Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 38

Capitalism K-Reagan Camp

***CAPITALISM K INDEX***

***CAPITALISM K INDEX***..................................................................................................1
***1NC***......................................................................................................................................2
1NC.............................................................................................................................................................................3
1NC.............................................................................................................................................................................4
1NC.............................................................................................................................................................................5
1NC.............................................................................................................................................................................6
1NC.............................................................................................................................................................................7
***LINKS***.................................................................................................................................8
Link: ID PTX..............................................................................................................................................................9
Link: ID PTX............................................................................................................................................................10
Link: ID PTX............................................................................................................................................................11
Link: Multiculturalism..............................................................................................................................................12
2NC Multiculturalism Link.......................................................................................................................................13
Link: Standpoint Ptx.................................................................................................................................................14
Link: Feminism.........................................................................................................................................................15
A2: Patriarchy=Root of Cap.....................................................................................................................................16
Link: Discourse First.................................................................................................................................................17
Link: Discourse First.................................................................................................................................................18
A2: Gibson Graham..................................................................................................................................................19
A2: Turn-Include Excluded Voice............................................................................................................................20
Link: Ethic to the Other............................................................................................................................................21
Link: Ethic to the Other............................................................................................................................................22
A2: Aff=Ethical Relationship...................................................................................................................................23
Link: Postmodern K of Militarism............................................................................................................................24
A2: Modernity=Root Cause of Violence..................................................................................................................25
***MPX***..................................................................................................................................26
Cap=War...................................................................................................................................................................27
Resist Cap=Key to Ethics.........................................................................................................................................28
Cap=Bad for Enviro..................................................................................................................................................29
Cap=NV2L................................................................................................................................................................30
***ALT***...................................................................................................................................31
Alt Solves Cap..........................................................................................................................................................32
Alt Prereq to Solve Case...........................................................................................................................................33
Alt Prereq to Class Conc (A2: Perm Solves Cap).....................................................................................................34
Case: Identity Ptx No Solve......................................................................................................................................36
***PERM***................................................................................................................................37
A2: Perm...................................................................................................................................................................38
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
2

***1NC***
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
3

1NC
The affirmative’s rejection of truth claims about the material role of actors and structures
in history conflates all knowledge with Enlightenment rationality-this ahistorical viewpoint
precludes the most relevant and politicizing modes of analysis

Palmer, Canada Research Chair in Canadian Labour History and Canadian Studies @ Trent University, 1996
(Bryan D., "Old Positions/New Necessities: History, Class, and Marxist Metanarrative," in "In
Defense of History," Ed. by E. Meiskins Wood & John Foster, p.65-72)
On one level this is not particularly new. But postmodernists/poststruc-turalists have wrapped their antagonism to
history in a series of intellectually seductive tautologies which beg the fundamental questions of the
historical process. Central to this outlook is a refusal of post-Enlightenment systems of rational thought,
which are reduced to a form—narration—and a substance—accommodation of bourgeois rule—that
relegates such "knowledge" to complicity with various oppressions . It is as though poststructuralism, in an2

immense social reconstruction of the deep historical past, would like to see the entire eighteenth-century Age of
Revolution, which was, to be sure, a bourgeois project, jettisoned. In some staggering leap of idealism, it seeks to pole-
vault over the class contents and transformations of thought associated with 1776,1789,1792, and the Industrial Revolution,
leapfrogging the nineteenth century, the experience of colonial revolt, and the first workers' state (1917). Yet
all of these occurred as historical process and have rich narrative structures of meaning in the politics and
culture of modern times, from Blake and Beethoven to Marx and Munch to Veblen and Van Gogh. However incomplete the
Enlightenment project, compromised as it was in its origins in the bourgeois proclamation of egalitarianism as a property-based legal right rather than a
social condition of fulfillment, it was a revolutionary transcen dence of the feudal order, which had been confined for centuries in
castelike conceptions of social station and the incarcerating thought of superstition, divinity, and absolutism. It was the purpose of Marxism, as
the maturing worldview of the emerging proletariat, to materialize and radicalize Enlightenment
rationality, extending its potential not just to this or that privileged sector of society, but to all of humanity. Just as Mary Wollstonecraft took
the possibilities inherent in the Enlightenment's Pandora's box of equality and extended her defense of the French Revolution and Thomas Paine's
Rights of Man to a feminist articulation of the rights of woman, reaching well past patriarchy's powerful presence in bourgeois thought and
practice, so too did Marx build on Enlightenment idealism to construct its oppositional challenge, historical
materialism. Poststructuralism allows no such reading of distinctions and developments within
Enlightenment thought, condemning all post-Enlightenment modes of discourse as hopelessly
compromised with the project of subordination.Particularly suspect in current theory is the Enlightenment "metanarra-tive," with its
"explicit appeal to some grand narrative, such as the dialectics of Spirit, the hermeneutics of meaning, the emancipation of the rational or working subject, or the
creation of wealth."3 This obsolete discourse, a supposed product of the modernist crisis of metaphysical philosophy, merely masks the disintegrations of such
narratives, and their dispersal into the unstable clouds of postmodernity's lofty discursiveness. 4Postmodernists/poststructuralists
thus
disavow, in their formalist and ultimatist rejections, divergences of considerable, oppositional importance.
They throw out Kant and Hegel as well as Marx, all of whom rely on metanarratives of one sort or
another, little consideration being given to the fundamental differences separating such systems of
thought. All states are simply states, and hence oppressive , an anarchist might argue (Down with the Bolsheviks!); all
wars are to be condemned, asserts the pacifist (We take no sides in Vietnam!); all metanarratives are suspect and
compromised, there being no master categories of explanatory authority, proclaims the post-structuralist
(Away with all interpretive pests!). In the comment that follows I concentrate on the Marxist "metanarra-tive," an unfulfilled project of radicalizing Enlightenment
rationality that much contemporary theory refuses in its repudiation of historical materialism. Marxist
metanarrative is rejected, ironically,
at precisely the historical moment that it is critically necessary, its insistence on reading history in
class terms, as a succession of identifiable structures and agencies propelled by material interests,
being fundamental to the interpretation of the movement from past to present, especially in the context of
contemporary life, where humanity is more and more connected in the globaldimensions ofexploitation
and oppression.5

Insert specific links:


Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
4

1NC
Capitalism is creating multiple scenarios for extinction—we must confront centralization of
power within the economic elite to stop band-aid solutions to these massive problems

Shrivastava,Ph D in Economics at Univ of Massachusetts, 2006


(Aseem, Tyranny, Empire, and the End of the World as We Know
It?,http://www.stateofnature.org/tyrannyEmpire1.html)
No serious person doubts that we live today in a world in which nobody has to die of hunger or curable diseases. All
hunger and most of child and infant mortality are man-made. Moreover, all the millions of victims of wars of choice are
actually victims of the entirely avoidable human lust for power. We are invited to feel (rightly) indignant at the hundreds of lives lost
to terrorism every week, but there is a stunning, numbed silence over the quiet genocides that have become routine
in this cowardly old world, for which educated, privileged humanity is collectively, squarely responsible. No shame is felt by our
species when we are collectively culpable for crimes of a magnitude incomparably greater in scale than the
undoubted damage being done by bloodthirsty terrorists. Our thinking and moral sense has been corrupted by
the distortion of our audio-visual capacities : the sensational damage done by terrorists is shown to us every
evening on our TV screens, but the colossal murderous routine of hunger and disease falls below the threshold
of media sensation. This auto-censorship is also because those who bring us the news are also perhaps aware, at the back of their minds, thatthe
reigning world order is to be held responsible for such crimes against humanity. In this sense, we are all like the
"good Germans" of the early 1940s, looking the other way from obvious crimes, when we know better. This essay has sought to draw
a detailed political map of the world as it appears today to a concerned observer. In conclusion, I would only like to draw attention to something which has escaped
mention thus far: the force of cultural hegemony. We live under the dispensations of the US Empire today. And yet this empire is uniquely different from every other
in history, in that while geography is still quite central to it, its decisive advantage, apart from being market-based, comes from the cultural hegemony it exercises over
how diverse peoples right across the world conceive and assess their way of life. For
no matter where one looks today, "the American
way of life" – of expressways and supermarkets, skyscrapers and giant corporations – has become the very norm for evaluating
everything else. It is this, backed and underwritten by the rapidly encroaching institutions of state corporate
capitalism, that everyday reinforcesAmerican dominance and what is arguably, the most predatory and ultimately self-
destructive style of life known to humanity. Moreover, it is precisely this fact which accounts for the rise of consensual
tyranny and the decline of substantive democracy. Will the American Empire collapse at some point in the not too distant future? No reading of history can miss the
mortality of empires. So this one shall have its end too. There is a sharply accelerating convergence of crises, too many to go into here. But there is a saying in India that "even a dead elephant is
worth a million bucks." It may well turn out that the American Empire, like a wounded tiger, kicks and screams its way to a slow death in the human jungle, bringing down much else besides
itself. Maybe that is precisely what is beginning to happen before our eyes since the dawn of the present century. (After all, the golden age of US capitalism, by common agreement amongst
economists, ended in the 1970s, best symbolized by the breakdown of the Bretton-Woods system.) Humanity has often been threatened in the past by the cumulative consequences of its own
these two forces of destruction are increasingly enhanced by the historically
follies, as much as by natural causes. What is new today is that
unprecedented powers of destructive technology, driving us collectively towards an abyss of perhaps historic proportions. It
humanity is threatened with extinction from multiple sources of its own making . And the peril is
is fair to say that

heightened especially since cowboys are writing a "what can we get away with" foreign policy for the superpower. There is the looming threat of
unprecedented crises and possiblespecies extinctionon accountof the changes in climate and other natural disastersthat
ongoing industrial revolutions are precipitating. If China and India succeed even half-way in achieving American standards of living, there
is assuredly no planet left. Then of course, we may wipe ourselves out through nuclear war, a more distinct
possibility today than perhaps at any point during the days of the Cold War, when American enemies could be more precisely located and targeted, and the
fear of "mutually assured destruction" (MAD) kept the superpowers well-behaved, a predicament which has changed substantially now. Finally, there is the
danger of public health catastrophes – not excluding public outbreaks of madness – in a globalized
world.All of this raises political temperatures around the globe and makes conflict between and within
societies ever more likely. This makes physical security a matter of the highest concern for most people, a fact that
governments are always good at manipulating to their political advantage, exaggerating threats as and when
necessary for their narrow purposes, often acting on them in order to retain the credibility of threats. This
exacerbates the prevailing conflicts further, especially because of the growing speed and precision of technologies of destruction. Propaganda through action, one
might call it. [61] To
face these crises-ridden times with courage and to make room for fresh hopes and new visions of
human freedom,the manifold hypocrisies of the rulers of the world must be repeatedly shown up. Their
compassion is selective, their morality cosmetic .Perhaps they should be reminded of a verse from William Blake every time they set about seeking to fix
some wrong in an oil-producing nation: ‘O’er my sins thou sit and moan: Hast thou no sins of thy own? O’er my sins thou sit and weep, And lull thy own sins fast asleep. You can't be serious
about bringing freedom and prosperity to others while torturing and killing people in your own prisons or letting your own people die in hurricanes. Freedom for the world is already there if
America is free. The tragedy of our world is that it is, alas, confusing its power with its freedom. It is this confusion which has to be brought before the public eye for moral intelligence to be
provoked and a new world to be sought.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
5

1NC
Our critique turns their impacts. The alternative is a pre-requisite to an understanding of
power as contingent and to create effective resistance in the form of Marxist counter-
hegemonies

Palmer, Canada Research Chair in Canadian Labour History and Canadian Studies @ Trent University,1996
(Bryan D., "Old Positions/New Necessities: History, Class, and Marxist Metanarrative," in "In
Defense of History," Ed. by E. Meiskins Wood & John Foster, p.65-72)
It is worth reiterating the obvious, since the obvious is precisely what poststructuralism/postmodernism often obfuscates, or even denies. Marxist
and
historical materialist criticism of contemporary theory and its insis tence on the politics and historically
central practices of class do not rest only on a series of denials. The significance of the knowledge/power
coupling, for instance, which is associated with Foucault, is hardly alien to the Marxist method. Marxism
has always been attentive to the relationship of ideas, dominance, and social transformation.
Representation, imagery, discourses, and texts can hardly be said to be understated in the theory and
practice of historical materialism, which has consistently grappled, sometimes for better, sometimes for worse, with the problematized meaning of
the base-superstructure metaphor, most evident in the rich body of writing associated with British Marxist historians such as Christopher Hill, Edward Thompson,
Rodney Hilton, and V.G. Kiernan, and the tradition of histo-ricized literary criticism associated with Raymond Williams and Terry Eagleton. 6 Finally, to
claim
that Marxism is a metanarrative of explanatory importance, resting unambiguously on the causality of
productive forces and the determinative boundaries set by fundamentally economic relations, such as
class, does not necessitate refusing the significance of other points of self-identification, such as race and
gender. What separates Marxism's metanarrative from postmodernist incredulity of all master categories is not, however, this or that particular. Rather, there
is a critical parting of the analytic seas in the two traditions' approaches to historical context as a material
force, within which all struggles for emancipation and all acts of subordination take place.
Poststructuralism/post-modernism sees history as an authorial creation, a conjuring up of the past to serve
the discursive content of the present. Thus the past can only be textually created out of the imperatives of the ongoing instance. In its insistence
that history be contextualized in the material world of possibili ties of the past, rather than cut adrift to float
freely in the cross-currents of attending to its obscured social relations and situating those corners of
suppressed history within the larger ensemble of possibilities that were something more than the
ideological fiction of the established archival record, attentive as it generally is to the instinctual
preservationism of power. Moreover, Marxism's metanarrative tries to be true—believing that such a process can be located, just as it can be obscured
or distorted—to the actors of the past, whatever side of the class divide their feet touch down upon. Thus, a major historiographical difference separates the essentially
Marxist understanding of class formation, struggle, and consciousness evident in E.P. Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class (1963) and Gareth
Stedman Jones's poststructurally inclined reading of Chartism in The Languages of Class (1983). Thompson, whose political practice and theory ran headlong into
Stalinist and mainstream social democratic containments, explores the opaque nooks and crannies of English popular radicalism, uncovering an underground
insurrectionary tradition that flew in the face of constituted authority in the opening decades of the nineteenth century, as well as standing in stark revolutionary
contrast to the stolid constitutionalism of later generations of working-class reformers and their Fabian historians. This is a long way from Stedman Jones, whose
politics of the 1980s had been formed within the conservatizing and hostile drift of the Labour Party away from the working class. He reads Chartism's successes
against the politics of mass upheaval in the 1830s and 1840s, seeing in the movement's ideas and actions not the class mobilizations of the time but the hangover of an
eighteenth-century politics that somehow distanced itself from the class actualities of the historical context. There is no doubt that Thompson's Making is driven by a
commitment to the revolutionary aspirations of the working class, past and present, but that does not undermine his text's authority precisely because it is, for all of its
dissident commitments, engaged with the complexities of the material world of the early nineteenth century. Stedman Jones, in contrast, searches for ways to distance
himself from the specificities of Chartism's times. The supreme irony is that the "present" of Stedman Jones's text is nothing more than an ideological adaptation to
Thatcher's Britain, a displacement of the past that paints a major history of working-class mobilization into a derivative corner of denigration and denial. Thompson's
"present," in striking contrast, is a moment of revolution thwarted, a "heroic" challenge that, whatever its failures, remains significant to both the history of the
working class and the class content of contemporary left politics. 7 It
is when postmodernist/poststructuralist readings of history
are scrutinized to see how metanarrative is suppressed, resulting inevitably in a particular structuring of
past, present, and future, that the costs and content of abandoning metanarrative are most evident. When
the French Revolution is interpreted, not as a contest between aristocracy and bourgeoisie, mediated by
the involvement of the sans-culottes, but as the unfolding symbolic will of a population galvanized as
much by imagery as political principle, the condescending class dismissiveness of contemporary histo-
riographic fashion is strikingly evident. An ironic consequence of postcolo-nial deconstructive writing , with
8

its understandable refusal of the Orientalist metanarrative, and its unfortunate textualization of imperialist plunder and
indigenous resistance, is the further silencing of those marginalized "others," whose differences are
celebrated, but whose umbilical link to class formation on a global sale is twisted in the obscured
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
6

1NC
isolations of cultures and countries. In the words of David Harvey: Postmodernism has us accepting the reifications and partitionings,
9

actually celebrating the activity of masking and cover-up, all the fetishisras of locality, place, or social
grouping, while denying the kind of meta-theory which can grasp the political-economic processes (money
flows, international divisions of labour, financial markets, and the like) that are becoming ever more universalizing in their depth,
intensity and reach over daily life. Postmodernistic antagonism to metanarrative thus carries with it a particular price tag, one in which the
10

significance of class is almost universally marked down. That this process is embedded less in theory and more in the material politics of the late twentieth century,
with their "retreat from class,"11 a withdrawal hastened by new offensives on the part of capital and the state, and conditioned by "actually existing socialism's"
Stalinist deformations and ultimate collapse, is evident in one historian's confident statement. Patrick Joyce claims that British history, once explained in terms of class
struggle, must now be regarded differently: There is a powerful sense in which class may be said to have "fallen." Instead of being a master category of historical
explanation, it has become one term among many, sharing rough equality with these others (which is what I meant by the "fall" of class). The reasons for this are not
hard to find. In Britain, economic decline and restructuring have led to the disintegration of the old manual sector of employment, and of what was, mistakenly, seen
to be a "traditional" working class. The rise of the right from the 1970s, and the decline of the left, together with that of the trade unions, pointed in a similar direction
to that of economic change, towards a loosening of the hold class and work-based categories had, not only on the academic mind, but also on a wider public. Changes
going on in Britain were mirrored elsewhere, but the greatest change of all was the disintegration of world communism, and with it the retreat of intellectual Marx-
ism.12 To "deconstruct" such a statement is to expose the transparent crudeness of its content, which bears a disappointing likeness to Time magazine. Even if trends in
the 1990s were unambiguously of the sort pointed to by Joyce, it is most emphatically not the case that the analytic meanings of this period of supposed change could
be transferred wholesale to a past society quite unlike it—what possible relevance can the fall of a degenerated and deformed set of workers' states (the Soviet Union,
Poland, Hungary, etc.) have on our exploration of the tangible class composition of early nineteenth-century society? Is it not rather unwholesome for supposed
intellectuals to be bartering their interpretive integrity in the crass coin of political fashion, their supposedly pristine ideas dripping with the thoroughly partisan poli-
tics of a particular historical period? Joyce's words, ironically, confirm rather than undermine historical materialism. As Joyce alludes to the "fall" of class as a product
of global restructuring, trade union and left defeat, the implosion of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, and the rise of the right, what are we to see but the actual
confirmation of "intellectual Marxism?" Did not Marx write that, "The
ideas of the ruling class are in eveiy epoch the ruling
ideas," and suggest that at moments of "enthusiastic striving for innovation"—which is certainly a
characteristic of the postmodern—such ideas might well result in a "more deeply rooted domination of the
old routine?" Historical materialism would suggest that there is a profound difference between the trajectory of political
13

economy in one epoch, and its attendant ideologies, and the actual social relations of production and
contestation in another historical period. Joyce collapses the two. In doing so he does disservice, again, to both past and present. For while his
simplified catalogue-like listing of the onward march of left defeat has some resonance in terms of contemporary political economic development, Joyce conveniently
understates the presence of other dimensions. His accounting is one-sided and distortingly one-dimensional. Yes, to be sure, the Stalinist economies and their ruling
castes have, outside of Cuba and (less so) China, taken a headlong plunge into the privatization despotisms of the 1990s, which Marxists from the Trotskyist tradition
have been predicting since the publication of The Revolution Betrayed (1937). Against those who saw in the bureaucratic grip of Stalinism a fundamental, if flawed,
blockade against the restoration of market relations, Trotsky wrote: "In reality a backslide to capitalism is wholly possible." 14 Class politics were dealt a severe blow in
the capitalist counterrevolutions and Stalinist implosions of the post-1989 years. Nevertheless, there is no indication that this has lessened the importance of class as
an agent of social transformation and human possibility (a master category of metanarrative). Indeed, it will be the revival of class mobilizations that will retrieve for
socialized humanity what was lost over the course of the 1990s in Russia and elsewhere, or there will be no gains forced from the already all-too-apparent losses of
recent capitalist restorationism. Almost a decade of tyrannical Yeltsin-like Great Russianism and the barbarism of small "nation" chauvinisms should have made it
apparent where the politics of national identity lead. Class,
as both a category of potential and becoming and an agency of
activism, has thus reasserted its fundamental importance. More and more of humanity now faces the
ravages of capitalism's highly totalizing, essen-tializing, and homogenizing impulses, and these are
currently unleashed with a tragic vengeance as even the once degenerate and deformed workers' states
look to the ideological abstractions of the world market for suste nance rather than relying on proletarian
powers. Mass strikes now routinely challenge capital and its states, from France to Canada, from Korea to Brazil. Once-Soviet workers, who saw socialism sour in
the stale breath of generations of Stalinism, are voting Communist again, whatever the problematic connotations, in the 1990s. At the end of 1995, polls in the
advanced capitalist economies of the West almost universally locate society's major discontents in the material failings of a social order that has visibly widened the
gap between "haves" and "have-nots," undermining the mythical middle class and depressing the living conditions of those working poor fortunate enough to retain
some hold on their jobs. There are no answers separate from those of class struggle, however much this metanarrative of materially structured resistance intersects
with special oppressions. Class has not so much fallen as it has returned. It had never, of course, gone anywhere. Identified as simply one of
many plural subjectivities, class
has actually been obscured from analytic and political view by poststructuralism's analytic
edifice, erected at just the moment that the left is in dire need of the clarity and direction that class, as a category and
an agency, a structure and a politics, can provide. The legacy of Marxism in general, and of historical materialism in particular, is to
challenge and oppose this obfuscation, providing an alternative to such material misreadings, building an
oppositional worldview that can play some role in reversing the class struggle defeats and weakening of the
international workers' movement that has taken place as capital and the state have been in the ascendant over the
course of the last thirty years.Those thinkerswho have failed to see the transitory nature of
postmodernism/poststructuralism, many of them academic fair-weather friends of Marxism , and have instead
invested so much in recent proclamations of their discursively constructed identity politics, may well be
among the last to acknowledge the blunt revival of class in the face of contemporary capitalism's
totalizing materiality. They will no doubt find some variant of "difference" to cling to, the better to avoid
the necessity of engaging subjectivity and its oppressive objectification under capitalism, where class , in its
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
7

1NC

singular capacity to assimilate other categories of being and congeal varieties of power, rules
and is ruled, a metanarrative of exploitation
within which all identities ultimately find their level of subordination/domination. This is indeed an old way of looking
at the world. But postmodernism/post-structuralism notwithstanding, all that is old is not always without value .
As one "Old Man" of Marxism, a lifelong defender of radicalized Enlightenment values, once proclaimed, in a maxim particularly suited to the linked fortunes of
materialism's past, present, and future: "Those who cannot defend old positions will never conquer new ones."

The alternative is historical materialism. This mode of analysis is epistemologically


superior to post-modernism-it renders a historically cognizant scholarship that is more
effective at organizing dissident discourses

Lapointe, 2007
(Thierry. "Beyond an Historicism Without Subject: Agency and the Elusive Genealogies of State
Sovereignty" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association 48th
Annual Convention, Feb 28, http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p180176_index.html)
The primary objective of this volume is to bring social history back in IR in order to challenge its ahistorical and essentialist categories as much
as its core postulates. As this chapter has shown, it has also been Poststructuralistcontention to challenge IR selfimage in shedding light in
its theoretical role as a practice of forgetting. Our contention is that despite their significant contributions in challenging the supremacist position
of mainstream IR, their method
of analysis have impeded their capacity to think about IR in terms of
historical process. As I have stressed in the first section, its anti-foundationalist conception of power, its
endeavour to analyse power relations on the basis of de-centring of the human subject, and its
own historical analysis which focuses solely on moment of epistemic ruptures without
adventuring into an explanation of its causes have left us with an image of “history without
subject”. If the imperative of thinking about social institutions—sovereignty—in dynamic terms
necessitates that we abandon any attempt to fix meaningsinto rigid definitions, as suggested by
Walker, we have to bring back agency at the heart of our theorizing since it is through its
historically specific practices that human create and transform—albeit seldom as they have
initially planed—their environments. As I have sought to highlight in the second and third part of this chapter, HM may
develop better and richer analysis in thinking about the relationship between power relations,
institutional and symbolic structures of enunciation in embedding them in a wider geopolitical
environment. However, as I have argued, the focus on discourses and symbolic structures without a proper
contextualization of the relations and dynamics of power they are an integral part of should be
abandoned. Indeed, such method of investigation tends to reify language in giving too much unity to
rules/structures of enunciation, which also tends to loose sight of the different ways in which
different agents may mobilise discourses—make references to similar symbols and used them in following the same (proper)
rules of enunciation—in order to achieve quite distinctive sets of objectives and reproducing quite different set of social practices.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
8

***LINKS***
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
9

Link: ID PTX
“Identity politics” are only conceivable against the backdrop of capitalist globalization this
system appeases subgroups in order to calculate and control their existence. This cycle of
deterritorialization and reterritorialization creates the preconditions that made Nazism
possible we must reassert the dimension of the Universal against capitalist globalization

Zizek ‘99
(Slavoj, Slovenian Critic, The Ticklish Subject, p. 209-211)

Here however one must fully endorse Badiou’s point that these “returns to the Substance” are themselves impotent
in the face of the global march of capital: they are its inherent supplement, the limit/conditioning of its functioning,
since - as Deleuze emphasized years ago – capitalist “deterritorialization” is always accompanied by re-emerging re-
territorializations. More precisely, there is an inherent split in the field of particular identities themselves caused by
the onslaught of capitalist globalization: on the one hand, the so-called ‘fundamentalisms’, whose basic formula is
that of the Identity of one’s own group, implying the practice of excluding the threatening Other(s): France for the
French (against Algerian immigrants), America for the Americans (against the Hispanic invasion), Slovenia for
Slovenians (against the excessive presence of “southerners”, immigrants from the ex-Yugoslav provinces); on the
other hand there is post-modern culturalist ‘identity politics’ groups, aiming at the tolerant coexisting of ever-
shifting, ‘hybrid’ lifestyle groups, divided into endless subgroups (Hispanic women, black gays, white AIDS
patients, lesbian mothers…) This ever flowering of groups and subgroups in their hybrid and fluid, shifting
identities, each insisting on the right to assert its specific way of life and/or culture, this incessant diversification, is
only possible and thinkable only against the background of capitalist globalization: it is the very way capitalist
globalization affects our sense of ethnic and other forms of community belonging: the only link connecting
these multiple groups is the link of capital itself,always ready to satisfy the demands of each group and subgroup
(gay tourism, Hispanic music...). Furthermore the opposition between fundamentalism and postmodern pluralist
identity politics is ultimately a fake, concealing a deeper solidarity (or, to put it in Hegelese, speculative identity): a
multiculturalist can easily find even the most fundamentalist ethnic identity attractive, but only so much as it is the
identity of the supposedly authentic Other (say, in the USA, Native American tribal unity); a fundamentalist group
can easily adopt, in its social functioning, the postmodern strategies of identity politics, presenting itself as one of
the threatened minorities, simply striving to maintain its specific way of life and cultural identity.The line of
separation between postmodern identity politics and fundamentalism is thus purely formal; it often depends merely
on the different prospective from which the observer views the movement for maintaining a group identity. Under
these conditions, the event in the guise of a “return to the roots” can only be a semblance that fits the capitalist
circular movement perfectly or – in the worst case – leads to a catastrophe like Nazism. The sign of today’s
ideologico-political constellation is the fact that these kinds of pseudo-events which seem to pop up (it is only right-
wing populism which today displays the authentic political passion of accepting the struggle, of openly admitting
that, precisely in so far as one proclaims to speak from a universal standpoint, one does not aim to please everybody,
but is ready to introduce a division of “us” versus “them”). It has often been remarked that, despite hating the guts
of Buchanan in the USA, Le Pen in France or Haider in Australia, even leftists feel a kind of relief in their
appearance – finally, there is someone who revives a proper political passion of division and confrontation, a
complete belief in political issues, albeit in a deplorably repulsive form. We are thus more and more deeply locked
into a claustrophobic space within which we can only oscillate between the non-event of the smooth running of the
liberal-democratic capitalist New World Order and fundamentalist Events (the rise of local proto fascisms, etc)
which temporarily disturb the calm surface of the capitalist ocean – no wonder that, in these circumstances,
Heidegger mistook the Pseudo-event of the Nazi revolution as the Event itself. Today, more than ever, one has to
insist that the only way open to the emergence of an Event is that of globalization-with-particularization by
(re)asserting the dimension of Universality against capitalist globalization. Badiou draws an interesting parallel here
between our time of American global domination and the late Roman Empire, also a ‘multiculturalist’ global state in
which multiple ethnic groups were thriving, united (not by capital, but) by the non-substantial link of the Roman
legal order – so what we need today is the gesture that would undermine capitalist globalization from the standpoint
of universal Truth, just as Pauline Christianity did to the Roman global empire.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
10

Link: ID PTX
Theorizing political action as conditioned by experience makes it impossible to understand
racial oppression and makes effective resistance to capitalism impossible

Libretti ‘97
(assistant professor in the English Department at Northeastern Illinois University, Forgetting Identity, Recovering
Politics: Rethinking Chicana/o Nationalism, Identity Politics, and Resistance to Racism in Alejandro Morales's
Death of an Anglo, Post Identity, liberalarts.udmercy.edu/pi/PI1.1/PI11_Libretti.pdf)
The importance of this point lies in the fact that most frequently it is experience and not essence that is invoked as the
sacred grounding of political authority. The experience of oppression is usually claimed as providing one with a privileged
consciousness of the entire complex of sociohistorical forces that produce the oppressive conditions, which may be global in
nature, and thus of a clearer insight into how to resist those conditions through political action. Careful distinctions,
however, need to be made between knowledge and experience, distinctions which problematize the valorization of experience
as the source or precondition of heightened political understanding and consciousness. We need to recognize, as Fredric
Jameson has noted, that in the world under global capitalism we have witnessed “a growing contradiction between lived
experience and structure” such that the truth of any experience “no longer coincides with the place in which it takes place. The
truth of that limited daily experience of London lies, rather, in India or Jamaica or Hong Kong; it is bound up with
the whole colonial system of the British empire that determines the very quality of the individual’s subjective life.
Yet those structural coordinates are no longer accessible to immediate lived experience and are often not even
conceptualizable for most people” (349). Thus, one’s experience of race in the U.S. might not provide one with an objective
understanding of the mechanisms of racial oppression which would seem necessary for developing a cogent strategy of
resistance against the objective conditions of racial capitalism. Indeed, viewing race as a political category, as the critic Gilroy
and the writer Morales do, we see that, in Gilroy’s words, “its meanings are unfixed and subject to the outcomes of
struggle. There can be no guarantee that conflicts over the meaning of ‘race’ will always be resolved in a politically
radical or progressive direction” (24). Herein lies the importance of the separation of political consciousness from racial
identity constituted by the distinction between the terms “Chicana/o” and “Mexican American.” We can then theorize
radicalization and political action as not simply or only conditioned by the experience of oppression or as the exclusive
domain of the oppressed. Rather, we can theorize political consciousness and action in much broader and complex ways,
as rooted in historically determined objective interests that exceed a limited correspondence with a narrowly construed identity of
oppression and as most efficaciously rooted, methodologically, in the category of totality as the carrier of revolutionary
principle, following Lukacs insistence in History and Class Consciousness. It is thus we can understand Marx’s theory of
how “a portion of the bourgeoisie goes over to the proletariat, and in particular, a portion of the bourgeois ideologists, who
have raised themselves to the level of comprehending theoretically the historical movement as a whole” (Marx,
“Manifesto” 481); or Morales’s novelistic narrative of how an “Anglo” “goes over” to a Chicano nationalist and
internationalist politics.

The particular struggle of identity politics compartmentalizes its resistance and allows for Capital to destroy
its radical nature.

Jodi Dean, Associate Professor of Political Theory Hobart and William Smith College“Zizek’s Politics” 2006
Page 118 – 119
We can approach the same point from another direction. Identity politics today emphasizes the specificity of each
identity and experience. Particular differences are supposed to be acknowledged and respected. As Zizek points out,
the notion of social justice that corresponds to this view depends on asserting the rights of and redressing the wrongs
inflicted upon victims. Institutionally, then, identity politics “requires an intricate police apparatus (foridentifying
the group in question, for punishing offenders against its rights ... for providing the preferential treatment which
should compensate for the wrong this group has suffered.”51 Rather than opening up a terrain of political struggle,
functioning as human rights that designate the very space of politicization, identity politics works through a whole
series of depoliticizing moves to locate, separate, and redress wrongs.52 Systemic problems are reformulated as
personal issues. No particular wrong or harm can then stand in for the “universal wrong.”53 Multiculturalism is thus
a dimension of postpolitics insofar as it prevents the universalization of particular demands.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
11

Link: ID PTX
Identity politics feed capitalism – it’s a safe way to ignore the class struggle and
perpetuates oppression on a global scale

Anarchist News ‘05


(Identity politics – capitalism in action!,http://www.anarchistnews.org/?q=node/48)3

I'm not going to spend time explaining Australian capitalism or how it adversely affects the ordinary working
person; this is something that most people involved in some form of "alternative politics" already seem to
understand. But what is lacking is a proper theoretical understanding of the role that identity, or social group-based, politics
actually plays within capitalism. Australian capitalism uses division to maintain itself. It tries very hard to split us into opposing groups
based on gender, ethnicity, sexuality, etc. It attempts division at every level, separating states and regions with football
matches, and even individuals on the basis of mundane arguments such as whether Ford or Holden is better. More
recently the Howard Liberal government has engaged in a campaign of division focused on welfare recipients
somewhat reminiscent of the Nazi Party's propaganda war on Jewish people during the '30s. Naturally, whilst we are all
opposing each other, and are divided, we are unable to effectively change anything. But just in case we still have a lingering desire to make a
change, we are offered recycling and enviro-based pseudo-activism so that we can feel like we are making a change. It is in the best
interests of Australian capitalism that we all remain divided by layer upon layer of identity-based differences. RACE During the arrival of Europeans
into this country over successive generations, Australian governments virtually wiped out the Aboriginal people. What remains of the Koori people is a very small
percentage of the total Australian population and, as such, they are unable to make any effective change on their own. It is in the interests of Australian capitalism that
Kooris have a fierce national identity to separate them from the "white people". The distrust of white liberals and white politicians is something rife within Koori
identity politics. GENDER The relationship between men and women in Australia has been severely damaged by the separatist excesses of the bourgeois women's
movement in the late 1980s and 1990s. Conveniently, capitalism has thrived on increased divorce rates and the tendency of men and women to live separately,
creating new markets for cars for women, home units for single people, etc. Of course, this has lead to a declining birth rate and raised concerns about where the next
generation of working drones is going to come from - hence we are now foisted with the 'pro-family' politics of the National-Liberal coalition. SEXUALITY
Someone's sexuality is someone's personal feelings. It is not relevant to anyone but the person involved, and those persons they sexually interact with. Australian
capitalism seeks to create ghettos of Gay people by inadequately protecting Gays from the homophobic views and attacks of some members of the heterosexual
"community". Mainly as a by-product of blunt necessity, a great many Gay people have traditionally been liberally-minded and tended to see beyond the differences in
people, thus promoting a better understanding of their own sexuality within a hostile homophobic community. This, of course, is traditionally the enemy of capitalism.
To break down the barriers between sexualities or, indeed, to acknowledge that such barriers are simply irrelevant might mean that other barriers between working
people might also break down.By encouraging a gay identity as a means of self-protection and as a form of pride in one's self, gay people are
encouraged to divide themselves from other workers and spend their lives attaining a capitalism-approved (consuming) "queer" identity.
Identity-based political groups (often for example Trotskyist-type groups) pose a political solution to Australian
capitalism in an identical fashion: they follow and assist capitalist ideas. This does not mean that they do this
intentionally; for the most part they are well meaning but they are still helping capitalism along. RACE A great many persons
involved in identity politics spend time on the "white" liberal side of Koori identity politics, seemingly oblivious to the fact that Koori indigenous law is completely
patriarchal and, in many ways, just as authoritarian as Australian capitalism. Persons involved in this form of politics often follow the "black consciousness" approach,
encouraging community amongst indigenous Australians as a separate group. GENDER Bourgeois feminism permeates virtually every left wing group, seeking to
establish separate groupings within each of these - a counter culture exclusively for women. This, it is generally claimed, is necessary to counter the patriarchal
tendencies of every left wing group (whether they actually exist or not) and a great deal of time is taken up philosophizing about whether such things are taking place
and what form they take ... all, of course, reinforcing the division between men and women already fostered by Capitalism. SEXUALITY Sexual politics are often a
regular feature of identity-based solutions. These groups feel that it is important that Gay people have their own exclusive input into the group and form their own
sexuality-based grouping. But the approach of Capitalism is to divide us carefully within groups and to maintain tensions between us. Otherwise, we might try and see
past our differences (and as human beings they will always be numerous), and try to find what we have in common; persons involved in identity-based politics would
argue that they are doing just this. However, where they create any division, or exclude certain people solely because of their race, gender or sexuality (i.e. because
CLASS So what type of grouping is there that
they are not a koori, not a woman, not gay), they will always work in the interest of Australian capitalism.
does not divide us in any way? What do we all have in common outside these shallow capitalist-created social groups? All members of the working class work,
seek work, or are supported by the benefits of work in order to live (welfare is provided by taxes from Australian workers, students are supported by their working
families). All members of the ruling classes control work and contribute nothing to it. The fact that we subsist on the basis of work as a class is the one
thing that we all have in common, whether we are Kooris, men, women, etc., and it is here that we can find the only
common ground with which to deal with Australian capitalism. So why do so many people spend time engaged in the politics of
identity? The reasons are varied but by and large I think it is because it is safe to do so. No real change ever takes place and social
uprisings such as anti-war movements are very quickly simply ignored by capitalism as they have no solid basis upon which to force real and lasting change. So what
if 3 million people march in the streets, tomorrow they will be back home feeling good about themselves, the news services will be able to increase their ratings (i.e.,
make more money) by reporting it, and it will be forgotten. Of course, if workers in the factories refused to make guns or filled the bullets with flour, or the wharfies
refused to load the ships with war toys for Iraq and 3 million people marched in the streets to protect them from the capitalists trying to use force to get their own way,
something would change. Providing the strike spread to other industries (it didn't just happen in isolation) and was maintained, Australian capitalism would have no
like this will ever
choice but to capitulate. (For that matter if it spread among workers throughout the world there would be no wars at all.) Of course, nothing
be possible whilst we continue to accept that identity-based politics is anything but a con job, and that a great many well-meaning political
groups are attempting to encourage change in precisely the reverse direction to that which will bring it abou t. Identity Politics is an approach
that is doomed to constant failure. If it wasn't, capitalism wouldn't allow it, and so many bourgeois people, who have a lot to lose by
real change, wouldn't be engaged in it. Without beginning with what we have in common - rather than trying to find it later from "broad
coalitions" of groups that are from the start structurally-based on exclusionary and fortress-like ideas - we are simply chasing our tails and
John Howard and his mates are laughing their arses off as identity-based groups help capitalism divide working people.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
12

Link: Multiculturalism
Multiculturalism is the ultimate ideology of global capitalism—its respect for the “other”
mirror colonists respect for natives, learning about the “other” without escaping the racist
society in which misrepresentations about the other are created in the first place

Zizek, professor of philosophy and psychoanalysis at the European Graduate School, Oct 1997
[Slavoj, Multiculturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Multinational Capitalism, http://www.newleftreview.org/?
view=1919]

How, then, does the universe of Capital relate to the form of Nation-State in our era of global capitalism? Perhaps,
this relationship is best designated as ‘auto-colonization’: with the direct multinational functioning of Capital, we
are no longer dealing with the standard opposition between metropolis and colonized countries; a global company as
it were cuts its umbilical cord with its mother-nation and treats its country of origins as simply another territory to be
colonized. This is what disturbs so much the patriotically oriented right-wing populists, from Le Pen to Buchanan:
the fact that the new multinationals have towards the French or American local population exactly the same attitude
as towards the population of Mexico, Brazil or Taiwan. Is there not a kind of poetic justice in this self-referential
turn? Today’s global capitalism is thus again a kind of ‘negation of negation’, after national capitalism and its
internationalist/colonialist phase. At the beginning (ideally, of course), there is capitalism within the confines of a
Nation-State, with the accompanying international trade (exchange between sovereign Nation-States); what follows
is the relationship of colonization in which the colonizing country subordinates and exploits (economically,
politically, culturally) the colonized country; the final moment of this process is the paradox of colonization in
which there are only colonies, no colonizing countries—the colonizing power is no longer a Nation-State but
directly the global company. In the long term, we shall all not only wear Banana Republic shirts but also live in
banana republics. And, of course, the ideal form of ideology of this global capitalism is multiculturalism, the
attitude which, from a kind of empty global position, treats each local culture the way the colonizer treats colonized
people—as ‘natives’ whose mores are to be carefully studied and ‘respected’. That is to say, the relationship
between traditional imperialist colonialism and global capitalist self-colonization is exactly the same as the
relationship between Western cultural imperialism and multiculturalism: in the same way that global capitalism
involves the paradox of colonization without the colonizing Nation-State metropole, multi-culturalism involves
patronizing Eurocentrist distance and/or respect for local cultures without roots in one’s own particular culture. In
other words, multiculturalism is a disavowed, inverted, self-referential form of racism, a ‘racism with a distance’—it
‘respects’ the Other’s identity, conceiving the Other as a self-enclosed ‘authentic’ community towards which he, the
multiculturalist, maintains a distance rendered possible by his privileged universal position. Multiculturalism is a
racism which empties its own position of all positive content (the multiculturalist is not a direct racist, he doesn’t
oppose to the Other the particular values of his own culture), but nonetheless retains this position as the privileged
empty point of universality from which one is able to appreciate (and depreciate) properly other particular cultures
—the multiculturalist respect for the Other’s specificity is the very form of asserting one’s own superiority.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
13

2NC Multiculturalism Link


Multiculturalism distracts attention from fighting capitalism—focusing on individual
struggles like ethnic rights fragments resistance

Zizek, professor of philosophy and psychoanalysis at the European Graduate School, Oct 1997
[Slavoj, Multiculturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Multinational Capitalism, http://www.newleftreview.org/?
view=1919]

And, mutatis mutandis, the same goes for today’s capitalist who still clings to some particular cultural heritage,
identifying it as the secret source of his success—Japanese executives participating in tea ceremonies or obeying the
bushido code—or for the inverse case of the Western journalist in search of the particular secret of the Japanese
success: this very reference to a particular cultural formula is a screen for the universal anonymity of Capital. The
true horror does not reside in the particular content hidden beneath the universality of global Capital, but rather in
the fact that Capital is effectively an anonymous global machine blindly running its course, that there is effectively
no particular Secret Agent who animates it. The horror is not the (particular living) ghost in the (dead universal)
machine, but the (dead universal) machine in the very heart of each (particular living) ghost. The conclusion to be
drawn is thus that the problematic of multiculturalism—the hybrid coexistence of diverse cultural life-worlds—
which imposes itself today is the form of appearance of its opposite, of the massive presence of capitalism as
universal world system: it bears witness to the unprecedented homogenization of the contemporary world. It is
effectively as if, since the horizon of social imagination no longer allows us to entertain the idea of an eventual
demise of capitalism—since, as we might put it, everybody silently accepts that capitalism is here to stay—critical
energy has found a substitute outlet in fighting for cultural differences which leave the basic homogeneity of the
capitalist world-system intact. So we are fighting our pc battles for the rights of ethnic minorities, of gays and
lesbians, of different life-styles, and so on, while capitalism pursues its triumphant march—and today’s critical
theory, in the guise of ‘cultural studies’, is doing the ultimate service to the unrestrained development of capitalism
by actively participating in the ideological effort to render its massive presence invisible: in a typical postmodern
‘cultural criticism’, the very mention of capitalism as world system tends to give rise to the accusation of
‘essentialism’, ‘fundamentalism’ and other crimes.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
14

Link: StandpointPtx

Locating political struggle within particular struggles masks capitalism’s universal nature
—people can’t draw the lines between different forms of oppression

Zizek, professor of philosophy and psychoanalysis at the European Graduate School, 2001
[Slavoj, Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism?, pg. 1-4]

On the ‘Celestial Seasonings’ green tea packet there is a short explanation of its benefits: ‘Green tea is a natural
source of antioxidants, which neutralize harmful molecules in the body known as free radicals. By taming free radicals
antioxidants help the body maintain its natural good health.’ Mutatis mutandis, is not the notion of totalitarianism one of the main
ideological antioxidants, whose function throughout its carrer was to tame free radicals, and thus to help the social body to maintain its politico-
ideological good health? No less than social life itself, today’s self-professed ‘radical’academia is permeated by unwritten rules
and prohibitions—although such rules are never explicitly stated, disobedience can have dire consequences. One of these
unwritten rules concerns the unquestioned ubiquity of the need to ‘contextualize’ or ‘situate’one’s position: the
easiest way to score points automatically in a debate is to claim that the opponent’s position is not properly
‘situated’ in a historical context: ‘You talk about women—which women? There is no woman as such, so does not your generalized talk
about women, in its apparent all-encompassing neutrality, privilege certain specific figures of feminity and preclude others?’Why is such radical
historicizing false, despite the obvious moment of truth it contains? Because today’s (late capitalist global market) social reality
itself is dominated by what Marx referred to as the power of ‘real abstraction’: the circulation of Capital is the force of
radical ‘deterritorialization’ (to use Deleuze’s term) which, in its very functioning, actively ignores specific conditions
and cannot be ‘rooted’ in them. It is no longer, as in the standard ideology, the universality that occludes the twist of its
partiality, of its privileging a particular content; rather, it is the very attempt to locate particular roots that
ideologically occludes the social reality of the reign of ‘real abstraction’.

The aff’s prioritization of subjective experience over objective analysis necessitates the
abandonment of any higher goal – inward oriented politics are doomed to failure
Lukacs ‘71
(Philosopher, The Theory of the Novel, p. 117-118)

The inner importance of the individual has reached its historical apogee: the individual is no longer significant as the carrier of
transcendent worlds, as he was in abstract idealism, he now carries his value exclusively within himself; indeed, the values of being
seem to draw the justification of their validity only from the fact of having been subjectively experienced, from their significance to
the individual’s soul The precondition and the price of this immoderate elevation of the subject is , however, the abandonment of
any claim to participation in the outside world . The romanticism of disillusionment not only followed abstract idealism in time and history,
it was also conceptually its heir, the next historico-philosophical step In a priori utopianism. There, the individual, the vehicle of the utopian
challenge to reality, was crushed by the brute force of reality; here, defeat is the precondition of subjectivity . There, subjectivity gave rise to
the heroism of its militant interiority; here, a man can become the hero, the center figure of a literary work, because he has the inner possibility of
experiencing life as a literary creator. There, the outside world was to be created anew on the model of ideals; here , an interiority which
protects itself in the form of a literary work demands from the outside world that it should provide it with suitable materials for thus
forming itself. In romanticism, the literary nature of the a priori status of the soul vis a vis reality becomes conscious: the self, cut off from
transcendence, recognizes itself as the source of the ideal reality, and, as a necessary consequence, as the only material worthy
of self-realization. Life becomes a work of literature; but, as a result, man becomes the author of his own life and at the same time the observer
of that life as a creative work of art. Such duality can only be given form by lyrical means. As soon as it is fitted into a coherent totality, the
certainty of failure becomes manifest, the romanticism becomes skeptical, disappointed, and cruel towards itself and the world; the novel of
the romantic sense of life is the novel of disillusionment. An interiority denied the possibility of fulfilling itself in action turns inwards, yet
cannot finally renounce what it has lost forever, even if it wanted to do so, life would deny it such a satisfaction; life forces it to continue the
struggle and suffer defeats which the artist anticipates and the hero apprehends.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
15

Link: Feminism
Feminism only smooths the way for capitalism—even if it creates equality, massive violence
and poverty still continue in the name of capitalist hegemony, only class focus serves to
address these inequalities

Newinsky, eco-activist living in Germany, 2004


[Peter, The Continuing Charm of Marx, http://www.stateofnature.org/theContinuingCharm.html]

One cogent argument against a facile or reductionist emphasis on class alone, however, has also been frequently
made by the various adherents of ‘identity politics’. The importance of non-class factors like gender, ethnicity,
culture and sexual orientation for understanding and changing socially oppressive structures has been a radical given
since the 60s and 70s, and doubtless an over-focus on class can often obfuscate, distract from or gloss over such
factors and their various forms of oppression. At times, such factors can undoubtedly override class factors.
However, for social change activists to throw the baby of class and class struggle out with the bathwater of dogmatic
‘workerism’ or simplistic ‘class analysis’ comes at the great price of likely delusion. Beyond all theoretical
argument, the sheer empirical facts would now seem to confirm the social (and thus heuristic) ‘ultimate’
predominance of class over all other factors underpinning ‘identity politics’. Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell
and a plethora of black CEOs in the US may be taken as cases in point: neither being a female nor being black need
now necessarily preclude one from becoming a member of the imperial ruling classes (nor, despite the froth of
Christian fundamentalist backlash, would it any longer really matter if either of them were gay). Empirically, a black
middle and upper class is no different in its material interests and prevailing aggregate consciousness to any other
middle or upper class. A greater degree of civil rights for oppressed minorities as achieved in the US or South Africa
will not change the class realities manifest in South Central LA or Soweto. A Nelson Mandela in power might well
enable a new black bourgeoisie and middle class but will not touch the wealth and power base of the ruling classes
and will symbolically bestow the highest national honours on a kleptocrat and genocidal dictator like Indonesia’s
Soeharto. Unlike many a white liberal, a white steel worker might in all likelihood not be surprised at any of this. He
may also have a different, since openly class-based, view of collective shame or guilt about the historical legacy of
black slavery: I got no use for the black militant who’s gonna scream three hundred years of slavery to me while I’m
busting my ass. You know what I mean? (Laughs.) I have one answer for that guy: go see Rockefeller. See
Harriman. Don’t bother me. We’re in the same cotton field. So don’t just bug me. (Laughs.) [6] Similarly,
mainstream feminism’s systemically naïve, class-neutral fixation on ‘gender equality’ within prevailing capitalist
institutions has ‘succeeded’ to the extent that most corporate PR spokespeople are now women (perhaps because we
somehow still tend to view women as more ‘sincere’) and the ubiquitous advertising image of a successful CEO
now also tends to be that of a woman, preferably even of non-European background. The ‘feminism’ even within
Chinese Stalinism has enabled China’s richest billionaire to be a woman, Zhang Yin, a paper recycling capitalist.
Western feminism has also ‘succeeded’ to the extent that the torture and atrocities in US-occupied Iraq involved
women in the immediate chain of command: from Rice at the top toMajor General Barbara Fast (top intelligence
officer responsible for reviewing detainee condition before release) to General Janis Karpinski (director of Abu
Ghraib prison) down to the three women Lynndie England, Megan Ambuhl and Sabrina Harman of the seven
soldiers actually made to carry the can and be charged with abuse and torture at Abu Ghraib. [7] Thus, the defining
criterion of ‘success’ within contemporary capitalism is not gender or race or sexual orientation but achieving the
‘equality’ of thoroughly espousing ruling class values and mind sets. Thus from a critical Marxist perspective, in the
‘post-modern’ age of intensified globalisation and cultural McDonaldisation, Capital has now manifestly become
what it inherently always was: a powerful cosmopolitan levelling force that knows neither nation, gender nor race as
a barrier to its drive to self-accumulate. As the Communist Manifesto so forcefully argued, Capital is an inherently
revolutionary force that sweeps all before it, all non-monetary qualities, quirks, responses, institutions and identities
are but grist for its all-levelling mill of expansion and accumulation.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
16

A2: Patriarchy=Root of Cap


Patriarchy exists as another form of domination from capitalist relations—focusing solely
on abuse of women ignores capitalisms role in destroying women’s positions in the neo-
liberal order

Otto Wolf, teaches philosophy at Free Univ of Berlin, June 2007


[Frieder, The Missed Rendevous of Critical Marxism and Ecological Feminism, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, Vol
18 Iss 2, Proquest]

Von Werlhof sees "patriarchy" as the "deeper structure" of capitalism. This is, I am convinced, a profoundly
ambivalent formulation. On the one hand, it blinds us to the very real dangers of capitalist accumulation as such-just
as it simultaneously threatens to undermine human labor and nature. On the other hand, it misses the difference
between different forms of domination, which is a central achievement of Marx. By this I mean that immediately
personal forms of domination like patriarchy, slave ownership or feudal appropriation are inseparable from lived
relations between dominating and dominated human beings. Conversely, objectively "reified," impersonal forms of
domination - like the wage-capital relationship - really function in separation from the personal relations of those
involved. To ignore this groundbreaking difference makes it impossible to understand why capitalist politics
historically has always been capable of mobilizing active support for its projects from those oppressed by personal
forms of domination slaves, serfs, and housewives. A recent example of this is the existence of active support from
women-and not only career women - for the neoliberal politics of dismantling the fordist "welfare state." This
reflects the neoliberal achievement in casting the welfare state as something explicitly patriarchal, while at the same
time obscuring the implicit patriarchal functions of neoliberal strategies that create precarious situations for the
majority of women around the world.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
17

Link: Discourse First


Discursive focus doesn’t create social change—its focus on pure individualism leaves people
trapped to fend off capitalist hegemony with their own devices, only materialist focus can
challenge the system

Novack, served as the secretary of the American Committee for the Defence of Leon Trotsky, 1956
[George, George Novack’s Understanding of History,
http://www.marxists.org/archive/novack/works/history/ch12.htm]

The contrast between the idealistic subjectivity of the existentialist thinkers and the materialist objectivity of Marxism
can be seen in the following assertion of Heidegger in An Introduction to Metaphysics : “It is in words and language that
things first come into being and are.” In accord with the conception that other aspects of reality acquire existence only to the extent that
they enter human experience, Heidegger makes not simply the meaning but the very existence of things emanate from our verbal expression of
them. To a materialist such human functions as speech and thought reflect the traits of things but do not create them .
The external world exists regardless of our relations with it and apart from the uses we make of its elements .The whole
of existentialism revolves around the absolute primacy of the conscious subject over everything objective, whether it be physical or social. The
truth and values of existence are to be sought exclusively within the experiences of the individual, in our self-discovery and self-creation of what
we authentically are.Marxism takes the reverse position. It gives existential priority, as any consistent materialism must, to nature
over society and to society over any single person within it. Nature, society, and the individual coexist in the closest reciprocal
relationship, which is characterised by the action of human beings in changing the world. In the process of subduing objective reality for their
own ends they change themselves. The subjective comes out of the objective, is in constant interaction and unbreakable communion
with it, and is ultimately controlled by it. These opposing conceptions of the object-subject relationship are reflected in the conflict between the
two philosophies on the nature of the individual and the individual’s connections with the surrounding world. The category of the isolated
individual is central in existentialism. The true existence of a person , it asserts, is thwarted by things and other people.
These external forces crush the personality and drag it down to their own impersonal and commonplace level. The individual can attain genuine
value only in contest with these external relationships.We must turn inward and explore the recesses of our beingin order to arrive
at our real selves and real freedom. Only at the bottom of the abyss where the naked spirit grapples with the fearful foreknowledge of death are
both the senselessness and the significance of existence revealed to us.Thus existentialism pictures the individual as essentially
divorced from other humans, at loggerheads with an inert and hostile environment, and pitted against a coercive
society. This desolation of the individual is the wellspring of inconsolable tragedy. Having cut off the individual
from organic unity with the rest of reality, from the regular operation of natural processes and the play of historical forces,
existentialism is thereafter unable to fit the subjective reactions and reflections of the personality to the environing
conditions of life. Indeed, says Sartre, our attempts to make consciousness coincide with “facticity”, the world of things, are a futile business.
By a grim paradox, the solitary human mind is completely sovereign in shaping its real existence. With nothing but its
own forces to lean on and its own judgment as a guide, it must confront and solve all the problems of life .
Existentialism is the most thoroughgoing philosophy of individualism in our time. “Be yourself at all costs!” is its first commandment. It
champions the spontaneity of the individual menaced by the mass, the class, the state. It seeks to safeguard the dignity, rights, initiatives, even the
vagaries of the autonomous personality against any oppressive authority, organised movement, or established institution. With individual liberty
as its watchword and supreme good, existentialism is a creed of nonconformism. “I came to regard it as my task to create difficulties
everywhere”, wrote Kierkegaard in describing how he turned to an existentialist view of life. The existentialists are averse to routine, externally
imposed ideas, or disciplined modes of behaviour, and whatever is uncongenial to the desires of the ego. All submission to projects not freely
chosen is evidence of bad faith, says Sartre. The targets of existentialism’s protest are as diversified as the interests and inclinations of its
exponents. These have ranged from religious orthodoxies to philosophical systematising, from capitalist exploitation to Stalinist regimentation,
from bourgeois morality to workers’ bureaucratism. Kierkegaard set about to disturb the peace of mind of the hypocritical Danish middle class.
Nietzsche heralded the superman who was to rise above the herdlike crowd and transcend good and evil. The favoured heroes of Camus and
Sartre are rebels and outsiders. Simone de Beauvoir and Sartre analyse writers such as the Marquis de Sade and Jean Genet, whose ideas and lives
have outrageously flouted the ordinary canons of moral conduct. It must be said that theheresies of the existentialists do not always
succeed in shedding completely the values of the society they rebel against. Kierkegaard assailed the sluggishness and self-
deception of the smug citizens around him only to embrace the Christian God with more passionate intensity. And Sartre, who attacks stuffed
shirts and stinkers for their egotism, clings to the concept of the totally free person beholden solely to himself as the pivot of his philosophy and
moral theory. Existentialism proclaims the urge of the individual to develop without hindrance. But its constitutional aversion to the
organised action of mass movements determined by historically given circumstances renders it incapable of finding
an effective solution of this problem for the bulk of humanity. That is why it is nonconformist rather than
revolutionary. Historical materialism takes an entirely different approach to the relationship between individual and
environment. We are essentially social beings; we develop into individuals only in and through society. For Marxists,
the isolated individual is an abstraction. All distinctive things about humans , from toolmaking, speech, and thought to the
latest triumphs of art and technology, are products of our collective activity over the past million years or so.Take away from
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
18

Link: Discourse First

the person all the socially conditioned and historically acquired attributes derived from the culture of the collectivity and little would be left but
the biological animal. The specific nature of the individual is determined by the social content of the surrounding world. This shapes not only our
relations with other people but our innermost emotions, imagination, and ideas.Even the special kind of solitude felt by people today
is an outgrowth of the social system. One of the major contradictions of capitalism is that it has brought humans into
the closest “togetherness” while accentuating conditions that pull them apart. Capitalism socialises the labour process and
knits the whole world into a unit while separating people from one another through the divisive interests of private property and competition.
Frederick Engels noted this when he described the crowds in the London streets in his first work, The Condition of the Working Class in England
in 1844 : “This isolation of the individual, this narrow self-seeking, is the fundamental principle of our society
everywhere Ö The dissolution of mankind into monads, of which each has a separate principle , the world of atoms,
is here carried out to its utmost extreme.” The “barbarous indifference, hard egotism and nameless misery” which he observed over a
century ago still strongly permeate our acquisitive society. Like the existentialists, the socialist movement has made one of its chief aims and
persistent concerns the defence and expansion of individuality—however much this has been violated in practice by bureaucratic powers
speaking in the name of socialism. But Marxism differs from existentialism by denying that individualism as a philosophy
can provide an adequate method of social change and political action. Since the social structure shapes and
dominates the lives of individuals, it has to be transformed by the collective struggle of the working people in order
to eliminate the conditions that repress individuality and create an environment suited to the unhampered cultivation of the capacities
of each living human being.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
19

A2: Gibson Graham


Gibson-Graham preclude revolutionary thinking – their blind faith in reformism leads to
capitalist co-option of the aff/perm

Poetevin ‘01
(member of the SR editorial collective, Socialist Review, end of anti-capitalism as we knew it: Reflections on
postmodern Marxism, http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3952/is_200101/ai_n8932891/pg_11)

My main point here is that throughout The Full Monty - and in J.K. Gibson-Graham's review of the film as well - property relations are
never questioned or challenged. In the postmoder n/post-Marxist "noncapitalist" world, corporations get to keep ownership of the
means of production and their profits, while working class communities continue to lap dance their way through "identification
across difference" rather than doing union organizing . That this kind of argument can be presented not only as "noncapitalist" but
also as Marxist thinking should be enough to demonstrate the political bankruptcy of this paradigm . It is also interesting that JK
Gibson-Graham maintain that challenging their analysis of The Full Monty, or not endorsing the politics of the film, "is inherently conservative
and capitalocentric."48 I disagree strongly. The politics advocated by J.K. Gibson-Graham through their reading of The Full Monty is
nothing but liberal politics with post-structuralist delusions of grandeur. It is one thing to say that we are at a political conjuncture
in which the thing to do is to work hard for reform, not "revolution. " But it is another thing to argue that revolutionary practice
cannot happen on epistemological grounds, and that all we can do is make capitalism as user friendly as possible while
obscuring and co-opting the Marxist tradition. J.K. Gibson-Graham's reading of The Full Monty is both liberal and reactionary.
What the postmodern Marxist's reading of The Full Monty demonstrates is that in their desire to get rid of "capitalocentrism" - the alleged
obsession of Marxists with seeing "capitalism" everywhere - they end up reconfiguring and consolidating capitalism back in. In their
unreflective romanticizing of reform, and in their haughty contempt for revolutionary thinking and politics, J.K-.Gibson-Graham's style
of postmodern/post-Marxism delivers what boils down to good old-fashioned liberalism: a mild, state-administered "economic justice"
platform centered around individual private liberties, neatly packaged in postmodern gift wrapping. The bottom line is this: When one looks
closely at what postmodern/post-Marxist theory actually offers, and after it is done "representing capitalism through the lens of
overdetermination,"49 all one can strategize about is how to make capitalism more "user friendly." Gone is the project of getting rid
of it. Strangely enough, postmodern/ post-Marxists do not regard these positions as a surrender of the Marxist project at all, but rather, as the
exact fulfillment of that commitment.50
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
20

A2: Turn-Include Excluded Voice


There’s no risk of a link turn-elite groups will hijack notions of culture to reinforce their
place in social hierarchy by offering their own counternarratives-cooption outweighs

Dunk, teaches in the Department of Sociology at Lakehead University, March 2002


[Thomas, Hunting and the Politics of Identity in Ontario, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism Vol 13 Iss 1, Proquest]

The arguments employed by the OFAH and the NOTO exemplify a number of interesting developments in the
ongoing struggles about identity, power, and relationships with nature. They indicate that culture is now recognized
by these organizations as a form of political capital. The state, the legal profession and the lay public are picking up
on the anthropological idea that everyone has culture - not only those odd, quaint immigrant groups, religious
minorities, or remnant indigenous peoples. This may represent an interesting side effect of the intellectual critique of
whiteness and masculinity as hegemonic cultural forces. Those who have been the principal object of this critique
are now recasting their own place in the social hierarchy as a cultural rather than a purely economic-political
phenomenon. This is not to prejudge the nature of the intention that lies behind the arguments of white men's
organizations regarding their culture. The extent to which the arguments about the relationship between hunting and
culture utilized by the OFAH and the NOTO are politically motivated as opposed to sincerely felt by white hunters
is impossible to know. Rather than engage in a futile debate about the honesty of white hunters' claims about the
place of hunting in their culture and identity, it is more fruitful to think through how this case reveals some of the
limitations of identity politics as a means of achieving social, economic, and environmental justice. A discursive
strategy and ethical position similar to that employed by subaltern groups to defend endangered minority cultures is
here being used to support the status quo. Many who have operated from a more explicitly Marxist-oriented
perspective have long been wary of the potential implications of arguing and acting on primarily cultural grounds as
opposed to political and economic terrain. The debates about hunting, culture, and rights reveal that, in the absence
of a deeper engagement with the entire systemthat simultaneously involves the destruction of nature and the creation
of social dislocations, alienation, and inequality,we end up in an endless cycle of claims and counter-claims
about the linkages between the uses of nature, cultural traditions, and rights.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
21

Link: Ethic to the Other

Ethics guarantees continuation of poverty and hunger—ethicists only manage social


anatagonisms’ created by capitalism, not criticize them

DeFazio, Ph D Candidate in English at Stony Brook Univ, Spring 2003


[Kimberly, The Imperialism of “Eating Well”,
http://www.redcritique.org/Spring2003/theimperialismofeatingwell.htm]

The cultural imaginary in the West today is dominated by the discourse of "ethics". Ethics, in its privileging of the
subjective over the objective, turns social structures into modes of personal behavior and thus sees social change
basically as a matter of changing individuals' minds and ideas. On these terms, hunger is not viewed as a structure of
social relations tied to ownership of property (class)—a view based on the understanding that a transformation in property relation is
the necessary precondition of eradicating hunger. Rather, the primary solutions to hunger are individual and subjective ones
that promote life-style changes and daily negotiations within existing unequal social structures. For instance: those
with food give to those who do not; food pantries redistribute surpluses; understanding that the hungry are not in any fundamental way
"different" from the fed, etc. These and other similar reformist practices aimed at addressing only the most intolerable effects
of hunger, not its material roots, are widely seen as the only "reasonable" solutions. Ethics, in other words, is one of the main
manifestations of theoretical "savvy-ness" today.  Ethical theorists regard transforming hunger by eradicating its roots in private property as
highly "unreasonable" and "crude", if not deeply suspicious, since transformation of class relations is deemed a "totalitarian" imposition of one
subjective will over another. Social change, to put it differently, is only ethical when it deals with one hungry person at a time. What is necessary
to note about contemporary ethics is that unlike the "traditional" ("modernist") ethics of John Stuart Mill or Kant, for whom ethics involves the
study of the "good society" (the "polis") and finding the ideal means of living a "good life", ethics today is post-foundational. It puts
itself forward as a "radical" ethics because it does not essentialize or monolithize the subject.Ethics , in other words, is
now "post-al" and, as Mas'udZavarzadeh explains, begins with the assumption that we have entered a post-historical , post-
class, post-industrial, post-historical moment of history; a moment in which capitalism has somehow broken free from its
exploitative past (1-2). That is to say, in contemporary articulations of ethics the social is a series of autonomous, disparate,
and aleatory events operating independently of any over-arching logic (such as the logic of exploitation), and, therefore, without
any common and underlying principles of judgment. As a result, whereas traditional ethics was at least formally committed to a
notion of "equality", post-al ethics is resigned to inequality, and views all discussions of "equality" as totalizing
fictions aimed at concealing over the fundamental "difference" that constitutes the social. As pragmatist Chris Barker
succinctly puts it "The modernist goal of equality is beset with problems, and equality of outcome is neither possible nor desirable" (20). Post-al
ethicists, he declares, have instead learned not to "mistake our ethical choices for radical public politics" (19). As a result, ethics today is
more concerned with managing the effects of social inequalities. The shift from modern to postmodern or post-al ethics, it is
necessary to emphasize, is not the result of a more "savvy", "sophisticated" or "radical democratic" understanding of ethics—the shift, in other
words, did not come about due to the triumph of new or "better" ideas. This is a claim that Francis Moore Lappé makes in the new introductory
chapter to the 20th Anniversary Edition of Diet For a Small Planet, a book that has maintained its ongoing popularity by appealing to activist
sentiments yet at the same time effectively disconnecting hunger from any encompassing theory of hunger as a product of capitalism. She writes
that through the sheer "power of ideas" a new ecological "myth" which recognizes the net of relationships in which humans are involved is
coming to replace an older Cartesian "mechanical" myth that separated people into "atoms" and denied them agency (xix-xxvii). This, of course,
is the dominant understanding of social change today, which turns the history of capitalism into the progress of ideas and erases the way in which
the possibilities of social change are the product of human labor in order to obscure the fundamental exploitation of labor that is central to the
organization of capitalist society. Post-al ethics, in other words, is a response to the new needs of capital in the era of
cybercapitalism in which the material developments in production that have enabled the possibility of an
economically just society are held back by private ownership and must instead be explained as a problem of "bad
ideas" if this contradiction is to be secured.Ethics, to be more general, is an articulation of the way in which
individuals are trained to deal with the contradictions of capitalism.  In other words, changes in what constitutes
"ethical" behavior are an effect of shifts in the needs of capital.Modern ethics, now deemed too "mechanical" by both activists
like Lappé and "high theorists" like Derrida alike, responded to the needs of an emerging capitalist system; that is, it was focused on the aims of
"integrating" social classes into the capitalist system at a time of deep unrest brought about by the conflict between dying feudal relations and
industrialization. The "good society" was basically an attempt to assure the increasing numbers of dispossessed that the market could meet the
common needs of all. Ethics in what is called "post-industrialism", on the contrary, is no longer aimed at "integrating", or including the excluded.
With the generalization of capitalist relations throughout the world, and the resulting deepening divisions between
the haves and the have-nots, ethics has instead become more interested in "recognizing" "difference" and the
underlying alterity that, on post-al terms, subvert  the "good society" (a concept that is, as a result, largely
abandoned today as a modernist fantasy of wholeness that reduced the complexity of the social to a false unity).
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
22

Link: Ethic to the Other

Whereas the ethics of the "polis" emphasized collectivity and politics (albeit often in an idealist fashion), post-al
ethics abandons both. It substitutes "community" for collectivity and emphasizes interpersonal relations and
individual differences, in order to evacuate social(structural) contradictions from the scene of theory, and replace
them with local ones which can be micro-managed.Ethics today is thus more concerned with managing the effects of
growing divisions resulting from the concentration of capital in the hands of the few, and ongoing privatization of all
aspects of social life. To be ethical today is to recognize class and other differences but to conclude at the same time
that nothing can be done to address these contradictions.Post-al ethics, in short, is a manifestation of the growing
cynicism of bourgeois society, resigned to deep inequalities. 
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
23

A2: Aff=Ethical Relationship

Guarantees only link no link turn—the other is only incorporated to be a new market for
capitalism—turning distinct cultures into parts of an autonomous machine

DeFazio, Ph D Candidate in English at Stony Brook Univ, Spring 2003


[Kimberly, The Imperialism of “Eating Well”,
http://www.redcritique.org/Spring2003/theimperialismofeatingwell.htm]

According to this logic, the ethical subject is one who no longer simply identifies with the self but respects the other
by "identify[ing] with the other, who is to be assimilated, interiorized," (283). The self is never single but plural, and indeed the
boundary between self and other is continually blurred. And it is precisely this ethical relation to the other that Derrida calls
"infinite hospitality" (282): the idea that one gives to the other "infinitely"—without beginning or end, without boundaries or determinants. The
"excessiveness" of hospitality in fact becomes even more explicit in Derrida's recent text Of Hospitality, where he writes: "To be what it 'must'
be, hospitality must not pay a debt, or be governed by a duty [...] For if I practice hospitality 'out of duty' […] this hospitality of paying up is no
longer an absolute hospitality, it is no longer graciously offered beyond debt and economy" (83). Hospitality, I argue, is like "ethics" and
"eating well", a trope deployed to exceed class binaries. As Derrida emphasizes, hospitality cannot be the effect of
existing relations of material inequality(i.e., to "repay" a social or economic debt); nor can it be "legislated". "Repaying" and
"legislating" are textualist codes for the social praxis of changing objective historical structures—codes which are seen as "monolithic" and thus
as stopping the play of differences that inherently undermine all attempts at conceptualization. Hospitality, instead, "negotiates" on
subjective and local terms the already existing unequal relations among people. It is an act of ethical willfulness that must be
motivated spontaneously, without condition, obligation, or determination. But it is precisely this textual logic of "graciousness" and
"hospitality" that enables corporations on the one hand to refuse to pay taxes on their profits—taxes on which
working people are forced to rely for social services—and on the other to "donate" large (tax-free) sums to charity (to
be used at the discretion of local administrators). Corporations too are invested in precisely such notions of "hospitality"
because they function outside the "law". Rather than actually opening any space from which to examine the inherent
contradictions of language, Derrida's deconstruction of any connection between the local and the global operates to
legitimate the suspension of all social structures such as regulation of the market and eliminates any conception that
the state is required to ensure livable wages, support comprehensive healthcare, or to finance advanced educations
for the working class. Hospitality is in effect a code, not so much for sophisticated reading, but for economic deregulation.  
It is the theoretical equivalent of free-trade agreements. That is, it is an ethical ruse for the complete privatization of
social resources under imperialism. Derrida's entire argument is based on the assumption that, as he puts it, "one must
eat". But in fact many worldwide do not eat, and even more do not "eat well". What appears to be a "beyond" class
argument, in other words, is an alibi for the interests of the bourgeois subject, for whom food, like other social resources, is
always already available. Not only does the trope of ethical eating naturalize the relation between the haves and the have-nots, but the very
availability of the food "eaten well" by the subject—that is, the conditions under which it is produced—is taken for granted. Derridean ethics,
which claims to resist essentializing social relations by appealing to the textual slippage of social codes, is in actuality a means of
defending the interests of the ruling class by removing the ethical act from determination by material conditions.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
24

Link: Postmodern K of Militarism


Poststructuralism’s characterization of the international system by inequalities in military
power overlooks historical materialist conditions underlying militarism and war.

Lapointe, 2007
(Thierry. "Beyond an Historicism Without Subject: Agency and the Elusive Genealogies of State
Sovereignty" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association 48th
Annual Convention, Feb 28, http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p180176_index.html)

It becomes clearer, in this context, thathierarchical


relations of power in the international system may not solely rest on
“objective” inequalities in military might as has been contended.As critical approaches generally argue, these
hierarchical relations are themselves shaped through and conditioned by various institutionalised structures of power
—material and discursive—that reproduce social relations of domination and subordination between human subjects
across time and space. The question of their historical conditions of emergence and transformation appears to be the fundamental one for
any critical approach in IR that seeks to avoid what John M. Hobson calls the fallacy of tempo-centrism and chronofetishism (Hobson 2002).
Critical scholarship remains deeply divided on the way in which they problematize the relation between power and sovereignty. How to
problematise the historical conditions of emergence of discourses and practices of state sovereignty remains a
question that still needs to be debated. In this regard, it exists a fundamental line of fracture dividing Poststructuralism
and Historical Materialism in their respective ways to theorise the articulation of power relations/dynamics of power
with social discourses and social institutions across time and space . This paper seeks to critically explore the way in which Post-
Structuralist scholars in IR have approached the question of the historicity of state sovereignty. While acknowledging their contributions in
critiquing the a-historical and essentialist foundations of mainstream IR scholarship, it will be argued that the central weakness of
Poststructuralism is that by understanding formation and transformation in state sovereignty as expression of
shifting discursive paradigms, it tends to evacuate the specific, uneven and differentiated social relations that create
the historical conditions for such discourses to emerge. It will be argued that Poststructuralism magnifies the internal coherence
of an epistemic paradigm—discursive rules of an historical era—and downplays the variety of ways in which specific discourses
can be mobilized to produce, reproduce and transform different sets of social relations of power by human agents
across space in a given historical period. Thus, I argue that Poststructuralism eschews an analysis of the historical
process of formation and transformation of forms of knowledge/social power in relations with differentiated forms
of institutionalized social practices.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
25

A2: Modernity=Root Cause of Violence


Rejecting modernity and calculative thought lumps together capitalism’s distinct social
relations and dehistoricizes the specific conditions enabling racism, colonialism, and the
Holocaust

Malik,senior visting fellow at the Department of Political, International and Policy Studies at the
University of Surrey, 1996
(Kenan, "The Mirror of Race: Postmodernism and the Celebration of Difference," in "In Defense of History," Ed. by
E. Meiskins Wood & John Foster, p.127-131)

By conflating the social relations of capitalism with the intellectual and technological progress of “modernity,” the
product of the former can be laid at the door of the latter. The specific problems created by capitalist social relations
become dehistoricized. In postructuralist discourse racial theory, colonialism, or the Holocaust are not investigated
in their specificity, as products of distinctive tendencies within capitalist society, but are all lumped together as the
general consequence of “modernity.” In this way the positive aspects of “modern” society – its invocation of
reason, its technological advancements, its ideological commitment to equality and universalism – are denigrated
while its negative aspects – the inability of capitalism to overcome social divisions, the propensity to treat large
sections of humanity as “inferior” or “subhuman,” the contrast between technological advance and moral turpitude,
the tendencies towards barbarism – are seen as inevitable or natural.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
26

***MPX***
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
27

Cap=War
Capitalism is the root cause of war-self interested states pursue economic prosperity
ChrisHarmon, editor of the Socialist Worker, Economics of the Madhouse p. 90 1995

The only sense in which Marx is 'outdated' is not that the system is more rational than he thought, but rather his
picture understates the destructiveness of the system. Capitalists do not merely battle against each other on markets.
They also use the state to force rival capitalists to accept their dictates, supplementing economic competition with
displays of military prowess. American capitalism seeks to persuade European and Japanese capitalism to accept its
dictates by proving that it alone has the power to wage war in the vital oil rich regions of the Middle East; Iranian
and Turkish capitalists rely on the help of their states as they compete with each other for influence and contracts in
the southern belt of the former USSR; Turkish and Greek capitalists encourage a mini-arms race as each seeks to
establish a dominant role in the Balkan countries once controlled by Russia; Germany backs Croatia, the US backs
the Bosnian Muslims, and Greece backs the Serbs in horrific wars in former Yugoslavia; the Russian military wage
vicious wars to hang on to vital oil pipelines through Chechnya and influence in the Tadjik republic bordering
Afghanistan; China, the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam clash over control of the oil reserves thought to lie close
to uninhabited islands in the China Sea; Israel tries to carve Egypt out from economic influence in the Arabian
peninsular. The result is that at any point in time there are half a dozen wars or civil wars, using the most horrendous
forms of 'conventional' weaponry, in one part of the world or another.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
28

Resist Cap=Key to Ethics


You have an ethical obligation to reject capitalism – it’s costs are beyond calculation

Glyn Daly, Senior Lecturer in Politics in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at University College,
Northhampton, Conversations with Zizek p. 14-16 2004

For Zizekit is imperative that we cut through this Gordian knot of postmodern protocol and recognize that our ethico-political
responsibility is to confront the constitutive violence of today’s global capitalism and its obscene naturalization/anonymization of
the millions who are subjugated by it throughout the world.Against the standardized positions of postmodern culture – with all its
pieties concerning ‘multiculturalist’ etiquette – Zizek is arguing for a politics that might be called ‘radically incorrect’ in the
sense that it breaks with these types of positions and focuses instead on the very organizing principles of today’s social reality:
the principles of global liberal capitalism. This requires some care and subtlety. For far too long, Marxism has been bedeviled by
an almost fetishistic economism that has tended towards political morbidity. With the likes of Hilferding and Gramsci, and more
recently Laclau and Mouffe, crucial theoretical advances have been made that enable the transcendence of all forms of
economism. In this new context, however, Zizek argues that the problem that now presents itself is almost that of the opposite
fetish. That is to say, the prohibitive anxieties surrounding the taboo of economism can function as a way of not engaging with
economic reality and as a way of implicitly accepting the latter as a basic horizon of existence . In an ironic Freudian- Lacanian
twist, the fear of economism can end up reinforcing a de facto economic necessity in respect of contemporary capitalism (i.e. the
initial prohibition conjures up the very thing it fears). This is not to endorse any kind of retrograde return to economism. Zizek’s
point is rather that in rejecting economism we should not lose sight of the systemic power of capital in shaping the lives and
destinies of humanity and our very sense of the possible. In particular we should not overlook Marx’s central insight that in order
to create universal global system the forces of capitalism seek to conceal the politico- discursive violence of its construction
through a kind of gentrification of that system. What is persistently denied by neo-liberals such as Rorty (1989) and Fukuyama
(1992) is that the gentrification of global liberal capitalism is one whose ‘universalism’ fundamentally reproduces and depends
upon a disavowed violence that excludes vast sectors of the world ’s population. In this way, neo-liberal ideology attempts to
naturalize capitalism by presenting its outcomes of winning and losing as if they were simply a matter of chance and sound
judgment in a neutral marketplace. Capitalism does indeed create a space for a certain diversity, at least for the central capitalist
regions, but it is neither neutral nor ideal and its price in terms of social exclusion is exorbitant. That is to say, the human cost in
terms of inherent global poverty and degraded ‘life chances’ cannot be calculated within the existing economic rationale and, in
consequence, social exclusion remains mystified and nameless (viz. the patronizing reference to the ‘developing world’). And
Zizek’s point is that this mystification is magnified through capitalism’s profound capacity to ingest its own excesses and
negativity: to redirect (or misdirect) social antagonisms and to absorb them within a culture of differential affirmation . Instead of
Bolshevism, the tendency today is towards a kind of political boutiquism that is readily sustained by postmodern forms of
consumerism and lifestyle.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
29

Cap=Bad for Enviro

History proves expansion of capitalism destroys the environment—places profits before


environmental sustainability

Hwang, Phd U of Conn, Winter 1999


[Sung U-K, Ecological Panopticism: The Problematization of the Ecological Crisis,
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3709/is_199901/ai_n8843780]

With these false causalities, the problematization of the ecological crisis, while attending exclusively the urgent predicament,
distracts the attention from the main culprit of ecological pillage. While attracting public gaze to the direst scenes of
ecological disasters, it turns a blind eye to those forces that have effected the plight. It questions neither how the population
bomb was created, nor why the ecological equilibrium was destroyed. History proves that when
capitalism rushes in, it capitalizes the rivers, forests, mountains, skies, birds, people of the pre-capitalist societies, and
even the ideas of nature and culture on the model of the industrial factory. Whether incubated in a pre-
existing society or imposed forcibly from outside, capitalism always disrupts the social mediation of man-nature
relations. Its market nexus precludes the reproduction of nature (both physical and human) which are not
themselves subject to exchange valuation. Profitability, as the motor of capital, replaces social
needs-and ecological sustainability-in determining what to produce and how to distribute. As growth
is the key to raising profits, the system continually engenders the expansion of production, consumption,
and waste. The ecological crisis is not a surprising interlude to, but an ongoing process of capitalism.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
30

Cap=NV2L
Life in capitalism not worth living—individuals have a negative view of life looking for
more and better things to satisfy them, always living in an uncomplete and dismal state

Mies, formerly Professor in Applied Social Sciences at the Fachhochschule in Cologne, Dec 2006
[Maria, Questioning Needs: A Rejoinder to Victor Wallis, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism Vol 17 Iss 4, Proquest]

I agree with Wallis that mainstream environmentalism has reflected on the way human needs are met rather than on the needs themselves.
Mainstream ecologists want to solve all problems by new technological inventions; thus, they search for a kind of deus ex machina. But Wallis
criticizes my position by saying, that I "simply wish artificial or excessive needs out of existence," that I do not take into account "people's
present day starting points . . . which therefore cannot lead towards a realizable political strategy." And he continues: "The process of redefining
needs that are experienced at the personal level cannot be the same for everyone . . ." Here I disagree strongly. I follow the Chilean economist
Manfred Max-Neef in his definition of needs.4 He says that the basic needs are the same for everyone in both poor and rich
countries and poor and rich classes. And these basic needs are limited.They include the need for food and drink,
shelter, clothing, etc., which he calls subsistence needs. But there are also needs for affection, love, respect, learning, fantasy,
adventure, company, friendship, enjoyment, pleasure, and work. All these needs are universal, and these latter needs I also
include as subsistence needs. Most importantly, Max-Neef distinguishes between needs and satisfiers. Whereas needs as such cannot be
increased, satisfiers can. And capitalism has been able to increase satisfiers endlessly. Instead of drinking water
when you are thirsty, you want Coca Cola, or beer or some other industrially produced beverage, which you have to buy
on the market. I do not try to solve today's ecological problems by a moralistic appeal to people to curb their needs. Rather, I try to make them
aware of capitalism's colonization of our deep needs by offering us a limitless amount of satisfiers from all over the world-satisfiers which are all
commodities and must be bought. I ask people whether this abundance of industrially produced satisfiers in our global supermarkets has really
satisfied them and really made them happy. And I find that increasingly even people from the wealthy classes in both the rich
countries and the global South are not happy. That means their real needs are not satisfied. In spite of the wealth all
around them, they feel alienated. And without understanding the source of their alienation, they seek ever more new
satisfiers. One year when we discussed diese issues before Christmas, one of my students said: "I told my children that this year I shall give
them Time to Tell Stories. I shall not buy any toys. And they were very happy." "Time to Tell Stories" is a satisfier that does not cost anything. It
is not a commodity. It does not harm nature. But it strengthens human relationships, because it satisfies a whole range of needs of both the
children and the mother: the need for attention, for love, for curiosity, adventure, fantasy, and closeness. And both the children and the mother
will remember this storytelling time throughout their lives, because it is an unalienated satisfaction of needs. This does not mean that we should
not buy anything as satisfiers. But if we keep in mind what we really need, we would look for different satisfiers, and many of them would not be
commodities. I call this process "the non-commodified satisfaction of our needs."
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
31

***ALT***
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
32

Alt Solves Cap


Rejection critical to create space of non-commodified relations—only showing that
capitalism isn’t inevitable opens up space for actions outside the system

Adrian Johnston, interdisciplinary research fellow in psychoanalysis at EmoryUniversity. “The Cynic's Fetish:
SlavojZizek and the Dynamics of Belief” Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society.Vol. 9, Iss. 3 Dec 2004.

Perhaps the absence of a detailed political roadmap in Zizek's recent writings isn't a major shortcoming. Maybe, at
least for the time being, the most important task is simply the negativity of the critical struggle, the effort to cure an
intellectual constipation resulting from capitalist ideology and thereby to truly open up the space for imagining
authentic alternatives to the prevailing state of the situation. Another definition of materialism offered by Zizek is
that it amounts to accepting the internal inherence of what fantasmatically appears as an external deadlock or
hindrance (Zizek, 2001d, pp 22-23) (with fantasy itself being defined as the false externalization of something
within the subject, namely, the illusory projection of an inner obstacle, Zizek, 2000a, p 16). From this perspective,
seeing through ideological fantasies by learning how to think again outside the confines of current restrictions has,
in and of itself, the potential to operate as a form of real revolutionary practice (rather than remaining merely an
instance of negative/critical intellectual reflection). Why is this the case? Recalling the analysis of commodity
fetishism, the social efficacy of money as the universal medium of exchange (and the entire political economy
grounded upon it) ultimately relies upon nothing more than a kind of "magic," that is, the belief in money's social
efficacy by those using it in the processes of exchange. Since the value of currency is, at bottom, reducible to the
belief that it has the value attributed to it (and that everyone believes that everyone else believes this as well),
derailing capitalism by destroying its essential financial substance is, in a certain respect, as easy as dissolving the
mere belief in this substance's powers. The "external" obstacle of the capitalist system exists exclusively on the
condition that subjects, whether consciously or unconsciously, "internally" believe in it - capitalism's life-blood,
money, is simply a fetishistic crystallization of a belief in others' belief in the socio-performative force emanating
from this same material. And yet, this point of capitalism's frail vulnerability is simultaneously the source of its
enormous strength: its vampiric symbiosis with individual human desire, and the fact that the late-capitalist cynic's
fetishism enables the disavowal of his/her de facto belief in capitalism, makes it highly unlikely that people can
simply be persuaded to stop believing and start thinking (especially since, as Zizek claims, many of these people are
convinced that they already have ceased believing). Or, the more disquieting possibility to entertain is that some
people today, even if one succeeds in exposing them to the underlying logic of their position, might respond in a
manner resembling that of the Judas-like character Cypher in the film The Matrix (Cypher opts to embrace
enslavement by illusion rather than cope with the discomfort of dwelling in the "desert of the real"): faced with the
choice between living the capitalist lie or wrestling with certain unpleasant truths, many individuals might very well
deliberately decide to accept what they know full well to be a false pseudo-reality, a deceptively comforting fiction
("Capitalist commodity fetishism or the truth? I choose fetishism").
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
33

Alt Prereq to Solve Case


Historical materialism is an indispensable tool for the critical interrogation of language and
identity—the affirmative risks being absorbed into the dominant cultural frame
Foster, prof. of sociology @ Univ. Oregon, 1996
(John, "In Defense of History," in "In Defense of History," Ed. by E. Meiskins Wood & John Foster, p.185-193)
The weaknesses of postmodernism—from an emancipatory perspective— thus far overshadow its strengths. Missing
from Foucault's analysis, like that of postmodernism generally, is any conception of a counter-order to the
disciplinary orders described. In the more extreme case of "textual postmodernists"—those postmodernist thinkers like Derrida, as distinct
from Foucault, who deny any reality outside the text—the political and historical weaknesses from a left perspective are even
more glaring. By undermining the very concept of history—in any meaningful sense beyond mere story-telling—
such theorists have robbed critical analysis of what has always been its most indispensable tool.18 The denial within
postmodernist theory of the validity of historical critique covers up what is really at issue: the denial of the historical
critique of capitalism, leading to a convergence between left thought infected by Nietzsche and the dominant liberal
"end of history" conception. The danger of such ahistorical or anti-historical views, as E.P. Thompson observed, is that one loses
sight not of "reason in history" in some abstract sense, but rather of "the reasons of power and the reasons of
money."19 Historical materialism at its best provides a way out of this dilemma. This is not to ignore the fact that Marxism—
which has sometimes given rise to its own crude interpretations and historical travesties, as in the case of Stalinism—has frequently been
identified with the kind of "totalizations" and "essentialisms" that postmodernist theorists have singled out. As Thompson pointed out in a 1977
essay on Christopher Caudwell, Marxism has sometimes relied on " 'essentialist' tricks of mind," the "tendency to intellectualize the social
process"—"the rapid delineation of the deep process of a whole epoch." These are things that the historian (and social scientists in general)
should guard against. But to abandon theory and historical explanation entirely in order to avoid "essentialism" and
"foundationalism" is a bit like throwing out the baby in order to keep the bathwater clean . Marx himself provided another
model, actively opposing theory (even "Marxist" theory) that purported to be "suprahistorical." In his Theses on Feuerbach, he presented what
still ranks as the most thorough- going critique of what he called the "essentialist" conception of human beings and nature. Indeed, historical
materialism has long engaged in its own self-critique, precisely in order to expel the kinds of "essentialisms,"
"positivisms," and "structuralisms" that have intruded on the philosophy of praxis itself —-a self-critique that has produced
the insights of theorists like Gramsci, Sartre, Thompson, and Raymond Williams.20 These thinkers distanced themselves from the positivistic
"official Marxism" that grew out of the Second International and later turned into a caricature of itself in the form of Stalinism. Yet they held firm
to the critique of capitalism and their commitment to the struggles of the oppressed. Moreover, these particular examples tell us that if what
has sometimes been called "the postmodern agenda"—consisting of issues like identity, culture, and language—is
to be addressed at all, this can only be accomplished within a historical context. And here one might openly wonder with
Foucault "what difference there could ultimately be between being a historian and being a Marxist." When placed within a more holistic
historical materialist context—animated by the concept of praxis—the problems raised by postmodernism look
entirely different. As David McNally says, "Language is not a prison-house, but a site of struggle." What the contributions in this volume
have in common is the insistence that issues like language, culture, nationality, race, gender, the environment, revolution, and history itself are
only effectively analyzed within a context that is simultaneously historical in character, materialist (in the sense of focusing on concrete
practices), and revolutionary. Such analyses do not abandon the hope of transcending capitalism, nor of the notion of human progress as a
possible outcome of historical struggles. It is said that Nicholas I, Czar of Russia, issued an order banning the word "progress." Today we no
longer believe, in a nineteenth century sense, in automatic human progress, embodying some definite content—the idea that the Czar found so
threatening. But this does not mean, as the philosopher Michael Oakeshott contended with respect to political activity in the 1950s, that we "sail a
boundless and bottomless sea" that has "neither starting-point nor appointed direction" and that our only task is "to keep afloat on an even keel."
History—as centuries of struggle and indeed progress suggest—is more meaningful than that. To abandon altogether the concept of
progress, in the more general sense of the possibility of progres sive human emancipation, would only be to submit
to the wishes of the powers that be. Such political disengagement by intellectuals on the left in the present epoch could only mean one
thing: the total obeisance to capital.21The irony of post-modernism is that while purporting to have transcended modernity, it abandons from the
start all hope of transcending capitalism itself and entering a post-capitalist era. Postmodernist theory is therefore easily absorbed
within the dominant cultural frame and has even given rise recently to texts such as Postmodern Marketing, which attempts to utilize the
insights of thinkers like Foucault, Derrida, Lyotard, and Baudillard to market goods within a capitalist economy. Perhaps this will be the final
destiny of postmodernist theory—its absorption by the vast marketing apparatus of the capitalist economy, adding irony and color to a
commercial order that must constantly find new ways to insinuate itself into the everyday lives of the population. Meanwhile, historical
materialism will remain the necessary intellectual ground for all those who seek, not to revel in the "carnival" of
capitalist productive and market relations, but to transcend them.22
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
34

Alt Prereq to Class Conc (A2: Perm Solves Cap)


Only by integrating the 1AC narrative into the ideological frame of materialism can we
create counter-hegemonic movements strong enough to effect widespread change-class
consciousness is key to unify fractured counter narratives that exist in the squo
Rosewarne, political economist in the School of Economics and Political Science at the
University of Sydney, Dec 2006
[Stuart, Socialist Ecology's Necessary Engagement with Ecofeminism, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism Vol 17 Iss 4,
Proquest]
For O'Connor, herein lies the qualification of the political purchase of the new social movements. "Particularity"
defines their politics, whereas in contrast, working peoples are generally less likely to be in a position to quarantine
themselves from the impact of the assault on the conditions of production. Working peoples across communities are
considered more likely to be touched by the effects of capitalism's contradictions beyond the waged workplace in
ways that other social groups are not. As varied as these impacts are, or could be, the effect will manifest as a
generalized and more comprehensive erosion of the material well-being of working peoples compared with other
social groups. The latter are more likely to feel the effects of "particular" incursions on their well-being. The
corollary of this is that the generalized nature of working people's experienceis held to provide a more
comprehensive foundation both for buildinga political force and for sustaining the unanimity of purpose that is
necessary for mounting a challenge to capitalist hegemony. The political import of new social movements is limited,
because1) they tend to be formed in response to particular material challenges, 2) their political organization is
generally framed specifically to respond to environmental and/or other challenges, and 3) they tend to be formed in
given political spaces. The argument developed by O'Connor in CNS is that the capacity of the movements to forge
broadly based and enduring coalitions that seek to build responses to both the first and second contradictions in the
struggle against capital's hegemony will necessarily be precarious. It is in this context that the universality of the
experience of working peoples is held to provide the most constructive axis around which those social movements
campaigning against capitalist hegemony might coalesce. The working class oeuvre, because it is held to extend
beyond particular issues and locales, is regarded as the most powerful instrument for marshalling the various
oppositional forces, for sustaining the struggle of the coalition of the new social movements, and for assuming
leadership in forging a transformative politics.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
35
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
36

Case: IdentityPtx No Solve


Rejecting identity as a social construction takes it out of historical and social context,
making it appear natural and justifying biological theories of race
Malik, senior visting fellow at the Department of Political, International and Policy Studies at
the University of Surrey, 1996
(Kenan, "The Mirror of Race: Postmodernism and the Celebration of Difference," in "In Defense of History," Ed. by
E. Meiskins Wood & John Foster, p.112-117)
"Poststructuralist thinking," sociologists David Bailey and Stuart Hall have argued, "opposes the notion that a
person is born with a fixed identity—that all black people, for example, have an essential underlying
black identity which is the same and unchanging. It suggests instead that identities are floating, that
meaning is not fixed and universally true at all times for all people, and that the subject is
constructed through the unconscious in desire, fantasy and memory."1The reminder that our
identities are not naturally given but socially constructed is a useful antidote to the idea that
human differences are fixed and eternal. Butby insisting that society is inherently and irreducibly
heterogeneous and diverse, and by rejecting any idea of "totality" that might allow us to see the
commonalities or connections among heterogeneous and diverse elements, poststructuralist
discourse has undermined its own capacity to challenge naturalistic explanations of
difference. The paradoxical result, I shall argue, is a conception of identity scarcely different from
that of nineteenth-century racial theory. The problem can be seen in the very concept of "anti-essentialism" as understood by
postmodernist thinkers. Sociologist Ali Rattansi has described anti-essentialism as a "manoeuvre cutting the ground from conceptions of subjects
and social forms as reducible to timeless, unchanging, defining and determining elements or ensemble of elements—'human nature,' for example,
or in the case of the social, the logic of the market or mode of production." Rattansi seems at first to define anti-essentialism simply as
opposition to an ahistorical understanding of social phenomena, hostile to the idea of timeless or unchanging social forms. But he slides from this
rejection of ahistorical explanation to a repudiation of social "determinants" altogether. He rejects
any idea that social forms
can be explained by reference to forces or pressures like the "logic of the market" or the "mode
of production" which permeate and shape the social order, even if these determinants are con-
ceived as historically specific. A non-essentialist understanding of society is apparently one that denies any unifying patterns or
processes among the diverse and constantly shifting fragments that constitute society. In other words, Rattansi identifies anti-essentialism with an
insistence on indeterminacy. In this he
reflects much postmodern thinking which finds the meaning of social
forms not in relations but in differences. But this kind of indeterminacy is precisely the foundation of ahistorical
explanations. How, for instance, can we understand the historical nature of capitalism as a specific
social form without identifying the specific determinants that distinguish it from other social
forms, in other times and places? We could argue about whether the "essence" of capitalism
should be seen in the logic of the market, in the particular mode of production, in some other
aspect, or in some combination of these. But unless we can characterize the fundamental
specificity—the "essence," if you will—of capitalist society, its distinctive "laws of motion" or systemic
logic, we cannot distinguish it from other types of societies. How, then, should we analyze race in
modern capitalist societies? If we treat race as just an "identity" detached from any specific
social determinants, then race becomes not a historically specific social relation but an
eternal feature of human society—just as it is in reactionary biological theories of race, in
which racial divisions are a natural and permanent necessity. This may seem an odd conclusion to draw from
postmodern anti-essentialism, because its roots lie precisely in a hostility to naturalistic explanations of social phenomena, particularly
positivism, which reduce social laws to natural laws, treating the laws that govern human relations as quantifiable and permanent, just like the
laws of nature. Because the
positivist view of society underpinned nineteenth century racial theories,
opponents of racial theory have always been hostile to naturalistic theories of society.
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
37

***PERM***
Capitalism K-Reagan Camp
38

A2: Perm
Mutually exclusive- there is no perm because:
a) We PICd out of the way they framed the narrative in the 1AC. We’re impact
turning their methodology-their claims that case is a DA to the alternative’s
historical lens proves competition
b) Cross apply any other links-these are all reasons why the implementation of or the
rhetoric justifying the plan are incompatible with the alternative

Severance-our links are based on framing-severance is a voting issue because it makes


stable neg ground impossible-destroys clash.
***This is uniquely abusive if they don’t defend the policy implications of the plan-this
justifies links to parts of the plan that aren’t intrinsic to plan action, like epistemology

The alt solves case and outweighs-means perm isn’t net beneficial and you reject it on face

The direct call to action without the universalist element of our alternative leads to
interpassivity which allows capitalism to subsume your movement.
SlavojZizek, Senior Researcher at the University of Ljubljana Revolution at the gates p.169- 171 2002

Indeed, since the "normal" functioning of capitalism involves some kind of disavowal of the basic principle of its functioning
(today's model capitalist is someone who, after ruthlessly generating profit, then generously shares )arts of it, giving large
donations to churches, victims of ethnic or sexual abuse etc., posing as a humanitarian), the ultimate act of transgression is -to
assert this principle directly, depriving it of its humanitarian mask. I am Therefore tempted to reverse Marx's Thesis 11: the first
task today is Precisely not to succumb to the temptation to act , to intervene directly and Change things (which then inevitably
ends in a cul-de-sac of debilitating impossibility: "What can we do against global capital? "), but to question he hegemonic
ideological coordinates. In short, our historical moment is ,till that of Adorno:To the question "What should we do?" I can most
often truly answer only with "I don't know." I can only try to analyse rigorously what there is. Here people reproach me: When
you practise criticism, you are also obliged to say how one should make it better. To my mind, this is incontrovertibly a
bourgeois prejudice. Many times in history it so happened that the very works which pursued purely theoretical goals
transformed consciousness, and thereby also social reality. 5If, today, we follow a direct call to act, this act will not be performed
in an empty space -it will be an act within the hegemonic ideological coordinates - those who "really want to do something to help
people" get -involved in (undoubtedly honourable) exploits like Medecins sans frontieres-,Greenpeace, feminist and anti-racist
campaigns, which are all not only tolerated but even supported by the media, even if they seemingly encroach an economic
territory (for example, denouncing and boycotting companies which do not respect ecological conditions, or use child labour-they
are tolerated and supported as long as they do not get too close to a certain limit . This kind of activity provides the perfect
example of interpassivity: of doing things not in order to achieve something, but to prevent something from really happening,
really changing. All this frenetic humanitarian, politically Correct, etc., activity fits the formula of "Let's go on changing
something all the time so that, globally, things will remain the same!". If standard Cultural Studies criticize capitalism, they do so
in the coded way hat exemplifies Hollywood liberal paranoia: the enemy is "the system", the hidden "organization", the
anti-democratic "conspiracy", not simply capitalism and state apparatuses. The problem with this critical stance is not only that it
replaces concrete social analysis with a struggle against abstract paranoiac fantasies, but that - in a typical paranoiac gesture - it
unnecessarily redoubles social reality, as if there were a secret Organization behind the "visible" capitalist and state organs. What
we should accept is that there is no need for a secret " organization-within- an- organization": the "conspiracy" is already in the
"visible" organization as such, in the capital system, in the way the political space and state apparatuses work.

You might also like