Pretty Heady Stuff

Pretty Heady Stuff

This podcast features interviews with a variety of theorists, artists and activists from across the globe. It's guided by the search for radical solutions to crises that are inherent to colonial capitalism. To this end, I hope to keep facilitating conversations that bring together perspectives on the liberatory and transformative power of care, in particular.

  1. 2d ago

    Steven Swarbrick conceives of a world where Palestine is free because none of us "belong"

    What might the politics of masochism be able to do for the dangerously stagnant politics of liberation Is masochism more mobilizing than empathy? Empathy requires the Palestinian to be a "perfect victim," to use Mohammed El-Kurd's phrase. It says that the other must remain othered in its incomprehensible but familiar suffering. Masochism, on the other hand, insists that we are all Palestinian, or that we are not free until we are all free.It's too easy to forget that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. The idea of building solidarity by engaging with the question of how solidarity is created and sustained feels relevant right now, as even ersatz or gestural solidarity fades from view. Even when it was front and center, that gestural solidarity clearly wasn't generating the systemic transformation needed to produce an end to Israeli apartheid, the Zionist regime's immiseration and domination of Gaza. The expanding solidarity the world has seen since 2023--with the erasure of thousands of Palestinian lives, the reduction of Gaza to rubble, the increased suffocation of life in the West Bank and the ramping up of Israel's imperial ambitions in the region more broadly--has done effectively nothing to stem the perpetrating of ethnonationalist violence. Dwelling with that fact leads us to talk about the encampments that spontaneously formed on university campuses as part of the global solidarity movement. At the core of the discussion is this question of how a movement that seems unstoppable can still be stopped, and what it means to try and keep going, especially at a time when ultra-right militarism and US-Israeli nationalism is becoming more explicitly fascistic in nature. As Swarbrick puts it in his book: the US state is now focused on what you call "maintenance." This is "maintenance of the idea that this is it, that there can be no other way of things, no other world but the world as we know it, a world devoid of the event, truth, equality, and freedom." I ask Steven, ultimately, whether there is any choice but the choice of division, the choice of opposing oneself against the fascist goons who talk openly about wanting to see the world burn. His response hinges on the inherent violence of "belonging," and the goal of embracing a different kind of radical love that isn't just invested in identification with a cause. ⁠#freegaza⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#don⁠⁠tstoptalkingaboutpalestine ⁠⁠#israel⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#zionism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#usempire⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#imperialism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#lebanon⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#iran⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#antioppression⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#anticolonialism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#antiimperialism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#psychoanalysis⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#liberation⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#leftpolitics⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#nationalism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#ethnonationalism⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#genocide⁠⁠ ⁠⁠#gazagenocide⁠⁠

  2. May 27

    Vijay Kolinjivadi and Aaron Vansintjan want a world where "sustainability" isn't meaningless

    Vijay Kolinjivadi is an assistant professor at the School for Community and Public Affairs, Concordia University in Montreal, Canada. He is also a co-editor of the website Uneven Earth. The co-author, with Aaron Vansintjan, of The Sustainability Class (The New Press), he has been published in Al Jazeera, New Internationalist, Truthout, and The Conversation. He lives in Montreal.Aaron Vansintjan is the founder and co-editor of Uneven Earth and co-author of The Future Is Degrowth. He has been published in The Guardian, Truthout, openDemocracy, and The Ecologist. The co-author, with Vijay Kolinjivadi, of The Sustainability Class (The New Press), he lives in Montreal. The Sustainability Class is about those wealthy “progressive” urbanites convinced that we can save the planet through individual action, smart urbanism, green finance, and technological innovation. Kolinjivadi and Vansintjan challenge many of the popular ideas about environmentalism, showing that it is actually the sustainability class itself that is unsustainable. The solutions they propose work to safeguard an elite minority, exclude billions of people, and ultimately hasten ecological breakdown, not reverse it. A sustainability apartheid is emerging. More than ever, urban residents want to be green, yet to cater to their interests, a green-tech service economy has sprung up, co-opting well-intentioned concerns over sustainability to sell a resource-heavy and exclusive “lifestyle environmentalism.” This has made cities more unsustainable and inaccessible to the working class.#sustainability #cooptation #greencities #lifestyleenvironmentalism #lifestyle #climateaction #radicalpolitics #anticapitalism #anticonsumerism #ecosocialism #solidarityisaverb

    1h 4m
  3. May 13

    Arang Keshavarzian examines the politics of modern Iran and devises an escape from perpetual war

    Arang Keshavarzian is Professor of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University. He’s one of the most shrewd thinkers you’ll see on the politics of modern Iran and the Persian Gulf because he pays serious attention to how social and economic hierarchies constrain the formation of political solidarity. His most recent book is Making Space for the Gulf: Histories of Regionalism and the Middle East. That text studies the history of the Persian Gulf both in terms of the politics of its naming, and the politics of geography. This idea, that geography is political, stands at the centre of our conversation here. With the world’s publics, news outlets and governments hyper-focused on the Strait of Hormuz, Keshavarzian is focused on helping others grasp the fact that while the strait is currently a chokepoint, it has historically been a gateway. What if international relations could be revolutionized to protect the strait with something other than drones and bombs? The weapon of multilateralism is underused, but Keshavarzian believes that it might be the most powerful way to open up new pathways to environmental protection, social vibrancy and a more inclusive model of prosperity. In his article “Iran Transformed,” he historicizes the rise of austerity economics and politics in Iran, and the ways that this funneled wealth to a ruling elite in a country already beset by sanctions and isolation. This shift to privatization and monopoly capitalism “entrenched and empowered” the ruling class “by halting the economic redistribution that had been underway prior to 2012.” Iran’s support for Palestinian liberation is a key focus here, too, as it has in many ways defined its relationships with other states in the region, especially the genocidal regime in Israel. Fundamentally, though, the interview gravitates to the question of orientalism and Islamophobia, and its geopolitical consequences. Keshavarzian insists that “depictions of the region” present it as “peripheral to world history, an endemic zone of conflict, an energy depot for expanding industrial capitalism elsewhere, or a bastion of traditional tribalism and petro-monarchies.” The world, though, is beginning to realize that it the so-called “Middle East” is a fulcrum of global politics, and a part of the Earth that much of the planet is still reliant upon, and not just for fossil energy.#straitofhormuz #oilshock #economiccrisis #globalrecession #iran #iranpolitics #iranianrevolution #persiangulf #anticolonialism #palestine #freepalestine #israel #uspolicy #usforeignpolicy #neoliberalism #waroniran #freeiran #islamophobia #orientalism #revolution

    1h 1m
  4. Apr 28

    Aaron Hagey-MacKay opines on satire as sensemaking, and scenarios where we 'bend but don't break'

    Aaron Hagey-MacKay is a Canadian satirist as a longtime writer for The Beaverton and host of ‪The Goose Media on YouTube. In a piece for The Tyee, Aaron writes that "satirists, like journalists and academics, are targeted by authoritarian bullies because satire deals with hard truths." In this conversation, he insists that, while he's not a journalist, he's invested in satire as an "anti-dominant strategy" that allows folks who care about the people and the public to "bully up," assailng the coldness and rabid individualism that have become fixtures of the Second Gilded Age. He doesn't believe that climate communicators have fully internalized the fact that we respond more to messages of affordability and generosity than stories of loss and pain -- though, he acknowledges that miserable stories of collapse and catastrophe have a way of capturing our attention. This is why he wants to tell stories where we "bend, but don't break," using humour and humility to poke holes in the absurd myopia of our chaotic moment. We've seen campaigns against more comfortable, livable ways of being from powerful interests. Forms of narrative capture that condemn us to fossil fuel dependency. That means we need more outlets like The Goose and more communicators like Hagey-MacKay, who understand that if we can make clean energy a wise choice and address people's genuine anxiety, we can radically and rapidly make climate action unremarkable and everyday. #climateaction #climatechange #climatecrisis #environment #climate #climatejustice #globalwarming #climateemergency #affordability #climateactionnow #renewableenergy #environmentalist #cleanenergy #ecology #environmentaljustice #greenenergy #satire #humour #comedy

    1h 3m
  5. Apr 2

    Wim Carton dissects the gore, gaslighting and chaotic consequences of fossil capitalism

    Wim Carton is Associate Professor of Sustainability Science at Lund University, Sweden. He's the author of over 20 academic articles and book chapters on climate politics. His work has appeared in top journals such as Nature Climate Change, WIRES Climate Change and Antipode. His book with Andreas Malm, The Long Heat: Climate Action When It's Too Late, is a study of the science and politics of geoengineering, carbon capture and "muscular" climate adaptation. The book offers what Wim calls an "event ethnography" of the people and organizations adopting tactics to fix the climate crisis, and the ways they end up fixing the status quo of climate breakdown through capitalist accumulation firmly in place. Carton and Malm learned in their research that functionaries are "very aware of the flaws and the problems" with their approach, but can't or won't abandon the assumption that the "solutions they've always believed in" will succeed, despite so much evidence that markets, private capital and the pursuit of profit are leading us into the slow violence of escalating disaster. One of the core problems is technological optimism, or the dangerous persistence of a mechanistic worldview when it comes to the way the world works. Regardless of how necessary it will be to build resilience as we hurtle into the long heat, faith in climate adaptation is strengthening as the resolve for addressing the drivers of climate change weakens. We can't allow adaptation to "substitute for dealing with the real problem." In this moment, too, we see the emergence of technologies like carbon capture and storage or geoengineering replacing and displacing the push for mitigation. Carton talks about the dark side of these technologies as forms of "reputation management" that enable further investment in fossil fuel infrastructure. The planet doesn't care if we ignore its limits. If we create an entirely new climate, we are playing with fire. Allowing the ruling classes to "look away from the suffering that is being rained down, literally, on people in Gaza, Iran and much of the Global South" will only deepen the coldness that characterizes our current age. In opposition, we need a revolutionary alternative that holds power to account, to rage against the deadly incrementalism that defers action and renders the future unlivable. In Wim's words, crises always expose "cracks in the system," and right now, in the context of an imperial war sowing chaos in the site of some of the most rapacious fossil fuel extraction, the "obvious solution is to go full-on renewable and reduce dependence" on this toxic sludge. #juststopoil #endfossilfuels #phaseout #fossilphaseout #ccus #geoengineering #climateadaptation #technologicaloptimism #technology #capitalism #endtimes #climatebreakdown #fossilcapital #climateaction #thelongheat ⁨

    55 min
  6. Mar 26

    Jeff Diamanti tracks the shockwaves disrupting the global economy as war rages on in Iran

    Jeff Diamanti is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Cultural Analysis at the University of Amsterdam and Professor of Global History of Sustainable Development at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. For over a decade he has researched and written on logistical cartographies, energy infrastructure, and political ecology. Diamanti and I discuss the reverberations in the global economy caused by Iran's shutting down of a crucial chokepoint in the arteries of fossil capitalism: the Strait of Hormuz. Jeff has seen this vital space of maritime passage with his own eyes, having visited it during a research trip alongside colleagues who were interested in the energy infrastructures that are becoming visible in this time of crisis.One of the things we focus on is the emergence of different kinds of literacy in these emergencies -- how we become more aware of the ways we're yoked to oil by an economy built around overproduction and profit, or the ways that our food is a commodity predicated on the endless supply of fossil fuel feedstocks. What those literacies look like and can translate into politically is an open question, though, as Diamanti points out, because it hinges on the simultaneous emergence of different networks of care that have largely atrophied as a result of neoliberal atomization.As war halts the flow of commodities through a key chokepoint, we can see how the disproportionate impacts are felt most acutely by the global poor. And this is why Jeff stresses that we shouldn't presume that those in power had no plan, or that they were simply unhinged in making the strategic decision to bomb thousands of sites in Iran. There is an unreasonable rationale that justifies, from their fascistic worldview, the intervention in the Middle East. Chaos is benefiting the ruling elite in settler colonial societies that have long sought to exploit destabilization and disruption. The pain this causes is precisely the point.Cynicism about secular stagnation and the termination shock of this cycle of accumulation coming to a violent close is an easy and understandable response. Against that reasonable despair, Diamanti offers anger, pointed criticism and a global perspective that sees chokepoints as important places where fossil capitalism can be contested. #iranwar #trumpwar #uswar #israel #middleeast #imposedwar #warofchoice #china #russia #oman #iran #energycrisis #capitalism #colonialism #oilshock #supplychain #straitofhormuz

    51 min
  7. Mar 22

    C. Thi Nguyen troubles the way the art of play and agency in games is co-opted & commodified

    Publisher bio and book description: C. Thi Nguyen is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Utah, and a specialist in the philosophy of games, the philosophy of technology, and the theory of value. A former food writer for the Los Angeles Times, Nguyen is active in public philosophy, writing for The New York Times, The Washington Post, New Statesman, and elsewhere. One of the leading experts on the philosophy of games and the philosophy of data, Nguyen takes us deep into the heart of games, and into the depths of bureaucracy, to see how scoring systems shape our desires. Games are the most important art form of our era. They embody the spirit of free play. They show us the subtle beauty of action everywhere in life in video games, sports, and boardgames—but also cooking, gardening, fly-fishing, and running. They remind us that it isn’t always about outcomes, but about how glorious it feels to be doing the thing. And the scoring systems help get us there, by giving us new goals to try on. Scoring systems are also at the center of our corporations and bureaucracies—in the form of metrics and rankings. They tell us exactly how to measure our success. They encourage us to outsource our values to an external authority. And they push on us to value simple, countable things. Metrics don’t capture what really matters; they only capture what’s easy to measure. The price of that clarity is our independence. https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/2288505/c-thi-nguyen/

    53 min

About

This podcast features interviews with a variety of theorists, artists and activists from across the globe. It's guided by the search for radical solutions to crises that are inherent to colonial capitalism. To this end, I hope to keep facilitating conversations that bring together perspectives on the liberatory and transformative power of care, in particular.