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{{BSZ}}
 +
 
=Is this the end of fantasy?=
 
=Is this the end of fantasy?=
 
<p>Christopher Isherwood, an Englishman who became an American, once  
 
<p>Christopher Isherwood, an Englishman who became an American, once  
              gave  
+
gave  
expression to the unreality of American daily life, exemplified in  
+
expression to the unreality of American daily [[life]], exemplified in  
            the motel room: “American motels are unreal! … They are deliberately  
+
the motel room: “American motels are unreal! … They are deliberately  
            designed to be unreal. … The Europeans hate us because we’ve retired  
+
designed to be unreal. … The Europeans [[hate]] us because we’ve retired  
            to live inside our advertisements, like hermits going into caves to  
+
to live [[inside]] our advertisements, like hermits going into caves to  
            contemplate.”  
+
contemplate.”  
            </p><p></p>
+
</p><p></p>
            <p> The Wachowski brothers’ 1999 hit film The Matrix brought this  
+
<p> The Wachowski brothers’ 1999 hit [[film]] The [[Matrix]] brought this  
              logic to its extreme climax: The material reality we all experience  
+
[[logic]] to its extreme climax: The [[material]] [[reality]] we all [[experience]]
              and see around us is a virtual one, generated and coordinated by  
+
and see around us is a [[virtual]] one, generated and coordinated by  
              a gigantic mega-computer to which we are all attached. When the  
+
a gigantic mega-computer to which we are all attached. When the  
              hero, played by Keanu Reeves, awakens into the “real reality,” he  
+
hero, played by Keanu Reeves, awakens into the “[[real]] reality,” he  
              sees a desolate landscape littered with burned ruins—what remained  
+
sees a desolate landscape littered with burned ruins—what remained  
              of Chicago after a global war. The resistance leader Morpheus utters  
+
of Chicago after a [[global]] war. The [[resistance]] [[leader]] Morpheus utters  
              the ironic greeting: “Welcome to the desert of the real.”</p>
+
the ironic greeting: “Welcome to the desert of the real.”</p>
            <p> Was it not something of a similar order that took place in New  
+
<p> Was it not something of a similar [[order]] that took [[place]] in New  
              York on September 11? As we were introduced to the “desert of the  
+
York on [[September 11]]? As we were introduced to the “desert of the  
              real,” the landscape and the shots we saw of the collapsing towers  
+
real,” the landscape and the shots we saw of the collapsing towers  
              could only remind us of the most breathtaking scenes from innumerable  
+
could only remind us of the most breathtaking scenes from innumerable  
              Hollywood disaster movies. The unthinkable had been the object of  
+
Hollywood disaster movies. The unthinkable had been the [[object]] of  
              fantasy. In a way, America got what it fantasized about, and this  
+
[[fantasy]]. In a way, America got what it fantasized [[about]], and this  
              was the greatest surprise.</p>
+
was the greatest surprise.</p>
 
 
            <p> It is precisely now, when we are dealing with the raw reality
 
              of a catastrophe, that we should bear in mind the ideological and
 
              fantasmatic coordinates that determine its perception. If there
 
              is any symbolism in the collapse of the World Trade Center, it is
 
              not that the Twin Towers stood for capitalism per se, but of virtual
 
              capitalism, of financial speculations disconnected from the sphere
 
              of material production. The towers symbolized, ultimately, the stark
 
              separation between the digitized First World and the Third World’s
 
              “desert of the real.”</p>
 
            <p> The American sphere of safety is now experienced by its citizens
 
              as being under threat from an Outside of terrorist attackers who
 
              are ruthlessly self-sacrificing and cowards, cunningly intelligent
 
              and primitive barbarians. Whenever we encounter such a purely evil
 
              Outside, we should gather the courage to remember the Hegelian lesson:
 
              In this evil Outside, we should recognize the distilled version
 
              of our own essence. For the past five centuries, the (relative)
 
              prosperity and peace of the “civilized” West was bought by the export
 
              of ruthless violence and destruction to the “savage” Outside. It’s
 
              a long story, from the conquest of America to the slaughter in Congo.</p>
 
            <p> Cruel and indifferent as it may sound, we should also, now more
 
              than ever, bear in mind that the actual effect of these attacks
 
              is much more symbolic: In Africa, every single day more people die
 
              of AIDS than all the victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center
 
              and the Pentagon, and their deaths can and could have been easily
 
              minimized with relatively small financial means. The United States
 
              got a taste of what goes on around the world on a daily basis, from
 
              Sarajevo to Grozny, from Rwanda and Congo to Sierra Leone. If one
 
              adds to the situation in New York rape gangs and a dozen or so snipers
 
              blindly targeting people who walk along the streets, one gets an
 
              idea of what Sarajevo was like a decade ago.</p>
 
            <p> Now, we are forced to strike back, to deal with real enemies in
 
              the real world … but whom to strike? Whatever the response, it
 
              will never hit the right target, bringing us full satisfaction.
 
              The spectacle of America attacking Afghanistan would be just that:
 
              If the greatest power in the world were to destroy one of the poorest
 
              countries, where peasants barely survive on barren hills, would
 
              this not be the ultimate case of the impotent acting out? Afghanistan
 
              is already reduced to rubble, destroyed by continuous war during
 
              the past two decades. The impending attack brings to mind the anecdote
 
              about the madman who searches for his lost key beneath a street
 
              light; asked why he searches there, when he actually lost the key
 
              in a dark corner, he answers: “But it is easier to search under
 
              strong light!” Is it not the ultimate irony that Kabul already looks
 
              like downtown Manhattan?</p>
 
            <p> To succumb to the urge to retaliate now means precisely to avoid
 
              confronting the true dimensions of what occurred on September 11—it
 
              means an act whose true aim is to lull us into the secure conviction
 
              that nothing has really changed. The true long-term threats are
 
              further acts of mass terror in comparison to which the memory of
 
              the World Trade Center collapse will pale—acts less spectacular,
 
              but much more horrifying. What about biological warfare, the use
 
              of lethal gas or the prospect of DNA terrorism—the development
 
              of poisons that will affect only people who share a determinate
 
              genome? Instead of a quick acting out, one should confront these
 
              difficult questions: What will “war” mean in the 21st century? Who
 
              will be “them”?</p>
 
  
            <p> There is a partial truth in the notion of a “clash of civilizations”
+
<p> It is precisely now, when we are dealing with the raw reality
              attested here. Witness the surprise of the average American: “How
+
of a catastrophe, that we should bear in [[mind]] the [[ideological]] and
              is it possible that these people display and practice such a disregard
+
[[fantasmatic]] coordinates that determine its [[perception]]. If there
              for their own lives?” Is the obverse of this surprise not the rather
+
is any [[symbolism]] in the collapse of the [[World]] Trade Center, it is
              sad fact that we, in the First World countries, find it more and  
+
not that the Twin Towers stood for [[capitalism]] per se, but of virtual
              more difficult even to imagine a public or universal cause for which
+
capitalism, of financial speculations [[disconnected]] from the sphere
              one would be ready to sacrifice one’s life?</p>
+
of material production. The towers [[symbolized]], ultimately, the stark
            <p> But a brief look at the comparative history of Islam and Christianity
+
[[separation]] between the digitized First World and the [[Third]] World’s
              tells us that the “human rights record” (to use an anachronistic
+
“desert of the real.”</p>
              term) of Islam is much better than that of Christianity: In past  
+
<p> The American sphere of safety is now experienced by its citizens
              centuries, Islam was significantly more tolerant toward other religions
+
as [[being]] under [[threat]] from an [[Outside]] of terrorist attackers who
              than Christianity. It was through the Arabs that, in the Middle
+
are ruthlessly [[self]]-sacrificing and cowards, cunningly intelligent
              Ages, Western Europeans regained access to the ancient Greek legacy.  
+
and [[primitive]] barbarians. Whenever we [[encounter]] such a purely [[evil]]
              We are not dealing with a feature inscribed into Islam as such,  
+
Outside, we should gather the courage to [[remember]] the [[Hegelian]] lesson:
              but with the outcome of modern socio-political conditions. This
+
In this evil Outside, we should recognize the distilled version
              notion of the “clash of civilizations” has to be thoroughly rejected:
+
of our own [[essence]]. For the [[past]] five centuries, the (relative)
              What we are witnessing today are rather clashes within each civilization.</p>
+
prosperity and peace of the “civilized” West was bought by the export
            <p> Indeed, every feature attributed to the Outside is already present
+
of ruthless [[violence]] and [[destruction]] to the “savage” Outside. It’s
              in the very heart of the United States. Murderous fanaticism? What
+
a long story, from the conquest of America to the slaughter in Congo.</p>
              about the rightist, populist “fundamentalists” who also practice
+
<p> Cruel and indifferent as it may sound, we should also, now more
              a terror of their own, legitimized by (their understanding of) Christianity?
+
than ever, bear in mind that the actual effect of these attacks
              Since America is in a way “harboring” them, should the U.S. Army
+
is much more [[symbolic]]: In Africa, every single day more [[people]] die
              have punished its own country after the Oklahoma City bombing? And
+
of AIDS than all the victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center
              what about the way Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson reacted to the
+
and the Pentagon, and their deaths can and could have been easily
              attacks on September 11, perceiving them as a sign that God had
+
minimized with relatively small financial means. The [[United States]]
              lifted his protection because of the sinful lives of Americans,
+
got a taste of what goes on around the world on a daily basis, from
              putting the blame on hedonist materialism, liberalism and rampant
+
Sarajevo to Grozny, from Rwanda and Congo to Sierra Leone. If one
              sexuality, and claiming that America got what it deserved?</p>
+
adds to the [[situation]] in New York rape gangs and a dozen or so snipers
            <p> It is still too early to tell how the events of September 11 will
+
blindly targeting people who walk along the streets, one gets an
              be symbolized or what acts they will be evoked to justify. Even
+
[[idea]] of what Sarajevo was like a decade ago.</p>
              now, in these moments of utmost tension, this link is not automatic
+
<p> Now, we are [[forced]] to strike back, to deal with real enemies in
              but contingent. We already see the first bad omens, like the sudden
+
the real world … but whom to strike? Whatever the response, it
              resurrection, in the public discourse, of the old Cold War term
+
will never hit the [[right]] target, bringing us [[full]] [[satisfaction]].  
              “free world”: The struggle is now the one between the “free world”
+
The [[spectacle]] of America attacking Afghanistan would be just that:
              and the forces of darkness and terror. The question to be asked  
+
If the greatest [[power]] in the world were to destroy one of the poorest
              here is: Who then belongs to the unfree world? Are, say, China or
+
countries, where peasants barely survive on barren hills, would
              Egypt part of this free world?</p>
+
this not be the ultimate [[case]] of the impotent [[acting out]]? Afghanistan
            <p> The day after the attacks, I got a message from a journal that
+
is already reduced to rubble, destroyed by continuous war during
              was just about to publish a longer text of mine on Lenin, telling
+
the past two decades. The impending attack brings to mind the anecdote
              me that they decided to postpone its publication—they considered
+
about the madman who searches for his lost key beneath a street
              it inopportune to publish a text on Lenin immediately after the  
+
light; asked why he searches there, when he actually lost the key
              terrorist attacks. Does this point toward ominous ideological rearticulations
+
in a dark corner, he answers: “But it is easier to [[search]] under
              to come, with a new Berufsverbot (prohibition to employ radicals)
+
strong light!” Is it not the ultimate irony that Kabul already looks
              much stronger and more widespread than the one in the Germany of
+
like downtown Manhattan?</p>
              the ’70s? </p>
+
<p> To succumb to the urge to retaliate now means precisely to avoid
 +
confronting the [[true]] dimensions of what occurred on September 11—it
 +
means an act whose true aim is to lull us into the secure conviction
 +
that [[nothing]] has really changed. The true long-term [[threats]] are
 +
further [[acts]] of mass [[terror]] in comparison to which the [[memory]] of
 +
the World Trade Center collapse will pale—acts less spectacular,  
 +
but much more horrifying. What about [[biological]] warfare, the use
 +
of lethal gas or the prospect of DNA terrorism—the [[development]]
 +
of poisons that will [[affect]] only people who share a determinate
 +
genome? Instead of a quick acting out, one should confront these
 +
difficult questions: What will “war” mean in the 21st century? Who
 +
will be “them”?</p>
  
            <p> These days, one often hears the phrase that the struggle is now
+
<p> There is a [[partial]] [[truth]] in the [[notion]] of a “clash of civilizations”
              the one for democracy—true, but not quite in the way this phrase
+
attested here. [[Witness]] the surprise of the average American: “How
              is usually meant. Already, some leftist friends of mine have written
+
is it possible that these people display and [[practice]] such a disregard
              me that, in these difficult moments, we had better keep our heads
+
for their own lives?” Is the obverse of this surprise not the rather
              down and not push forward with our agenda. Against this temptation
+
sad fact that we, in the First World countries, find it more and  
              to duck out the crisis, one should insist that now the left should
+
more difficult even to imagine a [[public]] or [[universal]] [[cause]] for which
              provide a better analysis. To not do so is to concede in advance
+
one would be ready to sacrifice one’s life?</p>
              the left’s political and ethical defeat in the face of acts of quite
+
<p> But a brief look at the comparative [[history]] of [[Islam]] and [[Christianity]]
              genuine heroism on the part of ordinary people—like the passengers
+
tells us that the “[[human]] rights record” (to use an anachronistic
              who, in a model of rational ethical action, apparently overtook
+
term) of Islam is much better than that of Christianity: In past
              the hijackers and provoked the early crash of the fourth plane over
+
centuries, Islam was significantly more tolerant toward [[other]] [[religions]]
              Pennsylvania.</p>
+
than Christianity. It was through the Arabs that, in the Middle
            <p> So what about the phrase that reverberates everywhere, “Nothing
+
Ages, Western Europeans regained access to the ancient Greek legacy.
              will be the same after September 11”? Significantly, this phrase
+
We are not dealing with a feature inscribed into Islam as such,  
              is never further elaborated—it’s just an empty gesture of saying
+
but with the outcome of modern socio-[[political]] [[conditions]]. This
              something “deep” without really knowing what we want to say. So
+
notion of the “clash of civilizations” has to be thoroughly rejected:
              our reaction to this phrase should be: Really? Or is it rather that
+
What we are witnessing today are rather clashes within each [[civilization]].</p>
              the only thing effectively changed was that America was forced to
+
<p> Indeed, every feature attributed to the Outside is already [[present]]
              realize the kind of world it is part of?</p>
+
in the very heart of the United States. Murderous fanaticism? What
            <p> Such changes in perception are never without consequences, since
+
about the rightist, populist “fundamentalists” who also practice
              the way we perceive our situation determines the way we act in it.  
+
a terror of their own, legitimized by (their [[understanding]] of) Christianity?  
              Recall the processes of collapse of a political regime—say,
+
Since America is in a way “harboring” [[them]], should the U.S. [[Army]]
              the collapse of the Communist regimes in Eastern Europe. At a certain
+
have punished its own country after the Oklahoma City bombing? And
              moment, people all of a sudden became aware that the game was over,  
+
what about the way Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson reacted to the  
              that the Communists had lost. The break was purely symbolic, nothing
+
attacks on September 11, perceiving them as a [[sign]] that God had
              changed “in reality”—and, nonetheless, from that moment on,
+
lifted his protection because of the sinful lives of Americans,  
              the final collapse of the regime was just a question of days.</p>
+
putting the blame on hedonist [[materialism]], [[liberalism]] and rampant
            <p> What if something of the same order did occur on September 11?
+
[[sexuality]], and claiming that America got what it deserved?</p>
              We don’t yet know what consequences in economy, ideology, politics
+
<p> It is still too early to tell how the events of September 11 will
              and war this event will have, but one thing is sure: The United
+
be symbolized or what acts they will be evoked to justify. Even
              States, which, until now, perceived itself as an island exempted
+
now, in these moments of utmost tension, this link is not automatic
              from this kind of violence, witnessing these kind of things only
+
but [[contingent]]. We already see the first bad omens, like the sudden
              from the safe distance of a TV screen, is now directly involved.
+
resurrection, in the public [[discourse]], of the old [[Cold War]] term
              So the question is: Will Americans decide to further fortify their
+
“free world”: The [[struggle]] is now the one between the “free world”
              sphere, or risk stepping out of it? America has two choices. It
+
and the forces of darkness and terror. The question to be asked
              can persist in or even amplify its deeply immoral attitude of “Why
+
here is: Who then belongs to the unfree world? Are, say, China or
              should this happen to us? Things like this don’t happen here,” leading
+
Egypt part of this free world?</p>
              to even more aggression toward the Outside—just like a paranoiac
+
<p> The day after the attacks, I got a [[message]] from a journal that
              acting out. Or America can finally risk stepping through the fantasmatic
+
was just about to publish a longer [[text]] of mine on [[Lenin]], telling
              screen separating it from the Outside world, accepting its arrival
+
me that they decided to postpone its publication—they considered
              into the desert of the real—and thus make the long-overdue
+
it inopportune to publish a text on Lenin immediately after the  
              move from “A thing like this should not happen here” to “A thing
+
terrorist attacks. Does this point toward ominous ideological rearticulations
              like this should not happen anywhere!”</p>
+
to come, with a new Berufsverbot ([[prohibition]] to employ radicals)
            <p> Therein resides the true lesson of the attacks: The only way to  
+
much stronger and more widespread than the one in the [[Germany]] of  
              ensure that it will not happen here again is to prevent it from
+
the ’70s? </p>
              going on anywhere else. America should learn to humbly accept its
 
              own vulnerability as part of this world, enacting the punishment
 
              of those responsible as a sad duty, not as an exhilarating retaliation.
 
              Even though America’s peace was bought by the catastrophes going
 
              on elsewhere, the predominant point of view remains that of an innocent
 
              gaze confronting unspeakable evil that struck from the Outside.  
 
              One needs to gather the courage to recognize that the seed of evil
 
              is within us too.</p>
 
  
            <p> In his campaign for the presidency, George W. Bush named Jesus
+
<p> These days, one often hears the phrase that the struggle is now
              Christ as the most important person in his life. Now he has a unique
+
the one for democracy—true, but not quite in the way this phrase
              chance to prove that he meant it seriously. For him, as for all
+
is usually meant. Already, some [[leftist]] friends of mine have written
              Americans today, “Love thy neighbor” means “Love the Muslims.” Or
+
me that, in these difficult moments, we had better keep our heads
              it means nothing at all.
+
down and not push forward with our agenda. Against this temptation
 +
to duck out the crisis, one should insist that now the [[left]] should
 +
provide a better [[analysis]]. To not do so is to concede in advance
 +
the left’s political and [[ethical]] defeat in the face of acts of quite
 +
genuine heroism on the part of ordinary people—like the passengers
 +
who, in a [[model]] of [[rational]] ethical [[action]], apparently overtook
 +
the hijackers and provoked the early crash of the fourth plane over
 +
Pennsylvania.</p>
 +
<p> So what about the phrase that reverberates everywhere, “Nothing
 +
will be the same after September 11”? Significantly, this phrase
 +
is never further elaborated—it’s just an [[empty gesture]] of saying
 +
something “deep” without really [[knowing]] what we [[want]] to say. So
 +
our reaction to this phrase should be: Really? Or is it rather that
 +
the only [[thing]] effectively changed was that America was forced to
 +
realize the kind of world it is part of?</p>
 +
<p> Such changes in perception are never without consequences, since
 +
the way we perceive our situation determines the way we act in it.  
 +
[[Recall]] the [[processes]] of collapse of a political regime—say,
 +
the collapse of the [[Communist]] regimes in Eastern [[Europe]]. At a certain
 +
[[moment]], people all of a sudden became aware that the [[game]] was over,
 +
that the Communists had lost. The break was purely symbolic, nothing
 +
changed “in reality”—and, nonetheless, from that moment on,
 +
the final collapse of the [[regime]] was just a question of days.</p>
 +
<p> What if something of the same order did occur on September 11?
 +
We don’t yet [[know]] what consequences in [[economy]], [[ideology]], [[politics]]
 +
and war this [[event]] will have, but one thing is sure: The United
 +
States, which, until now, perceived itself as an island exempted
 +
from this kind of violence, witnessing these kind of things only
 +
from the safe distance of a TV [[screen]], is now directly involved.
 +
So the question is: Will Americans decide to further fortify their
 +
sphere, or risk stepping out of it? America has two choices. It
 +
can persist in or even amplify its deeply immoral attitude of “Why
 +
should this happen to us? Things like this don’t happen here,” leading
 +
to even more [[aggression]] toward the Outside—just like a [[paranoiac]]
 +
acting out. Or America can finally risk stepping through the fantasmatic
 +
screen separating it from the Outside world, accepting its arrival
 +
into the desert of the real—and thus make the long-overdue
 +
move from “A thing like this should not happen here” to “A thing
 +
like this should not happen anywhere!</p>
 +
<p> Therein resides the true lesson of the attacks: The only way to
 +
ensure that it will not happen here again is to prevent it from
 +
going on anywhere else. America should learn to humbly accept its
 +
own vulnerability as part of this world, enacting the [[punishment]]
 +
of those [[responsible]] as a sad [[duty]], not as an exhilarating retaliation.
 +
Even though America’s peace was bought by the catastrophes going
 +
on elsewhere, the predominant point of view remains that of an innocent
 +
[[gaze]] confronting unspeakable evil that struck from the Outside.
 +
One [[needs]] to gather the courage to recognize that the seed of evil
 +
is within us too.</p>
  
http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/1588/
+
<p> In his campaign for the presidency, George W. [[Bush]] named [[Jesus]]
 +
[[Christ]] as the most important person in his life. Now he has a unique
 +
[[chance]] to prove that he meant it seriously. For him, as for all
 +
Americans today, “[[Love]] thy neighbor” means “Love the Muslims.” Or
 +
it means nothing at all.
  
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==Source==
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* [[The Desert of the Real]]. ''In These [[Times]]''. October 29, 2001. <http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/1588/>
  
  

Latest revision as of 00:36, 21 May 2019

Articles by Slavoj Žižek

Is this the end of fantasy?

Christopher Isherwood, an Englishman who became an American, once gave expression to the unreality of American daily life, exemplified in the motel room: “American motels are unreal! … They are deliberately designed to be unreal. … The Europeans hate us because we’ve retired to live inside our advertisements, like hermits going into caves to contemplate.”

The Wachowski brothers’ 1999 hit film The Matrix brought this logic to its extreme climax: The material reality we all experience and see around us is a virtual one, generated and coordinated by a gigantic mega-computer to which we are all attached. When the hero, played by Keanu Reeves, awakens into the “real reality,” he sees a desolate landscape littered with burned ruins—what remained of Chicago after a global war. The resistance leader Morpheus utters the ironic greeting: “Welcome to the desert of the real.”

Was it not something of a similar order that took place in New York on September 11? As we were introduced to the “desert of the real,” the landscape and the shots we saw of the collapsing towers could only remind us of the most breathtaking scenes from innumerable Hollywood disaster movies. The unthinkable had been the object of fantasy. In a way, America got what it fantasized about, and this was the greatest surprise.

It is precisely now, when we are dealing with the raw reality of a catastrophe, that we should bear in mind the ideological and fantasmatic coordinates that determine its perception. If there is any symbolism in the collapse of the World Trade Center, it is not that the Twin Towers stood for capitalism per se, but of virtual capitalism, of financial speculations disconnected from the sphere of material production. The towers symbolized, ultimately, the stark separation between the digitized First World and the Third World’s “desert of the real.”

The American sphere of safety is now experienced by its citizens as being under threat from an Outside of terrorist attackers who are ruthlessly self-sacrificing and cowards, cunningly intelligent and primitive barbarians. Whenever we encounter such a purely evil Outside, we should gather the courage to remember the Hegelian lesson: In this evil Outside, we should recognize the distilled version of our own essence. For the past five centuries, the (relative) prosperity and peace of the “civilized” West was bought by the export of ruthless violence and destruction to the “savage” Outside. It’s a long story, from the conquest of America to the slaughter in Congo.

Cruel and indifferent as it may sound, we should also, now more than ever, bear in mind that the actual effect of these attacks is much more symbolic: In Africa, every single day more people die of AIDS than all the victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and their deaths can and could have been easily minimized with relatively small financial means. The United States got a taste of what goes on around the world on a daily basis, from Sarajevo to Grozny, from Rwanda and Congo to Sierra Leone. If one adds to the situation in New York rape gangs and a dozen or so snipers blindly targeting people who walk along the streets, one gets an idea of what Sarajevo was like a decade ago.

Now, we are forced to strike back, to deal with real enemies in the real world … but whom to strike? Whatever the response, it will never hit the right target, bringing us full satisfaction. The spectacle of America attacking Afghanistan would be just that: If the greatest power in the world were to destroy one of the poorest countries, where peasants barely survive on barren hills, would this not be the ultimate case of the impotent acting out? Afghanistan is already reduced to rubble, destroyed by continuous war during the past two decades. The impending attack brings to mind the anecdote about the madman who searches for his lost key beneath a street light; asked why he searches there, when he actually lost the key in a dark corner, he answers: “But it is easier to search under strong light!” Is it not the ultimate irony that Kabul already looks like downtown Manhattan?

To succumb to the urge to retaliate now means precisely to avoid confronting the true dimensions of what occurred on September 11—it means an act whose true aim is to lull us into the secure conviction that nothing has really changed. The true long-term threats are further acts of mass terror in comparison to which the memory of the World Trade Center collapse will pale—acts less spectacular, but much more horrifying. What about biological warfare, the use of lethal gas or the prospect of DNA terrorism—the development of poisons that will affect only people who share a determinate genome? Instead of a quick acting out, one should confront these difficult questions: What will “war” mean in the 21st century? Who will be “them”?

There is a partial truth in the notion of a “clash of civilizations” attested here. Witness the surprise of the average American: “How is it possible that these people display and practice such a disregard for their own lives?” Is the obverse of this surprise not the rather sad fact that we, in the First World countries, find it more and more difficult even to imagine a public or universal cause for which one would be ready to sacrifice one’s life?

But a brief look at the comparative history of Islam and Christianity tells us that the “human rights record” (to use an anachronistic term) of Islam is much better than that of Christianity: In past centuries, Islam was significantly more tolerant toward other religions than Christianity. It was through the Arabs that, in the Middle Ages, Western Europeans regained access to the ancient Greek legacy. We are not dealing with a feature inscribed into Islam as such, but with the outcome of modern socio-political conditions. This notion of the “clash of civilizations” has to be thoroughly rejected: What we are witnessing today are rather clashes within each civilization.

Indeed, every feature attributed to the Outside is already present in the very heart of the United States. Murderous fanaticism? What about the rightist, populist “fundamentalists” who also practice a terror of their own, legitimized by (their understanding of) Christianity? Since America is in a way “harboring” them, should the U.S. Army have punished its own country after the Oklahoma City bombing? And what about the way Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson reacted to the attacks on September 11, perceiving them as a sign that God had lifted his protection because of the sinful lives of Americans, putting the blame on hedonist materialism, liberalism and rampant sexuality, and claiming that America got what it deserved?

It is still too early to tell how the events of September 11 will be symbolized or what acts they will be evoked to justify. Even now, in these moments of utmost tension, this link is not automatic but contingent. We already see the first bad omens, like the sudden resurrection, in the public discourse, of the old Cold War term “free world”: The struggle is now the one between the “free world” and the forces of darkness and terror. The question to be asked here is: Who then belongs to the unfree world? Are, say, China or Egypt part of this free world?

The day after the attacks, I got a message from a journal that was just about to publish a longer text of mine on Lenin, telling me that they decided to postpone its publication—they considered it inopportune to publish a text on Lenin immediately after the terrorist attacks. Does this point toward ominous ideological rearticulations to come, with a new Berufsverbot (prohibition to employ radicals) much stronger and more widespread than the one in the Germany of the ’70s?

These days, one often hears the phrase that the struggle is now the one for democracy—true, but not quite in the way this phrase is usually meant. Already, some leftist friends of mine have written me that, in these difficult moments, we had better keep our heads down and not push forward with our agenda. Against this temptation to duck out the crisis, one should insist that now the left should provide a better analysis. To not do so is to concede in advance the left’s political and ethical defeat in the face of acts of quite genuine heroism on the part of ordinary people—like the passengers who, in a model of rational ethical action, apparently overtook the hijackers and provoked the early crash of the fourth plane over Pennsylvania.

So what about the phrase that reverberates everywhere, “Nothing will be the same after September 11”? Significantly, this phrase is never further elaborated—it’s just an empty gesture of saying something “deep” without really knowing what we want to say. So our reaction to this phrase should be: Really? Or is it rather that the only thing effectively changed was that America was forced to realize the kind of world it is part of?

Such changes in perception are never without consequences, since the way we perceive our situation determines the way we act in it. Recall the processes of collapse of a political regime—say, the collapse of the Communist regimes in Eastern Europe. At a certain moment, people all of a sudden became aware that the game was over, that the Communists had lost. The break was purely symbolic, nothing changed “in reality”—and, nonetheless, from that moment on, the final collapse of the regime was just a question of days.

What if something of the same order did occur on September 11? We don’t yet know what consequences in economy, ideology, politics and war this event will have, but one thing is sure: The United States, which, until now, perceived itself as an island exempted from this kind of violence, witnessing these kind of things only from the safe distance of a TV screen, is now directly involved. So the question is: Will Americans decide to further fortify their sphere, or risk stepping out of it? America has two choices. It can persist in or even amplify its deeply immoral attitude of “Why should this happen to us? Things like this don’t happen here,” leading to even more aggression toward the Outside—just like a paranoiac acting out. Or America can finally risk stepping through the fantasmatic screen separating it from the Outside world, accepting its arrival into the desert of the real—and thus make the long-overdue move from “A thing like this should not happen here” to “A thing like this should not happen anywhere!”

Therein resides the true lesson of the attacks: The only way to ensure that it will not happen here again is to prevent it from going on anywhere else. America should learn to humbly accept its own vulnerability as part of this world, enacting the punishment of those responsible as a sad duty, not as an exhilarating retaliation. Even though America’s peace was bought by the catastrophes going on elsewhere, the predominant point of view remains that of an innocent gaze confronting unspeakable evil that struck from the Outside. One needs to gather the courage to recognize that the seed of evil is within us too.

In his campaign for the presidency, George W. Bush named Jesus Christ as the most important person in his life. Now he has a unique chance to prove that he meant it seriously. For him, as for all Americans today, “Love thy neighbor” means “Love the Muslims.” Or it means nothing at all.

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