đŽ Only the Impossible Is Possible Now
In the late nineteenth century, a young Jewish intellectual called Lev Shestov was kidnapped for several months. Every day he thought he would be killed. When he was finally released, he spent the rest of his life ridiculing the liberal illusion that we can know anything for certain about anything.
Or, as a climate scientist recently put it in response to the âdead as a doornailâ 1.5C target, âYou shouldnât ask scientists how to galvanize the world because clearly we donât have a fucking clue.â
In other news, Trump has been re-elected. The outgoing Democratic administration oversaw the greatest-ever increase in US oil and gas production. The devil and the deep blue sea, as you might say. Over in Valencia, 100,000 scrap cars are clogging rivers after the floods, and 100,000 people in the street protests are understandably getting angry. Meanwhile, in The Guardian, the ever-cheerful Ed Miliband tells us we need to âkeep 1.5°C alive.â Good luck with that, Ed.
Hereâs another statistic to chew over: 52% of Hispanics voted for Trump. The only group to vote in greater numbers for the Democrats this election, compared to the last, were white college-educated people. Telling, isnât it? Iâve been saying for a while now that people need to get out there and do some door-knocking. But very few peopleâespecially white, college-educated onesâwant actually to talk to real people. Much better to stay on social media and moan about Trump. Depression can be delicious, can it not?
And thatâs all you need to know about why, at present, the fascists are going to win. And when they do, a lot more people are going to be kidnapped like Lev Shestovâand worse.
When I get out of this place (prison, that is), Iâll be straight on the road, speaking to people around the country. I might call it The Fanatic Tour. The judge at my trial called me a fanatic for giving a Zoom talk on why itâs not a good idea to let the elites destroy the birthright of our children. And who am I to argue with a British judge? Iâll tell people itâs âdoor-knocking or death.â Not quite as catchy as âLiberty or Death,â but just as fundamental. Unless we get out and listen to peopleâs angerâand create spaces where that anger can be expressed without judgement in local assembliesâthen the impossible is going to happen.
As the great AIDS activist Larry Kramer famously shouted: âIf you donât get on the streets, youâre gonna fucking die.â Whatâs new?
Except this time it wonât just be emaciated young gay men dying in their shit along hospital corridors. Itâll be everyone. Me, writing thisâand yes, you, reading it. Iâm 58. By the time Iâm 75, my generation will be nicely entering the time of their dying as we fly past 2°C and up to 3°C. According to the science papers, a billion people will be on the move. The NHS getting even more âoverstretchedâ is a reasonable prediction, donât you think? Even more bodies in the corridors. Our bodies.
Hereâs the thing about the climate crisis: itâs going to hurt you. Physically. As someone whoâs been on two hunger strikes, I can report that not having food to eat hurtsâa lot. Then thereâs the nausea. Friends of the Earth wonât tell you about that bit, will they? Not great for the revenue stream.
And then thereâs the matter of the fascists getting into power. Less said about that the better. Pass the tea, please.
The difference between Trump and Harris is that Trump takes you over the cliff with joy for making America great again, while Harris takes you over the cliff with joy for reasons she never made clear. Are you surprised people opted for fascism?
Saying that âonly the impossible is possible nowâ wasnât some clever bit of messaging to get you to read this article. All futures are now, actually, impossible. The impossibility of fascism. The impossibility of creating an alternative that isnât Harris. The impossibility of getting people to do that door-knocking. So, which impossibility is it going to be? What will happen?
Shestovâs generation had to deal with liberalismâs sick joke of the First World War: the trenches, the body parts, the doomed youth. All of it. We are about to face our own sick joke of liberalismâand our own sleepless nights.
The forgotten thinkers of the dark valley of the interwar years will come back into fashion. And weâll find, as that generation did, that only those who face the world as it is will make it through.
Well done, by the way, to those of you whoâve got this far in reading this article. Those who bury their heads in the sands of social media silos wonât see the boot coming when it smashes down on their face. That was Orwellâs image in 1984âwhat happens when you ignore your moral and political responsibilities? When you canât get off your arse and do your sacred democratic duty on a drizzly Thursday evening and listen to your fellow human beings on their doorsteps.
So, as I say: itâs door-knocking or death. Not old-style door-knockingâa quick transactional pitch to get out the vote at election time. But door-knocking where you listen, and they talk. And a bunch of other things to create the âimpossibleâ world we want rather than the âimpossibleâ world we donât want.
Iâll go through more details about this in next monthâs piece. In the meantime, I humbly suggest you donât avoid your own dark night of the soul. In the deepest depths of your despair, remember: only when you go through the burning of your entitled ego will you be useful in the struggles to come. And only then will you be of any use to yourself.