By the way, that sentence is not an attack on NRx, but a proof of one of its principles—that homogeneity is useful.
Well, yes, I’ve been saying this from the beginning—the word “neoreaction” fucked everything up. If you don’t have a word for the whole cluster, each point can be argued; if you do, pro- and anti- become two factions, and you get the usual factional conflicts.
In particular, the strategy I suspect Nick Land was playing by was a mistake. Trying to create a faction and make it as loud as possible works in academia; not so much anywhere else.
Well, yes, I’ve been saying this from the beginning—the word “neoreaction” fucked everything up. If you don’t have a word for the whole cluster, each point can be argued; if you do, pro- and anti- become two factions, and you get the usual factional conflicts.
In particular, the strategy I suspect Nick Land was playing by was a mistake. Trying to create a faction and make it as loud as possible works in academia; not so much anywhere else.
It’s the SOP for politics. “When bad men combine, the good must associate.” (Edmund Burke, 1770)
How many successful political factions have gone out and given themselves names, and how many were only named by their enemies?
What, for example, do the ‘cultural Marxists’ call themselves?