If youβre starting up a political movement and want to get the asses into the seats — and then out into the streets — itβs helpful to have a stirring manifesto.
Hereβs the opening of the Communist Manifesto.
A spectre is haunting Europe β the spectre of communism. All the powers of old Europe have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this spectre: Pope and Tsar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and German police-spies.
Thatβs pretty good, you gotta admit. Like the start of an action movie.
And then thereβs the classic opening of our own Declaration of Independence. Not quite as dramatic, but pretty damn stately. It starts off with all that “[w]hen in the Course of human events” stuff, and then, BAM:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
That is, like, really quotable and shit.
Well, our old friend Fidelbogen has been doing some manifesto writing of his own. Letβs see how his new manifesto stands up against these classics.
The Manifesto of Coalition JS38
JS38 – Operational Overview
JS38 is a coalition of politically conscious non-feminist groups and individuals. The name itself is a random character string which serves only as an identification tag. As a project, JS38 is designed to overcome the problems which labels often generate – such problems as branding, false grouping, conflation, stereotypification, message degradation and the like.
What What WHAT?! You’ve named your movement after A RANDOM CHARACTER STRING?
Fidelbogen apparently thinks heβs writing a manifesto for robots.
Letβs see if he can pick up the pace a bit in the second paragraph:
We recognize that we are in a contest to sway hearts and minds.
Yeah, nothing wins hearts and minds faster than random character strings.
We recognize that this contest is played out on the field of public rhetoric – by which we mean things popularly said and heard. We strive, accordingly, to craft a message as well as we are able.
Dude, I hate to break it to you, but you are about as talented at crafting messages as I am at ballet dancing.Β The difference between the two of us is that I don’t post videos of myself trying to ballet dance on the internet, while you have a blog entirely — if inadvertently — devoted to documenting your failures to “craft messages” with any kind of skill. (And of course there’s your amazing Twitter account.)
The operation of JS38 will boost and clarify the signal of our selected message and cut through the background noise. In this way, the message will gain a more individuated presence within the public discourse.
Uh, see what I mean? Then Fidey, having set forth no reasons whatsoever for anyone to get involved in his little project, gets into the nitty-gritty of how it will work:
Members of JS38 (called “signatories”) are aligned with each other under the terms of a Prime Constitution – a list of points that encompass a mission, a code of principles, and a practical worldview.
He continues on in this fashion for approximately one million words (rough estimate). Here are some more snippets, to give you a flavor:
JS38 is neither a moral collective nor an organization in any sense, but only a joint intellectual effort to distill a message signal, and to differentiate this from what other feminist-averse groups and individuals are transmitting.Β …
If we establish that an octagon is an eight-sided geometrical figure, the truth of that message remains uncompromised by the messenger. Even if Stalin or Caligula declared that an octagon was an eight-sided geometrical figure, it would not become a nine-sided or seven-sided figure. …
The points in the Prime Constitution are not listed in order of priority, and there is no linear progression of ideas from one item to the next. However, the items do form a loose holographic unity.Β …
Ideally, every sub-constitution would list its entire chain of linkages, leading eventually back to the Prime Constitution, which is deemed canonical. In the end, this would generate a pyramidal structure of variations which cascade from the Prime Constitution. …
We value self-containment and aplomb in our spoken and written communications. Furthermore, we believe it is good practice to “think like a lawyer.” …
We define our method as query-based rather than theory-based – although it is true that we theorize. But feminism owes us answers, and not the reverse. Thus, if we declare that “feminism is x”, we are expecting proof that feminism is NOT x, and shall expect our concerns to be sensitively and respectfully addressed. …
If a particular idea is not expressly stated in this document, it cannot be attributed to the document. Equally, however, it cannot be said that the document excludes it. …
We seek to bring about a decolonization of the non-feminist mind. To that end, we claim an epistemic standpoint independent of feminist discourse, and from said standpoint we develop a counter-discourse. …
We assert the prerogative to define feminism in absolute terms in the light of our own study, regardless of feminist objection to such a proceeding. Simply put, feminism categorically IS what WE say it is. …
We assert that feminism is like a product that must be sold, and that nobody is obligated to buy. …
Iβm thinking that Fidelbogenβs He Man Antifeminism ClubΒ 4NtevaSh — sorry, βCoalition JS38β — isnβt going to be making a lot of sales itself.
http://www.feministborg.com/
p.s. My vote is for Manboobz: the Magazining as the tag line.
I like the idea of making Feminist Borg a separate entity from Manboobz. Someone (Argent?) came up with “Assimilate or be mocked.” I like that, personally.
Sorry, I’m a trifle distracted today.
My tagline contribution: “YOU WILL BE EDUCATED!”
serrana – I don’t get emails when there’s comments that need to be approved for my (other) blog. If you log in, there’s a counter at the top sidebar where it tells you how many comments need to be approved.
It looks like this: http://i.imgur.com/KHda11o.png
(I highlighted it in red.)
Seconding that!
Oh, okay. Assimilate or be mocked goes along with the blog’s name very well.
Alice, I have a wordpress blog too, and I do get emails for comments and trackbacks needing approval. (I’m on WordPress.org and using the Jetpack plugin.) I’m just wondering what Argenti’s plans and what other people’s thoughts are regarding email notifications.
I’m with “assimilate or be mocked” too. I want to make a little survey post for “which cyborg critters do you want?” plus a fundraising bar so people know how many critters have been funded, and a Paypal Donate button if folks want more. How does that sounds to folks?
Thirding! If we create an About page, I think we should mention that the original founders met in the comments at Manboobz but that we’re not affiliated. That will help explain any in-jokes that creep in (because you know they’re going to.)
Just proofread you post, toujoursgai – I found one missing letter and nothing else! π
Would Blanche from Streetcar Named Desire fit in the first category?
Nice posts, Alice and toujoursgai! =D This blog is going to be great.
Thanks, kittehserf and Ally S!
@ kittehserf – I totally think she would, but I’ve never actually seen A Streetcar Named Desire, so that’s just based on what I’ve heard about her secondhand.
Ah, gotcha. The description made me think of her straight away – I haven’t seen any of the other films. π
I reckon this one’s ready to post!
kittehs – I’d also add that Blanche from A Streetcar Named Desire intentionally deludes herself because she can’t handle the fact that she’s not as gentile as she thinks she is, but she does somewhat fit the first description.
*from my recollection of A Streetcar Named Desire, since I read it when I was in 9th grade*
toujoursgai – I checked the post too, it looks really good. π
toujoursgai — Silly is for the manboobz snark, the stuff we’re going to try not to let infest our semi-serious site. So idk, make a category under serious for sarcasm?
Oh, and the tag cloud excludes anything ever used on a silly post, so try not to tag mockery of AVfM as feminism or anything like that.
I wasn’t the one who came up with “Assimilate or be Mocked” but I like it. Now, is it down for everyone or just me? >.<
Oh good, it's just me. Fascinating that is.
Cassandra, cloudiah, I'll get you guys added tomorrow since it oughta work at the shop. As for email notifications I, uh, have a plan. I'll email y'all.
Somebody go ahead and create that about page π
Note to self, dear gods do I need a mobile version, some things are FUCKED UP.
Thanks, Alice!
I went ahead and posted it.
Argenti – I was going to say, except that I forgot. I think I was more amused than anything though when I saw the mess it made on my iDevice. π
I know I’m a bit late, but I think it would be nice to have something to give this a bit more structure. Such as having a group of posts by different people on related topics (like issues in a conventional magazine) or assigning each writer a different topic or format and having them write different articles on that topic (like columnists in a conventional magazine).
RE: katz
Once I finished up Spookathon and the borgcritters, I was thinking of maybe doing a regular article on Interesting Women of History. Since I’m doing so many other things for pay, I wouldn’t be able to do it all the time, but I think I’d feel safe saying once a month. And unless something really amazing smacks me upside the head, I doubt I’d do much else; I prefer some structure.
Katz — I agree, and subcategories will automatically go in their parent category (scripting magic!). I have a list from what people have suggested, I’ll add the categories I have and the rest of you can add to them as needed/desired.
No, I’m not talking about coding structure, I’m talking about structure in terms of what’s written, when, and by whom. So, for instance, if we wanted to go with a columnist format, LBT could be our women in history columnist and he’d have that recurring segment, maybe Toujours is our pop-culture person who writes about various ways women are portrayed in different media, Alice might be the intersectionality columnist who writes about how gender issues relate to race, sexuality, and so on, etc etc.
Or if we wanted to do a more issue-based (as in magazine issue) format, maybe we’d say November was intersectionality month, and everyone would write stuff about intersectionality, and then December could be, I don’t know, cultural norms month, and everyone could talk about things that are treated as culturally acceptable but should change, and so on.
It would give it more of a distinctive feel that would make people want to read it, rather than feeling like another random feminism blog with posts on a bunch of random topics.
(Just basing those on what those people already wrote; not saying they have to do that or anything.)
Weeks instead of months with a week for everything that didn’t fit elsewhere? My concern is that it will leave people feeling like if they have something they want to write, but it isn’t on their topic // the current topic, then they shouldn’t write it at all.
Or maybe do that on weekends? M-F topics, Saturday and Sunday be a mixed content “special edition”?