NOTOCON X Keynote Address: Fire of Motion
Address delivered by National Grand Master General Sabazius Xº
to the Tenth National Conference of the U.S. O.T.O. Grand Lodge
Saturday evening,
August 15, 2015 e.v. Austin, Texas
Brothers and Sisters,
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
~Greeting, Acknowledgments and Announcements~.
Brothers and sisters, please silence your cellphones!
Here we are back in Austin, Texas, the Valley of our host, Scarlet Woman Lodge. Some of you may remember that this is the place where I received my Tenth Degree, 19 and a half years ago. I think this is rather fitting for the tenth biennial national conference of the U.S. Grand Lodge of O.T.O.
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Our theme this year is “Fire of Motion,” taken from the Second Collect of the Gnostic Mass, “The Lord,” upon which Brother David H. expounded so well last night.
The context of this theme, as explained on the NOTOCON X website, involves manifesting the Law of Thelema in our daily lives, especially in the context of living in a part of the country where conservative Christianity still plays a dominant role in society. I’d like to expand on this a little by talking about manifesting the Law in the context of another pervasive aspect of our society: democracy.
The United States of America is a large, well-established democratic republic. Popular democracy is a core, foundational aspect of American culture. It is not, however, a core, fundamental value of Thelema.
Crowley’s opinion of popular democracy is summarized quite succinctly in Book 194
“The principle of popular election is a fatal folly; its results are visible in every so-called democracy. The elected man is always the mediocrity; he is the safe man, the sound man, the man who displeases the majority less than any other; and therefore never the genius, the man of progress and illumination.”
At this point, I’m afraid I can’t resist also tossing in a couple of definitions from Ambrose Bierce’s The Devil’s Dictionary:
Rabble: “In a republic, those who exercise a supreme authority tempered by fraudulent elections. The rabble is like the sacred Simurgh, of Arabian fable — omnipotent on condition that it do nothing. (The word is Aristocratese, and has no exact equivalent in our tongue, but means, as nearly as may be, ‘soaring swine.’)”
Referendum: “n. A law for submission of proposed legislation to a popular vote to learn the nonsensus of public opinion.”
Continuing along these cynical lines, democratic elections have always been basically contests of propaganda, and thus subject to gaming. For truly fabulous prizes! The ability to craft laws in your own favor promises great wealth to the most skillful and unscrupulous players; so it’s always the money people who have the most interest in playing the game. And the rules of the game are to get votes for your side and take them away from the other side. By all means available–including appeals to sentimentality and irrational fear, twisting the facts and outright lying, and even physical intimidation.
A system like this ultimately has to devolve, through a process of attrition and assimilation, into a binary system of one powerful coalition against another, locked in perpetual combat; each claiming to represent Truth and Justice but each, in fact, representing small groups of powerful individuals and corporations playing an endless game of chess, with us as the pieces on the game board. (An exception to this rule might come along occasionally).
I’ve heard a lot of Thelemites arguing about which political party here in the U.S. is more “Thelemic” than the other. I think it’s a silly question. Political parties are artifacts of a system of popular democracy, which Crowley decried, and they’re both just huge propaganda engines designed to eternally bash away at each other; like giant gladiator battle-bots; because the People love conflict.
Now, I’m not saying that democratic politics is unimportant and should be ignored. It’s part of our world here in modern-day America, and so we need to make the best of it. I’m absolutely not one of those people who will tell you that voting is a waste of time. Elected officials constantly make decisions that affect you and your friends in significant ways. So as long as you have the ability to vote, I suggest that you need to use it; otherwise you’re ceding what little political power you have to others. You know how more and more evangelical Christians are seeking elected offices, and winning. You know–especially here–the kind of effects these people can have on your daily lives.
But… don’t let yourself get shanghaied onto sleazy campaign steamers by scare tactics, superstition, sentimentality, or vague promises of economic advantage. Hold onto your own vision and principles, and vote them. If you can find candidates who actually advocate your principles, support them. Perhaps more importantly, actively oppose candidates who espouse views and policies that are inimical to your principles. if you have the energy and contacts, maybe you should consider being a candidate yourself for some local office.
And if you want to support Thelemic principles in a political way, I suggest you use Liber Oz as your guide; not the phony, intentionally divisive, celebrity culture, pseudoissues cooked up by the political parties and their servants in the media.
Speaking of Liber Oz, I have heard some say that these are the rights we claim for ourselves as Thelemites. …Yes and no. Sure, we claim them, but that’s because we assert these rights for all humanity. It isn’t enough to enjoy and guard these rights for members of our little in-group. If we remain silent while these rights are being denied to anyone, then we are not really being true to our principles.
Recall that we oppose tyranny, which is the use of political or economic power in a cruel, unjust or oppressive way. We are against oppression, which is the deprivation of any minority group, or even an entire people, or sex, of their human rights. And we are against superstition–which people understand in different ways, but which I personally understand as the imposition of unscientific or pseudo-scientific beliefs to gain and hold on to political or economic power.
In Chapter 73 of Magick Without Tears, we find Crowley himself explaining how racism and classism are both rooted in fear, and how they bring out the worst in people. And he’s right–we need to be extremely wary of group-think, mob rule, conventional morality, and all sorts of jingoistic band-wagon crusades. One of our most cherished principles as Thelemites is the sovereignty of the individual within society. In his essay The Scientific Solution to the Problem of Government, Crowley emphasizes that “[t]he absolute rule of the state shall be a function of the absolute liberty of each individual will.”
But, practically speaking, our nature as human animals is to cluster into groups and divide humanity into insiders and outsiders. And these groups do tend to act collectively in the interest of their members, especially when under threat. It would be foolish to be opposed to this natural tendency. It would be like being opposed to…thumbs. But it would be equally foolish to ignore it; or to pretend that it doesn’t happen, or try to wish it away. We see it everywhere, even among ourselves, within our own Order. Really, the problem comes when this tendency blinds us to the individuality of all the insiders and outsiders in our world–and to our own individuality apart from any group context.
Every individual human being needs Light, Life, Love and Liberty; and has a right to the liberties described in Liber Oz. Furthermore, every human being has a right to be recognized as a human being–a Star–with a True Will, with all the attendant rights, and not dismissed as merely an outsider.
Those with initiative, dedication, resourcefulness, and genius certainly should be allowed to freely enjoy the fruits of their labors; and may also deserve a certain elevation of privilege if their labors also serve humanity. But these fundamental rights that underpin the ability to freely be oneself and do one’s will are for everyone–who does not reject them. They are not market commodities to be cornered through cleverness or family connections; either to keep to yourself or dole out selectively to your chosen and preferred. And if we stand idly by as other sovereign individuals have their basic rights eroded or torn away against their wills because of their group classification: their skin color, their gender, their ethnicity, their nationality, their preference in love, their economic status, their religion of their parents, even their I.Q., then we are guilty of hypocrisy. Everyone has their will to discover and do. The only ones who deserve abrogation of these basic rights are those who would deny them.
Thus, if we are to honorably claim these rights for ourselves, we must affirm their universality. Now, this puts us in a peculiar position that many of us will find uncomfortable. Because we live and participate in a culture that, through centuries of structuralization based on unscientific and pseudo-scientific notions, has internalized and institutionalized discriminatory biases based on race, gender, ethnicity, economic status, and a host of other arbitrary distinctions–and many, if not most, of us here, happen to be on the winning side of those biases. Whether we like it or not. You don’t have to be a bigot to benefit from institutionalized prejudice. And when you do so benefit without protest, or even awareness of it, you are a tacit participant in an oppressive system.
Opposing racial and sexual prejudice is a Thelemic value; even for white, heterosexual, middle-class men–like me. Even if we have to summon the courage confront our own fear of losing the automatic social privileges we have become accustomed to as societal insiders.
The Law is for all. Promulgation is not the same thing as recruitment, or publicity. It is not enough to get new folks to Minerval, or to the Gnostic Mass. Promulgation is not just selling more copies of Crowley books, wearing Thelemic jewelry and clothing, and using our conventional greetings and daily rituals.
Promulgation–which is a magical act–must include the active advocacy of fundamental Thelemic values and principles. In the world: the Rights of Man. All men, all women. Within our Order: peace, tolerance, truth. Fraternity. Harmony. Rejoicing in each others differences. Setting an example for newcomers. How can we act effectively to establish the Law of Thelema in the world if we do not have our own house in order? If we are tied up internally with our own factionalism, petty power struggles and overblown controversies, how can we ever be a force for positive change in the world? Moreover, how can we even survive the massive waves of change that are sweeping the world right now?
I’m not just talking about political change, here. We’re experiencing fundamental changes in the ways that people communicate and interact with each other; changes in the ways individual and organizational privacy are viewed; changes in attitudes towards intellectual property, changes in the ways that people are able to go about simply making a living for themselves; changes in the ways people approach matters of spirituality and belief; and changes in our own physical environment whose extent we’re only just starting to really grasp. Today, there’s no point being concerned about fighting or preserving the status quo. The status quo is a paper butterfly.
We’re all on board a tiny little fraternal boat here, bobbing around on very rough seas. We need to keep our eye on the stars and our instruments, and mind the pumps. It’s time to put our Lilliputian quibbles aside.
With sweeping change comes danger, certainly; but also opportunity. Evolution is all about survival through adaptation to change. Of course it is important to our group identity to honor our traditions and landmarks; but our survival as an active and effective sodality will depend on our ability to adapt to change. And, if we are capable of pulling together and adapting creatively, coherently, and effectively, we may not only survive, but flourish.
Love is the law, love under will.