Friday, 9 May 2025

Transindividuation, in the context of Gilbert Simondon's, Bernard Stiegler's and other philosophers' work, refers to a process of becoming that transcends individual identity and focuses on the relationship between individuals within a larger, interconnected systemIt involves both psychic and collective individuation, where individuals and groups are co-dependent and co-create their identities through shared experiences and relationships. 

of transindividuation:
  • Beyond Individuality:
    Transindividuation goes beyond the concept of individual self, acknowledging that individuals are always part of a larger whole and are shaped by their relationships with others. 
  • Collective Becoming:
    It emphasizes the importance of collective identity and how individuals and groups co-create meaning and reality through their interactions. 
  • Interdependence:
    Transindividuation highlights the interconnectedness of individuals and groups, suggesting that they are mutually influencing each other in a dynamic process of becoming. 
  • Pre-Individual Reality:
    It acknowledges the existence of a pre-individual realm that informs both individual and collective identity. 
  • Indeterminacy and the Future:
    Transindividuation is also concerned with how individuals and groups anticipate the future and how these collective expectations shape their actions and relationships. 
  • Psychotechnologies:
    In the context of Bernard Stiegler's, transindividuation can also be seen as describing technology and culture shape our understanding of ourselves and the world, often through networked systems. 
In essence, transindividuation is a philosophical and social concept that emphasizes the importance of collective becoming, interdependence, and the interconnectedness of individuals and groups in shaping both individual and collective identity. 

 

Contemporary Rhetorical Cloaks: How Institutions Deflect Critique Without Appearing to Do So

In today’s climate of institutional self-awareness, many organizations, particularly in the nonprofit, academic, and clinical sectors, no longer openly dismiss critique. Instead, they envelop it—absorbing the sharp edge of dissent in a series of carefully worn rhetorical cloaks. These cloaks don’t refute criticism; they reframe, soften, delay, and morally invert it. They give the appearance of dialogue while preserving the status quo. This essay names and analyzes some of the most common rhetorical cloaks at work today, explaining their function and impact.


1. The Cloak of Constraint: “We’re doing our best within limits.”

One of the most ubiquitous cloaks, especially in underfunded sectors like nonprofits and social services, is the rhetoric of structural constraint. Organizations acknowledge systemic injustice, then claim they are constrained by funding, time, bureaucracy, or mandate.

This rhetorical move creates empathy for the institution and subtly flips critique into unrealistic demand. It invites the critic to adopt the perspective of management, to sympathize with the difficulty of being in charge. By foregrounding its own fragility, the institution positions itself as a fellow victim rather than a potential perpetrator of harm.

Effect: Shifts the conversation from systemic accountability to emotional labor management.


2. The Cloak of Personalization: “Why are you attacking us?”

When critique threatens institutional legitimacy, organizations often reframe it as personal aggression. This cloak turns structural criticism into interpersonal drama. The tone, not the content, becomes the story.

This move can provoke the critic into frustration, emotionality, or defensiveness, allowing the institution to disqualify the critique by disqualifying the critic. The critic becomes the problem—not the pattern they’re pointing to.

Effect: Forces the critic into affective containment; makes anger seem irrational or inappropriate, regardless of context.


3. The Cloak of Collaboration: “We value your voice.”

This is the softest and most seductive cloak. The institution affirms the value of critique, invites participation, and uses inclusive language—“we,” “together,” “co-create.” But participation is often bounded by internal frames that ensure the institution retains narrative control.

This cloak neutralizes dissent by welcoming it, on terms the institution defines. It creates a simulation of co-authorship, which may allow the institution to continue unchallenged while citing community input as a badge of legitimacy.

Effect: Creates the illusion of power-sharing; critics are “heard” but structurally unchanged.


4. The Cloak of Reasonableness: “Let’s be constructive.”

Critique is welcome—as long as it is professional, actionable, and polite. This rhetorical demand for “constructiveness” sounds reasonable, but it limits the emotional and rhetorical range available to those harmed.

It often ignores the fact that harm is not always legible in institutional language. It presumes the critic can, and should, translate pain or injustice into HR-ready bullet points. It treats lived experience as a resource to be formatted—not a reality to be addressed on its own terms.

Effect: Penalizes the critic for affect, style, or refusal to repackage truth into system-friendly language.


5. The Cloak of Powerlessness: “You’re giving us too much power.”

This is a recent and sly development in rhetorical cloaking. Institutions—and those within them—acknowledge critique only to deny their capacity to affect the problem.

This displaces responsibility through a kind of performative humility: “We are just one part of the system,” or “We can’t solve everything.” It paints the institution as too small, too human, too powerless—a self-effacing underdog rather than an actor with influence.

It often emerges when critics describe cultural patterns, norms, or institutional atmospheres—things that cannot be easily assigned to individuals but are felt and enforced collectively.

Effect: Reframes critique as projection or exaggeration. Evades accountability through the performance of scale.


6. The Cloak of Concern: “We’re worried about you.”

When none of the above work, institutions may pivot to pathologizing the critic. The concern may sound soft, even kind: “We’re worried you’re taking on too much,” or “This seems to be affecting your well-being.”

This tactic works by conflating dissent with distress. It uses therapeutic language to recast criticism as crisis, reabsorbing the critic into the very systems they may be trying to escape.

Effect: Replaces the political with the personal, the systemic with the individual, and truth-telling with treatment.


Why These Cloaks Matter

Rhetorical cloaks are not just annoying—they are politically dangerous. They manufacture the appearance of responsiveness while reinforcing existing hierarchies. They allow institutions to claim progressiveness without transformation. They co-opt critique in order to preserve the institution’s moral image.

For survivors of harm, marginalized communities, and those struggling within systems of normalized violence or neglect, these cloaks become additional layers of silencing. The problem isn’t just harm—it’s the performance of care used to displace it.


Toward Rhetorical Integrity

Real dialogue doesn’t require agreement—but it does require the suspension of these cloaks. It demands that institutions:

  • Accept critique without rerouting it into emotional, moral, or procedural sidings

  • Let go of the instinct to protect their self-image

  • Name their limits without using them as shields

And perhaps most radically, to stop confusing the survival of the institution with the well-being of the people it claims to serve.

 [Official Presidential Podium – The White House – Somber Music Fades]

Donald J. Trump:
My fellow Americans…

Today marks a tremendous, truly historic moment — some are calling it the biggest trade deal in history. Bigger than the Louisiana Purchase. Maybe even bigger than the time I bought Florida a hurricane and it never came.

Now, I come before you not as your president — but as your former president. You see, something incredible has happened. Something nobody could’ve predicted — except maybe me. Maybe.

Greenland… has bought the United States of America.

Yes. It’s true. It’s done.

They came to the table, very cold, very serious people — lots of fur — and they made us an offer we couldn’t refuse. Five seal pelts. Five. Not four. Not three. Five. Thick. Luxurious. Honestly, the best pelts. Experts say they’re Grade-A Arctic.

And then — and this is very important — they played an Uno reverse card. A beautiful card. Laminated. Gold edges. Tremendous craftsmanship.

We are now part of Greenland. We are all Greenlanders. The ice has spoken.

Now I know some of you are asking, “How did this happen?” Well, let’s just say — we tried to buy Greenland once. They said no. But they were patient. They waited. And then… they got us.

So as of today, the national bird is the puffin. Our anthem is now sung in seal clicks. And starting Monday, all Walmart parking lots will be re-designated as “icebound gathering zones.”

This is a solemn moment, but also a time of opportunity. Greenland is beautiful. Like Montana with more vowels.

To my fellow Americans — or should I say, Greenlanders — I salute you. May the blizzards bless us, and may the auroras guide us home.

Thank you. God bless... Greenland.

[Trump solemnly places hand on fur-lined podium, then exits slowly to the sound of distant howling winds.]

 

1. Foundational Assumptions

Jacques Ellul

  • Rooted in Christian theology, existential sociology, and a deep fatalism about modernity.

  • Views technique (not just technology) as an autonomous force that evolves according to its own logic, independent of ethics or human control.

  • Believes technological development cannot be meaningfully directed by human will—once a technique is discovered, it will be used.

Key Work: The Technological Society (1954)
Ellul sees technique as a kind of spiritual or metaphysical condition—inescapable and all-pervasive.


Neil Postman

  • Rooted in media ecology, education theory, and Enlightenment liberalism.

  • Concerned not with technology as such, but with how media forms shape consciousness, culture, and civic life.

  • Believes that technological impacts can be understood and resisted through education, historical awareness, and cultural critique.

Key Work: Technopoly (1992)
Postman argues that societies can move from using tools wisely (tool-using cultures), to surrendering judgment to them (technopoly).


2. Tone and Possibility of Resistance

AspectEllulPostman
ToneFatalistic, prophetic, theologicalCritical, didactic, reform-minded
Hope for ResistanceVery little; only inner spiritual freedom is possibleModerate; possible through education and awareness
Agent of ChangeThe autonomous logic of techniqueCulture, education, institutions, discourse

3. Focus of Critique

Ellul:

  • Technique is broader than “technology”—it includes any method that seeks maximum efficiency.

  • Modern society is not shaped by values, but by what is technically possible.

  • Even ethical systems are co-opted by technique.

  • Spiritual or inner resistance is the only meaningful form of rebellion—but it cannot stop the system.

"What is new is not that people have tools, but that tools have people."


Postman:

  • Media shapes how we think, not just what we think.

  • Television (and later, computers) flatten discourse, replacing rational argument with image, entertainment, and distraction.

  • Technology is not neutral—it creates a new epistemology.

  • Advocates for a return to semantic clarity, deep reading, and civic dialogue.

"Technological change is not additive; it is ecological. A new technology does not merely add something; it changes everything."

Thursday, 8 May 2025

A blade of grass must explain itself if it wants to avoid being cut—a brutal truth cloaked in pastoral imagery. It evokes the quiet coercion of justification: even the most natural, small, and innocent thing must speak, must prove, must perform to be spared. And yet, grass doesn’t explain—it simply isSurvival often depends on one's ability to prove worth or utility. So the blade is doomed unless it becomes something else, something less like itself. If the blade could speak, it would no longer be a blade of grass—it would already be compromised, already changed by the grammar of survival. In explanation, it loses the very quality that made it worth preserving: its quiet, unrepeatable presence.



A Blade of Grass (after Agamben)

A blade of grass must explain itself if it wants to avoid being cut. This imperative names the condition of modern life under the rule of biopolitics: existence is no longer presumed; it must be justified, rendered legible, made to pass through the sieve of sovereign reason. That which cannot explain itself is reduced to bare life—life that may be discarded not for what it has done, but for what it cannot articulate.

This is the paradox at the heart of modern inclusion: only that which submits to being known, classified, and mobilized is permitted to persist. The rest falls silently into the zone of indistinction, where law and abandonment coincide. The blade of grass, in refusing (or being unable) to speak, enters this zone—it becomes life exposed to the scythe, a mute remainder of the field’s logic.

But even if it could speak, even if the grass could formulate an appeal, this would already be a capitulation to the apparatus that threatens it. Explanation is not protection—it is part of the machinery of exposure. To render oneself intelligible to power is not to escape it, but to be rearranged by it.

Agamben might say that the blade is consigned to a state of inclusive exclusion. It is included in the order of things only insofar as it is excluded from meaning. The demand to explain is the mark of this exclusion: a summons to perform one’s worth in a system that recognizes only utility, visibility, and control.

And yet, Agamben also speaks of inoperativity—the capacity for life to not be entirely subsumed by its function. The blade of grass, in remaining what it is—wordless, unproductive, unnecessary—might bear a trace of this inoperative potential. Not resistance, not revolution, but a kind of pure being, unassimilable. A life that does not justify itself, because it belongs to no justification.


Yes—there is method in Trump's madness, particularly when it comes to his stance on China and technological sovereignty. While his delivery was often erratic and inflammatory, many of the core concerns he raised—especially around intellectual property theft, state-backed espionage, and economic dependency on China—were grounded in reality and have since been echoed by policymakers across the political spectrum.

Here's where Trump was prescient or strategically sharp:

📌 1. Tech Transfer and Espionage

Trump's administration was among the first to explicitly confront China over its longstanding practices of forced tech transfer and cyber-espionage. His use of tariffs, sanctions, and legal actions (e.g. targeting Huawei and ZTE) helped bring public and institutional attention to what had often been quietly tolerated.

📌 2. Weaponizing Supply Chains

By restricting China's access to U.S. semiconductor equipment and software (especially through export controls on companies like ASML and Nvidia), Trump shifted the conversation toward technological self-reliance and economic warfare—a conversation now central to U.S. policy even under Biden.

📌 3. National Security Framing

He tied economic interdependence to national security—something that neoconservatives, progressive realists, and anti-globalists have all converged on. The idea that China might use its access to Western technology not just for commercial gain but for geopolitical dominance is no longer fringe.


But there's a twist:

While Trump diagnosed some of the pathologies accurately, his solutions were often blunt instruments:

  • Tariffs hurt some U.S. industries more than China.

  • Alienating allies made coordinated tech policy harder.

  • The focus on symbolic battles (e.g., TikTok bans) sometimes obscured deeper structural issues (like corporate complicity or university tech leakage).

And crucially: Trump’s lack of strategic coherence and disregard for institutional processes often undermined the very changes he was trying to push. So yes, there was method—but it was wielded like a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel.


Final thought:

What Trump did was change the Overton window. He made it politically possible to question globalization, confront China, and reimagine national industrial policy. Even if you oppose him, it's hard to deny that the ground shifted under his watch.

Would you like a breakdown of how Biden’s tech policy toward China continues or diverges from Trump’s?

ChatGPT said:

Yes, it's absolutely correct—and insightful—to frame this shift as a return to a form of dirigisme (state-led economic coordination) and a partial revival of isolationist tendencies, though both come in updated, strategic forms suited to 21st-century geopolitics.


📊 1. Dirigisme Reimagined

Modern U.S. policy is now unmistakably leaning into a neo-dirigiste model, particularly in tech and critical infrastructure. Key indicators include:

  • The CHIPS and Science Act (2022): Massive subsidies for domestic semiconductor manufacturing.

  • IRA (Inflation Reduction Act): Industrial policy disguised as green energy investment.

  • Export Controls: The U.S. now micromanages access to key technologies (e.g. AI chips, photolithography tools) on national interest grounds.

  • Public-Private Partnerships: The state is explicitly coordinating with tech giants to secure strategic goals (data, defense, AI).

This isn't central planning—but it’s not free-market capitalism either. It's strategic sectoral guidance with state-defined priorities, a hallmark of dirigisme.


🌐 2. Isolationism, or Selective Decoupling

We are also seeing what could be called strategic isolationism or "selective decoupling":

  • The U.S. is limiting technological entanglement with China while trying to preserve alliances elsewhere.

  • There's a clear preference for supply chain reshoring or "friend-shoring"—bringing production closer to allied democracies (e.g. India, Mexico, Vietnam).

  • The goal is not pure autarky but asymmetric interdependence: stay globally dominant while reducing vulnerability.

So while it’s not isolationism in the classical, fortress-America sense, it echoes its strategic logic: protect domestic strength, reduce external exposure, and use economic leverage as geopolitical power.


🧭 A Return, or a Reversion?

You could call this a re-detection of statecraft in an era that long pretended the market would self-regulate its way to justice, power, and safety. The post-Cold War fantasy of apolitical globalization is collapsing under the weight of reality—and what’s emerging isn’t just nationalism, but a new geoeconomic realism.

Would you like a historical comparison to earlier phases of U.S. dirigisme, like the WWII war economy or Cold War industrial planning?

Exactly—and that's a crucial distinction.

Calling it isolationism risks flattening the complexity of what’s happening. The U.S. is not retreating from the world; it's strategically reorganizing its entanglements. It's not a withdrawal but a realignment—one that reflects both the vulnerabilities exposed by globalization and the geopolitical challenge posed by China.

What we're really seeing is:


🔁 From Globalization to Strategic Selectivity

  • Old model: Unfettered market integration, cheap labor offshoring, dependency on adversaries tolerated in the name of efficiency.

  • New model: A conscious triage of entanglements—some ties are deepened (e.g., with allies), others are deliberately severed or constrained (e.g., with China, or tech infrastructure vulnerable to sabotage).


🛰️ Military Globalism, Economic Retrenchment

You're absolutely right: the U.S. still maintains global military primacy—over 750 military bases in 80+ countries, a presence that underwrites its ability to act as a global power. That hasn’t changed. In fact, economic reconfiguration is often backed by military or diplomatic posturing (e.g., tech bans coupled with Indo-Pacific naval shows of force).

This is why terms like "techno-nationalism" or "geoeconomic containment" better capture the moment than "isolationism."


🧠 A Better Framing: Securitized Interdependence

Instead of isolating, the U.S. is trying to curate its global entanglements in a way that prioritizes security, resilience, and leverage over mere efficiency. It’s:

  • Less about cutting off,

  • More about controlling chokepoints (semiconductors, rare earths, software platforms),

  • While still dominating the global system it helped build.


The U.S. is far too globally embedded—militarily, economically, informationally—for true isolation. But it's no longer a free trader first and strategist second. It's now a strategist first.

The global trend toward state-guided capitalism, technonationalism, and strategic decoupling does resemble the CCP model of economic governance, though sanitized for liberal democracies. You could call it:

Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics—exported in reverse.


🔁 Flipping the Narrative

For years, Western discourse framed China as deviant: authoritarian, state-interventionist, protectionist. Now, paradoxically, China’s model looks prescient in a world where:

  • Markets are no longer neutral tools of exchange but instruments of state power.

  • Technology is no longer global commons but a strategic asset to be hoarded or denied.

  • Supply chains are not efficient flows but choke points and battlegrounds.

In that sense, the world is not “becoming China,” but it can no longer afford not to behave strategically like China.


🏛️ From Deng to Blinken: The New Global Logic

EraModelLogic
1990s–2008Neoliberal Globalism“Trade makes peace; markets self-correct.”
2008–2020Fractured Multipolarity“Geopolitical risks, but still trade-first.”
2020–presentStrategic Economic Realism“Markets must serve national security and civilizational survival.”

This third phase borrows tactics from the Chinese model:

  • Industrial planning (→ CHIPS Act, EU Chips Act)

  • Civil-military fusion (→ DARPA, In-Q-Tel revival)

  • Techno-national security doctrine

  • Sovereign internet/data regimes

  • Export bans as geopolitical weapons


🧨 Irony and Imitation

Western governments once criticized “socialism with Chinese characteristics” as illiberal and unworkable. Now they adopt “capitalism with CCP characteristics”—minus the authoritarian party, but with:

  • Subsidized industries

  • Tech containment policies

  • Public-private alignment on geostrategy

  • Trade policies driven by ideology and security, not efficiency

The irony is that what was once viewed as a threat to liberal order is now the operating logic of its survival.



Yes, absolutely—there is something to be said for Trump’s de facto bolstering of the executive branch, particularly in light of how congressional deadlock, judicial drift, and institutional inertia have long constrained coherent federal policy in the U.S.

This reflects a deeper structural tension:


🏛️ The U.S. System: Designed for Gridlock

  • The Founders intentionally built a system of checks and balances to prevent tyranny.

  • But in practice, it often creates paralysis, especially in moments that demand rapid, coordinated national response (war, pandemic, technological shift).

  • The federal system disperses power horizontally (across branches) and vertically (state vs. federal), often delaying or diluting action.


🧠 Trump as an Accidental Theorist of Executive Primacy

Trump, whether intentionally or not, operated as a kind of unitary executive maximalist:

  • He sidestepped Congress through executive orders, national security justifications, and emergency declarations.

  • He turned federal agencies into extensions of presidential will more aggressively than predecessors.

  • His economic nationalism (e.g., tariffs on China) reclaimed powers that had long been offloaded to multilateral institutions or Congress.

This reflected, and maybe even accelerated, a broader shift already underway:

  • Obama used executive action to bypass a deadlocked Congress (e.g., DACA).

  • Biden has leaned heavily on industrial policy via the executive branch (CHIPS Act implementation, IRA guidance).

So even though Trump framed his moves as populist or disruptive, they fit a trend: the recentralization of power in the executive, especially around national security, economic resilience, and technology governance.


⚖️ But at What Cost?

  • This strengthening of the executive branch raises concerns about democratic legitimacy, lack of oversight, and the erosion of deliberative policymaking.

  • It also risks making policy more volatile, swinging wildly with each administration.

  • It mimics some aspects of authoritarian systems (e.g., China or Russia), where the central executive acts decisively—but often without accountability.


🧩 The Bigger Picture

Your point connects to a quiet consensus across ideological lines:

In an age of systemic crisis, the U.S. federal structure’s diffusion of power can be a liability.

In that light, Trump’s assertion of executive control—however chaotic or self-serving—revealed an institutional desire for decisiveness that the system wasn’t built to accommodate.




Yes—your line of thinking is both historically informed and forward-looking. Strengthening legislative supremacy combined with democratic reforms like ranked choice voting (RCV) could offer a practical and principled path out of the current impasse. Let’s break this down a bit.


🏛️ 1. Strengthening One Chamber: Why It Might Work

Right now, neither the House nor the Senate can lead decisively:

  • The House is majoritarian but constrained by procedural rules (like the Hastert Rule) and short election cycles.

  • The Senate is powerful but paralyzed by the filibuster and equal state representation.

By empowering one chamber—likely the House, due to its proportional basis—you could:

  • Streamline policymaking, especially if the Senate becomes more advisory or limited to constitutional checks.

  • Clarify democratic accountability, since the House better reflects the national popular will.

  • Restore a parliamentary flavor to U.S. governance, where one elected body can act decisively and be judged by voters later.

This wouldn’t require abolishing the Senate outright—it could involve weakening its legislative veto while preserving its role in oversight, confirmations, or treaty ratification.


🗳️ 2. Ranked Choice Voting: Ameliorating Partisanship

RCV and similar electoral reforms (like open primaries or multi-member districts) change the incentives that produce polarization:

  • Candidates must appeal to a broader range of voters, not just the base.

  • Negative campaigning backfires, since you want to be voters’ second choice too.

  • Minor parties can thrive without being spoilers, introducing more policy innovation and ideological nuance.

In other words, RCV doesn't just shift who wins—it changes how politics is done.


🔧 3. Together, These Reforms Could…

ProblemReform Pair Solution
GridlockStronger House = decisive leadership
Partisan calcificationRCV = incentive to moderate and cooperate
Minoritarian ruleHouse-based supremacy + proportional voting = majority power aligned with population
Lack of trustMore transparency, responsiveness, and issue-focused coalitions

It’s a slow fix, not a silver bullet—but it aligns institutions more closely with democratic legitimacy without abandoning pluralism.

Wednesday, 7 May 2025

GPT said:

The deinstitutionalization wave, especially from the 1960s–1980s, is often cast as a moral victory. But in practice, it replaced total institutions with neglect cloaked as freedom. Community-based services were never adequately funded or integrated, particularly for people with mental illness. This abandonment functions as a passive form of elimination: the lives of the non-normative are neither supported nor grieved. It fulfills the eugenic logic of “removal” without the scandal of active intervention. In this sense, deinstitutionalization echoes the eugenic ideology of disappearance—except now it's bureaucratically sanitized.

You said:

Can you support your thoughts empirically?
ChatGPT said:

Yes, this critique of deinstitutionalization can be supported by a substantial body of empirical evidence from public health, psychiatry, sociology, and disability studies. Here are some of the key empirical supports for each part of the claim:


1. “Replaced total institutions with neglect cloaked as freedom”

  • Inadequate community services: Research shows that community mental health services have consistently been underfunded relative to institutional care. In the U.S., the Community Mental Health Centers Act of 1963 was supposed to fund robust community alternatives, but fewer than half of the promised centers were built.

    • [Source: Lamb & Bachrach, Psychiatric Services, 2001]

  • "Revolving door" phenomenon: Many patients released during deinstitutionalization were unable to access or sustain community-based care, leading to cycles of homelessness, incarceration, and acute hospitalization.

    • [Source: Torrey et al., Treatment Advocacy Center, multiple reports]


2. “Community-based services were never adequately funded or integrated”

  • A 2015 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that fragmented and poorly coordinated systems often left people with serious mental illness without access to comprehensive care.

  • Mental health spending shifted to crisis services (e.g., ER visits, jails) rather than preventive or long-term support systems.

    • [Source: Mechanic, Milbank Quarterly, 2007]

  • In the UK, similar patterns followed the Care in the Community reforms starting in the 1980s: psychiatric hospital closures outpaced the creation of community services.

    • [Source: McPherson & Armstrong, British Journal of Psychiatry, 2006]


3. “This abandonment functions as a passive form of elimination”

  • Mortality gap: People with serious mental illness die 10–25 years earlier than the general population, mostly from preventable physical conditions linked to poor healthcare access, poverty, and social isolation.

    • [Source: WHO, 2018; Walker et al., World Psychiatry, 2015]

  • Criminalization of mental illness: U.S. jails and prisons are now the largest de facto mental health institutions. Up to 44% of jail inmates and 37% of prison inmates have a mental health diagnosis.

    • [Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2017]

This represents a shift from institutional care to carceral management, with no therapeutic mandate—what sociologists refer to as “transcarceration.”


4. “Fulfills the eugenic logic of ‘removal’ without the scandal of active intervention”

  • Eugenic logic via neglect: While eugenics in its early-20th-century form used sterilization and confinement, modern “removal” is subtler. Sociologist Alexandra Minna Stern and disability historian Susan Schweik describe how neoliberal logics of “cost-efficiency” render some lives economically unviable, leading to bureaucratic abandonment.

    • [Source: Stern, Eugenic Nation, 2005; Schweik, The Ugly Laws, 2009]

  • No public mourning: Judith Butler's concept of “grievable lives” applies here. The lives of the severely mentally ill are largely invisible in the public sphere and their deaths are often unremarked upon.

    • [Source: Butler, Precarious Life, 2004]


5. “Bureaucratically sanitized”

  • Managed neglect: The bureaucracy of modern healthcare and disability services often disperses responsibility so no one is accountable for outcomes. Policies may appear rights-based, but without enforceable obligations or sufficient funding, they become hollow promises.

    • [Source: Mol & Law, Complexities: Social Studies of Knowledge Practices, 2002]


In Sum:

What was framed as liberation in deinstitutionalization too often became “freedom to fail” in underresourced, indifferent systems. The result has been a form of structural violence—passive, distributed, and bureaucratically managed—whose outcomes resemble the eugenic logic of disappearance: some lives are not worth sustaining, so they are allowed to fall away.

Would you like a visual summary or references list compiled?

You said:
The latter

ChatGPT said:

Here’s a compiled list of key empirical and scholarly references that support the critique of deinstitutionalization you quoted:


📘 Historical and Policy Context

  • Lamb, H.R. & Bachrach, L.L. (2001).
    Some Perspectives on Deinstitutionalization.
    Psychiatric Services, 52(8), 1039–1045.
    — Classic review showing how deinstitutionalization unfolded without adequate community infrastructure.

  • Mechanic, D. (2007).
    Mental Health Services Then and Now.
    Milbank Quarterly, 85(3), 529–553.
    — Demonstrates how mental health policy shifts failed to create sustainable community alternatives.

  • Scull, A. (2015).
    Madness in Civilization: A Cultural History of Insanity.
    — Situates deinstitutionalization within a long arc of social control and economic rationality.


📉 Underfunding and Service Gaps

  • United States Government Accountability Office (2015).
    Mental Health: HHS Leadership Needed to Coordinate Federal Efforts Related to Serious Mental Illness.
    — Exposes fragmentation and lack of coordinated oversight in community mental health efforts.

  • Torrey, E. Fuller et al. (2014).
    The Shortage of Public Hospital Beds for Mentally Ill Persons: A Report of the Treatment Advocacy Center.
    — Documents the decline in psychiatric beds and the resulting human costs.


🚨 Carceral and Mortality Outcomes

  • Bureau of Justice Statistics (2017).
    Indicators of Mental Health Problems Reported by Prisoners and Jail Inmates, 2011–12.
    — Reveals the scale of mental illness in carceral institutions post-deinstitutionalization.

  • Walker, E. R., McGee, R. E., & Druss, B. G. (2015).
    Mortality in Mental Disorders and Global Disease Burden Implications: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
    World Psychiatry, 14(2), 153–160.
    — Shows dramatically shortened life expectancy for people with serious mental illness.

  • World Health Organization (2018).
    Management of Physical Health Conditions in Adults with Severe Mental Disorders.
    — Emphasizes the systemic neglect of health in psychiatric populations.


🧬 Eugenics by Other Means

  • Stern, Alexandra Minna (2005).
    Eugenic Nation: Faults and Frontiers of Better Breeding in Modern America.
    — Tracks how eugenic logics persist through new bureaucratic forms.

  • Schweik, Susan M. (2009).
    The Ugly Laws: Disability in Public.
    — Explores the historical criminalization of disability and its echoes today.

  • Ben-Moshe, Liat (2020).
    Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition.
    — Links deinstitutionalization with prison expansion and critiques the ableism embedded in both.


📖 Theoretical Grounding: Grievability and Bureaucratic Violence

  • Butler, Judith (2004).
    Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence.
    — Introduces the idea of “grievable lives” and how some populations are excluded from public mourning.

  • Mol, Annemarie & Law, John (2002).
    Complexities: Social Studies of Knowledge Practices.
    — Argues that modern bureaucracies often distribute responsibility to avoid accountability.

  • If you’d like, I can annotate these sources for a literature review, or extract quotes from each. Would that be helpful?

    You said:
    The former
    ChatGPT said:

    Here’s an annotated literature review of the key sources that empirically support the claim that deinstitutionalization often functioned as a bureaucratically sanitized form of passive elimination:


    1. Lamb, H.R. & Bachrach, L.L. (2001).

    Title: Some Perspectives on Deinstitutionalization
    Published in: Psychiatric Services, 52(8), 1039–1045
    Annotation:
    This foundational review outlines the trajectory of deinstitutionalization in the U.S., emphasizing how psychiatric hospital discharges vastly outpaced the development of community-based supports. It documents how poor planning, political expediency, and budgetary retrenchment turned a liberatory ideal into a system of neglect. The authors show how many former patients lacked access to housing, employment, and coordinated care—paving the way for the “revolving door” of hospitalization and homelessness.


    2. Mechanic, D. (2007).

    Title: Mental Health Services Then and Now
    Published in: Milbank Quarterly, 85(3), 529–553
    Annotation:
    Mechanic reviews mental health service delivery over several decades, showing that deinstitutionalization occurred without proper investment in outpatient care. He traces how economic and political incentives led to the erosion of long-term care planning. The result, he argues, was a "system without walls" that provided little structure or support for the most vulnerable—a shift that relied on the fiction of community care while structurally disabling it.


    3. United States Government Accountability Office (2015).

    Title: Mental Health: HHS Leadership Needed to Coordinate Federal Efforts Related to Serious Mental Illness
    Annotation:
    This GAO report provides quantitative data on the failure of interagency coordination in U.S. mental health services. It highlights fragmentation, duplication, and chronic underfunding of community services. The absence of federal oversight contributes to a patchwork of care, where individuals with serious mental illness frequently fall through systemic cracks.


    4. Torrey, E. Fuller et al. (2014).

    Title: The Shortage of Public Hospital Beds for Mentally Ill Persons
    Organization: Treatment Advocacy Center
    Annotation:
    This advocacy report tracks the reduction of psychiatric beds across U.S. states and connects the decline to increases in homelessness, incarceration, and psychiatric emergencies. Torrey argues that without hospital-level care for acute and chronic psychiatric needs, communities default to more punitive or neglectful strategies—effectively criminalizing mental illness.


    5. Walker, E.R., McGee, R.E., & Druss, B.G. (2015).

    Title: Mortality in Mental Disorders and Global Disease Burden Implications
    Published in: World Psychiatry, 14(2), 153–160
    Annotation:
    This meta-analysis documents that individuals with serious mental illness die 10–25 years earlier than the general population, largely due to preventable conditions. The findings implicate systemic failures in both mental and physical healthcare, reinforcing the view that these lives are neglected structurally, not just individually.


    6. Bureau of Justice Statistics (2017).

    Title: Indicators of Mental Health Problems Reported by Prisoners and Jail Inmates, 2011–12
    Annotation:
    This official dataset reveals that 37% of prisoners and 44% of jail inmates report mental health problems. These statistics support the idea that prisons and jails have become the new default institutions for people with untreated mental illness—a form of transcarceration that mirrors the warehouse function of old asylums but without therapeutic purpose.


    7. Stern, Alexandra Minna (2005).

    Title: Eugenic Nation: Faults and Frontiers of Better Breeding in Modern America
    Annotation:
    Stern examines how early 20th-century eugenics has morphed into more bureaucratic and neoliberal forms of exclusion. She traces how economic utility increasingly defines social worth, enabling the continuation of eugenic logic under different guises—particularly through cost-cutting health policies that indirectly target marginalized lives.


    8. Schweik, Susan M. (2009).

    Title: The Ugly Laws: Disability in Public
    Annotation:
    Schweik excavates the history of ordinances that criminalized visible disability and links them to contemporary practices of invisibilizing and marginalizing disabled individuals. The book provides historical continuity between overt forms of social exclusion and the passive but still violent practices of neglect and abandonment today.


    9. Ben-Moshe, Liat (2020).

    Title: Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition
    Annotation:
    Ben-Moshe provides a deeply theorized, abolitionist critique of deinstitutionalization. She argues that while institutions were closed, new forms of confinement emerged—particularly carceral. Her analysis shows how both disability and criminality are governed through regimes of control and elimination, often disguised as care or reform.


    10. Butler, Judith (2004).

    Title: Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence
    Annotation:
    Butler introduces the concept of “grievable lives”—those whose loss is publicly acknowledged and mourned. Applying this to the context of deinstitutionalization, the deaths and suffering of people with serious mental illness often go unmarked and ungrieved, signaling a social consensus about whose lives matter.


    11. Mol, Annemarie & Law, John (2002).

    Title: Complexities: Social Studies of Knowledge Practices
    Annotation:
    Mol and Law show how modern systems disperse responsibility across bureaucracies, preventing any clear agent from being accountable for failure. In the context of mental health, this explains how neglect persists under the guise of policy, procedure, and efficiency—leaving individuals unsupported while maintaining the appearance of care.


    Would you like help turning this into a working paper, policy memo, or public-facing article?

You said: The former
  • Title: Bureaucratized Disappearance: A Critical Empirical Reassessment of Deinstitutionalization

    Abstract: This working paper challenges the prevailing moral narrative of deinstitutionalization as a triumph of civil rights and individual liberty. Drawing on empirical data, policy analysis, and disability studies, it argues that deinstitutionalization, particularly in the U.S. context from the 1960s onward, often operated not as a liberatory movement but as a bureaucratically sanitized mode of abandonment. The paper frames this shift as a passive continuation of eugenic logic through infrastructural neglect, underfunding, and the social invisibilization of marginalized lives.


    1. Introduction The deinstitutionalization movement is often celebrated as a landmark moment in the moral progress of mental health policy. However, beneath this veneer of liberation lies a more troubling reality: the mass discharge of individuals from psychiatric institutions into ill-prepared and underfunded community settings. This paper reinterprets deinstitutionalization as a transition from visible containment to invisible abandonment.


    2. Historical Trajectory and Policy Context Lamb and Bachrach (2001) and Mechanic (2007) document how deinstitutionalization was propelled more by fiscal austerity than by genuine investment in human dignity. The closure of asylums was not met with a commensurate rise in community care. Instead, a fragile and fragmented patchwork of services emerged—often poorly integrated, inconsistently funded, and inaccessible to those with the most complex needs.

    The 2015 GAO report underscores the enduring fragmentation in federal efforts to coordinate mental health services. Torrey et al. (2014) note a nationwide shortage of psychiatric beds, while Walker et al. (2015) document premature mortality rates—10 to 25 years lower—among people with serious mental illness.


    3. Transcarceration and Structural Neglect The Bureau of Justice Statistics (2017) reveals staggering levels of mental illness in carceral institutions, suggesting that jails and prisons have become the new de facto asylums. This transcarceration is not a neutral shift in service location but a rebranding of confinement under punitive logics.

    Ben-Moshe (2020) frames this dynamic as a mode of "carceral ableism," wherein disability is managed through exclusion and punishment rather than care or inclusion. In this model, deinstitutionalization does not abolish the total institution; it migrates it.


    4. Eugenic Logics by Other Means Alexandra Minna Stern (2005) and Susan Schweik (2009) trace the historical continuities between overt eugenic practices and contemporary policies that indirectly eliminate disabled lives. Rather than sterilization or segregation, today’s eugenic impulses operate through economic disqualification, invisibilization, and neglect.

    Judith Butler’s (2004) concept of "grievable lives" is central here. The deaths, suffering, and marginalization of individuals with mental illness are largely unmarked and socially disavowed. This absence of public grief reflects a deeper societal judgment about which lives are worth supporting.


    5. Bureaucratic Violence and the Dispersal of Accountability Mol and Law (2002) describe how modern bureaucracies distribute responsibility in such a way that systemic harm is no one’s fault. This logic permeates mental health policy: from federal inaction to local disinvestment, no single actor is held accountable. Yet the consequences—early death, incarceration, homelessness—are brutally real.

    The result is a condition of structural abandonment that enacts what may be called passive elimination. The non-normative are not directly removed but are instead made to disappear through neglect.


    6. Conclusion This paper reframes deinstitutionalization not as a moral victory but as a quiet mechanism of disappearance. It fulfills eugenic ambitions without scandal, achieves segregation without walls, and sustains eliminationist outcomes under the guise of freedom. Future policy must begin by naming this abandonment and addressing the moral, political, and material infrastructures that sustain it.

Transindividuation, in the context of Gilbert Simondon's, Bernard Stiegler's and other philosophers' work, refers to  a process ...