Accelerationism
{{Short description|Ideologies of change via capitalism and technology}}
{{For|the concept from future studies|Accelerating change}}
{{Distinguish|Social acceleration}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}
Accelerationism is a range of revolutionary and reactionary ideologies that call for the drastic intensification of capitalist growth, technological change, and other processes of social change to destabilize existing systems and create radical social transformations, referred to as "acceleration".{{Cite web |last=Beckett |first=Andy |date=11 May 2017 |title=Accelerationism: how a fringe philosophy predicted the future we live in |url=http://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/11/accelerationism-how-a-fringe-philosophy-predicted-the-future-we-live-in |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170511050642/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/11/accelerationism-how-a-fringe-philosophy-predicted-the-future-we-live-in |archive-date=11 May 2017 |access-date=5 January 2021 |website=The Guardian |language=en |issn=0261-3077}}{{Cite web|date=5 August 2016|title=What is accelerationism?|url=https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2016/08/what-accelerationism|url-status=live|access-date=5 January 2021|website=New Statesman|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160806140736/http://www.newstatesman.com:80/politics/uk/2016/08/what-accelerationism |archive-date=6 August 2016 }}{{cite book|last=Shaviro|first=Steven|title=Post Cinematic Affect|publisher=O Books|year=2010|location=Ropley|page=136}}{{cite book|last=Adams|first=Jason|title=Occupy Time: Technoculture, Immediacy, and Resistance After Occupy Wall Street|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|year=2013|location=New York|page=96}}{{cite journal |last1=Henkin |first1=David |title=Accelerationism and Acceleration |journal=Écrire l'histoire. Histoire, Littérature, Esthétique |date=2016 |issue=16 |doi=10.4000/elh.1121 |doi-access=free}} It has been regarded as an ideological spectrum divided into mutually contradictory left-wing and right-wing variants, both of which support dramatic changes to capitalism and its structures as well as the conditions for a technological singularity, a hypothetical point in time at which technological growth becomes uncontrollable and irreversible.{{cite web |last=Jiménez de Cisneros |first=Roc |date=5 November 2014 |title=The Accelerationist Vertigo (II): Interview with Robin Mackay |url=https://lab.cccb.org/en/the-accelerationist-vertigo-ii-interview-with-robin-mackay/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190818150741/https://lab.cccb.org/en/the-accelerationist-vertigo-ii-interview-with-robin-mackay/ |archive-date=August 18, 2019 |access-date=5 February 2015 |publisher=Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona}}{{cite web|url=http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/05/14/accelerate-manifesto-for-an-accelerationist-politics/|title=#ACCELERATE MANIFESTO for an Accelerationist Politics|publisher=Critical Legal Thinking|first1=Alex|last1=Williams|first2=Nick|last2=Srnicek|date=14 May 2013|access-date=5 February 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150206222219/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/05/14/accelerate-manifesto-for-an-accelerationist-politics/|archive-date=6 February 2015|url-status=live}}{{cite web|url=http://www.ufblog.net/accelerate/|title=#Accelerate|date=13 February 2014|access-date=5 February 2015|first1=Nick|last1=Land|website=Urban Future (2.1)|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150929070901/http://www.ufblog.net/accelerate/|archive-date=29 September 2015|url-status=dead}}{{cite book |last1=Noys |first1=Benjamin |title=Palgrave Handbook of Critical Posthumanism |date=2022 |publisher=Springer International Publishing |isbn=978-3-030-42681-1 |pages=1–18 |chapter-url=https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-42681-1_58-1 |language=en |chapter=Accelerationism: Adventures in Speed|doi=10.1007/978-3-030-42681-1_58-1 }} It aims to analyze and subsequently promote the social, economic, cultural, and libidinal forces that constitute the process of acceleration.{{cite web |last=Wolfendale |first=Peter |year=2014 |title=So, Accelerationism, what's all that about? |url=http://deontologistics.tumblr.com/post/91953882443/so-accelerationism-whats-all-that-about |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141214133430/http://deontologistics.tumblr.com/post/91953882443/so-accelerationism-whats-all-that-about |archive-date=14 December 2014 |access-date=5 February 2015 |website=Dialectical Insurgency}}
Ideas such as Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's concept of deterritorialization, Jean Baudrillard's proposals for "fatal strategies", and various ideas of Nick Land are crucial influences on accelerationism. Such ideas gave rise to the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU), a philosophy collective at the University of Warwick, in the 1990s, promoting the use of capitalism to dissolve existing social structures and reach a singularity. In the late 2000s and early 2010s, the movement would gain a resurgence, producing numerous variants and interpretations as well as a few published works.
The term has also, in a manner strongly distinguished from original accelerationist theorists, been used by right-wing extremists such as neo-fascists, neo-Nazis, white nationalists and white supremacists to increasingly refer to an "acceleration" of racial conflict through assassinations, murders and terrorist attacks as a means to violently achieve a white ethnostate.{{cite web|url=https://www.cfr.org/in-brief/year-after-january-6-accelerationism-new-terrorist-threat|title=A Year After January 6, Is Accelerationism the New Terrorist Threat?|publisher=Council on Foreign Relations|date=2022-01-05|access-date=2024-07-15}}{{cite journal |author-last=Upchurch |author-first=H. E. |date=22 December 2021 |url=https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/CTC-SENTINEL-102021.pdf |title=The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the "Skull Mask" Neo-Fascist Network |url-status=live |editor1-last=Cruickshank |editor1-first=Paul |editor2-last=Hummel |editor2-first=Kristina |journal=CTC Sentinel |volume=14 |issue=10 |pages=27–37 |publisher=Combating Terrorism Center |location=West Point, New York |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211227044425/https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/CTC-SENTINEL-102021.pdf |archive-date=27 December 2021 |access-date=19 January 2022}}{{cite news|date=16 April 2019|title=White Supremacists Embrace "Accelerationism"|work=Anti-Defamation League|url=https://www.adl.org/blog/white-supremacists-embrace-accelerationism|access-date=13 October 2020}}
Background
= Influences and precursors =
The term "accelerationism" was first used in sci-fi author Roger Zelazny's third novel, 1967's Lord of Light.{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Every Which Way but Loose |url=https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/every-way-loose/ |access-date=2024-09-14 |website=Los Angeles Review of Books}} It was later popularized by professor and author Benjamin Noys in his 2010 book The Persistence of the Negative to describe the trajectory of certain post-structuralists who embraced unorthodox Marxist and counter-Marxist overviews of capitalist growth, such as Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in their 1972 book Anti-Oedipus, Jean-François Lyotard in his 1974 book Libidinal Economy and Jean Baudrillard in his 1976 book Symbolic Exchange and Death.{{cite book |last=Noys |first=Benjamin |title=The Persistence of the Negative: A Critique of Contemporary Continental Theory |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |year=2010 |page=5 |jstor=j.ctt1r276g}}
English right-wing philosopher and writer Nick Land, commonly credited with creating and inspiring accelerationism's basic ideas and concepts,{{cite journal |last1=Chistyakov |first1=Denis I. |last2=Игоревич |first2=Чистяков Денис |date=2022 |title=Philosophy of Accelerationism: A New Way of Comprehending the Present Social Reality (in Nick Land's Context) |journal=RUDN Journal of Philosophy |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=687–696 |doi=10.22363/2313-2302-2022-26-3-687-696 |doi-access=free}} cited a number of philosophers who expressed anticipatory accelerationist attitudes in his 2017 essay "A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism".{{Cite web |last=Colquhoun |first=Matt |date=4 March 2019 |title=A U/Acc Primer |url=https://xenogothic.com/2019/03/04/a-u-acc-primer/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://archive.today/20200602005245/https://xenogothic.com/2019/03/04/a-u-acc-primer/ |archive-date=2 June 2020|access-date=2021-04-08 |publisher=Xenogothic.com}}{{Cite web |last=Land |first=Nick |date=25 May 2017 |title=A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism |url=https://jacobitemag.com/2017/05/25/a-quick-and-dirty-introduction-to-accelerationism/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180113012817/https://jacobitemag.com/2017/05/25/a-quick-and-dirty-introduction-to-accelerationism/ |archive-date=13 January 2018 |access-date=20 February 2018 |work=Jacobite Magazine}} Firstly, Friedrich Nietzsche argued in a fragment in The Will to Power that "the leveling process of European man is the great process which should not be checked: one should even accelerate it."{{cite book |last=Strong |first=Tracy |year=1988 |title=Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of Transfiguration |url=https://archive.org/details/friedrichnietzsc00stro_449 |url-access=limited |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |page= 211}} Taking inspiration from this notion for Anti-Oedipus, Deleuze and Guattari speculated further on an unprecedented "revolutionary path" to perpetuate capitalism's tendencies that would later become a central idea of accelerationism:
{{blockquote|But which is the revolutionary path? Is there one?—To withdraw from the world market, as Samir Amin advises Third World countries to do, in a curious revival of the fascist "economic solution"? Or might it be to go in the opposite direction? To go still further, that is, in the movement of the market, of decoding and deterritorialization? For perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized enough, not decoded enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and a practice of a highly schizophrenic character. Not to withdraw from the process, but to go further, to "accelerate the process," as Nietzsche put it: in this matter, the truth is that we haven't seen anything yet.|author=Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari|title=Anti-Oedipus{{cite book |last1=Deleuze |first1=Gilles |last2=Guattari |first2=Félix |year=2004 |title=Anti-Oedipus |location=London |publisher=Continuum |page= 260}}}}
Land also cited Karl Marx, who, in his 1848 speech "On the Question of Free Trade", anticipated accelerationist principles a century before Deleuze and Guattari by describing free trade as socially destructive and fuelling class conflict, then effectively arguing for it:
{{blockquote|But, in general, the protective system of our day is conservative, while the free trade system is destructive. It breaks up old nationalities and pushes the antagonism of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie to the extreme point. In a word, the free trade system hastens the social revolution. It is in this revolutionary sense alone, gentlemen, that I vote in favor of free trade.|author=Karl Marx|title=On the Question of Free Trade{{Cite book |title=Karl Marx: Selected Writings | editor1=David McLellan | date=2000 | page= 296 | publisher= Oxford University Press| isbn= 9780198782650}}}}
Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams, prominent left accelerationists, additionally credit Vladimir Lenin with recognizing capitalist progress as important in the subsequent functioning of socialism:
{{Blockquote|text=Socialism is inconceivable without large-scale capitalist engineering based on the latest discoveries of modern science. It is inconceivable without planned state organisation which keeps tens of millions of people to the strictest observance of a unified standard in production and distribution. We Marxists have always spoken of this, and it is not worth while wasting two seconds talking to people who do not understand even this (anarchists and a good half of the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries).|author=Vladimir Lenin|title=“Left Wing” Childishness}}Robin Mackay, co-editor of #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader and a former CCRU member, additionally cites Russian cosmism, science fiction (particularly Terminator, Predator, and Blade Runner), cyberpunk, 90's cyberculture, and electronic music as influences on the movement. Iain Hamilton Grant, another former CCRU member, stated "Neuromancer got into the philosophy department, and it went viral. You’d find worn-out paperbacks all over the common room.”
= The Cybernetic Culture Research Unit =
The Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU), a philosophy collective at the University of Warwick which included Land, Mackay, and Grant, was one of the most significant parts of the movement.{{cite book |last1=Schwarz |first1=Jonas Andersson |title=Online File Sharing: Innovations in Media Consumption |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |location=New York |pages=20–21}} Mark Fisher, another former member, described the CCRU's accelerationism as “a kind of exuberant anti-politics, a ‘technihilo' celebration of the irrelevance of human agency, partly inspired by the pro-markets, anti-capitalism line developed by Manuel DeLanda out of Braudel, and from the section of Anti-Oedipus that talks about marketization as the 'revolutionary path'."{{Cite web |last=Wilson |first=Rowan |date=January 16, 2017 |title=They Can Be Different in the Future Too: Mark Fisher interviewed |url=https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3051-they-can-be-different-in-the-future-too-mark-fisher-interviewed |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250217195507/https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3051-they-can-be-different-in-the-future-too-mark-fisher-interviewed |archive-date=Feb 17, 2025 |access-date=2025-02-20 |website=Verso Books |language=en}} Other significant members include Sadie Plant and Ray Brassier. The group stood in stark opposition to the University of Warwick and traditional left-wing academia, with Mackay stating "I don’t think Land has ever pretended to be left-wing! He’s a serious philosopher and an intelligent thinker, but one who has always loved to bait the left by presenting the ‘worst’ possible scenario with great delight…!" As Land became a stronger influence on the group and left the University of Warwick, they would shift to more unorthodox and occult ideas. Land suffered a breakdown from his amphetamine abuse and disappeared in the early 2000s, with the CCRU vanishing along with him.
= Works =
The Guardian has referred to #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader, a 2014 anthology edited by Robin Mackay and Armen Avanessian, as "the only proper guide to the movement in existence." They also described Fanged Noumena, a 2011 anthology of Land's work, as “contain[ing] some of accelerationism's most darkly fascinating passages." In 2015, Urbanomic and Time Spiral Press published Writings 1997-2003 as a complete collection of known texts published under the CCRU name, besides those that have been irrecoverably lost or attributed to a specific member. However, it is not actually complete, as some known works under the CCRU name are not included, such as those in #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader.{{Cite book |last=CCRU |first= |title=Writings 1997-2003 |publisher=Urbanomic, Time Spiral Press |year=2015 |isbn=9780995455061 |location=United Kingdom |language=en}}{{Cite book |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2= |first2= |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |edition=1st |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=May 2014 |pages= |language=en |chapter= |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}
Beliefs
= Nick Land and right accelerationism =
In "A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism", Land attributed the increasing speed of the modern world, along with the associated decrease in time available to think and make decisions about its events, to unregulated capitalism and its ability to exponentially grow and self-improve, describing capitalism as "a positive feedback circuit, within which commercialization and industrialization mutually excite each other in a runaway process." He argued that the best way to deal with capitalism is to participate more to foster even greater exponential growth and self-improvement via creative destruction, accelerating technological progress along with it. Land also argued that such acceleration is intrinsic to capitalism but impossible for non-capitalist systems, stating that "capital revolutionizes itself more thoroughly than any extrinsic 'revolution' possibly could." In an interview with Vox, he stated "Modernity has Capitalism (the self-escalating techno-commercial complex) as its motor. Our question was what ‘the process’ wants (i.e. spontaneously promotes) and what resistances it provokes." He also said that “the assumption” behind accelerationism was that “the general direction of [
In “Meltdown”, a CCRU work and one of the writings compiled in Fanged Noumena, Land envisioned a technocapital singularity in China, resulting in revolutions in artificial intelligence, human enhancement, biotechnology, and nanotechnology. This upends the previous status quo, and the former first world countries struggle to maintain control and stop the singularity, verging on collapse. He described new anti-authoritarian movements performing a bottom-up takeover of institutions through means like biological warfare enhanced with DNA computing. He claimed that capitalism's tendency towards optimization of itself and technology, in service of consumerism, will lead to the enhancement and eventually replacement of humanity with technology, asserting that "nothing human makes it out of the near-future." Eventually, the self-development of technology will culminate in the "melting [of] Terra into a seething K-pulp (which unlike grey goo synthesizes microbial intelligence as it proliferates)." He also criticized traditional philosophy as tending towards despotism, instead praising Deleuzoguattarian schizoanalysis as "already engaging with nonlinear nano-engineering runaway in 1972."{{Cite web |last=Land |first=Nick |title=swarm1 |url=http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_melt.htm |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241227105712/http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_melt.htm |archive-date=Dec 27, 2024 |access-date=Jan 31, 2025 |website=Cybernetic culture research unit}}{{Cite book |last=Land |first=Nick |title=Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987-2007 |publisher=Urbanomic/Sequence Press |isbn=9780955308789 |editor-last=Kronic |editor-first=Maya |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=April 1, 2011 |pages=441–459 |language=en |chapter=Meltdown |editor-last2=Brassier |editor-first2=Ray}}
Land has continually praised China's economic policy as being accelerationist, moving to Shanghai and working as a journalist writing material that has been characterized as pro-government propaganda. He has also spoken highly of Deng Xiaoping and Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew, calling Lee an "autocratic enabler of freedom."{{Cite web |last=Kaiser-Schatzlein |first=Robin |date=2022 |title=How the "soft" dictatorship of Lee Kuan Yew became a template for the American right |url=https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/08/lee-kuan-yew-blake-masters-the-new-right/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250114180216/https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/08/lee-kuan-yew-blake-masters-the-new-right/ |archive-date=January 14, 2025 |access-date=2025-02-03 |website=Mother Jones |language=en-US}} Yuk Hui stated "Land’s celebration of Asian cities such as Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Singapore is simply a detached observation of these places that projects onto them a common will to sacrifice politics for productivity."{{Cite web |last=Hui |first=Yuk |date=April 2017 |title=On the Unhappy Consciousness of Neoreactionaries - Journal #81 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/81/125815/on-the-unhappy-consciousness-of-neoreactionaries/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240622063056/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/81/125815/on-the-unhappy-consciousness-of-neoreactionaries/ |archive-date=June 22, 2024 |access-date=2025-04-03 |website=e-flux |language=en}}
== Dark enlightenment ==
Land's involvement in the neoreactionary movement has contributed to his views on accelerationism. In The Dark Enlightenment, he advocates for a form of capitalist monarchism, with states controlled by a CEO. He views democratic and egalitarian policies as only slowing down acceleration and the technocapital singularity, stating "Beside the speed machine, or industrial capitalism, there is an ever more perfectly weighted decelerator [...] comically, the fabrication of this braking mechanism is proclaimed as progress. It is the Great Work of the Left.”{{Cite web |last=Haider |first=Shuja |date=2017-03-28 |title=The Darkness at the End of the Tunnel: Artificial Intelligence and Neoreaction |url=https://viewpointmag.com/2017/03/28/the-darkness-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel-artificial-intelligence-and-neoreaction/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250128001456/https://viewpointmag.com/2017/03/28/the-darkness-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel-artificial-intelligence-and-neoreaction/ |archive-date=January 28, 2025 |access-date=2025-02-21 |website=Viewpoint Magazine |language=en-US}} He has advocated for accelerationists to support the neoreactionary movement, though many have distanced themselves from him in response to his views on race.
= Left-wing accelerationism =
Left-wing accelerationism (also referred to as left-accelerationism or L/Acc) is often attributed to Mark Fisher.{{Cite journal|last=Gardiner|first=Michael E.|date=2020|title=Automatic for the People? Cybernetics and Left-Accelerationism|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1467-8675.12528|journal=Constellations|volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=131–145 |language=en|doi=10.1111/1467-8675.12528|s2cid=225363854|issn=1467-8675}} Left-wing accelerationism seeks to explore, in an orthodox and conventional manner, how modern society has the momentum to create futures that are equitable and liberatory.{{Cite web|last=Brassier|first=Ray|date=2014-02-13|title=Wandering Abstraction|url=https://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/wandering-abstraction|access-date=2021-10-06|website=Mute|language=en}}{{Failed verification|date=February 2025}} While both strands of accelerationist thinking remain rooted in a similar range of thinkers, left accelerationism appeared with the intent to use technology for the goal of achieving an egalitarian future. Fisher, writing on his blog k-punk, had become increasingly disillusioned with capitalism as an accelerationist, citing working in the public sector in Blairite Britain, being a teacher and trade union activist, and an encounter with Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek, whom he considered to be using similar concepts to the CCRU but from a leftist perspective. At the same time, he became frustrated with traditional left wing politics, believing they were ignoring technology that they could exploit.
In "Terminator vs Avatar", Fisher claimed that while Marxists criticized Libidinal Economy for asserting that workers enjoyed the upending of primitive social orders, nobody truly wants to return to those. Therefore, rather than reverting to pre-capitalism, society must move through and beyond capitalism. Fisher praised Land's attacks on the academic left, describing the academic left as "careerist sandbaggers" and "a ruthless protection of petit bourgeois interests dressed up as politics." He also critiqued Land's interpretation of Deleuze and Guattari, stating that while superior in many ways, "his deviation from their understanding of capitalism is fatal" in assuming no reterritorialization, resulting in not foreseeing that capitalism provides "a simulation of innovation and newness that cloaks inertia and stasis." Citing Fredric Jameson's interpretation of The Communist Manifesto as "see[ing] capitalism as the most productive moment of history and the most destructive at the same time", he argued for accelerationism as an anti-capitalist strategy, criticizing the left's moral critique of capitalism and their "tendencies towards Canutism" as only helping the narrative that capitalism is the only viable system.{{cite book |first=Mark |last=Fisher |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |date=2014 |publisher=Urbanomic |editor-first1=Robin |editor-last1=Mackay |pages=335–46: 340, 342 |chapter=Terminator vs Avatar |editor-first2=Armen|editor-last2=Avanessian}}
Nick Srnicek befriended Fisher, sharing similar views, and the 2008 financial crisis, along with dissatisfaction with the left's "ineffectual" response of the Occupy protests, led to Srnicek co-writing "#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics" with Alex Williams in 2013.{{Cite book |last1=Srnicek |first1=Nick |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2=Williams |first2=Alex |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |edition=1st |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=May 2014 |pages=347–362 |language=en |chapter=#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}} They posited that capitalism was the most advanced economic system of its time, but has since stagnated and is now constraining technology, with neoliberalism only worsening its crises. At the same time, they considered the modern left to be "unable to devise a new political ideological vision" as they are too focused on localism and direct action and cannot adapt to make meaningful change. They advocated using existing capitalist infrastructure as "a springboard to launch towards post-capitalism", taking advantage of capitalist technological and scientific advances to experiment with things like economic modeling like Project Cybersyn. They also advocated for "collectively controlled legitimate vertical authority in addition to distributed horizontal forms of sociality" and attaining resources and funding for political infrastructure, contrasting standard leftist political action which they deem ineffective. Moving past the constraints of capitalism would result in a resumption of technological progress, not only creating a more rational society but also "recovering the dreams which transfixed many from the middle of the Nineteenth Century until the dawn of the neoliberal era, of the quest of Homo Sapiens towards expansion beyond the limitations of the earth and our immediate bodily forms."{{Cite book |last1=Srnicek |first1=Nick |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2=Williams |first2=Alex |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |edition=1st |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=May 2014 |pages=347–362 |language=en |chapter=#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}} They expanded further in Inventing the Future, which, while dropping the term "accelerationism", pushed for automation, reduction and distribution of working hours, universal basic income, and diminishment of work ethic.{{Cite book |last1=Srnicek |first1=Nick |title=Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work |last2=Williams |first2=Alex |publisher=Verso Books |year=2015 |isbn=9781784780968 |location=United Kingdom |pages=67 |language=en}}
Land rebuked its ideas in a 2017 interview with The Guardian, stating "the notion that self-propelling technology is separable from capitalism is a deep theoretical error."
= Effective accelerationism =
{{Main|Effective accelerationism}}
Effective accelerationism (abbreviated to e/acc) takes influence from effective altruism, a movement to maximize good by calculating what actions provide the greatest overall/global good and prioritizing those rather than focusing on personal interest/proximity. Proponents advocate for unrestricted technological progress "at all costs", believing that artificial general intelligence will solve universal human problems like poverty, war, and climate change, while deceleration and stagnation of technology is a greater risk than any posed by AI. For example, James Brusseau advocates reconfiguring AI ethics to promote acceleration, arguing that problems caused by AI innovation are to be resolved by still more innovation as opposed to limiting or slowing the technology.{{Cite arXiv |eprint=2212.01834 |class=cs.CY |first=James |last=Brusseau |title=Acceleration AI Ethics, the Debate between Innovation and Safety, and Stability AI's Diffusion versus OpenAI's Dall-E |date=2 April 2023}} This contrasts with effective altruism (referred to as "longtermism" to distinguish from e/acc), which tends to consider uncontrolled AI to be the greater existential risk and advocates for government regulation and careful alignment.{{Cite web |last=Chowdhury |first=Hasan |date=28 July 2023 |title=Get the lowdown on 'e/acc' — Silicon Valley's favorite obscure theory about progress at all costs, which has been embraced by Marc Andreessen |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/silicon-valley-tech-leaders-accelerationism-eacc-twitter-profiles-2023-7 |access-date=2023-11-20 |website=Business Insider |language=en-US}}{{Cite web |last=Torres |first=Émile P. |date=2023-12-14 |title='Effective Accelerationism' and the Pursuit of Cosmic Utopia |url=https://www.truthdig.com/articles/effective-accelerationism-and-the-pursuit-of-cosmic-utopia/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241227175025/https://www.truthdig.com/articles/effective-accelerationism-and-the-pursuit-of-cosmic-utopia/ |archive-date=December 27, 2024 |access-date=2025-02-01 |website=Truthdig |language=en-US}}
= Other views =
In a critique, Italian Marxist Franco Berardi considered acceleration “the essential feature of capitalist growth” and characterized accelerationism as "point[ing] out the contradictory implications of the process of intensification, emphasizing in particular the instability that acceleration brings into the capitalist system." However, he also stated “my answer to the question of whether acceleration marks a final collapse of power is quite simply: no. Because the power of capital is not based on stability.” He posited that the “accelerationist hypothesis” is based on two assumptions: that accelerating production cycles make capitalism unstable, and that potentialities within capitalism will necessarily deploy themselves. He criticized the first by stating “capitalism is resilient because it does not need rational government, only automatic governance”; and the second by arguing that while the possibility exists, it is not guaranteed to happen as it can still be slowed or stopped.{{Cite web |last=Berardi |first=Franco |date=June 2013 |title=Accelerationism Questioned from the Point of View of the Body - Journal #46 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60080/accelerationism-questioned-from-the-point-of-view-of-the-body/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240424200456/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60080/accelerationism-questioned-from-the-point-of-view-of-the-body/ |archive-date=Apr 24, 2024 |access-date=2025-02-19 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}
Benjamin Noys is a staunch critic of accelerationism, initially calling it "Deleuzian Thatcherism". He accuses it of offering false solutions to technological and economic problems, considering those solutions “always promised and always just out of reach."{{Cite book |last=Noys |first=Benjamin |title=Malign Velocities: Accelerationism and Capitalism |date=October 31, 2014 |publisher=Zer0 Books |isbn=978-1782793007 |location=United Kingdom |language=en}} He has also said "Capitalism, for the accelerationist, bears down on us as accelerative liquid monstrosity, capable of absorbing us and, for Land, we must welcome this."
In The Question Concerning Technology in China, Yuk Hui critiqued accelerationism, particularly Ray Brassier’s “Prometheanism and its Critics” from #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader, stating “if such a response to technology and capitalism is applied globally, [...] it risks perpetuating a more subtle form of colonialism.” He argues that accelerationism tries to universally apply a western conception of technology based on Prometheus despite other cultures having different myths and relations to technology.{{Cite book |last=Hui |first=Yuk |title=The Question Concerning Technology in China |date=September 2, 2016 |publisher=Urbanomic/Mono |isbn=978-0995455009 |language=en}} Further critiquing Westernization, globalization, and the loss of non-Western technological thought, he has also referred to Deng Xiaoping as "the world's greatest accelerationist" due to his economic reforms, considering them an acceleration of the modernization process which started in the aftermath of the Opium Wars and intensified with the Cultural Revolution. In "A Politics of Intensity: Some Aspects of Acceleration in Simondon and Deleuze", Yuk Hui and Louis Morelle analyzed Deleuze and Simondon from an accelerationist perspective.{{Cite journal |last1=Hui |first1=Yuk |last2=Morelle |first2=Louis |date=2017 |title=A Politics of Intensity: Some Aspects of Acceleration in Simondon and Deleuze |url=https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/dls.2017.0282 |journal=Deleuze Studies |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=498–517 |doi=10.3366/dls.2017.0282}}
Slavoj Žižek considers accelerationism to be “far too optimistic”, critiquing it as retroactively deterministic and contrasting it with Freud’s death drive and its lack of a final conclusion. He argues that accelerationism considers just one conclusion of the world’s tendencies and fails to find other “coordinates" of the world order.{{Cite web |last=Žižek |first=Slavoj |date=2023-09-12 |title=The Dialectic of Dark Enlightenment |url=https://www.compactmag.com/article/the-dialectic-of-dark-enlightenment/ |access-date=2025-02-23 |website=Compact |language=en}}
Benjamin H. Bratton's book The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty has been described as concerning accelerationist ideas, focusing on how information technology infrastructures undermine modern political geographies and proposing an open-ended "design brief". Tiziana Terranova's "Red Stack Attack!" links Bratton's stack model and left-wing accelerationism.{{Cite web |last=Terranova |first=Tiziana |date=8 March 2014 |title=Red Stack Attack! Algorithms, Capital and the Automation of the Common |url=http://www.euronomade.info/?p=2268 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170211075914/http://www.euronomade.info/?p=2268 |archive-date=11 February 2017 |access-date=9 February 2017 |publisher=EuroNomade |language=it-IT}}
Laboria Cuboniks, a feminist group, advocated for the use of technology for gender abolition in "Xenofeminism: A Politics for Alienation", which has been described as "regrounding left accelerationism in its cyberfeminist antecedents."{{Cite web |date=11 June 2015 |title=After Accelerationism: The Xenofeminist manifesto |url=http://tripleampersand.org/after-accelerationism-the-xenofeminist-manifesto/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017070050/http://tripleampersand.org/after-accelerationism-the-xenofeminist-manifesto/ |archive-date=17 October 2015 |access-date=9 October 2015 |website=&&& Journal |language=en}} Aria Dean, proposing an alternative to both right and left accelerationism, synthesized racial capitalism with accelerationism in "Notes on Blacceleration", arguing that the binary between humans and capital is already blurred by the scars of the Atlantic slave trade.{{Cite journal |last=Dean |first=Aria |date=December 2017 |title=Notes on Blacceleration |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/87/169402/notes-on-blacceleration/ |journal=E-flux Journal |issue=87}}
Other uses of the term
Since "accelerationism" was coined in 2010, the term has taken on several new meanings. Several commentators have used the label accelerationist to describe a controversial political strategy articulated by Slavoj Žižek.{{cite web|date=5 May 2017|title=Melenchon and Žižek; Accelerationism and Edgelordism – Infinite Coincidence|url=https://infinite-coincidence.com/2017/05/05/melenchon-and-zizek-accelerationism-and-edgelordism/|access-date=12 August 2020|website=infinite-coincidence.com}}{{cite web|last=Coyne|first=Richard|date=14 May 2017|title=What's wrong with accelerationism – Reflections on Technology, Media & Culture|url=https://richardcoyne.com/2017/05/14/whats-wrong-with-accelerationism/|url-status=live|access-date=12 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171001173244/https://richardcoyne.com/2017/05/14/whats-wrong-with-accelerationism/ |archive-date=1 October 2017 }} An often-cited example of this is Žižek's assertion in a November 2016 interview with Channel 4 News that were he an American citizen, he would vote for U.S. president Donald Trump as the candidate more likely to disrupt the political status quo in that country.{{cite web|date=3 November 2016|title=Slavoj Žižek would vote for Trump|url=https://zizek.uk/slavoj-zizek-would-vote-for-trump/|url-status=live|access-date=12 August 2020|website=zizek.uk|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161107061736/http://zizek.uk:80/slavoj-zizek-would-vote-for-trump/ |archive-date=7 November 2016 }} Steven Shaviro described variants that “embrace the idea that the worse things get, the better the prospect for a revolution to overthrow everything”, though he considers it very rare.{{Cite web |last=Ambler |first=Charlie |date=2015-03-19 |title=Is Consuming Like Crazy the Best Way to End Capitalism? |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/is-consuming-like-crazy-the-best-way-to-end-capitalism-050/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250223175355/https://www.vice.com/en/article/is-consuming-like-crazy-the-best-way-to-end-capitalism-050/ |archive-date=Feb 23, 2025 |access-date=2025-02-23 |website=VICE |language=en-US}} Mackay noted a misconception that accelerationism involves a Marxist "acceleration of contradictions" within capitalism and stated that no accelerationist authors have advocated such a thing. Chinese dissidents have referred to Xi Jinping as "Accelerator-in-Chief" (referencing state media calling Deng Xiaoping "Architect-in-Chief of Reform and Opening"), believing that Xi's authoritarianism is hastening the demise of the Chinese Communist Party and that, because it is beyond saving, they should allow it to destroy itself in order to create a better future.{{Cite web |title=Accelerationism - China Digital Space |url=https://chinadigitaltimes.net/space/Accelerationism |access-date=2025-02-04 |website=chinadigitaltimes.net}}
= Far-right accelerationist terrorism =
Despite its originally Marxist philosophical and theoretical interests, since the late 2010s, international networks of neo-fascists, neo-Nazis, White nationalists, and White supremacists have increasingly used the term "accelerationism" to refer to right-wing extremist goals, and have been known to refer to an "acceleration" of racial conflict through violent means such as assassinations, murders, terrorist attacks and eventual societal collapse to achieve the building of a White ethnostate.{{cite news|author=Bloom|first=Mia|date=30 May 2020|title=Far-Right Infiltrators and Agitators in George Floyd Protests: Indicators of White Supremacists|publisher=Reiss Center on Law and Security at New York University School of Law.|agency=Just Security|url=https://www.justsecurity.org/70497/far-right-infiltrators-and-agitators-in-george-floyd-protests-indicators-of-white-supremacists/}} Far-right accelerationism has been widely considered as detrimental to public safety.{{Cite news|last1=Taub|first1=Amanda|last2=Bennhold|first2=Katrin|date=2021-06-07|title=From Doomsday Preppers to Doomsday Plotters|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/07/world/accelerationism-qanon-day-x.html|access-date=2021-12-10|issn=0362-4331}} The inspiration for this distinct variation is occasionally cited as American Nazi Party and National Socialist Liberation Front member James Mason's newsletter Siege, where he argued for sabotage, mass killings, and assassinations of high-profile targets to destabilize and destroy the current society, seen as a system upholding a Jewish and multicultural New World Order. His works were republished and popularized by the Iron March forum and Atomwaffen Division, right-wing extremist organizations strongly connected to various terrorist attacks, murders, and assaults.{{cite news |last1=Poulter |first1=James |title=The Obscure Neo-Nazi Forum Linked to a Wave of Terror |url=https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/437pkd/the-obscure-neo-nazi-forum-linked-to-a-wave-of-terror |work=Vice |date=13 October 2020 |language=en}}{{Cite web|date=22 February 2018|title=Atomwaffen and the SIEGE parallax: how one neo-Nazi's life's work is fueling a younger generation|url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/02/22/atomwaffen-and-siege-parallax-how-one-neo-nazi%E2%80%99s-life%E2%80%99s-work-fueling-younger-generation|url-status=live|access-date=16 June 2020|website=Hatewatch|publisher=Southern Poverty Law Center|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180224055840/https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/02/22/atomwaffen-and-siege-parallax-how-one-neo-nazi%E2%80%99s-life%E2%80%99s-work-fueling-younger-generation |archive-date=24 February 2018 }}{{cite news|last=Miller|first=Cassie|date=23 June 2020|title='There Is No Political Solution': Accelerationism in the White Power Movement|work=Southern Poverty Law Center|url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2020/06/23/there-no-political-solution-accelerationism-white-power-movement|access-date=13 October 2020}} Far-right accelerationists have also been known to attack critical infrastructure, particularly the power grid, attempting to cause a collapse of the system or believing that 5G was causing COVID-19, with some encouraging promotion of 5G conspiracy theories as easier than convincing potential recruits that the Holocaust never happened.{{Cite web |last=Ebrahimji |first=Alisha |date=2024-11-08 |title=What is accelerationism, the White supremacist ideology promoting power station attacks |url=https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/08/us/accelerationism-meaning-manifesto-theory-accelerationist/index.html |access-date=2025-02-01 |website=CNN |language=en}}{{Cite web |last=Hummel |first=Kristina |date=2023-05-23 |title=The Targeting of Infrastructure by America's Violent Far-Right |url=https://ctc.westpoint.edu/the-targeting-of-infrastructure-by-americas-violent-far-right/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250116095101/https://ctc.westpoint.edu/the-targeting-of-infrastructure-by-americas-violent-far-right/ |archive-date=Jan 16, 2025 |access-date=2025-02-01 |website=Combating Terrorism Center at West Point |language=en-US}} According to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which tracks hate groups and files class action lawsuits against discriminatory organizations and entities, "on the case of white supremacists, the accelerationist set sees modern society as irredeemable and believe it should be pushed to collapse so a fascist society built on ethnonationalism can take its place. What defines white supremacist accelerationists is their belief that violence is the only way to pursue their political goals."
Brenton Harrison Tarrant, the perpetrator of the 15 March 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings that killed 51 people and injured 49 others, strongly encouraged right-wing accelerationism in a section of his manifesto titled "Destabilization and Accelerationism: Tactics". Tarrant's manifesto influenced John Timothy Earnest, the perpetrator of both the 24 March 2019 Escondido mosque fire at Dar-ul-Arqam Mosque in Escondido, California, and the 27 April 2019 Poway synagogue shooting which resulted in one dead and three injured; and it also influenced Patrick Crusius, the perpetrator of the 3 August 2019 El Paso Walmart shooting that killed 23 people and injured 23 others. Tarrant and Earnest, in turn, influenced Juraj Krajčík, the perpetrator of the 2022 Bratislava shooting that left dead two patrons of a gay bar.{{cite web |title=Aké je ideologické podhubie streleckých útokov |url=https://komentare.sme.sk/c/23032476/ake-je-ideologicke-podhubie-streleckych-utokov.html?ref=w_neprehl |website=SME |access-date=13 October 2022 |language=sk-SK |date=12 October 2022}}{{cite news |author=Beauchamp |first=Zack |date=18 November 2019 |title=Accelerationism: the obscure idea inspiring white supremacist killers around the world |url=https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/11/11/20882005/accelerationism-white-supremacy-christchurch |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250210123938/https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/11/11/20882005/accelerationism-white-supremacy-christchurch |archive-date=Feb 10, 2025 |access-date=17 September 2020 |work=Vox |publisher=Vox Media}} Sich Battalion urged its members to buy a copy of Tarrant's manifesto, encouraging them to "get inspired" by it.{{cite web|url=https://www.bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-europe/2019/08/14/the-russians-and-ukrainians-translating-the-christchurch-shooters-manifesto/|title=The Russians and Ukrainians Translating the Christchurch Shooter's Manifesto|work=Bellingcat|date=23 October 2022}}
Vox pointed to Land's shift towards neoreactionarism, along with the neoreactionary movement crossing paths with the alt-right as another fringe right wing internet movement, as the likely connection point between far-right racial accelerationism and the term for Land's otherwise unrelated technocapitalist ideas. They cited a 2018 Southern Poverty Law Center investigation which found users on the neo-Nazi blog The Right Stuff who cited neoreactionarism as an influence. Land himself became interested in the Atomwaffen-affiliated theistic Satanist organization Order of Nine Angles (ONA) which adheres to the ideology of Neo-Nazi terrorist accelerationism, describing the ONA's works as "highly-recommended" in a blog post.{{cite news|author=Land|first=Nick|author-link=Nick Land|date=11 October 2020|title=Occult Xenosystems|work=Xenosystems.net|url=http://www.xenosystems.net/occult-xenosystems/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180106084441/http://www.xenosystems.net/occult-xenosystems/|archive-date=6 January 2018}} Since the 2010s, the political ideology and religious worldview of the Order of Nine Angles, founded by the British neo-Nazi leader David Myatt in 1974, have increasingly influenced militant neo-fascist and neo-Nazi insurgent groups associated with right-wing extremist and White supremacist international networks, most notably the Iron March forum.
==Fascist accelerationist organizations==
{{Off topic|date=April 2025}}
- Active Club Network is decentralized Clandestine cell system of white nationalists. It promotes mixed martial arts to fight against what it asserts is a system that is targeting the white race, as well as a "warrior spirit" to prepare for a forthcoming race war. Some extremism researchers have characterized the network as a "shadow or stand-by army" which is awaiting activation as the need for it arises.{{cite news |last1=Yousef |first1=Odette |title='Active club' hate groups are growing in the U.S. — and making themselves seen |url=https://www.npr.org/2023/07/19/1188111769/active-club-hate-groups |publisher=National Public Radio |date=July 19, 2023}}{{cite news |title=Active Club Network |url=https://www.adl.org/resources/backgrounder/active-club-network |publisher=Anti-Defamation League}}{{cite news |title=Amid Robert Rundo's Extradition, the White Supremacist Active Clubs Network Remains a Threat |url=https://www.justsecurity.org/87970/amid-robert-rundos-extradition-the-white-supremacist-active-clubs-network-remains-a-threat/ |publisher=Just Security |date=September 1, 2023|first1=Morgan|last1=Moon|first2=Jon|last2=Lewis}}{{cite news |title=Hiding in Plain Sight – The Transnational Right-Wing Extremist Active Club Network |url=https://extremism.gwu.edu/hiding-plain-sight |publisher=Counter Extremism Project |date=September 22, 2023}}{{cite web|url=https://www.middlebury.edu/institute/academics/centers-initiatives/ctec/ctec-publications/dangerous-organizations-and-bad-actors-patriot|title=Dangerous Organizations and Bad Actors: The Patriot Front|work=Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey|quote=Given the Active Club network's overt accelerationism and likely desire to engage in violence, it is concerning that PF has aligned itself and trained alongside these Active Clubs.|date=9 December 2023}}{{cite web|url=https://gnet-research.org/2023/12/05/the-right-fit-how-active-club-propaganda-attracts-women-to-the-far-right/|title=The Right Fit: How Active Club Propaganda Attracts Women to the Far-Right|work=Global Network on Extremism and Technology|quote=Individual far-right Active Clubs exist as part of a decentralised network of groups that conduct mental and physical combat training while promoting white supremacist, neofascist, and accelerationist ideologies.|date=9 December 2023}}
- Atomwaffen Division is a neo-Nazi terror organization found in 2013 by Brandon Russell responsible for multiple murders and mass casualty plots. Atomwaffen has been proscribed as a terror organization in United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.{{cite web |publisher=Anti-Defamation League |url=https://www.adl.org/education/resources/backgrounders/atomwaffen-division-awd |title=Backgrounder: Atomwaffen Division (AWD) |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180203140208/https://www.adl.org/education/resources/backgrounders/atomwaffen-division-awd |archive-date=February 3, 2018}}
- The Base is a neo-Nazi, white supremacist paramilitary hate group and training network, formed in 2018 by Rinaldo Nazzaro and active in the United States, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and Europe. {{as of|November 2021}} it is considered a terrorist organization in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.
- Combat 18 is a neo-Nazi organization that has been proscribed in Canada and Germany and is tied to the assassination of Walter Lübcke and the 2009 Vítkov arson attack.{{Cite web|url=https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/ntnl-scrt/cntr-trrrsm/lstd-ntts/crrnt-lstd-ntts-en.aspx|title=About the listing process|date=21 December 2018|website=www.publicsafety.gc.ca|access-date=6 April 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161005193024/https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/ntnl-scrt/cntr-trrrsm/lstd-ntts/crrnt-lstd-ntts-en.aspx|archive-date=5 October 2016|url-status=live}}{{Cite web|date=23 January 2020|title=Bekanntmachung eines Vereinsverbots gegen "Combat 18 Deutschland" vom 13. Januar 2020 (ÖSII3-20106/2#13) (BAnz AT 23.01.2020 B1)|url=https://www.bundesanzeiger.de/pub/publication/X2hfxbed1MFkxQrcMhr/content/X2hfxbed1MFkxQrcMhr/BAnz%20AT%2023.01.2020%20B1.pdf?inline|access-date=26 September 2020|publisher=Bundesanzeiger|language=de}}{{cite web|url=https://hopenothate.org.uk/2020/10/30/from-the-hope-not-hate-archive-accelerationism-leaderless-resistance-and-combat-18/|title=Accelerationism, Leaderless resistance and Combat 18|date=3 January 2023|work=Hope not Hate|first=Patrik|last=Hermansson}}
- The Manson Family was a doomsday cult, led by Charles Manson, responsible for the Tate–LaBianca murders, in which seven people were murdered between August 8 and August 10, 1969. Manson was a white supremacist and neo-Nazi{{cite magazine|first=Lauren|last=Gill|url=https://www.newsweek.com/charles-manson-was-white-supremacist-lets-not-forget-713915|title=Remember, Charles Manson Was a White Supremacist|magazine=Newsweek|date=November 16, 2017|access-date=August 17, 2020|archive-date=August 4, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200804074518/https://www.newsweek.com/charles-manson-was-white-supremacist-lets-not-forget-713915|url-status=live}}{{cite magazine|first=Desire|last=Thompson|url=https://www.vibe.com/2017/11/charles-manson-his-obsession-with-black-people|title=Charles Manson & His Obsession with Black People|magazine=Vibe|location=New York City|date=November 20, 2017|access-date=August 18, 2020|archive-date=August 13, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200813000715/https://www.vibe.com/2017/11/charles-manson-his-obsession-with-black-people|url-status=live}} who prophesized about a race war in which African-Americans would rise up and exterminate all white people in the United States, with him and his followers hiding in safety. Afterward, the Family would rule over the Black population, with Manson as their "master," as he believed that Black people were not intelligent enough to govern themselves.{{cite web|first=John W.|last=Whitehead|url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/helter-skelter-racism-and_b_669109|title=Helter Skelter: Racism and Murder|website=HuffPost|date=August 3, 2010|access-date=August 17, 2020|archive-date=October 30, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201030204544/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/helter-skelter-racism-and_b_669109|url-status=live}}{{cite web|first=Jim|last=Beckerman|url=https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/2019/08/09/charles-manson-murders-still-relevant-racism-50-years-later/1955164001/|title=Charles Manson: 50 years later, murders have racist link to recent mass-killings|newspaper=The Record|date=August 9, 2019|access-date=August 17, 2020|archive-date=January 24, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210124221103/https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/2019/08/09/charles-manson-murders-still-relevant-racism-50-years-later/1955164001/|url-status=live}} The Tate–LaBianca murders were an attempt to bring this scenario closer to reality, with Manson believing that the killing of people who he considered "pigs" would inspire Black people to do the same.{{Cite web|url=https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/3d/61/102.html|title=People v. Manson|website=Justia Law|language=en|access-date=May 11, 2019|archive-date=May 20, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180520054853/https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/3d/61/102.html|url-status=live}}
- Nordic Resistance Movement is a pan-Nordic neo-Nazi organization that adheres to accelerationism and is tied to ONA and multiple terror plots and murders, like the aggravated assault of an antifascist in Helsinki in 2016. There has been an international effort to proscribe NRM as a terrorist organization, and it was banned as such in Finland in 2019.{{cite web|url=https://www.sv.uio.no/c-rex/english/news-and-events/right-now/2020/the-case-against-the-nordic-resistance-movement.html|title=The case against the Nordic Resistance Movement in Finland: an overview and some explanations|publisher=University of Oslo Center for Research on Extremism |access-date=2 November 2020}}{{Cite news|url=https://www.middlebury.edu/institute/academics/centers-initiatives/ctec/ctec-publications/dangerous-organizations-and-bad-actors-nordic|title=Dangerous Organizations and Bad Actors: Nordic Resistance Movement|work=Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey|date=19 November 2022}} On 14 June 2024, the United States Department of State designated NRM and its leaders as Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT).{{cite web|url=https://ofac.treasury.gov/recent-actions/20240614|title=Counter Terrorism Designations; West Bank-related Designation; Issuance of Amended Frequently Asked Questions|date=14 June 2024|work=Office of Foreign Assets Control}}{{cite web|url=https://www.state.gov/terrorist-designations-of-nordic-resistance-movement-and-three-leaders/|work=state.gov|title=Terrorist Designations of Nordic Resistance Movement and Three Leaders|date=14 June 2024|quote=Today, the Department of State is designating Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM) as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended.}}{{cite web | last=Bergkvist | first=Frida | title=USA terrorstämplar nazistiska NMR | website=Dagens Nyheter | date=2024-06-14 | url=https://www.dn.se/varlden/usa-terrorstamplar-nazistiska-nmr/ | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240614195156/https://www.dn.se/varlden/usa-terrorstamplar-nazistiska-nmr/ | archive-date=2024-06-14 | url-status=live | language=sv | access-date=2024-06-14}}
- Order of Nine Angles is a neo-Nazi satanist organization that has been connected to multiple murders and terror plots. There has been an international effort to proscribe ONA as a terror organization. Further, the ONA is connected to the Atomwaffen and the Base, and the founder of ONA David Myatt was a one-time leader of the C18.
- Russian Imperial Movement is a white supremacist organization founded in Russia and proscribed as a terror organization in the United States and Canada for its connection to neo-fascist terrorists. People trained by RIM have gone on to commit a series of bombings and joined the separatist militants in Donbas.{{Cite journal|last1=Johnson|first1=Bethan|last2=Feldman|first2=Matthew|date=2021-07-21|title=Siege Culture After Siege: Anatomy of a Neo-Nazi Terrorist Doctrine|url=https://icct.nl/publication/siege-culture-anatomy-of-a-neo-nazi-terrorist-doctrine/ | journal=International Centre for Counter-Terrorism| page=1}}
See also
- Accelerating Change
- Christian Identity - Revolutionary violence
- Cybernetics
- Cyborg
- Ecofascism - Association with violence
- Ethnic conflict
- Futures studies
- {{annotated link|Great Acceleration}}
- {{annotated link|Non-simultaneity}}
- {{annotated link|Speculative realism}}
- {{annotated link|Strategy of tension}}
- {{annotated link|Terrorgram}}
- {{annotated link|Time–space compression}}
- Transhumanism