Like most people, when I first encountered NFTs I thought they were a scam: a lot of grifters taking money from impressionable fiance bros, tech bros, and technofetishist by hyping up a worthless new application of a technology. After watching Line Goes Up a few months ago, I became convinced that NFTs were a vanguard of this current global wave of fascism. The primary drivers behind NFTs aren't grifters but instead capitalists, just not ultra wealthy capitalists. Near the end of the video, Olson refers to NFTs as a battle between the 5% and the 1%, a relationship primarily based on the capitalist response to the end of capitalism. The writing is on the wall for everyone who isn't in the Gates/Bezos level of owning the means of production, which includes smaller capitalists still larger than the petite bourgeois. These capitalists know this, and they resent it. They aren't mad about extreme inequality and rampant oppression, they're mad that will soon no longer be the oppressors. In a desperate bid to keep their material position over society, they turned to creating a system whose goal is the corporatization of everything, a system that's based on atomizing and exploiting every tiny aspect of our lives - and they dreamed themselves the rulers of this new system. Conflicts like this, where smaller capitalists are willing to turn to social upheaval in order to take power from larger capitalists are exactly how fascism begins. NFTs are an incredibly dumb grift, but at their core, their underlying ideology is geared towards the creation of a new fascist social order. Where christofascism and QAnon are the worker response to the end of capitalism, technofetishism (specifically NFTs, DAOs, the blockchain, and all the rest) is the capitalist response to the end of capitalism. They're two opposite, class specific manifestations of the advent of fascism.

Of course, the NFT and crypto markets have collapsed. While this is potentially a diffusing of the capitalist infighting that heralds fascism, I don't think this is the last we'll see of NFTs. As stated above, the very function of NFTs is to turn everything about a worker's life into a commodity. Capitalism naturally ends as it runs out of markets to exploit, causing it to increase the exploitation of existing markets and laborers to unsustainable levels. That creates the material conditions we're seeing now, which directly leads to anti-capitalist sentiment that fascists take advantage of. Fascism as an ideology is essentially a more overtly violent continuation of capitalism after its collapse. The reason this is relevant to a conversation on NFTs is that big market players recognize the need to find more markets to exploit. Not in a Marxist sense where they are aware of their own inevitable collapse, but rather just by following their natural systemic incentives to grow infinitely. NFTs are a dumb grift, and they were a complete failure due to a lack of systemic backing and omnipresent scams. But what if a company like Facebook built their own NFT infrastructure? If enough keystone capitalists decided to recreate the architecture of crypto exchanges and NFTs, they could actually succeed in using technology to create markets out of thin air. This was the end goal of the existing incarnation of NFTs, the players involved simply lacked the institutional power to force everyone to participate by being required to register your resume or lease as an NFT. Should they choose to rebuild these systems under their control, web3 would give large capitalists more markets to speculate on and exploit at the cost of ever decreasing material conditions for the working class. The final days of capitalism might include systems not entirely dissimilar to what web3 aims to be, just not controlled by the original designers.

It seems unlikely at this point that NFTs will herald fascism in the way that I initially worried, but that's not to say that web3 won't be a contributing factor. By contrast, the failure of web3 and the potential recreation of it by large capitalists will provide ample room to radicalize its former advocates. Crypto bros, often middle class white men, who have been financially harmed by NFTs and crypto while companies like Meta recreate the same structures they once participated in will likely feel indignant and cheated out wealth they believe should be theirs. From their perspective, if NFTs were a viable idea why then were they unable to profit off of them despite being in on the ground floor long before larger capitalists became involved? This sentiment will be easily exploited by fascist agitators who will argue that this is evidence "the elite" rig systems so that "the people" cannot succeed financially. From here we'll see the typical fascist pipelining and bending of a legitimate criticism of liberal capitalism into an argument in support of a more overtly violent form of capitalism.

NFTs represent an opportunity for capitalists to extend the lifespan of capitalism by atomizing the existence of workers in the name of ever increasing growth. Simultaneously, the failure of cryptocurrency and the likelihood of its revitalization by large capitalists offers a massive opportunity to radicalize those who initially bought into crypto as consumers - a group already rife with fascist ideology and economically primed by declining material privilege to side with fascism. In this sense NFTs represent a way for fascists to reach an entirely different demographic than those susceptible to christofascism and conspiracy, creating an even wider tent of reactionary ideology.

  • crime [she/her, any]
    ·
    2 years ago

    This all makes a lot of sense.

    My impression of "Web3" was just that it's "blockchain everything" but the concept itself is so stupid that I haven't been able to wrap my head around it beyond that — do you have some sense of what it purports to be, what it actually is, and what the implications are for the internet at large? Doesn't need to be thorough. Just trying to decide if I should learn more about it and/or if it's necessary/valuable/possible to try to sabotage web3 before it takes off much

    • wire [it/its]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      If you haven't already seen it, I really recommend Line Goes Up for a general overview on Web3 stuff. What Web3 proports to be is the libertarian, techbro solution to the neoliberal financial system and the consolidation of the internet by companies like Google, Amazon, and Facebook. It completely fails in all these aims, creating an ecosystem which compounds the wealth of individuals rich enough to be close to capital or small time capitalists but not those like Bezos or Buffett. It also created a decentralized ecosystem which immediately centralized to solve problems stemming from decentralization, so it failed at that too. If you want more technical details on how exactly they fail at those aspect, I'd again recommend the video I linked. Dan Olson is at best a succdem, but the video does a good job making it easy to understand the mechanics of Web3 and laying a foundation for disucssions around it.

      The implications for the internet at large are very minor with the potential to be major in the right circumstances. As of now, crypto and NFTs are crashing since they have no real use value and the bubble has seemingly popped. The real value of NFTs is their potential to comodiy your existence, not what they're like now. Everything that you have a document on from contracts with landlords to government paperwork can be turned into a digital object which needs to be verified to a capitalist with money. The techbro who founded etherium doesn't have the systemic influence to begin building towards a system like that, so the NFTs we got were shit like monkey JPG profile pictures or video game assets. If a ton of corporations with actual power like your bank, Google, Facebook, and Amazon all got together and made a similar system they could conceivably force everyone to participate instead of NFTs being loser finance bros buying garbage. The implications of that are staggering, but that's if big capitalists decide to use this sort of infrastructure to stretch worker exploration as far as they can. In a situation like that, you wouldn't really need a dedicated blockchain, you could just take the spirit of a central authenticator that requires you to pay to authenticate things and go from there.

      As of now, there's no need to stop web3. It stopped itself more or less, and the existing players will likely get less and less relevant as time goes on. As long as you don't buy crypto or mint NFTs you're helping kill Web3. Bit if that systemic implication I mentioned earlier were to happen, you likely couldn't opt out for the same way you can't opt out of other worker exploitation. There's no guarantees that'll happen, but with companies like Facebook getting into this space, it doesn't seem impossible.

      • crime [she/her, any]
        ·
        2 years ago

        Ah cool thanks for the detailed write up and the video rec!

        Main reason I asked about helping to kill it is cause I'm a software engineer and recently browsed through a shitload of job listings for web3 startups/grifts/etc and know that if it were helpful or socially necessary I could easily get hired at those places and cause problems on purpose. Definitely less soul sucking not to though lol, especially since they're just small potatoes and it sounds like doing that would clear the way for the bigger players even more

        • wire [it/its]
          hexagon
          ·
          2 years ago

          Based as fuck that your mind immediately went to sabotaging development from the inside. That's fucking awesome comrade. As it currently stands, I wouldn't waste your mental health on it. Unless you think you can do some damage that would set a project back by years and you get an offer from Facebook or Google, you'd be fucking with little fish in a little pond that's likely to dry up soon. Also, they probably won't pay your wages when the CEO runs off with all the money after the rug pull. At this point the potential uses of the technology have been demonstrated if big players in the tech or financial sector are interested. Destroying some bullshit memecoin company won't help us too much, none of the players on the board right now will be involved in this hypothetical future scenario. Especially considering how good a job they do at destroying themselves without outside help, I'd focus your energy and labor on other areas.