this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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In the spirit of level 7: I use capitalised pronouns in all three grammatical persons
I don't think the Bourgeois created intentionalism, but I do think they're responsible for its prevalence in our modern society. The degree to which most people are concerned with intentions is so stifling, unhealthy, and unsustainable that I do not believe it can be natural. We live in an age of relatively little social upheaval. There are fewer revolutions and wars than usual right now, and that's not entirely a good thing. Look at the USA - they are in desperate need of a civil war, or we shall soon be fighting world war 3. Yet the people are far more passive than we would expect from history. Nonviolent resistance is also down, so it's not just military technology. It's propaganda.
I think intentionalism is a meme - an idea that through natural selection has taken on a life of its own. And because it helps the Bourgeoisie, they, perhaps unconsciously, create conditions that favour it in their media empires.
Pronouns fixed! (I hope. Let me know if I fucked it up. Also, just to be sure: You're okay with indeterminate "you" being still in minuscules, right? As in, only capitalising it for the personal pronoun?)
I don't have data to decide between my hypothesis (biological phenomenon) versus Yours (meme). And it's possible it's both things at the same time. So I think I'll roll with the idea of it being a meme.
Perhaps what the bourgeoisie is selecting for isn't intentionalism itself, but "assumptiveness"? I've been noticing people are becoming increasingly eager to voice certainty based on little to nothing; "what's inside someone else's head" is just a consequence of that. For the bourgeoisie, this would be useful for a lot more things, for example it makes people more vulnerable against advertisement.
On USA, another factor is false consciousness. (I know You aren't Marxist, but I think the concept is useful to Anarchists too.) The United-Statian population sees itself as part of the "ruling caste", as opposed to "the brown people" (...like me), and in the process they subject themselves even more to the actual ruling elites there.
You know, I don't think the "temporarily embarrassed millionaires" thing is true anymore. It made sense back in the 70s when the USA had what the capitalists call a middle class, but that group is getting smaller and smaller. Wealth inequality is higher than it's ever been in history, according to some measures. Maybe I'm just not in touch with the youth anymore, but everyone I know treats "Sigma male grindset" as a joke and knows our generation is never buying houses.
Then again I've lived in a homeless shelter and surround Myself with antirealists, so what do I know about the consciousness of white suburbia?
"you" as the pronoun for hypothetical people is perfectly amenable to Me. However I know other capitalised pronoun users, and the risk of misunderstandings and the annoyance of clarification has lead Me to use "one" as the hypothetical pronoun instead in most cases, and thus I recommend it to make your life easier as well.
I confess I don't fully understand how increased assumptiveness should lead to an increased value placed on intentions as excuses for wrongdoing.
I apologise beforehand for the wall of text. To be frank I'm enjoying this discussion.
I still notice a fair bit of that "we're the best Nation! ~~Gott mit uns~~ [sorry, wrong Nazi country] God Bless Amurrrca! Everyone else is a bloody shitskin living in a mud hut" discourse when interacting with United-Statians online. Perhaps it isn't as strong as before, like You said, but I don't think it's gone.
I live in a mostly-white suburbia but it's in Latin America, so... take what I say about USA's youth with a grain of salt. As in, I'm throwing in what I think, but I'm fully aware it might be wrong. Still worth saying IMO, though.
Got it. I'll do as You said and use "one". (To be frank I used "one" for some time, mostly to distinguish between the personal and indeterminate, but plenty native speakers screeched at it, so... I kind of gave up. But it's good to know I can use it with You, and potentially with other people who capitalise pronouns.)
Let's say intentions exist as an abstraction for a bunch of mental processes, related to planning and the predictions of the outcome of one's own actions. For example, when someone plans to do something, the person has the "intention" of doing it. Or (reusing the example from Your blog), "author intent" as the set of experiences, thoughts, emotions etc. the author is trying to provoke on the reader. In practice that's really close to what most use the word "intention" for.
But that's all internal to someone's mind. Only the person themself sometimes know their own intentions; nobody else does. At most others can guess it, based on what the person's words or actions.
So, for one to act based on someone else's actions, or to say something about them, one needs to either
Your typical person won't do the former. But they'll do the later — and the later is what we call "to assume", it's to take what one doesn't know as if one did.
So there's where assumptiveness kicks in; for most people, it's what even enables them to talk about intentions. Without assumptiveness, the value of intentions is the same of a ghost, it's zero.
Granted, someone's guesses might be more or less accurate depending on how much the person guessing knows the person they're guessing the intentions off. But when you're dealing with vulture capitalists across the globe, one knows as much about the person as one knows future lotteries, practically nothing. They're a stranger, but they're still talking carefully crafted words about their own intentions, and what they talk about their intentions is the only actual piece of info you have to guide your guess them. With the wrongdoings becoming more of a "no, I didn't have the intention! My intentions was another!"
The result is that you have a bunch of bourgeois people likely bullshitting about their intentions, and people eating it for breakfast.