are an expression of faith rather than reason, because there is no rational basis for the idea that man can radically transform hiscondition. There is continuity, too, between the bloodletting that often accompanied medieval and early modernmillenarianism and the political violence of the modern west, which "can only be understood as an eschatologicalphenomenon." In previous books, Gray has established himself as a fierce critic of contemporary free-market policies, and here he buildson his earlier arguments by tracing the way utopian thinking has taken over the Anglo-American political right. MargaretThatcher's adoption of neoliberalism marks, for Gray, the moment when the right abandoned a philosophy that aimed merelyat coping with the fact of human imperfection. Thatcher thought that releasing market forces in Britain and around the worldwould bring economic prosperity and moral reconstruction based around "Victorian values," but this hope was utopian andself-contradictory. The idea that the free market was the right system for all societies was based on a utopian vision of modernisation, and has produced a backlash in many countries. Gray's greatest scorn in Black Mass is reserved for neoconservatism, and the invasion of Iraq to which it led. After 9/11,President Bush proclaimed a campaign that had explicitly millennial overtones--to rid the world of evil. Christianfundamentalists in America joined with neoconservatives who believed democracy could be established around the world byforce. Blinded by their own illusions, the architects of the Iraq war failed to see what should have been obvious, that "what isfeasible on the banks of the Danube may not be possible on the Euphrates"--especially not in a matter of months. Tony Blair,too, subscribed to a militant view of human progress that believed "in the power of force to ensure the triumph of the good"and that sanctioned the use of deception because it knew history was on its side. Gray writes with a rare degree of literary and psychological sensitivity, and brings to his discussion of utopianism asweeping vision that at its best can pick out underlying trends and paradoxes with great insight. But this same quality leadshim to blur important differences between the ideas and movements he describes. Religious and secular visions of socialtransformation diverge significantly in the criteria to which they appeal for justification. Religious visions are based onappeals to an unseen order that must be taken on faith, while secular utopias must sooner or later justify themselves in theworld as it is, and are therefore more easily falsifiable. But in a way, this point is tangential to Gray's real aim, which is tolook not so much at the form that utopian thinking takes as at the temperament that lies behind it. Black Mass is, at core, awork of political criticism as psychoanalysis, which aims to weaken the hold of utopian thinking on western culture byexposing its irrational foundations. By accepting the presence of a thirst for meaning and harmony in ourselves and thosearound us, Gray believes, we will be better able to resist the siren call of utopian political movements. Still, it is fanciful to suggest, as Gray appears to, that the policies of Thatcher, Blair or Bush are directly comparable to thetotalitarian movements of the middle of last century. In addition, Gray's account of the lead-up to war in Iraq seems to me tooverstate the part played by neoconservative thinking. Many of those within the administration who backed the invasion,particularly the faction gathered around Dick Cheney, cared little about universal ideas of democracy and were mainlyconcerned to remove a foreign leader who had thumbed his nose at the US. Gray's claim that Blair viewed political lies as"prophetic glimpses of the future course of history" is overheated. But he is very convincing when he argues that all theseleaders, in different ways and degrees, displayed a form of utopianism. After the debacle of Iraq, Gray calls for a return to realism. The world faces the new threat of terrorist movements fuelled
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