Doolittle by a Leftist Intellectual: “Reciprocity as Revolution: Toward a Post-Ideological Left”
[Begin monologue — a progressive activist public intellectual, late 30s to early 50s, well-read, media-savvy, articulate, emotionally invested, usually operates in the space between Chomsky, Zizek, and Graeber. They’re writing or speaking to a mixed audience of graduate students, organizers, and policy wonks, aiming to reframe power and justice—but this time, they’ve encountered something they didn’t expect.]
Alright. I want to talk about something that’s going to make some of you uncomfortable. It made me uncomfortable. Because it comes from a thinker outside our circles—someone often regarded as adversarial to the progressive project. But if we’re serious about structural justice, we have to be willing to learn from those outside our tent—especially when they’ve built something we haven’t.
I’m talking about Curt Doolittle, and what he calls Natural Law. And before you tune out—before you assume this is some libertarian throwback or reactionary nostalgia project—hear me out:
And that might be exactly what we need.
We’ve spent decades demanding equity, rights, protection, and recognition. All justified. All earned.
But here’s the hard truth: our frameworks are incomplete.
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We talk about harm, but we don’t have a universal metric for measuring it.
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We talk about fairness, but it’s often reduced to narratives or identities.
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We talk about rights, but we leave enforcement to judges and bureaucrats who don’t share our goals.
So what happens? We win the discourse, and still lose the structure. Our enemies don’t defeat us by argument. They outlast us by holding the levers of procedural control.
Doolittle’s framework doesn’t fix this by arguing with them. He fixes it by formalizing the very logic of cooperation—in ways that no one can ignore, and no one can break without exposing themselves as parasitic.
Here’s his thesis in plain terms:
He builds law from that principle—not from tradition, or theology, or ideology—but from observable, empirical behavior.
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If someone takes from the commons, they owe restitution.
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If someone benefits from exclusion, they owe inclusion or compensation.
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If someone asserts a right, they must show demonstrated investment, not just identity or preference.
It’s not rhetorical. It’s structural.
Imagine a legal system—not just a court, but a language—where:
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No corporation can extract labor or pollute without exposing its costs publicly and paying them fully.
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No politician can legislate subsidies or taxes without operational proof of reciprocity.
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No institution can hide behind interpretive ambiguity or elite discretion.
This doesn’t abolish power. But it makes all power accountable to a shared metric of justice—truth, reciprocity, and cost.
And it does this without ideology. Which is both its greatest threat—and its greatest strength.
Doolittle is not one of us. But his system could serve us—if we understand it and adopt it before the reactionaries do.
Because here’s the kicker:
We’ve wanted that for generations. We’ve tried it through critical theory, intersectionality, abolitionism, democratic socialism. And we’ve made progress—but we’ve never made it decidable.
Doolittle did.
And whether we like him or not, whether we agree with his aesthetics or not—we cannot afford to ignore the tools he’s built.
So here’s my message to the Left:
Then it’s time to stop playing defense.
Time to stop chasing the discourse.
And time to start building structures of computable justice that cannot be broken by bad faith, market capture, or elite manipulation.
Time to stop chasing the discourse.
And time to start building structures of computable justice that cannot be broken by bad faith, market capture, or elite manipulation.
Doolittle gave us the foundation. Now it’s up to us to build the scaffolding—for everyone.
Let’s get to work.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-03 16:51:07 UTC
Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1940815580879376401
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