The Hate Man (born Mark Hawthorne, September 26, 1936–April 2, 2017) was an Americanphilosopher, activist, and former reporter for The New York Times. His beliefs centered on people being honest about their negative feelings.[2][3][4]
He was locally famous in Berkeley, California, where he lived since 1973. In the late 1970s he was a regular presence in upper Sproul Plaza on the University of California, Berkeley campus, and often gave speeches in Ludwig's Fountain. In addition to being known as "Hate Man", he was also called "Berkeley Baby".[5][6]
Hawthorne created a philosophy he called oppositionality, which is centered on treating people kindly even though one is in a bad mood. The reason he greeted people with, "I hate you," he explained, is because saying "I love you" is too often used as a form of manipulation. He created his own following. The group has a practice, initiated by Hawthorne, of pushing one another for what they want. Hawthorne indicated that this is about feeling out the other person's energy and communicating something to the other person about "where they are coming from". The idea is to avoid negative conflict by bringing such differences out in the open, rather than creating situations where people rob or con one another for what they want.[9] For a couple of years, he initiated a nightly "hate camp" drum circle at Sproul Plaza, where local people released their animosity. "Hate camp" was known as the camp that formed around him. Camping there made you a "hate camper", with a "true hate camper" being someone who believed in the camp and took an active role in helping the community it created.[8]
A documentary about his life and philosophy entitled The Hate Man, Street Philosopher was released in August 2017.[10]
Personal life
Hawthorne was married, but later divorced.[8] He was homeless by choice.[11] He died on April 2, 2017, at the age of 80.[1] He also had two daughters.