861 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
861 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
bolo'bolo
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(from the 'Introduction' to bolo'bolo)
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by
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ibu
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The following text of bolo'bolo is taken from Midnight Notes #7 (June 1984).
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Contact: Midnight Notes, P.O. Box 204. Jamaica Plain, MA 02130 U.S.A..
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bolo'bolo
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by
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ibu
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If you dream alone, it's just a dream.
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If you dream together, it's reality.
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--Brazilian folk song
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(Ibu, a Midnight Noter, originally wrote bolo'bolo in German. It will
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soon appear in its full version in a pamphlet in English. It has three
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parts: an 'introduction' discussing the shape of the Planetary Work
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Machine and how to kill the machine; bolo'bolo proper, a discussion of
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ibu's ideas and desires toward a possible arrangement of societies in
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the world; and notes on bolo'bolo which discuss many things from utopias
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to psychologies, from technical issues of food production to social
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relations. We print only here an edited version of the 'introduction'.
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We urge our readers to order the pamphlet, advertised on the previous
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page. [ad for Semiotext(e) FOREIGN AGENTS SERIES. Contact: Autonomedia,
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Box 568, Brooklyn, NY 11211 U.S.A.]
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Why do we print this piece, aside from the fact that we enjoy it and
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want to spread it around? First, it presents in clear and direct form a
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picture of the aspects of the Planetary Work Machine (capital) which is,
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in many regards, a concentrated version of the work machine discussed in
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our "Work/Energy Crisis and Apocalypse." [Midnight Notes #3] Thus pared
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down, it might be more accessible and thus useful as a tool of struggle.
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Second, ibu presents a provocative critique of traditional left
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political action.
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Third, a part we do not print, bolo'bolo can help us think more clearly
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about just what it is we are struggling for; our printing the intro
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might encourage more people to get the pamphlet. Perhaps, as ibu
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observed, producing a piece such as bolo'bolo is itself a product of our
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defeat as in defeat we take time to reflect, speculate, etc. that we
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cannot take when we are on the offensive. Still, we ought to make
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what best we can of our defeat, to help us make our next cycle of
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struggles are effective.
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Fourth, we have sharply attacked the left in this and previous issues.
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We have offered many of our own 'realpolitik' observations as to how we
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might proceed instead of down the path and over the cliff with the left.
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Perhaps lurking over our shoulders is our 'second reality' and we must
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consider both what the second reality can be and how to make the move
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from the reality we don't want into the one we do want. --Midnight
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Notes)
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A Big Hangover
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Life on this planet isn't as agreeable as it could be. Something obviously
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has gone wrong on our space-ship called Earth. But what? Maybe a fundamental
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mistake was made when nature (or somebody else) came up with the idea of
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"human". Why should an animal walk on two feet and start thinking? It seems we
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haven't got much choice: we've got to cope with this error of nature, with
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ourselves. Mistakes are made in order to learn from them.
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In prehistoric times our deal seems not to have been so bad. During the Old
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Stone Age (50,000 years ago) we were few, food (plants and game) was plentiful
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and survival required only a little working time and moderate efforts. To
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collect roots, nuts, fruits or berries (don't forget mushrooms) and to kill
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(or with even less effort, to trap) some rabbits, kangaroos, fish, birds, or
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deer, we spent about two or three hours per day. In our camps we shared meat
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and vegetables and enjoyed the rest of the time sleeping, dreaming, bathing,
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dancing, making love or chatting. Some of us took to painting on cave walls,
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carving bones or sticks, inventing new traps or songs. We roamed across the
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country in gangs of 25, with as little baggage and property as possible. We
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preferred the mildest climates, like Africa, and there was no "civilization" to
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push us into deserts, tundras or mountains. The Old Stone Age must have been a
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good deal--if we can trust the recent anthropological findings--for we stuck to
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it for several tens of thousands of years, especially if compared to the 200
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years of actual industrial nightmare.
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Then somebody must have started playing around with seeds and plants and
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invented agriculture. It must have seemed a good idea, for we didn't have to
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walk far to get enough food. But life became more complicated and toilsome. We
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had to stay in the same place for at least several months to store the seeds for
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the next crop and to plan and organize work on the fields. Fields and harvest
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also had to be defended from our nomadic gatherer hunter cousins who kept
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thinking that everything belonged to everybody. Conflicts between farmers,
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hunters and cattle breeders arose. We had to explain to others that we "worked"
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to accumulate our provisions--and they didn't even have a word for "work". With
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planning, with-holding of food, defence, fences, organization and the necessity
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of self-discipline we opened the door to specialized social organisms like
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priesthood, chiefs, armies. We created fertility-religions with rituals to stay
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convinced of our lifestyle. The temptation to return to the free life of
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gatherers/hunters must have always been a threat. Whether it was the
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patriarchate or matriarchate: we were on the road to statehood.
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With the rise of ancient civilizations in Mesopotamia, India, China, and Egypt,
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the equilibrium between humans and natural resources was definitely ruined.
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The future breakdown of our spaceship was programmed. Centralized organisms
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developed their own dynamics and we became the victims of our creations.
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Instead of two hours per day we worked ten hours and more on the fields and
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constructions of the Pharaohs and Caesars, we died in their wars and were
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deported as slaves where they needed us. Those who tried to return to their
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former freedom were tortured, mutilated, killed.
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When they started industrialization, it wasn't any better. To crush the peasant
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rebellions and the growing independence of craftsmen in the towns, they
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introduced the factory system. Instead of foremen and whips, they used
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machines. They dictated our rhythm of work, punished us automatically with
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accidents, kept us under control in huge halls. Once again progress meant
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working more and under more murderous conditions. The whole society and the
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whole planet was turned into one big Work-Machine. And this Work-Machine was at
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the same time a War-Machine for all those within and without who dared oppose
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it. War became as industrial as work. Indeed, peace and work have never been
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compatible: You cannot allow yourself to be destroyed by work and prevent the
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same machine from killing others, you cannot refuse your own freedom and not
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attack the freedom of others. War became as absolute as work.
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The early Work-Machine produced strong illusions of a "better future". After
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all, if the present was so miserable, the future could only be better. Even the
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working class organizations were convinced that industrialization would lay the
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basis for a society of more freedom, more free time, more pleasures. Utopians,
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socialists and communists believed in development and in industry, in
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"progress". Marx thought that with its help, humans would be able to hunt, make
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poetry and enjoy life again. Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Castro and others demanded
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more sacrifices to build a new society. But socialism only turned out to be
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another trick of the Work-Machine to extend its power in areas where it was
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lacking. The machine doesn't care if it is managed by transnational companies
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or state bureaucracies. Its goal is the same everywhere: steal our time to
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produce steel.
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The industrial War-and-Work Machine has definitely ruined our space-ship and
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its future: the furniture (jungles, woods, lakes, seas) is torn to shreds; our
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playmates have been exterminated or are sick (whales, birds, tigers, eagles);
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the air stinks and is out of balance (CO2 , acid rain); the pantries are being
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emptied (fossil fuels, metals) and self-destruction is programmed (nuclear
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holocaust). We can't even feed all the passengers of this wrecked vessel.
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We've been made so nervous and irritable that we're ready for any kind of
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nationalist, racial or religious war. For many of us, the nuclear holocaust is
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no longer a threat, but seems to be a welcome deliverance from fear, boredom,
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oppression and drudgery.
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5000 years of civilization and 200 years of accelerated industrial progress have
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left us with a terrible hangover. "Economy" has become a goal in itself and
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we're about to be swallowed by it. The hotel terrorizes its guests: But we are
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guests and hosts at the same time.
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The Planetary Work Machine
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The monster that we have let grow and that keeps our planet in its grip is the
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Planetary Work Machine. If we want to transform our spaceship into an agreeable
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place again, we've got to dismantle this Machine, to repair the damage it has
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done and to come to some basic agreements on a new start. So our first
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questions must be: How does the Planetary Work-Machine manage to control us?
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How is it organized? What are its mechanisms and how can they be destroyed?
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It is a Planetary Machine: it eats in Africa, digests in Asia and shits in
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Europe. It is planned and regulated by international companies; the banking
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system; the circuit of fuels, raw materials and other goods. There are a lot of
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illusions about nations, states, blocs, First, Second, Third or Fourth World-
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these are only minor subdivisions, parts of the same machinery. Of course there
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are distinct wheels and transmissions that exert pressure, tensions and
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frictions on each other. The Machine is built on the basis of its inner
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contradictions: workers/capital, private capital/state capital
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(capitalism/socialism), development/underdevelopment, misery/waste, war/peace,
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women/men, etc. The machine is not a homogenous structure, it uses its internal
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contradictions to expand its control and refine its instruments. Unlike fascist
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or theocratic systems or like Orwell's 1984, the Work-Machine permits a "sane"
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level of resistance, unrest, provocation and rebellion. It digests unions,
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radical parties, protest movements, demonstrations and democratic changes of
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regimes. If democracy doesn't function, it uses dictatorship. If it's
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legitimation is in crisis, it has camps, prisons and torture in reserve. All
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these modalities are not essential for understanding the functioning of the
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machine.
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The principle that governs all activities of the Machine is economy. But what
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is economy? Unpersonal, indirect exchange of crystallized life-time. We spend
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our time producing some part which is assembled with other parts by somebody we
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don't know to make a device that, in turn, is bought by somebody else we don't
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know for an unknown goal. The circuit os these scraps of life is regulated
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according to the working time that has been invested in its raw materials, its
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production and in us. The means of measurement is money. Those who produce and
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exchange have no control over their common product and so we have situations
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where rebellious workers are shot by exactly those guns they helped produce.
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Every commodity is a weapon against us, every supermarket an arsenal, every
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factory a battleground. This is the dynamic of the Work-Machine: split society
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into isolated individuals, `blackmail' us each separately with the wage or
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violence; use our working time according to its plans. Economy means expansion
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of control by the Machine over its parts more and more dependent on the Machine.
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We are all parts of the Planetary Work Machine--we are the Machine. We
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represent it against each other. Whether we are developed or not, waged or not,
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working alone or as employees- we serve its purpose. Where there is no
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industry, we "produce" workers to export to industrial zones. Africa has
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produced slaves for America, Turkey produces workers for Germany, Pakistan for
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Kuwait, Ghana for Nigeria, Morocco for France, Mexico for the U.S. Untouched
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areas can be used as scenery for the international tourist business: Indians on
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reservations, Polynesians, Balinese, Aborigines. Those who try to get out of the
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Machine fulfill the function of picturesque "outsiders" (bums, hippies, yogis).
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As long as there is the Machine, we're all inside of it. It has destroyed or
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mutilated almost all traditional societies or driven them into a demoralizing
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defensive position. If you try to retreat to a "deserted" valley in order to
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live quietly on some subsistence farming, you'll be found by a tax collector, a
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draft-agent or by the police. With its tentacles the Machine can reach virtually
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every place on this planet within hours. Not even in the most remote part of
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the Gobi desert can you be sure to take an unobserved shit.
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The Three Essential Elements
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Examining the Machine more closely, we can distinguish three essential
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functions, three components of the international workforce and three "deals" the
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Machine offers to different fractions of ourselves. The functions (A,B,C) can
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be characterized as follows:
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A) Information: planning, design, guidance, management, science,
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communication, politics, production of ideas, ideologies, religions,
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art, etc.: the collective brain and nerve-system of the Machine.
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B) Production: industrial and agricultural production of goods, execution
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of plans, fragmented work, circulation of energy.
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C) Reproduction: production and maintenance of A-, B-, and C-workers, making
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children, education, housework, services, entertainment, sex, recreation,
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medical care, etc.
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All these functions are essential to the Machine. If one of them fails, it will
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sooner or later be paralyzed. Around these functions the Machine has created
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three types of workers, although overlap occurs; e.g., reproduction requires
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more than one type of worker. The three types of worker are divided by their
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wage-level, 'privileges', education, social status, etc., as follows:
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A) Technical-Intellectual Workers, mostly located in advanced (western)
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industrial countries; highly "qualified", mostly white, male and
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well-paid; e.g., computer engineers.
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B) Industrial Workers and employees, located in not yet "de-industrialized"
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areas, in "threshold countries", socialist countries; average or miserably
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paid, male or female, of varying "qualifications"; auto-workers,
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electronic assembly-workers (female).
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C) Fluctuant Workers, oscillating between small agriculture and seasonal
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jobs, service workers, housewives, unemployed, criminals, hustlers;
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largely women and people of color without regular income in metropolitan
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slums or in the Third World, often at the edge of starvation.
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All these types of workers are present in all parts of the world, just in
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different proportions. Nevertheless it is possible to distinguish three zones
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with a typically high proportion of the respective type of workers:
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A-workers: advanced industrial (Western) countries: U.S., Europe, Japan.
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B-workers: socialist countries or industrializing countries: USSR, Eastern
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Europe, Taiwan, Singapore.
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C-workers: Third World, agricultural or "underdeveloped" areas of Africa, Asia
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and South America and in slums everywhere.
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The "Third Worlds" are present everywhere. In New York there are neighborhoods
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that can be considered parts of the Third World. In Brazil there are industrial
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zones, in socialist countries there are strong A-elements. But there is a
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difference between the United States and Bolivia, between Sweden and Laos, etc.
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The Machine's power to control is based on its ability to play the different
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types of workers against each other. High wages and 'privileges' are not
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conceded because the Machine particularly likes certain kinds of workers more
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than others. Social stratification is used for the purpose of maintenance of
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the whole system.
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The three kinds of workers are afraid of each other. They are kept divided by
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prejudices, racism, jealousy, political and religious ideologies and economic
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interests. The A- and B- workers among us are afraid of losing their standard
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of living, their cars, houses and jobs. At the same time they complain about
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stress and envy "idle" C-workers. C-workers in turn dream about consumer goods,
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stable jobs and an "easy" life. All these divisions are exploited by the
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machine in various ways.
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The Machine no longer even needs an extra ruling class to maintain its power.
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Private capitalists, bourgeois, aristocrats and chiefs are mere left-overs
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without any decisive influence on the material execution of power, The machine
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can do without capitalists and owners, as the example of the socialist states
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and state enterprises in the West demonstrates. They're not the problem. The
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real oppressive organs of the Machine are other workers: police, soldiers,
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officials, managers. We're always confronted with the metamorphoses of our own
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kind.
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The Planetary Work-Machine is a social mechanism in which people are pitted one
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against the other to guarantee its functioning. So we must ask ourselves: Why
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do we put up with the Machine? Why do we accept a kind of life we obviously
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don't like? What are the advantages that make us forget our discontents?
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The contradictions that make the Machine work are the same internal
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contradictions faced by every worker: they're our contradictions. Of course the
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Machine "knows" that we don't like this life and that it is not enough just to
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repress our wishes. If it were simply based on repression, productivity would
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be low and the costs of supervision would be too high. That's why the chattel-
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slave system was abolished. In reality, one half of us accepts the Machine's
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deal and the other half revolts against it.
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The Machine does have something to offer. We give it a part of our life-time,
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but not all. In return, it gives us a certain amount of goods, but not as much
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as we want and not exactly what we want. Every type of worker has its own deal
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and every worker has its extra-deal again, depending on its job and specific
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situation. As everybody thinks s/he is better off than somebody else (there's
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always somebody who is worse off), s/he sticks to his/her own deal and distrusts
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all changes. So the inner inertia of the Machine protects it against reforms and
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revolutions.
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Only when a deal becomes too unequal does dissatisfaction and readiness to
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change the situation arise. The actual crisis, which is visible mainly on the
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economic level, is caused by the fact that all deals the system has to offer
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have become unacceptable. A-, B-, and C-workers have protested recently, each
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in its own way, against the respective deals. Not only the poor but also the
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rich are dissatisfied. The Machine is about to lose its perspective. The
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mechanism of internal division and mutual repulsion is about to collapse.
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Repulsion is turning against the Machine itself.
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(The remainder if this section, "Three Deals in Crisis", discusses in
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detail the particular deals made by each type of worker. We have omitted
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it from this printing due to lack of space. The deals discussed are
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titled "The A-Deal: Disappointed at consumer society"; "The B-Deal:
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Frustrated by socialism"; "The C-deal: The development of misery".
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This entire section is in the pamphlet from Autonomedia.
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--Midnight Notes)
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The End of Realpolitik
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Misery in the Third World, frustration in the socialist countries, deception in
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the West; the main dynamic of the Machine is actually reciprocal discontent and
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the logic of the lesser evil. What can we do? Reformist politicians propose to
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change the Machine, to make it more humane and agreeable by using its own
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mechanisms. Political realism tells us to proceed by little steps. Thus the
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microelectronic 'revolution' is supposed to give us the means for reform.
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Misery shall be transformed into mobilization, frustration into activism and
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disappointment shall be the basis of change of consciousness. Some of the
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reformist proposals sound quite good: 20-hour-work-week, equal distribution of
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work, guaranteed minimal income (e.g. negative income tax), elimination of
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unemployment, use of free time for mutual and decentralized self-administration
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in enterprises and neighborhoods, creation of an "autonomous" sector with low-
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productivity-small-enterprises, investments in middle and soft technologies
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(also for the Third World), reduction of private traffic, conservation of energy
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(no nukes, insulation, coal), investments in solar energy and public
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transportation, less animal proteins (more self-sufficiency in the Third World),
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recycling of raw materials (aluminum), disarmament, etc.. These proposals are
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reasonable and even realizable and certainly not extravagant. They form more or
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less the official or secret program of the alternativist socialist-green-
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pacifist movements in Western Europe and the United States (and in other
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countries). Should it be realized, the Work-Machine would look much more
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bearable.
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But even these "radical" programs only imply a new adjustment of the
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Machine, not its destruction. As long as the Machine (the hard, heteronomous
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sector) exists, self-management and "autonomy" can only serve as a kind of
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recreational area for the repair of exhausted workers. And who can prevent us
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from being ruined in 20 hours as much as we've been in 40? As long as the
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monster isn't pushed into space, it'll continue devouring us.
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Additionally the political system is designed to block such proposals or to
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transform reforms into a new impulse for the development of the Machine. The
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best illustration of this fact is the politics of the reformist parties. As
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soon as the Left gets the power (e.g. in France, Greece, Spain, Bolivia, etc..)
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it gets entangled in the jungle of "realities" and economic necessities and it
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has no choice other than to enforce exactly those austerity-programs it attacked
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when the Right was in charge. Instead of Giscard it's Mitterand who sends the
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police against striking workers. Socialists have always been good police-
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ministers. The "recovery of the economy" (i.e. of the Work-Machine) is the
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basis of all national politics, and reforms have to prove that they encourage
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investments, create jobs, increase productivity, etc.. The more "new movements"
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enter Realpolitik (as the Greens in Germany), the more they get into the logic
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of a "healthy economy", or they disappear from the political game.
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Besides destroyed illusions, increased resignation and general apathy, reformist
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politics don't achieve anything. The Work-Machine is planetary and all its
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parts are interconnected; any national reformist policy will simply increase
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international competition, play the workers of different countries against each
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other and make more perfect control over us.
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It is exactly this experience that has led more and more voters to support neo-
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conservative politicians like Reagan, Thatcher or Kohl. The most cynical
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representatives of the logic of the economy are preferred to leftist thinkers.
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The self-confidence of the Machine has become shaky. Nobody dares fully believe
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any longer in its future, but everybody clings to it. The fear of experiment is
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greater than the belief in demagogical promises. Why reform a system that's
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going to collapse anyway? Why not try to enjoy the few positive aspects of
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respective personal or national deals with the Machine? Thus why not put in
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charge positive, confident, conservative politicians? They don't even promise
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to solve such problems as unemployment, hunger, pollution, the nuclear arms
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race. Or if they do, they make clear that those are not their priorities.
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They're not elected to solve problems, but to represent confidence and
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continuity. For the "recovery", only a little calm, stability and positive
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rhetoric is needed: the security to cash in on profits made by present
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investments. Under these conditions the recovery will be much more terrible
|
|
than the crisis. We don't have to believe in Reagan or Kohl, just keep smiling
|
|
together with them and forget about our doubts. The Work-Machine supports
|
|
doubts badly in this situation, and with neo-conservative regimes we're at least
|
|
left alone until the end of the next recovery or catastrophe. Besides
|
|
agitation, bad mood and remorses, the Left hasn't anything better to offer.
|
|
Realpolitik has become unrealistic, because reality is at a turning point.
|
|
|
|
All or Nothing
|
|
|
|
The Planetary Work-Machine is omnipresent and it cannot be stopped by politics.
|
|
So, will the Machine be our destiny until we die at 65 or 71? Will that have
|
|
been our life? Have we imagined it like this? Is ironical resignation the only
|
|
way out, as it helps us to hide our deception during the few years we still have
|
|
to live? Maybe everything's okay and we're just a little bit too dramatic.
|
|
|
|
Let's not fool ourselves: even if we mobilize all our spirit of sacrifice and
|
|
all our courage, we can't achieve anything. The Machine is perfectly equipped
|
|
against political Kamikazes, as the fate of the RAF, the Red Brigades, the [text
|
|
damaged -Ed.], [the] Tupamaros and others have shown. It can coexist with armed
|
|
resistance and transform it into a motor of its perfection. Our attitude isn't
|
|
a moral problem, not for us and even less for the Machine.
|
|
|
|
Whether we kill ourselves, manage to get an extra-deal, find an opening or a
|
|
refuge, win in the lottery, throw Molotov-cocktails, join a left-wing party,
|
|
scratch ourselves behind the ear or run amok, we're finished. In this reality
|
|
there's nothing else to get. Opportunism doesn't pay off. Career is a bad risk
|
|
as it causes ulcers, psychoses, marriages, obligations. Bailing out means self-
|
|
exploitation, ghetto, meetings. Cleverness is fatiguing. Stupidity is
|
|
annoying.
|
|
|
|
It would be logical to ask ourselves questions like these: "How would I like to
|
|
live?" "In What kind of society or nonsociety would I feel comfortable?" "What
|
|
are my wishes and desires, independent from their realizability?" And all this
|
|
not in a remote future (reformists always talk about the next 20 years) but in
|
|
our lifetime. while we're still in good health, let's say within five years...
|
|
|
|
Dreams, ideal visions, utopias, yearnings, alternatives; aren't those just new
|
|
illusions to seduce us once again into participating in progress? Don't we
|
|
know them from the neolithic, the 17th century and today from science-fiction
|
|
and fantasy-literature? Do we succumb again to the charm of history? Isn't
|
|
future the only thought of the Machine? Is there only the choice of joining the
|
|
Machine's dreams or refusing any activity?
|
|
|
|
There are kinds of desires that are censured scientifically, morally,
|
|
politically when they arise. The ruling reality tries to stamp them out. These
|
|
are the dreams of the second reality.
|
|
|
|
Reformists tell us that it's shortsighted and egoistic to follow our own wishes.
|
|
We should fight for the future of our children. We should renounce (car,
|
|
vacations, heating and our needs and desires) and work hard, so that they'll
|
|
have a better life. This is a curious logic. Isn't it exactly the renunciation
|
|
and sacrifice of our parent-generation, their hard work in the 50s and 60s, that
|
|
has caused the mess that we are in today? We're those children, for whom they
|
|
have suffered and worked. For us, our parents bore two wars, a crisis, and
|
|
built the nuclear bomb. They were not egoistic, they obeyed. Anything built on
|
|
sacrifice and renunciation just demands more sacrifices and more renunciation.
|
|
Because our parents haven't respected their egoism, they cannot respect ours...
|
|
It is not the Third or Fourth World that is the most underdeveloped, it's our
|
|
egoism of wishes.
|
|
|
|
Other political moralists could object that we're not allowed to dream of
|
|
utopias while millions die of starvation, others are tortured in camps, deported
|
|
and massacred, or deprived of the most basic human rights. While the spoiled
|
|
children of the consumer society compile their list of wishes, others don't even
|
|
know how to write or have time to wish. Yet, some of us die of heroin and
|
|
others commit suicide or are mentally ill: whose misery is more serious? Can we
|
|
measure misery? And even if there wasn't any misery: are our desires unreal,
|
|
because others are worse off or because we think we could be worse off?
|
|
|
|
Precisely when we act only to prevent the worst or because "others" are worse
|
|
off, we make it possible and let it happen. In this way we're always forced to
|
|
react on the initiatives of the Machine. There's always an outrageous scandal,
|
|
an incredible impertinence, a provocation that cannot be left unanswered. And
|
|
thus our 70 years go by-- and those of the others who are "worse" off. The
|
|
Machine can keep us busy, because it wants to prevent us from becoming aware of
|
|
our immoral dreams. When we act for ourselves, the Machine gets into trouble.
|
|
As long as we only (re-)act on the basis of "moral differences" we'll be
|
|
powerless dented wheels, exploding molecules in the engine of development. And
|
|
as we're weak, the Machine has more power to exploit the weaker ones.
|
|
|
|
Moralism is a weapon of the Machine, realism is another. The Machine has formed
|
|
reality and it has trained us to perceive reality in the Machine's way. Since
|
|
Descartes and newton it has digitalized our thoughts and reality; it has laid
|
|
yes/no-patterns over the world and our spirit. We believe in reality because
|
|
we're used to it. As long as we accept the digital culture to pulverize our
|
|
dreams, sentiments and ideas. Dreams and utopias are sterilized in novels,
|
|
films and commercialized music. But reality is in crisis, every day there are
|
|
more cracks and the yes/no- alternative turns more and more into simply an
|
|
apocalyptic threat. The Machine's ultimate reality is its self-destruction.
|
|
|
|
Our reality, the second reality of old and new dreams, cannot be caught in the
|
|
yes/no-net. It refuses apocalypse and status quo at the same time. Apocalypse
|
|
or Evangel, end of the world or utopia, all or nothing: there aren't any other
|
|
realist possibilities. In this reality, we choose one or the other
|
|
lightheartedly. But in between attitudes like "hope", "confidence" or
|
|
"patience" are just ridiculous and pure self-deceit. There's no hope. We have
|
|
to choose now.
|
|
|
|
Nothingness has become a realistic possibility, more absolute than nihilists
|
|
have dared to dream. In this regard the Machine's achievement must be
|
|
acknowledged. Finally we've got nothingness! We can kill all of us together!
|
|
We don't have to survive! Nothingness is about to become a realistic way of
|
|
life with its own philosophy (Cioran, Schopenhauer, Buddhism, Glucksmann), its
|
|
fashion (black, uncomfortable), music, housing style, painting, etc..
|
|
Apocalyptists, nihilists, pessimists and misanthropists have good arguments for
|
|
their attitude. After all, if we transform into values "life", "nature" or
|
|
"mankind", there are only totalitarian risks, biocracy or ecofascism. When we
|
|
sacrifice freedom to survival, new ideologies of renunciation arise and
|
|
contaminate all dreams and desires. The pessimists are the real free, happy and
|
|
generous. The world will never be supportable again without the possibility of
|
|
self-destruction, as the life of the individual is a burden without the possible
|
|
exit of suicide. Nothingness is here to stay.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand "all" is also quite appealing. It is much less probable than
|
|
nothingness, badly defined and poorly thought out. It is ridiculous, megalomanic
|
|
and self-conceited. Maybe it's only around to make nothingness more attractive.
|
|
|
|
bolo'bolo
|
|
|
|
bolo'bolo is part of (my) second reality. It's strictly subjective, because the
|
|
reality of dreams can never be objective. Is bolo'bolo all or nothing? It's
|
|
both and none of them. It's a trip into second reality like Yapfaz, Kwendolm,
|
|
Takmas and Ul-So. Down there there's a lot of room for many dreams. bolo'bolo
|
|
is one of those unrealistic, amoral, egoistic maneuvers of diversion from the
|
|
struggle against the worst. bolo'bolo is also a modest proposal for the new
|
|
arrangements in the spaceship after the Machine's disappearance. Though it
|
|
started as a mere collection of wishes, a lot of considerations of their
|
|
realization accumulated around it. bolo'bolo can be realized worldwide within
|
|
five years, if we start now. It guarantees a soft landing in the second
|
|
reality. None of us will starve, freeze or die earlier than we would today in
|
|
the transition period. There's very little risk.
|
|
|
|
Of course general conceptions of a post-industrial civilization are not lacking
|
|
in these days. Be it the eruption of the Age of Aquarius, the change of
|
|
paradigms, ecotopia, new networks, rhizomes, decentralized structures, soft
|
|
society, new poverty, small circuits, third waves, prosumer societies: the
|
|
ecological or alternativist literature grows rapidly. Allegedly soft
|
|
conspiracies are going on and the new society is already being born in communes,
|
|
sects, citizens' initiatives, alternative enterprises and block associations.
|
|
In all these publications and experiments there are a lot of good and useful
|
|
ideas, ready to be stolen and incorporated into bolo'bolo. But many of these
|
|
futures or futuribles (as the French say) are not very appetizing: they stink of
|
|
renunciation, moralism, new efforts, toilsome rethinking, modesty and self-
|
|
limitation. Of course there are limits. But why should there be limits of
|
|
pleasure and adventure? Why are most alternativists only talking about new
|
|
responsibilities and almost never about new possibilities?
|
|
|
|
One of the slogans of the alternativists is: Think globally, act locally. Why
|
|
not think and act globally and locally? There are a lot of conceptions and
|
|
ideas, but what's lacking is a practical global (and logical) proposal, a kind
|
|
of common language. There has to be an agreement on some basic elements, if we
|
|
don't want to stumble into the Machine's next trap. In this regard, modesty and
|
|
(academic) prudence is a virtue that threatens to disarm us. Why be modest in
|
|
the face of impending catastrophe?
|
|
|
|
bolo'bolo might not be the best and most detailed and certainly not a definitive
|
|
proposal for a new arrangement of our spaceship. But it is not so bad and can
|
|
be acceptable to many people. I'm for trying it as a first attempt and seeing
|
|
later what happens.
|
|
|
|
Substruction
|
|
|
|
In case we like bolo'bolo, the next question will be: How can it be realized?
|
|
Isn't it just another real-political proposal? In fact, bolo'bolo cannot be
|
|
realized with politics, there's another road, a range or roads, to be followed.
|
|
|
|
If we deal with the Machine, the first problem is obviously a negative one: how
|
|
can we paralyze and eliminate the Machine's control (i.e., the Machine itself)
|
|
in such a way that bolo'bolo can unfold without being destroyed in its
|
|
beginnings? We can call this aspect of our strategy disassembly or subversion.
|
|
The Planetary Work Machine has got to be dismantled-- carefully, because we
|
|
don't want to perish with it. Let's not forget, that we're part of the Machine,
|
|
this it is us. We want to destroy the Machine but not ourselves. We only want
|
|
to destroy our function for the Machine. Subversion means to change the
|
|
relationship among us (the three types of workers) and towards the Machine
|
|
(which in turn faces each type of worker as a total system). It is subversion
|
|
and not attack, because we're all inside the Machine and have to block it from
|
|
there. It will never confront us as an external enemy. There will never be a
|
|
front-line, nor headquarters, nor uniforms.
|
|
|
|
Subversion alone will always be a failure, because with its help we might
|
|
paralyze a certain sector of the Machine, destroy one of its functions, but it
|
|
will be able to reconquer it and occupy it again. Every space obtained by
|
|
subversion has to be filled by us with something "new", something
|
|
"constructive". We cannot hope to eliminate first the Machine and then--in an
|
|
"empty" space--to establish bolo'bolo: we'd always come too late. Provisional
|
|
elements of bolo'bolo, seedlings of its structures, must occupy all free
|
|
interstices, abandoned areas, conquered bases and prefigure the new
|
|
relationships. Construction has to be combined with subversion into one
|
|
process: substruction. Construction should never be a pretext to renounce
|
|
subversion. Subversion alone only creates straw fires, historical dates and
|
|
heroes, but it doesn't leave concrete results. Construction and subversion are
|
|
both forms of tacit or open collaboration with the Machine.
|
|
|
|
Dysco
|
|
|
|
Dealing first with subversion, we have to state that every type of worker, every
|
|
functionary of the Machine and every part of the world has its own specific
|
|
potential of subversion. There are different ways of doing damage to the
|
|
Machine and not everybody has the same possibilities. A planetary menu of
|
|
subversion could be described as follows:
|
|
|
|
A- Dysinformation: sabotage (of hardware or programs), theft of machine-time
|
|
(for games or private purposes), defective design or planning,
|
|
indiscretions (e.g. Ellsberg and the Watergate scandal), desertions
|
|
(scientists, officials), refusal of selection (teachers), mismanagement,
|
|
treason, ideological deviation, false information (to superiors);
|
|
effects can be immediate or long run (seconds, years).
|
|
|
|
B- Dysproduction: opting out, low quality, sabotage, strikes, sick-leaves,
|
|
shop-floor assemblies, demonstrations in the factories, mobility,
|
|
occupations (e.g., the struggles of the Polish workers);
|
|
effects--medium term (weeks, months).
|
|
|
|
C- Dysruption: riots, street blockades, violent acts, flight, divorce,
|
|
domestic rows, looting, guerilla warfare, squatting, arson
|
|
(e.g., Sao Paulo, Miami, Soweto, El Salvador);
|
|
effects--short term (hours, days).
|
|
|
|
Of course all these acts also have long-term effects; here we are only talking
|
|
about their direct impact as forms of activity. Any of these types of
|
|
subversion can damage the Machine, can even paralyze it temporarily. However,
|
|
each of them can be neutralized by lack or misapplication of the two others,
|
|
because their impact is different depending on time and space. Dysinformation
|
|
remains inefficient if it's not applied to the production or physical
|
|
circulation of goods or services. In that case it becomes purely an
|
|
intellectual game and destroys itself. Strikes alone can always be crushed
|
|
because nobody prevents the police from intervening by dysruptive actions.
|
|
Dysruption is quickly finished, because the Machine controls supply from its
|
|
production-sector. The Machine knows that there will always be subversion
|
|
against it, that the deal between it and the different types of workers will
|
|
always have to be bargained for and fought out again. It only tries to stagger
|
|
the attacks of the three sectors so that we cannot support and expand our
|
|
struggles to multiply each other and become a kind of counter-machine.
|
|
|
|
Workers who have just won a strike (dysproduction) are angry at unemployed
|
|
demonstrators who prevent them with a street blockade from getting to their
|
|
factory on time. A firm goes bankrupt and the workers complain about engineers
|
|
and managers. But it was a substructive engineer who willingly produced a bad
|
|
design and a manager who wanted to sabotage the firm. The workers lose their
|
|
jobs, take part in unemployment demonstrations, there are riots...police
|
|
(workers) do their job. The Machine transforms the isolated attacks of
|
|
different sectors into idle motion. For the machine, nothing is more
|
|
instructive than attacks and nothing more dangerous than long periods of calm,
|
|
because in this case it does not know what is going on inside the organisms of
|
|
its own body. The Machine cannot exist without a certain level of sickness and
|
|
dysfunction. Partial struggles are the means of control and a kind of fever
|
|
thermometer that provides it with imagination and dynamism. If necessary, it
|
|
can even provoke struggles to test its instruments of control.
|
|
|
|
Dysinformation, dysproduction and dysruption would have to be joined on a mass
|
|
level in order to produce a critical situation for the Machine. Such a deadly
|
|
conjuncture can only come into being by the overcoming of the separation of the
|
|
three functions and worker-types, and the separation can only be overcome by and
|
|
through struggles in the various sectors. There should emerge a kind of
|
|
communication with which the Machine is not designed to deal: dyscommunication.
|
|
The name of the final game against the Machine is thus ABC-Dysco.
|
|
|
|
Where can such ABC-dysco-knots develop? Hardly where the workers meet in their
|
|
Machine functions, i.e. at the workplace, in the supermarket or in the
|
|
household. A factory is organized division and the unions only mirror this
|
|
division, but don't overcome it. On the job the different interests are
|
|
particularly accentuated: wage, position, hierarchy and privileges all build up
|
|
walls. In the factories and offices workers are isolated from each other, the
|
|
noise level is too high, the tasks absorbing. ABC-dysco is not likely to happen
|
|
in the economic core of the Machine.
|
|
|
|
But there are domains of life--for the Machine mostly marginal domains--that are
|
|
more propitious for dysco. The machine hasn't digitalized and rationalized
|
|
everything: religion, mystic experience, language, native place, nature,
|
|
sexuality, all kinds of spleens, crazy ideas, fancies. Life as a whole slips
|
|
away from the Machine's patterns. Of course the machine is aware of its
|
|
insufficiency in these fields and tries to functionalize them economically.
|
|
Religion becomes sect-business, nature can be exploited by tourism and sport,
|
|
the love for one's country degenerates into an ideological pretext for weapons
|
|
industries, sexuality is commercialized by the sex-business, etc. There's no
|
|
need that couldn't be turned into a commodity, but as a commodity it gets
|
|
reduced and mutilated.
|
|
|
|
Certain needs, however, are particularly inappropriate for mass-production,
|
|
above all those of authentic, personal experience. The conversion succeeds only
|
|
partially, and more and more people are becoming aware of "the rest". The
|
|
success of the environmental movements, of the peace movement, of ethnic or
|
|
regionalist movements, or certain forms of "new religiousness" (progressive or
|
|
pacifist churches), or homosexual subcultures, is probably due to this
|
|
insufficiency. Whether identities are newly discovered or created that lie
|
|
beyond the logic of economy, there have been ABC-knots. As 'war objectors',
|
|
intellectuals, employees, women and men have met. Homosexuals gather regardless
|
|
of their jobs. Indians, Basques or Armenians struggle together--"a kind of new
|
|
nationalism" (or regionalism) overcomes job and educational barriers. The Black
|
|
Madonna of Czestochowa might have contributed to unite Polish workers,
|
|
intellectuals and farmers. It is no accident that in recent times such types of
|
|
movements have reached high levels of strength. Their substructive power is
|
|
based on the multiplication of ABC-encounters that have been possible in their
|
|
framework. One of the first reactions of the Machine has always been to play
|
|
off against each other the elements of these encounters and to establish the old
|
|
mechanism of mutual repulsion.
|
|
|
|
The above-mentioned movements have only produced superficial and short-lived
|
|
ABC-dysco. In most cases the different types just touched each other on a few
|
|
occasions and slipped back once again into their everyday division. Those of us
|
|
involved created more mythologies than realities. In order to exist longer and
|
|
to exert a substantial influence, we should also be able to fulfill everyday
|
|
tasks outside the Machine: we should also comprise the constructive side of
|
|
substruction. We should attempt the organization of mutual help, moneyless
|
|
exchange, of services, of concrete cultural functions in neighborhoods. In this
|
|
context we should create anticipations of bolos, of barter-agreements, of
|
|
independent food-supply, etc. Ideologies (or religions) are not strong enough
|
|
to overcome barriers such as income, education and position. As ABC-types, we
|
|
have to compromise ourselves in every day life. Certain levels of self-
|
|
sufficiency, of independence from state and economy, must be reached to
|
|
stabilize such dysco-knots. We cannot work 40 hours per week and still have the
|
|
time and energy for neighborhood initiatives. ABC-knots can't just be cultural
|
|
decorations, they should be able to replace at least a little fraction of money-
|
|
income to get some free time. What these ABC-dysco-knots can look like
|
|
practically can only be discovered through practice. Perhaps they will be
|
|
neighborhood centers, food-conspiracies, farmer/craftsman exchanges, energy
|
|
coops, communal baths, car-pools, etc. All kinds of meeting points that can
|
|
bring together all three types of workers on the basis of common interests are
|
|
possible ABC-dyscos.
|
|
|
|
(Midnight Notes reminds the reader of ibu's warning that subversion must
|
|
not be avoided in the guise of construction: the two must be united as
|
|
substruction.)
|
|
|
|
The totality of such ABC-Knots will disintegrate the machine, produce new
|
|
conjunctures of subversion, keep in motion all kinds of movements in an
|
|
invisible manner. Diversity, invisibility, flexibility, lack of names, flags
|
|
and labels, refusal of pride of honor, avoidance of political behavior and
|
|
representative temptations can protect such knots from the eyes and hands of the
|
|
Machine. Information, experiences and practical instruments can be shared in
|
|
this way. ABC-dysco-knots can be laboratories for new, puzzling and surprising
|
|
forms of action as they can use all three functions and the respective
|
|
dysfunctions of the Machine. Even the brain of The Machine doesn't have access
|
|
to this wealth of information, because it must keep divided the thinking about
|
|
itself (principle of competencies and divided responsibility). ABC-dysco-knots
|
|
are not a party, not even a kind of movement, coalition, or umbrella-
|
|
organization. They're just themselves, the cumulation of their single effects.
|
|
They might meet in punctual mass-movements, test their strength and the reaction
|
|
of the Machine, and then disappear again in every-day-life. They combine their
|
|
forces where they meet each other in practical tasks. They're not an anti-
|
|
Machine movement, they are the content and material basis of the destruction of
|
|
the Machine.
|
|
|
|
Due to their conscious non-organizedness, ABC-knots are always able to create
|
|
surprises. Surprise is vital, as we're in a fundamental disadvantage in [the]
|
|
face of the Machine: we can be 'blackmailed' by the constant threats of death or
|
|
suicide pronounced by the Planetary Machine. It cannot be denied that guerilla-
|
|
warfare as a means of subversion can be necessary in certain circumstances
|
|
(where the Machine already is killing). The more ABC-knots, network and tissues
|
|
there are, the more the Machine's instinct of death is awakened. But it's
|
|
already part of our defeat is we have to face the Machine with heroism and
|
|
rediness for sacrifice. Somehow we have to accept the Machine's `blackmailing'.
|
|
Whenever the Machine starts killing, we should retreat. We shouldn't frighten
|
|
it. It must die in a moment when it doesn't expect it. This sounds defeatist,
|
|
but it is one of the lessons we can learn from Chile, from Grenada, from Poland:
|
|
when the struggle can be put on the police or military level, we're about to
|
|
lose. Or if we win, it's exactly our police or military aspect that will have
|
|
won and not ourselves: we'll get a "revolutionary" military dictatorship. When
|
|
the Machine takes to mere killing, we have obviously made a mistake. We should
|
|
never forget, that we are also those that shoot. We're never in front of the
|
|
enemy, we are the enemy. This fact has nothing to do with non-violence-
|
|
ideologies: you can be very violent and still not kill each other.
|
|
|
|
Damage (to the Machine) and violence are not necessarily linked. It wouldn't
|
|
serve us either to put flowers into the soldiers' button-holes or be nice to the
|
|
police. They cannot be cheated by symbolism, by arguments and ideologies--
|
|
they're like us. But maybe the policeman has neighbors, the general is gay, the
|
|
soldier has heard that his sister is active in some ABC-dysco-knot. When there
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are enough dyscos, there are as many security-leaks and risks fir the Machine.
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We've got to be careful, practical and discreet.
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When the Machine kills, there aren't yet enough ABC-dysco-knots. Too many parts
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of its organism are still in good health and it can hope to save itself by a
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violent operation. The Machine won't die of a heart attack, but it can die of
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ABC-cancer, becoming aware of it when it's too late for any operation or
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radiation, These are the rules of the game. Those who don't respect them, must
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quit the game (and will be heroes).
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Substruction as a (general) strategy is a form of practical meditation. It can
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be the following Yantra, that combines substruction (movement aspect) and bolo
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(the future basic community): [see included .GIF--Ed]
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Trico
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The Work-Machine has Planetary character, so a successful bolo'bolo-strategy
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must also be planetary from the beginning. Purely local, regional or even
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national dysco-knots will never be sufficient to paralyse the World-Machine as a
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whole. West, East and South must start simultaneously to subvert their
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respective functions inside the Machine and to create new constructive
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anticipations. What is true for the three types of workers on a micro-level is
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also true for the three parts of the world on a macro-level. There must be
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planetary dysco-knots. There must be tricommunication between dysco knots. The
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Planetary Trick is trico.
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Trico is dysco between ABC-knots in each of the three major parts of the world:
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western industrial countries, socialist countries and underdeveloped countries.
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A trico-knot is the encounter of three local ABC-knots on an international
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level.
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Anticipations of bolos will get in contact in this trico-knot manner. Of
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course these contacts must be established outside of governments, of
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international or development-aid organizations. The contacts must function
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directly between neighborhoods, between everyday initiatives of all kinds.
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There must be a trico between St. Marks Place (New York), Gdansk North-East 7,
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Mutum-Biyu (Nigeria); or: Zurich-Stauffacher, Novosibirsk/Block A 23, Vuma
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(Fidji), etc.. Such trico knots could first originate on the basis of
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accidental personal acquaintances (on tourist trips, etc.). Then they could be
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multiplied by the activity of already existing tricos, etc.. The practical use
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of a trico-knot (and there must be one) can be very trivial in the beginning:
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exchange of necessary goods (medicine, records, spices, clothes, equipment) that
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should be moneyless or at least very cheap. It is obvious that since the
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exchange of goods presently isn't equal between the three parts of the world,
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the Third World-partner will need a lot of basic products to make up for the
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exploitation by the world market, and also need a lot of material for the
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construction of a basic infrastructure (fountains, telephones, generators).
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Nevertheless this doesn't mean that trico is just a type of aid for development.
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The partners will be aware of creating a common project, the contact will be
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person to person, the aid will be adapted to the real needs and will be based on
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personal relationships. Even under these difficult conditions exchange won't be
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one-sided. A-dysco-knots will give material goods (as they have plenty of them),
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but they'll get much are cultural and spiritual "goods" in exchange: for
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example, they can learn a lot from life- styles in traditional villages about
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nature, mythology, human relations, etc.. As we've said, every deal, even the
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most miserable one, has some advantages: instead of frightening ourselves with
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the disadvantages of the other deals, we'll exchange those elements that are
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still valuable and strong.
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The trico-knots permit the participating ABC-dysco knots to unmask the mutual
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illusions of their deals and to stop the division-game of the World-Machine.
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Western dyscos will learn about socialist everyday life and will get rid of both
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socialist propaganda and red-baiting anti-communism. The Eastern partners will
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have to give up their illusion on the Golden West and at the same time they'll
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become immune to the official indoctrination in their own countries. Third-
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World-dyscos destroy development-ideologies and socialist demagoguery and will
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be less vulnerable to `blackmailing' by misery. All this won't be an educational
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process, but a natural consequence of tricommunication. A Western dysco-knot
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might help the Eastern partner get a Japanese stereo-set for free--needs are
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needs--even those created by the Machine's advertising strategies. In the
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process of expansion of tricos, of closer exchange and of the growing of
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bolo'bolo-structures, authentic wishes, whatever they might be, will become
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predominating. Perhaps dances and fairy tales from Africa will be more
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interesting than disco, Russian songs more attractive than cassette-recorders.
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Planetary substruction from the beginning is a precondition for the success of
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the strategy that could lead to something like bolo'bolo. If bolo'bolo remains
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just a spleen of a single country or a region, it's lost, it'll be another
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impulse for development. On the basis of tricommunication those planetary
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relationships come into being that will disintegrate the Nation-States and the
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political blocks. Like the dysco-knots, the trico-knots form a network of
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substruction that will paralyze the World Machine. Out of tricos there will
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grow barter-agreements (fenos), general hospitality (sila) new culturally
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defined regions (sumi) and a planetary meeting point (asa'dala). The trico-
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network will also have to block the war-machines of the single countries from
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inside and thus be the real peace-movement, precisely because they're not
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primarily interested in "peace" but because they've got a common, positive
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project.
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(Here we break off. Generally the rest is the description by this ibu of
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bolo'bolo. Sorry...you'll have to get the pamphlet to find out what it
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says. In our previous issue, by the way, we said that we would explain
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the various symbols we overlaid on some of the pages. The symbols are
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from bolo'bolo and are explained in the forthcoming pamphlet.
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--Midnight Notes)
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