130 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
130 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
Libertarian Labor Review #14
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Winter 1992-93, pages 29-30
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The Syndicalist Ecology of Graham Purchase
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Review by Jeff Stein
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Anarchist Society & Its Practical Realization by Graham Purchase,
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1990. See Sharp Press (Box 6118, San Francisco CA 94101), 15 pp.,
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$1.50.
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Anarchist Organisation: Suggestions and Possiblities by Graham
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Purchase, 1991. Black Swan Press (c/o Jura Books, 110 Crystal St.,
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Petersham 2049, Sydney Australia), 31 pp.
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Social Ecology, Anarchism, & Trades Unionism by Graham Purchase,
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1991. Monty Miller Press (Box 92 Broadway, Sydney 2007, Australia),
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12 pp.
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Graham Purchase is one of the most prolific writers in the
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Australian anarchist movement, having been a frequent contributor
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to the Rebel Worker and other journals for many years. These three
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pamphlets represent his attempt to update anarchism by combining it
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with radical ecology. Since Purchase is also an anarcho-
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syndicalist, these pamphlets will no doubt interest many LLR
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readers.
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The first, Anarchist Society, is a fairly good summary of the
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classical anarchist position: the state as an obstacle to liberty
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and equality, voluntary association as a superior form of social
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organization, the free commune and workers' self-management as
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alternatives to the state, etc. To these standard themes, however,
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Purchase adds an ecological argument, pointing out the disruption
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of the ecosystem by imperialist expansion promoted by the state. As
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a solution to this environmental destruction, he suggests that
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"people will begin to organize themselves not according to
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electoral and state boundaries but rather according to natural
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geographical or ecological ones....[in order]....to persuade people
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to deeply identify with the natural ecology of their local place -
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and protect that place whilst devloping industrial and ecological
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practices that are specifically adapted to its ecological
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characteristics." (p.9)
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In Anarchist Organisation, Purchase makes an even more
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emphatic case for the addition of "ecological regionalism" as a
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component of any future society. While suggesting that there would
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still be a possiblity for communities and workplaces to federate
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for cultural and economic reasons, Purchase insists that "political
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space" should also be demarcated by "Changes in (a) species
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distribution, (b) climate, (c) drainage and rainfall and (d)
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physiography [and] the empirical data needed to produce a more or
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less scientifically arrived at picture of natural or bio-regional
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boundary." (p.20)
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"Bio-regionalism" has a nice ring to it. It implies not only
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decentralism, but a concern for the ecology of an area as well.
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Yet, contrary to Purchase, one suspects that "bio-regionalism"
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would deliver neither in practice. To divide up human society into
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political units based upon the prevailing flora and fauna in the
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area makes no more sense and is just as arbitrary as politicians
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drawing straight lines on a map. It is a contradiction of the
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anarchist principles of voluntary association and self-management,
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since it would take away the right of people to federate according
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to their self-perceived common interests and instead force them
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into borders dictated by so-called "environmental scientists." Nor
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is there any reason to suppose that once forced to live in these
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"scientifically" contrived bio-regions, people would acquire any
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more concern for the surrounding ecology than they had before.
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Worse yet, bio-regional politics might even produce the opposite
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effect: an anti-environmental backlash against what people would
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see as a paternalistic attitude by the bio-regionalists.
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Undoubtedly in some cases, communities do have strong
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ecological reasons for federating. All the communities in a river
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valley ringed by mountains, for example, would have a common
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interest in coordinating their industries to control air and water
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pollution, and soil erosion. On the other hand, a multitude of
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communities spread out over the Russian steppes or the plains of
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the midwestern U.S., not sharing the same water resources and
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having less of an air quality problem, would not have as great a
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degree of common ecological concerns, eventhough they were all part
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of the same "bio-region." Rather than dictate to people what
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political units they must live in, it would be better to allow
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communities to decide these things for themselves. Where common
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ecological interests are important, we can assume they will
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federate without needing to be told to do so.
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Social Ecology, a collection of essays on the works of social
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ecologist and anarchist, Murray Bookchin, is by far the best
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pamphlet of the three. Purchase gives Bookchin credit for his many
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insights about ecology and its relationship to a free society, but
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takes him to task for his anti-worker bias. As the author shows,
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Bookchin's rejection of the labor movement is often based upon
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stereotypes and a lumping together of all types of unionism, from
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conservative business unions to the anarcho-syndicalists, as though
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they were the same thing. Even worse, is Bookchin's rather sloppy
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sociology, which by identifying workers as only those directly
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engaged in full-time manufacturing, defines the working class right
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out of existence. As Purchase argues, service workers are every bit
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as much working class as their manufacturing brethren and in the
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modern economy, need labor organization as much as ever:
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How is one to travel or phone another city in Bookchin's
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ideal world of liberated, self-sufficient city communes
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unless we have to repair the roads, railway or telephone
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cables? ...Economic and industrial life is unfortunately
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global in nature and the idea that one could organize an
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inter-continental railway network from the individual
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town or city is as absurd as the proposition that one
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could organize social life from the factory floor - an
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idea that he mistakenly credits to industrial-
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syndicalism.
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The industrial proletariat, although it may certainly
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never represent the force that it did a century ago is
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hardly likely to disappear and Anarchism simply states
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that in the absence of capitalism and the nation state
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the workers in each industry must organize their affairs
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for the good of themselves, their city, their ecological
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region and the whole of humanity. (Pp. 5-6)
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Bookchin, on one hand, points out all the short-comings of the
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labor movement to conclude that it no longer has any revolutionary
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potential. On the other hand, he glosses over environmental
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opportunism and romanticizes the so-called "green movement." The
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point that Purchase makes is not to deny the potential of the
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ecology movement, but that it is not necessarily strong enough to
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bring about social change by itself. Therefore the ecology movement
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should not cut itself off from its working class supporters by
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claiming that the greens alone represent the needs and interests of
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everyone, and the workers are just a minority "interest group."
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Graham Purchase in these pamphlets, and his numerous magazine
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articles, has made a serious attempt to lay the foundation for a
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synthesis of the classical anarcho-syndicalism of yesterday and the
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emerging ecological anarchism of tommorrow. If it is not always
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possible to agree with him in all the particulars, his works
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certainly lead in the right directions.
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