806 lines
50 KiB
Plaintext
806 lines
50 KiB
Plaintext
ANTI-MASS METHODS OF ORGANIZATION FOR COLLECTIVES.
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The Difference Between Mass and Class
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Why is it important to know the difference between mass and class?
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The chances are that there can be no conscious revolutionary practice
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without making this distinction. We are not playing around with words.
|
|
Look. We are living in a mass society. We didn't get that way by
|
|
accident. The mass is a specific form of organization. The reason is
|
|
clear. Consumption is organized by the corporations. Their products
|
|
define the mass. The mass is not a cliche - 'the masses' - but a routine
|
|
which dominates your daily life. Understanding the structure of the mass
|
|
market is the first step toward understanding what happened to the class
|
|
struggle.
|
|
What is the mass? Most people think of the mass in terms of
|
|
numbers - like a crowded street or stadium. But it is actually structure
|
|
which determines its character. The mass is an aggregate of couples who
|
|
are separate, detached and anonymous. They live in cities physically
|
|
close yet socially apart. Their lives are privatized and depraved.
|
|
Coca-Cola and loneliness. The social existence of the mass - its rules
|
|
and regulations, the structuring of its status, roles and leadership - are
|
|
organized through consumption (the mass market). They are all products of
|
|
a specific social organization. Ours.
|
|
Of course, no one sees themselves as part of the mass. It's
|
|
always others who are the masses. The trouble is that it is not only the
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corporations which organize us into the mass. The 'movement' itself
|
|
behaves as a mass and its organizers reproduce the hierarchy of the mass.
|
|
Really, how do you fight fire? With water, of course. The same
|
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goes for revolution. We don't fight the mass (market) with a mass
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(movement). We fight mass with class. Our aim should be not to create a
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mass movement but a class force.
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What is a class? A class is a consciously organized social force.
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For example, the ruling class is conscious and acts collectively to
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organize not only itself, but also the people (mass) that it rules. The
|
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corporation is the self-conscious collective power of the ruling class.
|
|
We are not saying that class relations do not exist in the rest of
|
|
society. But they remain passive so long as they are shaped solely by
|
|
objective conditions (i.e. work situations). What is necessary is the
|
|
active (subjective) participation of the class itself. Class prejudice is
|
|
not class consciousness. The class is conscious of its social existence
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because it seeks to organize itself. Th
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The moral of the story is: the mass is a mass because it is
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organized as a mass. Don't be fooled by the brand name. Mass is thinking
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with your ass.
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Primacy of the Collective
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The small group is the coming together of people who feel the need
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for collectivity. Its function is often to break out of the mass -
|
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specifically from the isolation of daily life and the mass structure of
|
|
the movement. The problem is that frequently the group cannot create an
|
|
independent existence and an identity of its own because it continues to
|
|
define itself negatively, i.e. in opposition. So long as its point of
|
|
reference lies outside of it, the group's politics tend to be superimposed
|
|
on it by events and crises.
|
|
The small group can be a stage in the development of the
|
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collective, if it develops a critique of the frustrations stemming from
|
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its external orientation. The formation of a collective begins when
|
|
people not only have the same politics, but agree on the method of struggle.
|
|
Why should the collective be the primary focus of organization?
|
|
The collective is an alternative to the existing structure of society.
|
|
Changing social relations is a process rather than a product of
|
|
revolution. In other words, you make the revolution by actually changing
|
|
social relations. You must consciously create the contradictions in history.
|
|
Concretely, this means: organize yourselves, not somebody else.
|
|
The collective is the organizational nucleus of a classless society. As a
|
|
formal organization, it negates all forms of hierarchy. The answer to
|
|
alienation is to make yourself the subject, not the object, of history.
|
|
One of the crucial obstacles to the formation of collectives is
|
|
the transitional period - when the collective must survive side by side
|
|
with a disintegrating movement and a mass society. The disintegration of
|
|
the movement is not an isolated phenomenon but reflects the weakening of
|
|
the major institutions in American society responsible for our alienation.
|
|
Many people are demoralized by this process and find it bewildering
|
|
because they actually depend subconsciously on the continued existence of
|
|
these institutions. We are witnessing the break-up and transformation of
|
|
an institution integral to society - the mass market. The mass market is
|
|
corporate structure which few
|
|
These contradictions make it imperative that any people who decide
|
|
to create a collective know exactly who they are and what they are doing.
|
|
That is why you must consider your collective as primary. Because, if you
|
|
don't believe in the legitimacy of this form of organization, you can't
|
|
have a practical analysis of what is happening. Don't kid yourself. The
|
|
struggle for the creation and survival of collectives at this moment in
|
|
history is going to be very difficult.
|
|
The dominant issue will be how collectives can become part of
|
|
history - how they can become a social force. There is no guarantee and
|
|
we should promise no easy victories. The uniqueness of developing
|
|
collectives is their definitive break with all hierarchic forms of
|
|
organization and the reconstructing of a classless society.
|
|
The thinking of radical organizers is frozen in the concept of the
|
|
mass movement. This form of struggle, no matter how radical its demands,
|
|
never threatens the basic structure - the mass itself.
|
|
Under these circumstances it takes great effort to imagine new
|
|
forms of existence. Space must be created before we can think of these
|
|
things and be able to establish the legitimacy of acting upon them.
|
|
The form of the collective is its practice. The collective is
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opposed to the mass. It contradicts the structure of the mass. The
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collective is anti-mass.
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Size of the Collective
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The aim of any organization is to make it as simple as possible,
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or as Marshall McLuhan puts it, "high in participation, low in
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definition." The tendency is just the opposite. Our reflex is to create
|
|
administrative structures to deal with political problems.
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Most people cannot discuss intelligently the subject of size.
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There is an unspoken feeling either that the problem should not exist or
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that it is beneath us to talk about it. Let's get it out in the open.
|
|
Size is a question of politics and social relations, not administration.
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Do you wonder why the subject is shunted aside at large meetings? Because
|
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it fundamentally challenges the repressive nature of large organizations.
|
|
Small groups that function as appendages to larger bodies will never feel
|
|
like small groups.
|
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The collective should not be larger than a band - no orchestras or
|
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chamber music please. The basic idea is to reproduce the collective, not
|
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expand it. The strength of a collective lies in its social organization,
|
|
not its numbers. Once you think in terms of recruiting, you might as well
|
|
join the Army. The difference between expansion and reproduction is the
|
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difference between adding and multiplying. The first bases its strength
|
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on numbers and the second on relationships between people.
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Why should there be a limit to size? Because we are neither
|
|
supermen nor slaves. Beyond a certain point, the group becomes a meeting
|
|
and before you know it you have to raise your hand to speak. The
|
|
collective is a recognition of the practical limits of conversation. This
|
|
simple fact is the basis for a new social experience.
|
|
Relations of inequality can be seen more clearly within a
|
|
collective and dealt with more effectively. "Whatever the nature of
|
|
authority in the large organization, it is inherent in the simple
|
|
organization unit." (Chester Barnard, The Function of Executives, 1938).
|
|
A small group with a 'leader' is the nucleus of a class society. Small
|
|
size restricts the area which any single individual can dominate. This is
|
|
true both internally and in relation to other groups.
|
|
Today, the mode of struggle requires a durable and resilient form
|
|
of organization which will enable us to cope both with the attrition of
|
|
daily life and the likelihood of repression. Unless we can begin to solve
|
|
problems at this level collectively, we are certainly not fit to create a
|
|
new society. Contrary to what people are led to think, i.e. united we
|
|
stand, united we fall, it will be harder to destroy a multitude of
|
|
collectives than the largest organizations with centralized control.
|
|
Size is a key to security. But its real importance lies in the
|
|
fact that the collective reproduces new social relations - the advantage
|
|
being that the process can begin now.
|
|
The limitation on size raises a difficult problem. What do you
|
|
say to someone who asks, "Can I join your collective?" This question is
|
|
ultimately at the root of much hostility (often unconscious) toward the
|
|
collective form of organization. You can't separate size from the
|
|
collective because it must be small in order to exist. The collective has
|
|
a right to exclude individuals because it offers them the alternative of
|
|
starting a new collective, i.e. sharing the responsibility for
|
|
organization. This is the basic answer to the question above.
|
|
Of course, people will put down the collective as being exclusive.
|
|
That is not the point. The size of a collective is essentially a
|
|
limitation on its authority. By contrast, large organizations, while
|
|
having open membership, are exclusive in terms of who shapes the politics
|
|
and actively participates in the structuring of activities. The choice is
|
|
between joining the mass of creating the class. The revolutionary project
|
|
is to do it yourself. Remember, Alexandra Kollontal warned in 1920, "The
|
|
essence of bureaucracy is when some third person decides your fate."
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Difference Between Mass and Class
|
|
|
|
Why is it important to know the difference between mass and class?
|
|
The chances are that there can be no conscious revolutionary practice
|
|
without making this distinction. We are not playing around with words.
|
|
Look. We are living in a mass society. We didn't get that way by
|
|
accident. The mass is a specific form of organization. The reason is
|
|
clear. Consumption is organized by the corporations. Their products
|
|
define the mass. The mass is not a cliche - 'the masses' - but a routine
|
|
which dominates your daily life. Understanding the structure of the mass
|
|
market is the first step toward understanding what happened to the class
|
|
struggle.
|
|
What is the mass? Most people think of the mass in terms of
|
|
numbers - like a crowded street or stadium. But it is actually structure
|
|
which determines its character. The mass is an aggregate of couples who
|
|
are separate, detached and anonymous. They live in cities physically
|
|
close yet socially apart. Their lives are privatized and depraved.
|
|
Coca-Cola and loneliness. The social existence of the mass - its rules
|
|
and regulations, the structuring of its status, roles and leadership - are
|
|
organized through consumption (the mass market). They are all products of
|
|
a specific social organization. Ours.
|
|
Of course, no one sees themselves as part of the mass. It's
|
|
always others who are the masses. The trouble is that it is not only the
|
|
corporations which organize us into the mass. The 'movement' itself
|
|
behaves as a mass and its organizers reproduce the hierarchy of the mass.
|
|
Really, how do you fight fire? With water, of course. The same
|
|
goes for revolution. We don't fight the mass (market) with a mass
|
|
(movement). We fight mass with class. Our aim should be not to create a
|
|
mass movement but a class force.
|
|
What is a class? A class is a consciously organized social force.
|
|
For example, the ruling class is conscious and acts collectively to
|
|
organize not only itself, but also the people (mass) that it rules. The
|
|
corporation is the self-conscious collective power of the ruling class.
|
|
We are not saying that class relations do not exist in the rest of
|
|
society. But they remain passive so long as they are shaped solely by
|
|
objective conditions (i.e. work situations). What is necessary is the
|
|
active (subjective) participation of the class itself. Class prejudice is
|
|
not class consciousness. The class is conscious of its social existence
|
|
because it seeks to organize itself. Th
|
|
The moral of the story is: the mass is a mass because it is
|
|
organized as a mass. Don't be fooled by the brand name. Mass is thinking
|
|
with your ass.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Primacy of the Collective
|
|
|
|
The small group is the coming together of people who feel the need
|
|
for collectivity. Its function is often to break out of the mass -
|
|
specifically from the isolation of daily life and the mass structure of
|
|
the movement. The problem is that frequently the group cannot create an
|
|
independent existence and an identity of its own because it continues to
|
|
define itself negatively, i.e. in opposition. So long as its point of
|
|
reference lies outside of it, the group's politics tend to be superimposed
|
|
on it by events and crises.
|
|
The small group can be a stage in the development of the
|
|
collective, if it develops a critique of the frustrations stemming from
|
|
its external orientation. The formation of a collective begins when
|
|
people not only have the same politics, but agree on the method of struggle.
|
|
Why should the collective be the primary focus of organization?
|
|
The collective is an alternative to the existing structure of society.
|
|
Changing social relations is a process rather than a product of
|
|
revolution. In other words, you make the revolution by actually changing
|
|
social relations. You must consciously create the contradictions in history.
|
|
Concretely, this means: organize yourselves, not somebody else.
|
|
The collective is the organizational nucleus of a classless society. As a
|
|
formal organization, it negates all forms of hierarchy. The answer to
|
|
alienation is to make yourself the subject, not the object, of history.
|
|
One of the crucial obstacles to the formation of collectives is
|
|
the transitional period - when the collective must survive side by side
|
|
with a disintegrating movement and a mass society. The disintegration of
|
|
the movement is not an isolated phenomenon but reflects the weakening of
|
|
the major institutions in American society responsible for our alienation.
|
|
Many people are demoralized by this process and find it bewildering
|
|
because they actually depend subconsciously on the continued existence of
|
|
these institutions. We are witnessing the break-up and transformation of
|
|
an institution integral to society - the mass market. The mass market is
|
|
corporate structure which few
|
|
These contradictions make it imperative that any people who decide
|
|
to create a collective know exactly who they are and what they are doing.
|
|
That is why you must consider your collective as primary. Because, if you
|
|
don't believe in the legitimacy of this form of organization, you can't
|
|
have a practical analysis of what is happening. Don't kid yourself. The
|
|
struggle for the creation and survival of collectives at this moment in
|
|
history is going to be very difficult.
|
|
The dominant issue will be how collectives can become part of
|
|
history - how they can become a social force. There is no guarantee and
|
|
we should promise no easy victories. The uniqueness of developing
|
|
collectives is their definitive break with all hierarchic forms of
|
|
organization and the reconstructing of a classless society.
|
|
The thinking of radical organizers is frozen in the concept of the
|
|
mass movement. This form of struggle, no matter how radical its demands,
|
|
never threatens the basic structure - the mass itself.
|
|
Under these circumstances it takes great effort to imagine new
|
|
forms of existence. Space must be created before we can think of these
|
|
things and be able to establish the legitimacy of acting upon them.
|
|
The form of the collective is its practice. The collective is
|
|
opposed to the mass. It contradicts the structure of the mass. The
|
|
collective is anti-mass.
|
|
|
|
Size of the Collective
|
|
|
|
The aim of any organization is to make it as simple as possible,
|
|
or as Marshall McLuhan puts it, "high in participation, low in
|
|
definition." The tendency is just the opposite. Our reflex is to create
|
|
administrative structures to deal with political problems.
|
|
Most people cannot discuss intelligently the subject of size.
|
|
There is an unspoken feeling either that the problem should not exist or
|
|
that it is beneath us to talk about it. Let's get it out in the open.
|
|
Size is a question of politics and social relations, not administration.
|
|
Do you wonder why the subject is shunted aside at large meetings? Because
|
|
it fundamentally challenges the repressive nature of large organizations.
|
|
Small groups that function as appendages to larger bodies will never feel
|
|
like small groups.
|
|
The collective should not be larger than a band - no orchestras or
|
|
chamber music please. The basic idea is to reproduce the collective, not
|
|
expand it. The strength of a collective lies in its social organization,
|
|
not its numbers. Once you think in terms of recruiting, you might as well
|
|
join the Army. The difference between expansion and reproduction is the
|
|
difference between adding and multiplying. The first bases its strength
|
|
on numbers and the second on relationships between people.
|
|
Why should there be a limit to size? Because we are neither
|
|
supermen nor slaves. Beyond a certain point, the group becomes a meeting
|
|
and before you know it you have to raise your hand to speak. The
|
|
collective is a recognition of the practical limits of conversation. This
|
|
simple fact is the basis for a new social experience.
|
|
Relations of inequality can be seen more clearly within a
|
|
collective and dealt with more effectively. "Whatever the nature of
|
|
authority in the large organization, it is inherent in the simple
|
|
organization unit." (Chester Barnard, The Function of Executives, 1938).
|
|
A small group with a 'leader' is the nucleus of a class society. Small
|
|
size restricts the area which any single individual can dominate. This is
|
|
true both internally and in relation to other groups.
|
|
Today, the mode of struggle requires a durable and resilient form
|
|
of organization which will enable us to cope both with the attrition of
|
|
daily life and the likelihood of repression. Unless we can begin to solve
|
|
problems at this level collectively, we are certainly not fit to create a
|
|
new society. Contrary to what people are led to think, i.e. united we
|
|
stand, united we fall, it will be harder to destroy a multitude of
|
|
collectives than the largest organizations with centralized control.
|
|
Size is a key to security. But its real importance lies in the
|
|
fact that the collective reproduces new social relations - the advantage
|
|
being that the process can begin now.
|
|
The limitation on size raises a difficult problem. What do you
|
|
say to someone who asks, "Can I join your collective?" This question is
|
|
ultimately at the root of much hostility (often unconscious) toward the
|
|
collective form of organization. You can't separate size from the
|
|
collective because it must be small in order to exist. The collective has
|
|
a right to exclude individuals because it offers them the alternative of
|
|
starting a new collective, i.e. sharing the responsibility for
|
|
organization. This is the basic answer to the question above.
|
|
Of course, people will put down the collective as being exclusive.
|
|
That is not the point. The size of a collective is essentially a
|
|
limitation on its authority. By contrast, large organizations, while
|
|
having open membership, are exclusive in terms of who shapes the politics
|
|
and actively participates in the structuring of activities. The choice is
|
|
between joining the mass of creating the class. The revolutionary project
|
|
is to do it yourself. Remember, Alexandra Kollontal warned in 1920, "The
|
|
essence of bureaucracy is when some third person decides your fate."
|
|
|
|
Contact Between Collectives
|
|
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|
The collective does not communicate with the mass. It makes
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contact with other collectives. What if other collectives do not exist?
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Well, it should take to itself until the day they do. Yes. By all means,
|
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the collective also communicates with other people, but it never views
|
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them as a mass - as a constituency or audience. The collective
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communicates with individuals in order to encourage self-organization. It
|
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assumes that people are capable of self-organization, and given that
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alternative, they will choose it over mass participation. The collective
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knows that it takes time to create new forms of organization. It simply
|
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seeks to hasten the crumbling of the mass.
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Much of the problem of 'communication' these days is that people
|
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think they have got to communicate all the time. You find people setting
|
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up administrative functions to deal with information flows before they
|
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have any idea what they want to say. The collective is not obsessed with
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'communicating' or 'relating' to the movement. What concerns it is the
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amount of noise - incessant phone calls, form letters, announcements of
|
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meetings, etc. - that passes for communication. It is time we gave more
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thought to what we say and how we say it.
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What exactly do we mean by contact? We want to begin by taking
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the bureaucracy out of communication. The idea is to begin modestly.
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Contact is a touching on all sides. The essential thing is about its
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directness and reliability. Eyeball to eyeball.
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Other forms of communication - telephone, letters, documents, etc.
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- should never be used as substitutes for direct contact. In fact, they
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should serve primarily to prepare contacts.
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Why is it so important to have direct contact? Because it is the
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simplest form of communication. Moreover, it is physical and involves all
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the senses - most of all the sense of smell. For this reason, it is
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reliable. It also takes account of the real need for security. Those who
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talk about repression continue to pass around sheets of paper asking for
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names, addresses, and telephone numbers.
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There are already a number of gatherings which appear to involve
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contact but in reality are grotesque facsimiles. The worst of these and
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the one most people flock to is the conference. This is a hotel of the
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mind which turns is all into tourists and spectators. A lower form of
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existence is the endless meeting - the one held every night. Not to
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mention the committees formed expressly to arrange meetings.
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The basic principle of contact between collectives is: you only
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meet when you have something to say to each other. This means two things.
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First, that you have a concrete idea what it is you want to say.
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Secondly, that you must prepare it in advance. These principles help to
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ensure that communication does not become an administrative problem.
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The new forms of contact have yet to be created. We can think of
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single examples. A member of one collective can attend the meeting of
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another collective or there may be a joint meeting of the groups as a
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whole. The first of these appears to be the more practical, however, the
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drawback is that not everyone is involved. There are undoubtedly other
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forms of contact which are likely to develop. The main thing is to invent
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them.
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Priority of Local Action
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The collective gives priority to local action. It rejects the
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mass politics of the white nationalists with their national committees,
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organizers, and the superstars. Definitely, the collective is out of the
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mainstream and what is more it feels no regrets. The aim of the
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collective is to feel new thoughts and act new ideas - in a word to create
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its own space. And that, more than any program, is what is intolerable to
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all the xerox radicals trying to reproduce their own images.
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The collective is the hindquarters of the revolution. It makes no
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pretence whatsoever in regard to the role of the vanguard. Expect nothing
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from them. They are not your leaders. Leave them alone. The collective
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knows it will be the last to enter the new world.
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The doubts people have about local action reveal how dependent
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they are on the glamour of mass politics. Everyone wants to project
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themselves on the screen of revolution - as Yippies or White Panthers.
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Having internalized the mass, they ask themselves questions whose answers
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seem logical in its context. How can we accomplish anything without mass
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action? If we don't go to meetings and demonstrations, will we be
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forgotten? Who will take us seriously if we don't join the rank and file?
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Slowly you realize that you have become a spectator, an object.
|
|
Your politics take place on a stage and your social relations consist of
|
|
sitting in an audience or marching in a crowd. The fragmentation of your
|
|
everyday experience contrasts with the spectacular unity of the mass.
|
|
By contrast, the priority of local action is an attempt to unify
|
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everyday life and fragment the mass. This level of consciousness is a
|
|
result of rejecting the laws of mass behavior based on Leninism and TV
|
|
ideology. It makes possible an enema of the brain which everyone so
|
|
desperately needs. You will be relieved to discover that you can create a
|
|
situation by localizing your struggle.
|
|
How can we prevent local action from becoming provincial? Whether
|
|
or not it does so depends on our overall strategy. Provincialism is
|
|
simply the consequences or not knowing what is happening. A commune, for
|
|
example, is provincial because its strategy is based on petty farming and
|
|
glorification of the extended family. What they have is astrology, not a
|
|
strategy.
|
|
Local action should be based on the global structure of modern
|
|
society. There can be no collective action without collectives. But the
|
|
creation of a collective should not be mistaken for victory nor should it
|
|
become an end in itself. The great danger the collective faces
|
|
historically is that of being cut off (or cutting itself off) from the
|
|
outside world. The issue ultimately will be what action to take and when.
|
|
Whether collectives become a social force depends on their analysis of
|
|
history and their course of action.
|
|
In fact, the 'provinces' today are moving ahead of the centers in
|
|
political consciousness and motivation. From Minnesota to the Mekong
|
|
Delta, the revolt is gaining coherence. The centers are trying to
|
|
decipher what is happening, to catch up and contain it. For this purpose
|
|
they must create centralized forms of organization - or 'co-ordination' -
|
|
as the modernists call it.
|
|
The first principle of local action is to denationalize your
|
|
thinking. Take the country out of Salem. Get out of Marlboro country.
|
|
Become conscious of how your life is managed from the national centers.
|
|
Lifestyles are roles designed to give you the illusion of movement while
|
|
keeping you in your place. "Style is mass chasing class, and class
|
|
escaping mass." (W. Rauschenbush, "The Idiot God Fashion," Woman's Coming
|
|
of Age, eds Schmalhausen and Calvert, 1931).
|
|
Local action gives you the initiative by enabling you to define
|
|
the situation. That is the practice of knowing you are the subject.
|
|
Marat says: "The most important thing is to pull yourself up by your own
|
|
hair, to turn yourself inside out and see the whole world with fresh
|
|
eyes." The collective turns itself inside out and sees reality.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Dream of Unity
|
|
|
|
The principle of unity is based on the proposition that everyone
|
|
is a unit (a fragment). Unity means one multiplied by itself. We are not
|
|
going to say it straight - in so far as unity has suppressed real
|
|
political differences - class, racial, sexual - it is a form of tyranny.
|
|
The dream of unity is in reality a nightmare of compromise and suppressed
|
|
desires. We are not equal and unity perpetuates inequality.
|
|
The collective will be subject constantly to pressure from outside
|
|
groups demanding support in one form or another. Everyone is always in a
|
|
crisis. Given these circumstances, a group can have the illusion of being
|
|
permanently mobilized and active without having politics of its own.
|
|
Calls for unity channel the political energies of collectives into support
|
|
politics. So, as a precaution, the collective must take time to work out
|
|
its own politics and plan of action. Above all, it should try to foresee
|
|
crisis situations and their 'rent-a-crowd' militancy.
|
|
You will be accused of factionalism. Don't waste time thinking
|
|
about this age old problem. A collective is not a faction. Responding to
|
|
Pavlov's bell puts you in the position of a salivating dog. There will be
|
|
no end to your hunger when who you are is determined by someone else.
|
|
You will also be accused of elitism. This is a risky business and
|
|
should not be dismissed lightly. A collective must first know what is
|
|
meant by elitism. Instead of wondering whether it refers to leadership or
|
|
personalities, you should first anchor the issue in a class context. Know
|
|
where your ideas come from and what their relation is to the dominant
|
|
ideology. You should ask the same questions about those who make the
|
|
accusations. What is their class background and class interest? So far
|
|
many people have reacted defensively to the charge of elitism and, thus,
|
|
have avoided dealing with the issue head on. That in itself is a class
|
|
reaction.
|
|
The internal is the mirror of the external. The best way to avoid
|
|
behaving like an elite is to prevent the formation of elitism within the
|
|
collective itself. Often when charges of elitism are true, they reflect
|
|
the same class relations internally.
|
|
The ways of undermining the autonomy of a collective are many and
|
|
insidious. The call for unity can no longer be responded to
|
|
automatically. The time has come to question the motives and
|
|
effectiveness of such actions - and to feel good (i.e. correct) in doing
|
|
so. Jargon is pigeon talk and is meant to make us feel stupid and
|
|
powerless. Because collective action is not organized as a mass, it does
|
|
not have to rely on the call of unity in order to act.
|
|
"Does 'one divide into two' or 'two fuse into one'? This question
|
|
is a subject of debate in China and now here. This debate is a struggle
|
|
between two conceptions of the world. One believes in struggle, the other
|
|
in unity. The two sides have drawn a clear line between them and their
|
|
arguments are diametrically opposed. Thus, you can wee why one divides
|
|
into two." (Free translation from the Red Flag, Peking, September 21, 1964).
|
|
|
|
The Function of Analysis
|
|
|
|
Not only can there be no revolution without revolutionary theory,
|
|
there can be no strategy without analysis. Strategy is knowing ahead of
|
|
time what you are going to do. This is what analysis makes possible.
|
|
When you begin, you may not know anything. The purpose of analysis is not
|
|
to know everything, but to know what you do know and know it good - that
|
|
is collectively. The heart of thinking analytically is to learn over and
|
|
over again that the process is as important as the product. Developing an
|
|
analysis requires new ways of thinking. Without new ways of thinking we
|
|
are doomed to old ways of acting.
|
|
The question of what we are going to do is the hardest to answer
|
|
and the one that ultimately will determine whether a collective will
|
|
continue to exist. The difficulty of the question makes analysis all the
|
|
more necessary. We can no longer afford to be propelled by the crudest
|
|
forms of advertisement - slogans and rhetoric. The function of analysis
|
|
is to reveal a plan of action.
|
|
Why is there relatively little practical analysis of what is
|
|
happening today? Some people refuse to analyze anything which they cannot
|
|
immediately comprehend. Basically they have a feeling of inadequacy.
|
|
This is partly because they have never had the opportunity to do it before
|
|
and, therefore, don't know they are capable of it. On the other hand,
|
|
many activists put down analysis as being 'intellectual' - which is more a
|
|
commentary on their own kind of thinking than anything else. Finally,
|
|
there are those who feel no need to think and become very uncomfortable
|
|
when somebody does want to. This often reflects their class disposition.
|
|
The general constipation of the movement is a product of all these forces.
|
|
One reason for this sad state of affairs is that analysis gives so
|
|
little satisfaction. This is another way of saying that it is not
|
|
practical. What has happened to all thinking can best be seen in the
|
|
degeneration of class analysis into stereotyped, obese definitions. There
|
|
is little difference between the theory-mongers of high abstraction and
|
|
the sloganeers of crude abstraction. Theory is becoming the dialect of
|
|
robots, and slogans the mass production of the mind. But just because
|
|
ideas have become so mechanical does not mean we should abandon thought.
|
|
Most people are willing to face the fact that they are living in a
|
|
society that has yet to be explained. Any attempt to probe those areas
|
|
which are unfamiliar is met with a general hostility of fear. People seem
|
|
afraid to look at themselves analytically. Part of the problem of not
|
|
knowing what to do reveals itself in our not knowing who we are. The
|
|
motivation to look at yourself critically and to explain society comes
|
|
from the desire to change both. The heart of the problem is that we do
|
|
not concretely imagine winning, except perhaps, by accident.
|
|
Analysis is the arming of the brain. We're being stifled by those
|
|
who tell us analysis is intellectual when in reality it is the tool of the
|
|
imagination. Just as you can't tolerate intellectualism, so you cannot
|
|
act from raw anger - not if you want to win. You must teach your stomach
|
|
how to think and your brain how to feel. Analysis should help us to
|
|
express anger intelligently. Learning how to think, i.e. analysis, is the
|
|
first step toward conscious activity.
|
|
No doubt you feel yourself tightening up because you think it
|
|
sounds heavy. Really, the problem is that you think much bigger than you
|
|
act. Be modest. Start with what you already know and want to know more
|
|
about. Analysis begins with what interests you. Political thinking
|
|
should be part of everyday life, not a class privilege. To be practical,
|
|
analysis must give you an understanding of what to do and how to do it.
|
|
Thinking should help to distinguish between what is important and
|
|
what is not. It should break down complex forces so that we can
|
|
understand them. Break everything down. In the process of analyzing
|
|
something you will discover that there are different ways of acting which
|
|
were not apparent when you began. This is the pleasure of analysis. To
|
|
investigate a problem is to begin to solve it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Need for New Formats
|
|
|
|
The need for new formats grows out of the oppressiveness of print.
|
|
We must learn the techniques of advertisement. They consist of short,
|
|
clear, non-rhetorical statements. The ad words. The ad represents a
|
|
break with the college education and the diarrhea of words. The ad is a
|
|
concentrated formula for communication. Its information power has already
|
|
outmoded the school system. The secret is to gain as much pleasure in
|
|
creating the form as in expressing the idea.
|
|
How do we defend adopting the style of advertising when its
|
|
function is so oppressive? As a medium we think it represents a
|
|
revolutionary mode of production. Rejecting it has resulted in the
|
|
stagnation of our minds and a crude romanticism in political culture.
|
|
Those who turn up their noses at ads think in a language that is decrepit.
|
|
Using the ad technique transforms the person who does it. It makes
|
|
writing a pleasure for anyone because it strives in orality in print.
|
|
What we mean by the use of ad technique is to physically use it.
|
|
Most of the time we are unconscious of ads and, if we do become conscious,
|
|
we don't act upon them - don't subvert them. Ads are based on repetition.
|
|
If you affect one of them, you affect all of them. Know the environment
|
|
of the ad. The most effective way to subvert an ad is to make the
|
|
contradiction in it visible. Advertise it. The vulnerability of ads lies
|
|
in the possibility of turning them against the exploiters.
|
|
Jerry Rubin says you should use the media all the time. At least
|
|
he goes all the way. This is better than the toe-dipping approach that
|
|
seems so common these days. Of course, there are groups who say don't use
|
|
it at all and they don't. They will probably outlast Jerry since the
|
|
basic technique of mass media is over-exposure. That is why Jerry has
|
|
already written his memoirs. The Situationists say: "The revolt is
|
|
contained by over-exposure. We are given it to contemplate so that we
|
|
shall forget to participate."
|
|
We are not talking about the packaging of politics. Ramparts is
|
|
the Playboy of the Left. On the other hand, the underground press is
|
|
pornographic and redundant. Newsreel's projector is running backwards.
|
|
And why in the era of Cosmopolitan magazine must we suffer the stodginess
|
|
of Leviathan? We much prefer reading Fortune - the magazine for 'the men
|
|
in charge of change' - for our analysis of capitalism.
|
|
There is no getting around it - we need new formats, entirely new
|
|
formats. Otherwise we will never sharpen our wits. To break out of the
|
|
spell of print requires a conscious effort to think a new language. We
|
|
should no longer be immobilized by other people's words. Don't wait for
|
|
the news to tell you what is happening. Make you headlines with
|
|
presstype. Cut up your favorite magazine and put it together again. Cut
|
|
big words in half and make little words out of them - like ENVIRON MENTAL
|
|
CRISIS. All you need is a good pair of scissors and rubber cement. Abuse
|
|
the enemy's images. Turn the Man from Glad into a Frankenstein. Making
|
|
comic strips out of great art. Don't let anything interfere with your
|
|
pleasure.
|
|
Don't read any more books - at least not straight through. As
|
|
G.B. Kay from Blackpool once said (quoting somebody else), "Reading rots
|
|
the mind." Pamphlets are so much more fun. Read randomly, write on the
|
|
margins and go back to comics. You might try the Silver Surfer for a start.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Self-Activity
|
|
|
|
Bad work habits and sloppy behavior undermine any attempt to
|
|
construct collectively. Casual, sloppy behavior means that we don't care
|
|
deeply about what we are doing or who we are doing it with. This may come
|
|
as a surprise to a lot of people. The fact remains: we talk revolution
|
|
but act reactionary at elementary levels.
|
|
There are two basic things underlying these unfortunate
|
|
circumstances: 1) people's idea of how something (like revolution) will
|
|
happen shapes our work habits; 2) their class background gives them a
|
|
casual view of politics.
|
|
There is no doubt that the Pepsi generation is more politically
|
|
alive. But this new energy is being channelled by organizers into boring
|
|
meetings which reproduce the hierarchy of class society. After a while,
|
|
critical thinking is eroded and people lose their curiosity. Meetings
|
|
become a routine like everything else in life.
|
|
A lot of problems which collectives will have can be traced to the
|
|
work habits acquired in the (mass) movement. People perpetuate the
|
|
passive roles they have become accustomed to in large meetings. The
|
|
emphasis on mass participation means that all you have to do is show up.
|
|
Rarely, do people prepare themselves for a meeting, nor do they feel the
|
|
need to. Often this situation does not become evident precisely because
|
|
the few people who do work (those who run the meeting) create the illusion
|
|
of group achievement.
|
|
Because people see themselves essentially as objects and not as
|
|
subjects, political activity is defined as an event outside them and in
|
|
the future. No one sees themselves making the revolution and, therefore,
|
|
they don't understand how it will be accomplished.
|
|
The short span of attention is one tell tale symptom of instant
|
|
politics. The emphasis on responding to crisis seems to contract the span
|
|
of attention - in fact there is often no time dimension at all. This
|
|
timelessness is experienced as the syncopation of over-commitment. Many
|
|
people say they will do things without really thinking out carefully
|
|
whether they have the time to do them. Having time ultimately means
|
|
defining what you really want to do. Over-commitment is when you want to
|
|
do everything but end up doing nothing.
|
|
The numerous other symptoms of casual politics - lack of
|
|
preparation, being late, getting bored at difficult moments, etc. are all
|
|
signs of a political attitude which is destructive to the collective. The
|
|
important thing is recognizing the existence of these problems and knowing
|
|
what causes them. They are not personal problems but historically
|
|
determined attitudes.
|
|
Many people confuse the revolt against alienated labor in its
|
|
specific historical form with work activity itself. This revolt is
|
|
expressed in an anti-work attitude.
|
|
Attitudes toward work are shaped by out relations to production,
|
|
i.e. class. Class is a product of hierarchic divisions of labor
|
|
(including forms other than wage labor). There are three basic relations
|
|
which can produce anti-work attitudes. The working class expressed its
|
|
anti-work attitude as a rebellion against routinized labor. For the
|
|
middle class, the anti-work attitude comes out of the ideology of consumer
|
|
society and revolves around leisure. The stereotype of the 'lazy native'
|
|
or 'physically weak woman' is a third anti-work attitude which is applied
|
|
to those excluded from wage labor.
|
|
The dream of automation (i.e. no work) reinforces class prejudice.
|
|
The middle class is the one that has the dream since it seeks to expand
|
|
its leisure-oriented activities. To the working class, automation means a
|
|
loss of their job, preoccupation with unemployment, which is the opposite
|
|
of leisure. For the excluded, automation doesn't mean anything because it
|
|
will not be applied to their forms of work.
|
|
The automation of the working class has become the ideology of
|
|
post-scarcity radicals - from the anarchists at Anarchos to SDS's new
|
|
working class. Technological change has rescued them from the dilemma of
|
|
a class analysis they were never able to make. With the elimination of
|
|
working class struggle by automation (the automation of the working class)
|
|
the radicals have become advocates of leisure society and touristic
|
|
lifestyles. This anti-work attitude leads to a utopian outlook and
|
|
removes us from the realm of history. It prevents the construction of
|
|
collectivity and self-activity. The issue of how to transform work into
|
|
self-activity is central to the elimination of class and the
|
|
reorganization of society.
|
|
Self-activity is the reconstruction of the consciousness
|
|
(wholeness) of one's individual life activity. The collective is what
|
|
makes the reconstruction possible because it defines individuality not as
|
|
a private experience but as a social relation. What is important to see
|
|
is that work is the creating of conscious activity within the structure of
|
|
the collective.
|
|
One of the best ways to discover and correct anti-work attitudes
|
|
is through self-criticism. This provides an objective framework which
|
|
allows people the space to be criticized and to be critical.
|
|
Self-criticism is the opposite of self-consciousness because its aim is
|
|
not to isolate you but to free repressed abilities. Self-criticism is a
|
|
method for dealing with piggish behavior and developing consciousness.
|
|
To root out the society within us and to redefine our work
|
|
relations a collective must develop a sense of its own history. One of
|
|
the hardest things to do is to see the closest relations - those within
|
|
the collective - in political terms. The tendency is to be sloppy, or
|
|
what Mao calls 'liberal,' about relations between friends. Rules can no
|
|
longer be the framework of discipline. It must be based on political
|
|
understanding. One of the functions of analysis is that it be applied
|
|
internally.
|
|
Preparation is another part of the process which creates
|
|
continuity between meetings and insures that our own thinking does not
|
|
become a part-time activity. It also combats the tendency to talk off the
|
|
top of one's head and pick ideas out of the air. Whenever meetings tend
|
|
to be abstract and random it means the ideas put forward are not connected
|
|
by thought (i.e. analysis). There is seldom serious investigation behind
|
|
what is said.
|
|
What does it mean to prepare for a meeting? It means not coming
|
|
empty-handed or empty-headed. Mao says, "No investigation, no right to
|
|
speak." Assuming a group has decided what it wants to do, the first step
|
|
is for everyone to investigate. This means taking the time to actually
|
|
look into the matter, sort out the relevant materials and be able to make
|
|
them accessible to everyone in the collective. The motive underlying all
|
|
the preparation should be the construction of a coherent analysis. "We
|
|
must substitute the sweat of self-criticism for the tears of crocodiles,"
|
|
according to a new Chinese proverb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Struggle on Many Levels
|
|
|
|
Struggle has many faces. But no two faces look alike. Like the
|
|
cubists, we must look at things from many sides. The problem is to find
|
|
ways of creating space for ourselves. The tendency now is toward
|
|
two-sidedness which is embedded in every aspect of our lives. Our
|
|
language poses questions by making us choose between opposites. The
|
|
imperialist creates the anti-imperialist. Before 'cool' there was hot and
|
|
cold. 'Cool' was the first attempt to break out of two-sidedness.
|
|
Two-sidedness always minimizes the dimensions of struggle by narrowly
|
|
defining the situation. We end up with a one dimensional view of the
|
|
enemy and of ourselves.
|
|
Learn to be shrewd. Our first impulse is always to define our
|
|
position. Why do we feel the need to tell them? We create space by not
|
|
appearing to be what we really are.
|
|
Shrewdness is not simply a defensive tactic. The essence of
|
|
shrewdness is learning to take advantage of the enemy's weaknesses.
|
|
Otherwise you can never win. The rule is: be honest among yourselves,
|
|
but deceive the enemy.
|
|
There are at least three ways of dealing with a situation. You
|
|
can neutralize, activate, or destroy. Neutralize is to create space.
|
|
Activate is to gain support. Destroy is to win. What's more, it is
|
|
essential to learn how to use all three simultaneously.
|
|
Struggle on many levels begins with the activation of all the
|
|
senses. We must be able to conceive of more than one mode of acting for a
|
|
given situation. The response, i.e. method of struggle, should contain
|
|
three elements: 1) a means of survival; 2) a method of exploiting splits
|
|
in the enemy camp; 3) an underground strategy.
|
|
The fundamental tendency of corporate liberalism is to identify
|
|
with social change while trying to contain it. Wouldn't it be ironic (and
|
|
even a relief) if we could turn the threat of co-option into a means of
|
|
survival?
|
|
The fear of co-option often leads people to shun the challenge of
|
|
corporate liberals. Some of the purest revolutionaries prefer not to
|
|
think about using the co-opter for their own purposes. Too often the
|
|
mentality of the 'job' obscures the potential for subversion.
|
|
The existence of corporate liberalism demands that we not be
|
|
sloppy in our own thinking and response. The strength of the position is
|
|
that it forces us to acknowledge our own weaknesses - even before we
|
|
engage in struggle against it. The worst mistake is to pretend that this
|
|
enemy does not exist.
|
|
Urban struggle requires a subversive strategy. Concretely,
|
|
working 'within the system' should become for us a source of money,
|
|
information, and anonymity. This is what Mao means when he says, "Move at
|
|
night." The routine of daily life is night-time for the enemy - when he
|
|
cannot see us. The process of co-option should become an increasingly
|
|
disquieting exercise for them.
|
|
Exploiting splits within the enemy camp does not mean helping one
|
|
segment defeat another. The basic aim is to maintain the splits. There
|
|
are significant differences among the oppressors. These have the effect
|
|
of weakening them. Under certain circumstances these splits may provide a
|
|
margin of maneuverability which may be strategic for us. The main thing
|
|
is not to view the enemy monolithically. Monolithic thinking condemns you
|
|
to one way of acting.
|
|
There is a tendency to see the most degenerate forms of reaction
|
|
as the primary enemy. The corporations are consciously pandering to such
|
|
ideas through films like Easy Rider which also attempts to identify with
|
|
young males. The function of analysis is to break down and specify the
|
|
different forces within the enemy camp.
|
|
The spaces created by these splits are of crucial importance to
|
|
the preparation of a long range strategy. It will be increasingly
|
|
difficult to survive with the visibility that we are accustomed to. The
|
|
lifestyles which declare our opposition are also the ones which make us
|
|
easy targets. We must not mistake the level of appearances for new
|
|
cultures. The whole point is not to make a fetish of our lifestyles. In
|
|
the psychedelic atmosphere of repression, square is cool.
|
|
Always keep part of your strategy underground. Just as analysis
|
|
helps to differentiate the enemy so it should provide you with different
|
|
levels of attack. Mao says: "Flexibility is a concrete expression of
|
|
initiative."
|
|
Going underground should not mean dropping heroically out of
|
|
sight. There will be few places to hide in the electronic environment of
|
|
the future. The most dangerous kind of underground will be one that is
|
|
like an iceberg. The roles created to replace our identities in everyday
|
|
life must become the disguise of the underground.
|
|
An underground strategy puts the impulse of confrontation into
|
|
perspective. We must fight against the planned obsolescence of
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|
confrontations which lock us into the time-span of instant revolution.
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Going underground means having a long range strategy - something which
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plans for 2004. The iceberg strategy keeps us cool. It trains us to
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control our reflexes and calculate our responses.
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The underground strategy is also necessary to maintain autonomy.
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Autonomy preserves the organizational form of the collective, which is
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critical to the sharpening of its politics. Nothing will be achieved by
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submerging ourselves in a chaos of revolutionary fronts. The principle
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strategy of the counterfeit Left will be to smear over differences with
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appeals to a class unity that no longer exists. An underground strategy
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without a revolutionary from of organization can only emerge as a new
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class society. To destroy the system of oppression is not enough. We
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must create the organization of a free society. When the underground
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emerges, the collective will be that society.
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