Showing posts with label David Graeber void network Babylonia BFest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Graeber void network Babylonia BFest. Show all posts

8.9.12

“One year after Occupy Wall Street: DEBT, CRISES and GLOBAL REVOLUTION” a talk of DAVID GRAEBER with TASOS SAGRIS from Void Network











Commemorating one year from Occupy Wall street movement and the movement of open public assemblies in thousands of squares, parks and streets all over the world, the anarchist anthropologist David Graeber speaks about the past and the future of exploitation and global revoltwith the poet and writer from Greece Tasos Sagris from Void Network (co-editor of the book “We Are an Image from the Future / The Greek Revolt of Dec. 2008”, AKPress). 

1. Debt is Enslavement

Tasos Sagris: During summer 2011 all major cities of this planet faced mass riots and demonstrations. During all these period Void Network was spreading everywhere the graffiti “WeWon’t Live like Slaves”. In your book “Debt, the first 5000 years” you try to write a history for people without history and observe common subjects with uncommon ways. Can you explain us in short terms how Work, Money and Debt are historical ways of enslavement, exploitation and violent domination in our days like they were for thousands of years now?


David Graeber: One realization really startled me when researching the book: that is, the realization that throughout human history, most people have been in debt. Think about it for a second. Could the majority of the human race really be improvident failures unable to manage their affairs, and thus justly dependent on the rich? Of course not. Rather, states and elites have always colluded to ensure that their subjects become debtors; not least, because debt is the easiest way to take a relation of violent inequality, of violent extraction, and make it seem not only moral, but make it seem like it's the victim who's to blame. That's why mafiosi always dress up extortion in a language of debt. But it's the same with conquering armies, and gradually, all ruling classes seem to figure out the trick. So debt produces a form of slavery that seems voluntary; "well, you didn't have to take the loan out to begin with, did you" - though, in fact, the vast majority of loans in history were not commercial loans, voluntarily undertaken, but loans taken for survival by small farmers or craftsmen who had lost the networks of mutual aid that could have otherwise kept them afloat in hard times, or loans to pay taxes or some similar government extraction. In the colonial world you can see it happening quite clearly because colonial governments were very explicit about using tax policy as ways to get everyone into debt so as to extract more and more work out of them.
The same is true of wages by the way. In a technical way, loans and wages are very similar. They're both based on an illusion of equality: except, we are supposed to pretend that two independent, legally equal individuals enter into a contract not to be equals any more: in one case, as a debtor, until the loan is repaid, the other, as a laborer. Obviously, in each case, the money flows in opposite directions. But when you start exploring the historical origins of either, you end up in slavery again. Debt was used as the main way to turn people into slaves, or to get them to sell off members of their families as slaves. But most early wage laborers actually were slaves. That's true in ancient Greece, to the Medieval port cities of the Indian Ocean. Free people almost invariably refused to work for others wages (except maybe, in democratic Athens, for the state, since that wasn't seen as working for others but for the demos, which included oneself.)  The first wage laborers were always slaves that were being rented out by their masters: the owner got a half share of the wage, the slave got the rest for upkeep. In a fascinating ideological twist, capitalists have managed to take what was always considered a form of slavery and to present it to us as the very essence of human freedom.

2. Global Movement and Direct Democracy  

Tasos Sagris: Anarchists and antiauthoritarians offered a lot until now to the movements of our times. Among them the most popular are the diversity of Direct Democratic ways of organizing, the non hierarchical decision making processes, the self-organization, the consensus, the non representation and the uncompromised non negotiation with the authorities. Even though it seems that anarchists really lack, for the moment, clear political propositions for solving the every day life problems of our century or a clear strategy for destroying 21st century capitalism…what can be a way  for bringing the movement of the movements further towards the direction of real social, economic and cultural emancipation?

David Graeber: In the US, at least, we're trying to build a genuinely democratic culture - a matter of habits of horizontal decision-making, skills, capacities, that have never really existed before except among some very isolated populations like Quakers and Native Americans. It's not so much the institutions, necessarily (which can always be improvised when we need them) but the habits. Most US citizens don't have the slightest idea how to conduct themselves democratically. Or even how to think democratically - hence, for example, the notion of "public opinion." Opinions are what you have when you have no power. The rulers don't have opinions. They have policies. Policies are what you have when you're inflicting on something on people who have no say, just opinions. We need to get rid of both. One things really start to fall apart, and we enter into crisis mode, people are going to have to decide what to turn to: the right, which will offer some new form of violent post-apocalyptic authoritarianism, some kind of mafia system, or a more horizontal solution. The verticals will be able to offer a certain stark efficiency, but systems like that are ultimately stupid and inflexible, because they're unimaginative.  Our systems will be far more intelligent, but we'll never be as good at violence. We'll have to develop some really strong capacities for effective democratic organization, and making it pleasurable, fun, and satisfying as well as just effective, in order to be able to win out nonetheless.

3. Political Violence and Tactics of Struggle

Tasos Sagris: The anarchists all over the world accuse the pacifists for causing victimization of the people and spirit of defeatism in the movements. The liberals in America accuse Anarchists for alienating the people through violent tactics and direct actions. The media all around the world spread fear and massive stupidity. In north Africa the “Arab spring” is lost in the smoke of armed street fights, Nato air bombings and rich gangs of Islamic fundamentalism. In western metropolis crisis becomes the best excuse for the reappearance of racism and neonazism and the street violence of youth gangs becomes more and more uncontrollable. The hate and anger is everywhere, you can feel it. Can we offer new directions to all these anger? What signifies historically the difference between political violence and street gang hooliganism?


David Graber: We have to be realistic about the role of violence. Violence is the enemy's strongest card to play, because violence - especially organized violence - the one form of stupidity to which it's almost impossible to come up with an intelligent response. We have to remember that violence is ultimately a form of stupidity. That doesn't mean we don't do it - there are many situations where we simply have no choice, it's the only way to confront the massive violence and stupidity of the system. But it will never be how we win. Because violence is also one of the very few things that tends to be more effective if done in a top-down, command structure fashion. We're never going to defeat the 101st Airborne Division in a stand-up battle in the street. And anyway they have nukes. So the end-game has got to be to maneuver the enemy into a position where the people they send to shoot us refuse to do so, or simply go home, or join us. Now, obviously, we're not going to maneuver the  enemy into that position if we're practicing pure Gandhian non-violence either.
I agree with the APPO movement in Oaxaca: both Gandhian non-violence, and outright armed insurrection (at least if it continues for any time), will necessarily end up producing vertical structures and destroying democracy. But there's an enormous territory to be explored in between. 
As for hooliganism - well, I guess the other real problem with violence is that it's so terribly seductive, almost drug-like in its addictive qualities, once you get over the initial inhibitions. I think anthropology provides some useful insight here. One thing it teaches us quite clearly is that groups that consist exclusively - or almost exclusively - of young males from about 15-25 are really bad news (think about the atrocities of national armies all over the world!). The key thing I suspect is to make sure your groups that are prepared to engage in militant tactics if they have to be mixed in terms of age and especially gender and to ensure that they spend most of their time collaborating on something other than violence.

4. The Global Revolution

Tasos Sagris: If the “future is uncertain and the end is always near” (especially after Global warming did this clear)… can we think the movements of 2011-2012 as the beginning of a new global revolutionary era or they are just the last glimpses of the great revolutions of the past just before the greatest domination of Global capitalism ever?
   
David Graber: I doubt the coming years will look precisely like what we think a revolution should look like, but probably most revolutions in the past haven't looked like what we think they should look like for those living through them. 
I agree with Immanuel Wallerstein that future historians will be talking about the "world revolution of 2011" - in much the same way as they talk about 1848 or 1968, which also didn't involve any outright seizures of power or revolutionary regimes. And anyway what sort of criteria is that for an anarchist? Such revolutions transform political common sense, our horizons of possibility, and I think that's already happened. But even more: I think historians will remember this moment as the beginning of the struggles over the dismantling of the US military-financial empire. It will be dismantled. The struggles are over what form the next thing will take. 


more info about Void Network: http://voidnetwork.blogspot.com

here you can see also a short video of  International Solidarity message from Athens General Assembly some days after the start of Occupy Wall Street. The video includes video and photos from summer 2011 in Greece:


«ΧΡΕΟΣ / ΚΡΙΣΗ / ΠΑΓΚΟΣΜΙΑ ΕΠΑΝΑΣΤΑΣΗ» Μια συζήτηση του αναρχικού ανθρωπολόγου David Graeber με τον Τάσο Σαγρή από το Κενό Δίκτυο ένα χρόνο μετά το κίνημα Occupy Wall Street

















O David Graeber είναι σήμερα ο πιο πολυδιαβασμένος Αναρχικός ακτιβιστής και επιστήμονας στον κόσμο. Ανθρωπολόγος καθηγητής με συμμετοχή στην διαμόρφωση των πολιτικών θέσεων και την εξέλιξη των αντικαθεστωτικών κινημάτων από την εποχή του κινήματος της αντι-παγκοσμιοποίησης έως το Occupy Wall Street μοιράζετε μαζί μας τις ελπίδες και τον αγώνα για την παγκόσμια κοινωνική απελευθέρωση. Με αφορμή τις ομιλίες του στο φεστιβάλ Occupy Planet Earth που διοργανώθηκε στο Πολυτεχνείο από το Κενό Δίκτυο, το περιοδικό Βαβυλωνία και την συνέλευση του BFest ο Τάσος Σαγρής συναντήθηκε και συζήτησε με τον David Graeber  

1.  Το χρέος είναι υποδούλωση.

Τάσος Σαγρής: Κατά την διάρκεια του καλοκαιριού το 2011 όλες οι κύριες πόλεις αυτού του πλανήτη αντιμετώπισαν μαζικές ταραχές και διαδηλώσεις. Σε όλη αυτή την διάρκεια το Κενό Δίκτυο διέδιδε παντού το γκράφιτι «Να μην Ζήσουμε σαν Δούλοι». Στο βιβλίο σας «Χρέος, τα πρώτα 5000 χρόνια» προσπαθήσατε να γράψετε Ιστορία για ανθρώπους χωρίς ιστορία και να παρατηρήσετε συνηθισμένα θέματα με ασυνήθιστους τρόπους. Μπορείτε να μας εξηγήσετε εν συντομία πως η Εργασία, το Χρήμα και το Χρέος είναι ιστορικοί τρόποι υποδούλωσης, εκμετάλλευσης και βίαιης κυριαρχίας όπως ήταν για χιλιάδες χρόνια τώρα;

David Graeber: Μία διαπίστωση πραγματικά με τρόμαξε, όταν έκανα έρευνα για το βιβλίο. Η διαπίστωση αυτή είναι, ότι καθ’ όλη την ανθρώπινη ιστορία, οι περισσότεροι άνθρωποι ζήσαν χρεωμένοι. Σκεφτείτε το αυτό για λίγο. Μπορεί η πλειοψηφία της ανθρώπινης φυλής να είναι σπάταλα αποτυχημένη και ανίκανη να διαχεριστεί τις υποθέσεις τις και για αυτό απλά να εξαρτάται από τους πλούσιους; Φυσικά όχι. Μάλλον, τα κράτη και οι ελίτ πάντα συνωμοτούσαν ώστε να εξασφαλίσουν ότι οι υποτελείς τους θα είναι πάντα χρεωμένοι. Το κυριότερο, επειδή το χρέος είναι ο εύκολος τρόπος να μετατρέψεις μια σχέση  βίαιης ανισότητας, βίαιης απόσπασης  και κλοπής, να φαίνεται όχι μόνο ηθική, αλλά και εμφανίζοντας αυτόν ο οποίος είναι ο θύτης ως το θύμα της υπόθεσης. Για αυτό το λόγο οι Μαφιόζοι πάντα παραποιούν την γλώσσα του εκβιασμού σε γλώσσα του χρέους. Αλλά αυτό ακριβώς συμβαίνει και με τους κατακτητικούς στρατούς και σταδιακά φαίνεται ότι όλες  οι κυρίαρχες τάξεις αρχίζουν να καταλαβαίνουν αυτό το κόλπο. Έτσι το χρέος παράγει μια μορφή δουλείας που φαίνεται εθελούσια, μιας και άλλωστε «δεν ήταν απαραίτητο να πάρεις αυτό το δάνειο για να ξεκινήσεις την δουλειά σου, έτσι δεν είναι ;» Όμως στην πραγματικότητα, η τεράστια πλειοψηφία των δανείων στην ιστορία, δεν ήταν εμπορικά δάνεια που πάρθηκαν εθελούσια, αλλά δάνεια που πάρθηκαν για επιβίωση από μικρούς αγρότες ή τεχνίτες που είχαν χάσει τα δίκτυα αμοιβαίας αλληλοβοήθειας που μπορούσαν να τους επιτρέπουν να επιβιώνουν στους δύσκολους καιρούς ή δάνεια που πάρθηκαν από ανθρώπους για να πληρώσουν φόρους ή  κάποια άλλη παρόμοια κυβερνητική κλοπή.  Στον αποικιακό κόσμο μπορούμε να δούμε αυτό να συμβαίνει αρκετά ξεκάθαρα, επειδή οι αποικιακές κυβερνήσεις ήταν πολύ σαφείς στο να χρησιμοποιούν την πολιτική φόρων  για να χρεώνουν τους πάντες, έτσι ώστε να τους αναγκάζουν να δουλέψουν όλο και περισσότερο.
Το ίδιο συμβαίνει και με τα ημερομίσθια κατά κάποιο τρόπο. Τεχνικά, τα δάνεια και τα ημερομίσθια είναι παρόμοιοι μηχανισμοί. Και οι δύο μηχανισμοί βασίζονται στην αυταπάτη της ισότητας, μιας και θα πρέπει να υποκριθούμε ότι δύο ανεξάρτητα και ισότιμα σύμφωνα με τον νόμο άτομα, υπογράφουν ένα συμβόλαιο έτσι ώστε να μην είναι πλέον ισότιμα. Στην μία περίπτωση, μπαίνεις σε αυτή την κατάσταση όντας  χρεωμένος μέχρι το δάνειο να αποπληρωθεί και στην άλλη ζώντας σαν εργάτης. Προφανώς, σε κάθε περίπτωση, το χρήμα ρέει προς μια συγκεκριμένη κατεύθυνση. Αλλά, όταν αρχίζεις να εξερευνείς εις βάθος τις ιστορικές προελεύσεις του καθενός από αυτούς τους μηχανισμούς καταλήγεις και στις δύο περιπτώσεις πάλι στη δουλεία. Το χρέος χρησιμοποιήθηκε σαν ο κύριος τρόπος για  να μετατρέψουν τους ανθρώπους σε δούλους, ή να τους αναγκάσουν να ξεπουλήσουν μέλη των οικογενειών τους σαν δούλους. Αλλά, κυρίως οι πρώτοι ημερομίσθιοι εργάτες ήταν στην πραγματικότητα δούλοι. Αυτό πράγματι συνέβαινε από τις πόλεις στην Αρχαία Ελλάδα έως τις Μεσαιωνικές  πόλεις  και τα λιμάνια του Ινδικού Ωκεανού. Οι ελεύθεροι άνθρωποι σχεδόν πάντα αρνούνταν να δουλέψουν για  ημερομίσθια (εκτός ίσως από την δημοκρατική Αθήνα όπου οι άνθρωποι δούλευαν για το κράτος, δηλαδή για τους δήμους που εμπεριείχαν και τους εαυτούς τους). Οι πρώτοι ημερομίσθιοι εργάτες ήταν πάντα δούλοι που ενοικιάζονταν από τα αφεντικά τους, ο ιδιοκτήτης έπαιρνε το μισό του ημερομισθίου και ο δούλος το υπόλοιπο για την συντήρηση του. Με μια μαγευτική ιδεολογική στροφή, οι καπιταλιστές κατάφεραν να μας παρουσιάσουν αυτό που πάντα θεωρούνταν δουλεία σαν την ίδια την ουσία της ανθρώπινης ελευθερίας.

2.     Παγκόσμιο Κίνημα και Άμεση Δημοκρατία.

Τάσος Σαγρής: Οι αναρχικοί και οι αντιεξουσιαστές πρόσφεραν πολλά μέχρι σήμερα στα κινήματα των καιρών μας. Ανάμεσα σε άλλα, τα πιο δημοφιλή είναι η ποικιλομορφία των Αμεσο- Δημοκρατικών τρόπων οργάνωσης, η μη-ιεραρχική διαδικασία λήψης αποφάσεων, η αυτοοργάνωση, η ομοφωνία, η μη-αντιπροσώπευση και η ασυμβίβαστη μη-διαπραγμάτευση με την εξουσία. Αν και φαίνετε ότι οι αναρχικοί πραγματικά αυτή την στιγμή στερούνται σαφών πολιτικών προτάσεων για την λύση των καθημερινών προβλημάτων της ζωής του αιώνα μας ή μια σαφή στρατηγική για την καταστροφή του καπιταλισμού του 21ου αιώνα… ποιος μπορεί να είναι ο τρόπος να φέρουμε το κίνημα των κινημάτων στο επόμενο στάδιο, προς την κατεύθυνση της πραγματικής κοινωνικής, οικονομικής και πολιτικής απελευθέρωσης;

David Graeber: Στις ΗΠΑ τουλάχιστον, προσπαθούμε να χτίσουμε μια γνήσια δημοκρατική κουλτούρα – δημιουργώντας συνήθειες και θέτοντας ζητήματα αντιεραρχικής, οριζόντιας λήψης αποφάσεων, δημιουργώντας κοινωνικές δεξιότητες και ικανότητες που πράγματι δεν υπήρξαν ποτέ πριν παρά μόνο ανάμεσα σε κάποιους πολύ απομονωμένους πληθυσμούς όπως οι Κουακέροι και οι Ιθαγενικοί λαοί της Αμερικανικής ηπείρου. Το σημαντικό δεν είναι κυρίως οι θεσμοί (μιας και αυτοί μπορούν πάντα να αλλάξουν όποτε το χρειαζόμαστε) αλλά οι κοινωνικές συνήθειες. Οι περισσότεροι από τους αμερικανούς πολίτες δεν έχουν την παραμικρή ιδέα ώστε να διαχειρίζονται τους εαυτούς τους δημοκρατικά. Ακόμη περισσότερο δεν ξέρουν πώς να σκέφτονται δημοκρατικά – όπως για παράδειγμα, δεν έχουν την αίσθηση της «δημόσιας γνώμης». «Γνώμη» είναι αυτό που έχεις όταν δεν έχεις εξουσία. Οι κυβερνώντες δεν έχουν γνώμες. Έχουν πολιτικές αποφάσεις. Πολιτικές αποφάσεις είναι αυτό που έχεις όταν επιβάλλεσαι πάνω σε ανθρώπους που δεν έχουν λόγο για αυτές τις αποφάσεις αλλά μόνο γνώμες σχετικά με αυτές. Χρειάζεται να απαλλαγούμε και από αυτούς που παίρνουν τις αποφάσεις και από τις αποφάσεις τους. Όταν τα πράγματα αρχίζουν να γκρεμίζονται  και μπούμε στην τελικό στάδιο της κρίσης, οι άνθρωποι θα πρέπει να αποφασίσουν προς τα πού να στραφούν: προς τη δεξιά, που θα προσφέρει κάποια νέα μορφή βίαιου μετά-αποκαλυπτικού αυταρχισμού ή προς κάποιο είδος μαφίας ή προς μια οριζόντια λύση ισότητας. Όσοι συνεχίσουν να πιστεύουν στην ανισότητα θα μπορούν να προσφέρουν κάποια μορφή έντονης αποδοτικότητας, όμως τέτοια συστήματα τελικά αποδεικνύονται  τελείως ηλίθια και άκαμπτα επειδή δεν έχουν καμία φαντασία. Τα δικά μας προτεινόμενα συστήματα θα είναι σίγουρα πολύ πιο ευφυή, αλλά δεν θα είμαστε ποτέ τόσο ικανοί  όσο αυτοί που πιστεύουν στην ανισότητα στο να τα επιβάλλουμε με την βία, μιας και κάτι τέτοιο είναι έξω από τις προθέσεις μας. Θα πρέπει να αναπτύξουμε κάποιες πραγματικά πολύ ιδιαίτερες ικανότητες για να επιτύχουμε την αποτελεσματική δημοκρατική οργάνωση, και πρέπει να μπορούμε να το κάνουμε όλο αυτό ευχάριστο, διασκεδαστικό και ικανοποιητικό καθώς επίσης και αποτελεσματικό για να μπορέσουμε να κερδίσουμε παρόλη την βία που θα συνεχίζουν να εξασκούν οι θιασώτες της ανισότητας.

3. Πολιτική Βία και Τακτικές Αγώνα

 Tάσος Σαγρής: Οι Αναρχικοί κατηγορούν σε όλο τον κόσμο τους ειρηνιστές ότι προκαλούν θυματοποίηση και ηττοπάθεια στα κινήματα. Οι Φιλελεύθεροι στην Αμερική κατηγορούν τους Αναρχικούς ότι απομονώνουν κοινωνικά τα κινήματα με τις βίαιες πρακτικές τους και την άμεση δράση τους. Τα μέσα μαζικής ενημέρωσης παντού στον πλανήτη απλώνουν μαζική αποβλάκωση. Στην βόρεια Αφρική η «Αραβική Άνοιξη» περιπλανιέται χαμένη μέσα στους καπνούς  των ένοπλων συγκρούσεων στους δρόμους, τους αεροπορικούς βομβαρδισμούς του ΝΑΤΟ και τις παρεμβάσεις συμμοριών και κομμάτων πλούσιων ισλαμιστών φανατικών. Στις Δυτικές μητροπόλεις η κρίση γίνεται η καλύτερη δικαιολογία για να εκφραστούν τα χειρότερα ρατσιστικά και  δολοφονικά ένστικτα, επανεμφανίζεται ο νεοναζισμός και η αγελαία νεανική βία στους δρόμους γίνεται ανεξέλεγκτη. Το μίσος και η οργή βασιλεύουν παντού, μπορείς να το νιώσεις. Μπορούμε να προσφέρουμε πολιτική κατεύθυνση σε αυτή την οργή;  Τι είναι αυτό που ιστορικά εκφράζει την διαφοροποίηση ανάμεσα στην πολιτική βία και τον μητροπολιτικό χουλιγκανισμό;

David Graeber: Πρέπει να είμαστε ρεαλιστές σχετικά με τον ρόλο της Βίας. Η Βία είναι το πιο δυνατό χαρτί που έχει στα χέρια του για να παίξει ο αντίπαλος και επίσης η Βία –ειδικά η οργανωμένη Βία –είναι μια μορφή ηλιθιότητας που όταν επικρατεί κάνει αδύνατη κάθε πιθανότητα να απαντήσεις σε αυτήν με κάποια μορφή ευφυΐας. Δεν πρέπει να ξεχνάμε ότι κατά βάθος η Βία είναι μια μορφή ηλιθιότητας. Αυτό δεν σημαίνει ότι δεν πρέπει να την χρησιμοποιούμε. Υπάρχουν πάρα πολλές περιπτώσεις που αυτή είναι η μοναδική πιθανή μας επιλογή απέναντι στην μαζική βία της ηλιθιότητας του παρόντος κυρίαρχου συστήματος. Αλλά πρέπει να θυμόμαστε ότι δεν πρόκειται ποτέ να νικήσουμε με αυτό τον τρόπο.  Γιατί επίσης η Βία τείνει να είναι ένα από τα ελάχιστα πράγματα που είναι πιο αποτελεσματική όταν εφαρμόζεται σε ιεραρχική δομή εντολών «από πάνω – προς τα κάτω». Δεν πρόκειται ποτέ να νικήσουμε την Αμερικάνική Αεροπορία με μια οδομαχία. Και ούτως ή άλλως οι αντίπαλοι μας έχουν πυρηνικά όπλα! Έτσι, το τέλος του παιχνιδιού πρέπει με κάποιο τρόπο να έρθει από μια δικιά μας κίνηση στην οποία με κάποιο τρόπο ο εχθρός δεν θα μπορεί να απαντήσει στέλνοντας τους στρατιώτες μας να μας σκοτώσουν όλους γιατί μάλλον οι στρατιώτες του θα αρνηθούν να κάνουν κάτι τέτοιο ή απλά θα πάνε σπίτια τους ή θα περάσουν στην δικιά μας πλευρά. Φυσικά, δεν πρόκειται ποτέ να καταφέρουμε να κάνουμε ποτέ αυτή την κίνηση απέναντι στον εχθρό ούτε αν ακολουθούμε κατά γράμμα την «μη-βία» του Γκάντι.  Προσωπικά συμφωνώ απόλυτα με την απάντηση που έδωσε σε αυτό το θέμα η εξέγερση της Οαχάκα και το κίνημα των δασκάλων εκεί: και οι δύο πλευρές, και η τύπου Γκάντι «μη-βία» και η νικηφόρα ένοπλη εξέγερση (τουλάχιστον αν διαιωνιστεί), είναι σίγουρο ότι καταλήγουν σε κάθετες ιεραρχικές δομές και καταστρέφουν τελικά την δημοκρατία. Όμως, υπάρχει μια απέραντη περιοχή ανάμεσα σε αυτές τις δύο θέσεις που πρέπει να εξερευνηθεί.
Τώρα, σχετικά με τον χουλιγκανισμό,  δυστυχώς το άλλο μεγάλο πρόβλημα με  την Βία είναι πως είναι φρικτά σαγηνευτική. Αφού ξεπεράσεις κάποιες  αρχικές αναστολές έχει σχεδόν τις ίδιες εθιστικές ποιότητες με κάποια είδη ναρκωτικών. Πιστεύω πως η ανθρωπολογία μπορεί να μας βοηθήσει να εμβαθύνουμε σε αυτό το θέμα αποδεικνύοντας ότι ομάδες που αποτελούνται αποκλειστικά από νεαρούς άντρες ηλικίας 15 έως 25 χρονών πολύ συχνά οδηγούν σε πολύ προβληματικές συμπεριφορές (χαρακτηριστικό παράδειγμα για αυτό είναι η φρικτή δράση των κρατικών στρατών). Το σημαντικότερο πράγμα λοιπόν που πρέπει κάποιος να παίρνει υπόψη του  πριν αποφασίσει να συμμετάσχει σε συγκρουσιακές τακτικές είναι να βεβαιώνεται ότι η συγκεκριμένη ομάδα με την οποία συμπράττει περιλαμβάνει ανθρώπους από διαφορετικές ηλικιακές ομάδες και διαφορετικά φύλλα όπως επίσης ότι  σίγουρα τα μέλη πρέπει να συνεργάζονται και για έναν ευρύ αριθμό από πολλές άλλες πρακτικές εκτός από την επιτέλεση βίαιων δράσεων.     

4. Η Παγκόσμια Επανάσταση

Τάσος Σαγρής: Αν «το μέλλον είναι αβέβαιο και το τέλος είναι πάντα κοντά» (ειδικά αν αναλογιστούμε τις επιπτώσεις της Κλιματικής Αλλαγής στο πιθανό μέλλον της Γης), μπορούμε να θεωρήσουμε τα κινήματα του 2011-2012 σαν τις απαρχές μιας νέας παγκόσμιας επαναστατικής εποχής ή σαν τις τελευταίες εκλάμψεις ενός «ένδοξου» επαναστατικού παρελθόντος λίγο πριν την εγκαθίδρυση μιας μακράς περιόδου απόλυτης παγκόσμιας κυριαρχίας του Καπιταλισμού;       

David Graeber: Διατηρώ τις αμφιβολίες μου για το κατά πόσο τα επερχόμενα χρόνια θα μοιάζουν με αυτό ακριβώς που πιστεύουμε ότι πρέπει να μοιάζει μια επανάσταση. Άλλωστε, σχεδόν σίγουρα και οι επαναστάσεις του παρελθόντος για αυτούς που τις έζησαν δεν μοιάζανε και πολύ με αυτό που νομίζουμε ότι θα έπρεπε να μοιάζουν. Συμφωνώ με την θέση του Immanuel Wallersteinότι οι ιστορικοί του μέλλοντος θα μιλούν για την «παγκόσμια επανάσταση του 2011» σχεδόν με τον ίδιο τρόπο με τον οποίο αναφέρονται στο 1848 ή το 1968, επαναστάσεις οι οποίες επίσης δεν επέτυχαν την άμεση κατάληψη της εξουσίας και την εγκατάσταση επαναστατικών καθεστώτων. Και άλλωστε ποια μπορούν να είναι τα κριτήρια ενός αναρχικού πάνω σε αυτό το θέμα; Επαναστάσεις σαν αυτές που αναφέραμε μεταμορφώνουν την πολιτική κοινή λογική, επεκτείνουν τους ορίζοντες των δυνατοτήτων και των πιθανοτήτων μας και προσωπικά πιστεύω ότι αυτό ήταν που συνέβη το 2011. Όμως και ακόμα περισσότερο, πιστεύω ότι οι ιστορικοί θα θυμούνται αυτές τις στιγμές ως τις απαρχές της διάλυσης της στρατικο-οικονομικής αυτοκρατορίας των Η.Π.Α. Γιατί σίγουρα θα διαλυθεί. Οι αγώνες της εποχής μας είναι για το ποια μορφή θα πάρει η επόμενη κατάσταση.    



Ο David Graeber είναι ανθρωπολόγος καθηγητής στο πανεπιστήμιο Goldsmiths του Λονδίνου. Σημαντικότερα έργα του: Debt: the first 5,000 years., Possibilities: essays on hierarchy, rebellion, and desire, Direct action: an ethnography. Στην Ελλάδα βιβλία του κυκλοφορούν από τις εκδόσεις ΣΤΑΣΕΙ ΕΚΠΙΠΤΟΝΤΕΣ

O Tάσος Σαγρής είναι ποιητής, σκηνοθέτης  και πολιτισμικός ακτιβιστής από το Κενό Δίκτυο [http://voidnetwork.blogspot.com ] Πιο πρόσφατο θεατρικό έργο του το "Πεθαίνω Σαν Χώρα" του Δ.Δημητριάδη με το +Ινστιτούτο Πειραματικών Τεχνών / Βιβλία του: «Για την Ανθρώπινη Αγάπη στις Δυτικές Μητροπόλεις» εκδ. Κενότητα, 2008, «We Are an Image from the Future / The Greek Revolt of Dec. 2008» AK Press Η.Π.Α. 2010

H συνέντευξη κυκλοφόρησε στο περιοδικό Unfollow #7 Ιούλιος 2012

17.5.10

Bfest // The posters of the International Antiauthoritarian Conference























Bfest 
International 
Antiauthoritarian 
Festival

1 Conference area
+2 cinema areas
+ 3 concert stages

5 days festival
26 May // 30 May 2010
talks, workshops, 
lectures, concerts, 
film shows, 
rave parties

at the
Athens School of Arts
Pireos 256

for all info & programme:

posters 50cmx70cm published in 8000 copies

13.5.10

Interview of David Graeber by Yiannis Aktimon from Void Network for the Bfest issue of antiauthoritaran newspaper Babylonia







































Exclusive Interview of David Graeber by Yiannis Aktimon from Void Network for the Bfest issue of antiauthoritarian newspaper Babylonia 


Void Network: Dear David Graeber, good afternoon from Exarchia area, Athens Greece. Here there are some questions that you might try to answer, so we can publish them in the pre b-fest Babylonia issue.


So ;How can you define the antiauthoritarian,movement and attitude of today? Do you think that we are facing a major turning point that somehow is showing the limits, of ideology in contradiction with an antiauthauritarian view,free from ideological obstacles?
D.G.: If by "ideology" you mean the idea that one needs to establish a global analysis before taking action (which inevitably leads to the assumption that an intellectual vanguard must necessarily play leadership role in any popular political movement) then I think, yes, we do see a gradual movement away from that. Much of my last ten years of intellectual life has been trying to think about ways in which intellectuals can play a useful role without descending into ideologists. There are no obvious answers though. I think we have come to a broad consensus about the fact that a diversity of perspectives, even incommensurable perspectives, is not a problem but actually a resource for our movements - since if the operative question is not "how do we define the situation" but "how shall we act together to further our common goals?" - that is, if it's practical problem-solving, then obviously a group of people with diverse perspectives will have more useful insights and ideas than a group of people who all think exactly the same. This is an important breakthrough. But it still leaves some questions unanswered: you can't just start, as John Holloway says, with "the scream", the instinctive feeling that capitalism isn't right, and then move to action - the very fact that you identify "capitalism" as the problem means there is some shared analysis, or else, there'd be no reason for us not to be working with fascists, nationalists, sexists, or for that matter the capitalists themselves. No one has quite resolved all of these questions but my impression is we've made a lot of progress - much more, in fact, in the last ten years than in whole fifty years previous to that. 

Void Network: Is there really anarchy,an open social movment or some of the most advanced fractions of it turned to be more and more abstract,in the area of theory losing themselves inside an avantguardism of activism, only compared in the past, by marxist-leninist views?
D.G. : By "advanced" I guess you mean "self-conscious?" I once wrote a little propaganda pamphlet called "Are you an Anarchist? The answer may surprise you!" I think most people share anarchist values and even practice anarchism (direct action, mutual aid, voluntary association) most of the time. I'd actually go even further. Most human activity, on the micro-level, is essentially communistic, in that it's cooperative, and/or based on some variation of the principle "from each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs." Even bankers act this way with each other, and so do the people who clean the bank. Capitalism is built on endless diffuse forms of communism and always has been. I think one problem with the sort of self-conscious, revolutionary activist elites you are talking about is that they sometimes lose track of that, and fall into a certain elitism. This in turn renders much of their activism ineffective as they seem ridiculous to most of the people that they would like to bring into their movement. In America, for instance, there's a huge debate about "activist culture" - which is treated, especially by groups representing people of color, poor people, black people, immigrants, the truly oppressed, as a bad thing, a form of white privilege, or middle class privilege, in itself. There's a terrible paradox here. Once we reject the old, depressing Stalinist ideal of the grim, calculating revolutionary who denies him or herself everything because of their dedication to the revolution - since such people, even if they win, are unlikely to create a world anyone would want to live in - then we've got to accept that personal liberation, the creation of experiments in life, free communities, has to go hand-in hand with the work of fighting capitalism. But somehow our very attempts to create fragments of what a free society might be like make us seem absurd, even monstrous, to many of those we see as our natural allies - and makes us incapable of seeing that to some degree, they are already doing the very things we think we're inventing (consensus decision-making, alternative economies). So I take your question in that way: we develop not a theoretical avant garde, so much as a practical one. Now, something like that is probably inevitable: how to make alliances between those people whose main problem is oppression, and those whose main problem is alienation? In a way that's the ultimate revolutionary problem. We shouldn't blame ourselves - actually, I think that's part of the problem. Blaming ourselves means thinking about ourselves and if there's one absolutely legitimate grievance people have against these self-appointed activist elite it's that they are a little self-obsessed, which is, of course, the ultimate bourgeois vice. Thinking about your own privilege is still just thinking about yourself. We need to learn how to stop thinking about ourselves and to think about other people more.

Void Network: How much the great social movements of today, like the emigration movment and the current ecological movement, have anything to do with the infiltrations of antiauthoritarian ideas ito them? 
D.G. : I have only had the opportunity to observe in detail what's happened in North America, and to some degree in the UK, but my impression is that anti-authoritarian forms of process have had an enormous impact and it's really one of our greatest accomplishments. I was in the NYC Direct Action Network from 2000-2003, when it broke up, and we always said we didn't want to last forever - we were primarily a way of disseminating a certain set of principles of democratic process, showing how self-organization could, effectively, work, and much better than the forms of authoritarian dictat or top down phony "democracy" we were up against. The remarkable thing is how fast this happened. Much faster than we anticipated. True, there's a lot of debate now about moving away from a pure network model and towards more permanent forms of organization, and this is a healthy debate, we need a wide range of institutional forms here too, but the whole field of debate has shifted dramatically in an anti-authoritarian direction. 

Void Network: what are the major challenges of antiauthoritarian movment of today? Is there really a revolution to be waited for, or in truth, the radical procedure of presnet, has to do with the ideas and forces of a general daily reformation of life?
D.G.: Globally, I think we are at a turning point, but that turning point has been, as it were, endlessly suspended. One reason the alter-globalization movement slowed down so in the second half of the '00s was not just the lingering effects of the war on terror and resultant stepping up of repression, but the fact that the other side simply couldn't get their act together. They were faced with enormous structural crises, really, the effects of the same broad diffuse popular resistance of which are movements were perhaps the most self-conscious, explicit, and articulate form. Yet all they did was bicker with each other at their summits - they didn't really seem to have a strategy, and thus, it was very hard to come up with a strategy of opposition. This might be changing now. As for the grand strategic question: well, I don't think the transformation of daily life, and the larger question of revolution, can any longer be clearly separated. How might radical transformation happen? We can't know. We're really flying blind. But I also think we've been working with a very limited set of historical analogies: the history of revolutionary movements first in Europe in the 18th and 19th century, then globally in the 20th, but that's it. It's a tiny tiny slice of human history. There have been hundreds of successful revolutions in world history we don't even know how to see. It's quite likely that many of the "primitive communists" in say, the Eastern Woodlands of North America that so inspired Engels, or in Amazonia, weren't primitive at all, but the descendants of revolutionaries, of people who had overthrown earlier centralized states. The world is much more complicated, and the history of resistance much deeper than we have been taught to imagine. Or another way of making the same point: we have come to accept, over the last couple hundred years, since the Enlightenment basically, that there is only one paradigm for fundamental social change, "the transition from feudalism to capitalism" - which must then be the model for the next one, "the transition from capitalism to socialism" (or whatever). It's becoming screamingly obvious that the transition to whatever comes next is not going to look like that. So people think no revolutionary change is possible at all. Nonsense. Capitalism is unsustainable. Something will replace it. For me, I think a more useful paradigm right now is the transition from slavery to feudalism, at least in Europe. Remember, under Rome, huge percentages of the population of the empire were outright chattel slaves (maybe a third, even, and much more if you count the coloni and debt-peons and so on who were effectively slaves). A few hundreds years later, the number of slaves in Europe was almost none. This was one of the greatest liberations in human history (and similar things did happen in India and China around the same time.) How did it happen? How were all the slaves freed? Well, since we're only used to seeing it from an elite perspective as "the decline and fall of the Roman empire" and can't see any explicit anti-slavery movements, we're unable to write the history at all, but it happened. Will wage-slavery be eliminated in a similar apparently catastrophic and confused moment? It's possible. But it could only happen the first because of pressure from below, based on certain egalitarian values that were always there, all operating below the historical radar screen. Obviously, there were also horrific thugs taking advantage of the chaos, as there will be now too. But we need to think about how to mobilize similar bottom-up alliances when things start breaking down.

Void Network: Is there really a national and international debt? What would you like to put as a small analysis of what it seems to be the greek paradigm in the great saga of domino financial collapse of many countries economies after the 2008 broke of international crisis?
D.G.: Money nowadays is a purely political instrument. Some people - central bankers, to some degree ordinary banks and even the financial divisions of large firms - have the right to generate it, to make up money, relatively as they wish. Banks after all don't mostly lend money they actually have, they lend money they just made up - if under certain constraints. So the rhetoric people use, that "there's only so much money" is nonsense. Money isn't like oil, it's not even like bananas, you can't actually run out of it. So the scam is to allow some people to just whisk it into existence and then, even more importantly, to say that other people can't. In a way banks ability to make money is not so outrageous since money is basically debt, it's an IOU, a promise, and in a free society everyone should have the right to make promises. In a way that's what being "free" means. The problem is in our society, the only really important promises are financial, and some people are granted the political right to make as many of these as they like, with no little or responsibility for keeping them, and others (the politically powerless) are not, and everyone acts as if the most important moral responsibility everyone has is to pay back money that others were allowed to simply make up. This is particularly ridiculous in the case of governments, who grant the banks the right to make up the money, and then act as if they have no choice but to honor their commitments to these same people. It's all nonsense. But it's just a new variant of an age-old pattern. Conquerors, tyrants, powerful lords throughout human history have always tried to convince their subjects or those they conquer that they owe them something, at the very least, that they owe them their life, for not having massacred them all. It's basically the logic of slavery (I could have killed you, I didn't, now you owe me everything) but it's also the foundation of what we like to call "sovereignty." The unusual thing about the present day is just that this sovereignty has been transferred from states to this semi-independent financial establishment as a way of undercutting any notion that sovereignty any longer belongs with what they used to call "the people."

Void Network: what can the real meaning apart from false controlled media analysis of the major role, that imf,and hedge funds played and continue playing in the grouth of the crisis?

D.G.: Well, that question can be asked on many different levels. In terms of the specifics, yes, all that we're seeing is the run-off of a huge housing bubble, centered on the US, but global in its scope, that opened the door for an almost unimaginable succession of financial scams, in fact, the most extraordinary and all-encompassing set of financial scams in the history of the world. Yet the perpetrators of these scams - the international banking class - are still being treated as the arbiters of economic morality. How did we end up here? Why is anyone taking the pronouncements of these crooks in any way seriously? That's the question we should be asking. I have something of an answer perhaps. I think that US capitalism (like German capitalism, but unlike British in its heyday) has always been essentially bureaucratic. Hence after the question of who was going to replace Great Britain as the dominant capitalist power (the US or Germany) was resolved, the US started setting up global bureaucracies: the Bretton Woods institutions, the UN... But at first these were weak, with limited enforcement mechanisms. In part of course this was because of the Cold War. It's only under neoliberal capitalism though that we have the first effective, global administrative system - one that can level real, devastating sanctions at governments that refuse to cooperate, as the IMF showed so clearly in the '80s and '90s. That bureaucracy is semi-public and semi-private, just like the central banks that were in a way its paradigm. Or anyway it's made up of more public, and more "private" elements. I would see the financial system as part of this bureacracy, and after that, the trade bureaucracies (WTO, IMF, NAFTA, EU, etc etc), the transnationals, and finally, the NGOs, which form the equivalent of what Bourdieu liked to call the "left hand of the state." All sorts of bizarre rhetoric was used to justify this, like that of "civil society", which was deployed for any organization independent of government, so if a group based in Chicago or Geneva was designing agrarian policy for Nepal, this could be treated as more democratic than if local Nepali authorities, who at least had to occasionally face judgment of the voters, had anything to do with it. Anyway, there have been two open, difficult unresolved questions about the ultimate nature of this global bureaucracy (I am taking the perspective of the rulers here): (1) what is ultimately sovereign here? the financial markets? the legal structures? the bureaucratic class themselves? (2) what is the ultimate locus of the organized violence needed to enforce bureaucratic decisions - the kind of "human rights imperialism" based in the UN we saw in Kosovo? the more pure national imperialism, backed up with mercenary armies, that Bush promoted? attempts to subordinate national or local security forces directly to the control of international bodies? Some combination? The current moment we seem to be seeing the financial elites (referred to, disingenuously, as "the market") establishing themselves, through the very crisis they caused, even more firmly in the control of the apparatus, and a shift away - but not totally away - from the Bush paradigm to the idea that local security forces ultimately work for the financial bureaucrats. This is happening all of the world. The case of recent events in Madagascar, a country i know particularly well, is a great example actually - the army refused to cooperate with a plan to sell a large part of the country to a Korean transnational and went over to the side of the protestors, and the country is now under enormous sanctions, as if to make it abundantly clear to everyone that armies are not ultimately to consider themselves loyal to "the people" but to the sovereignty of financial bureaucratic elites - but that's just one case. Similar things are happening I suspect in Greece. 

Void Network: what could be the attitude of a winning social and basically antiauthauritarian movement? You are also using in some of your critiques the paradigms, of sixties,sevnties, and late nineties early zeroes movements,giving some emphasis in the antiglobalisation one?
D.G.: oh, you mean in the Shock of Victory? Well, yes, as you can see, I always try to put things in longterm perspective. One of the vices of academia, and to some degree it washes over into the intellectual life of social movements, is this obsession with rupture, this giddy presentism, this absolute assumption that whatever is happening now is utterly new and unprecedented and marks a fundamental break with the rest of history and human experience. At this point it grows genuinely tiresome. I guess my earlier comments about the fall of Rome could be thought of as a partial answer. Victory will probably not look like what we have been brought up to expect. It will be long and messy and may well be for many, ugly and disastrous (though of course for many, things could not be much more ugly and disastrous than they are already.) Once you eliminate the idea of taking control of the state and systematically destroying the opposition through terror and brutality, well, it's hard to see how things could be anything but uneven and messy, because everyone is not going to come over to us voluntarily right away. However, in the long run, our best weapon is our ability to provide examples of what a more free, caring, decent, and fulfilling life could be like. If the world ends up a checkerboard of enclaves, where are the people having the most fun? Again, to move back to historical analogies: if you look at the history of North America, well, the European settlers won by brute force of numbers, and willingness to employ extraordinary genocidal violence. But if they hadn't had that advantage, if the question was who could provide the more desirable existence, they would have totally lost. At least half of the war captives, settlers captured by Indians, who then were incorporated into (stateless, relatively nonalienated, egalitarian...) native American societies, refused to return to settler society even when they had the opportunity. There are about zero examples of that on the other side. Every Native American who was kidnapped or taken in war or otherwise adopted into settler society, even if treated by settler society's terms very well (given land and education), escaped at the first opportunity. That should be our ace in the hole: our ability to provide a better life. It's clear the powers that be suspect we can, that's why they are so desperate to destroy experiments and make sure people don't know about them. In part, I guess, the real problem is the middle class. These are the people who mostly don't even like capitalism very much, but are obsessed with stability, and are endlessly taught that no alternative is possible. Therefore when capitalism starts breaking down, as it does every decade or two, they're the people who have to effectively hold their noses and put it all back together again, somehow, even though mostly they don't even like the system particularly. The moment it doesn't seem like their only option, the moment other systems actually look viable, the fact that those other systems are more fulfilling will make a huge difference. I mean, look at the Great Depression. Why did a typical capitalist bust lead to a decade-long crisis? What was different about the '30s? Clearly it was the existence of the USSR, which was growing at a huge rate, and which people (largely based on false information, it's true) believed marked a fundamental break with capitalist values. The moment an alternative seems possible it becomes very hard to put the pieces back again. The question now is: how to create a similar vision of other possibilities that people will take seriously. If we can, then the other more tactical questions (how to convince the cops and army not to shoot at us when they are ordered to do so) become much easier to conceive. 

Void Network: Is there any chance of surpassing the non effective anymore,specially after the start of the so called "war on terror", Seattle example? It seems that the western oligarchies,have been creating strong counter measures against the repetition of such a paradigm.
D.G.: Well, it's critical to constantly be able to change your tactics. Ideally, you should do the same thing twice. One thing a lot of US anarchists wonder about the Greek movement, or Athens anyway, is the impression that they too have basically one set of tactics, endlessly deployed. I don't know if that impression is justified - I suspect there's much more going on than most people in the US or UK are aware of. 
In general, I think mass direct action, even non-violent mass direct action, is best seen as a form of war. I mean that literally. War is never a free-for-all, the untrammeled use of force, because armies that play without rules turn into marauding bands and when they meet real armies, they always lose. There are always rules of engagement - it's just in direct actions, the rules are different, the types and levels of violence (not to mention rules about who's a combatant and who isn't, prisoners, envoys, medics, all those things there always have to be agreement about in wars) are different. How these rules are negotiated is for me, as an anthropologist, a fascinating question. Sometimes it's quite direct, as it was in Italy with Ya Basta up until Genoa. Usually, it's indirect, through the media, but also through social mobilization, dissemination, legal and rights groups, covert private or government propaganda operations, and so forth and so on. And also, of course, the structure of alliances: unions, NGOs, political parties... Obviously, after Seattle, in the US, certain alliances were shattered, and the other side managed to gradually move the rules of engagement to the point where arbitrary mass arrest and torture of even completely non-violent activists became acceptable, with the additional danger of directing terrorism conspiracy charges, which was designed to undercut, and very effectively undercut, the ability to do the sort of vast democratic coordination of real direct action that we used to in the Seattle-style spokescouncils. On the other hand, more secretive styles of "security culture" that replaced it proved utterly ineffective in creating meaningful mass mobilizations that could achieve much of anything in the new environment, which led to a constant feeling of failure and frustration - and of course opened the door to more old-fashioned reformists, socialists, who at least could put a lot of people in the streets even if those people didn't then really do anything. In Europe this was perhaps less so since institutionalized violence on the part of protestors is seen as acceptable, but there was a similar shifting of the rules against us I think. Clearly we need new tactics - or even better, new ways to integrate tactics with one another. We need more creative forms that make the government look increasingly ridiculous. What was so magnificent about the big mobilizations was the effectiveness of the principle of "diversity of tactics" - our ability to shift the terms of engagement on the field, so that a Black Bloc action could give away to a crazy, goofy circus, or to a solemn pagan or indigenous ritual, or to a Gandhian CD, or artistic event, etc etc. Ultimately our great advantage is that we have more imagination and humor than the other side. We're just better people. That shows and people recognize it if the media isn't allowed to cover events only as "violence." This is not to say that militant tactics have no place, but I think we have to learn how to integrate them with everything else in a way that continually surprises the other side, who really do have just one trick, which is violence.  
So I guess I'm saying two things. One is that the very idea that we could repeat Seattle is part of the problem. For a movement, repetition is decay and death. The other is that the war on terror managed to allow the bureaucrats (government and capitalist) to move things back into the domain of violence, which of course they prefer, and to change the rules of engagement in a way to make it much harder to apply the principle of diversity of tactics and the festive element of things that was so important to the success of Seattle. But these rules are quite possibly shifting back now and I think we can take advantage of this.

Void Network: How much ready is the new anarchist movement to speak about effective, political and economical structures ,beyond the collapsing,socialist and capitalist paradigms? I am reffering of course in the large scale economy's examples.
D.G. : Well, as I said earlier, I think we're closer than we think. In some sense we do already live in communism, not in the sense people like Negri propose, that this is something new born of biopower or the internet or postmodern capitalism or whathaveyou, but because we always have. In many ways capitalism has always been just a bad way or organizing communism. We need to think harder about what's already there. It's the capitalists who want us to think that capital is such an all-powerful form of contagion that anything that touches it or helps to reproduce it in any way somehow _is_ capitalism. It's not. Once we open our eyes we can start to see that pieces of what could be a new world exist already all around us.

Void Network: what does the greek antiautharitarian example,with the large spread activism, and the many social centers, squats,and affinity groups,can give to the general radical attitude?
D.G.: Well, I will have to go to Greece and see things for myself - I don't really feel I have much authority to pronounce on such matters myself. What do I know?

Void Network: Are there any values that have to be defended against the formulated extremity of extreme nihilism and elitism?
D.G.: Someone once said that the ultimate stakes of any political struggle is the ability to define what value is. Autonomy does not just mean making up one's own rules, as Castoriadis says, though that's important - it also means being free to collective establish what you think value is. In that way, any enclave that preserves a system of value even relatively autonomous from capital is a form of freedom that should be defended. One of the terrible mistakes of old-fashioned socialism was to subordinate everything to the revolution in the same way that capitalists subordinate everything to profit. It's funny because I'm often accused of criticizing anthropologists and academics for not helping radical social movements. That's not true at all. I think it's a scandal that many seem actively opposed, or pretend to be leaders when they're not, or refuse to engage with people who want their help. But I also think that it's absolutely great that there are people who get to spend their lives thinking about, I don't know, Medieval Provencal musical instruments as an end in themselves. I call this the utopian moment in academia. Don't we want people to be able to do this? Anyway, for me, a free society is  one where there are endless varieties of forms of value, and people can decide for themselves which they wish to pursue. Therefore the key social question is "how do we provide people with sufficient life security, in a free society, that they are able to be as free as possible to pursue those forms of value (moral, artistic, spiritual, hedonistic, communal, etc, etc etc) they feel to be the most important - whatever these may be." 

Void Network: How much can be concluded according to Zapatista paradigm?
D.G. : The Zapatistas are exciting because they have come up with a viable dual-power strategy, one which shows that even people in very marginal situations can use the threat of violence - the ability and willingness to employ violence if you absolutely have to - to create zones where, in fact, you don't have to use violence, to create spaces of peaceful autonomy. They balanced that perfectly, using just exactly as much force as they had to to win the right not to have to use force, without ever romanticizing violence for its own sake. They also show a lot of other useful things: how to break out of the identity trap, for instance. They are overwhelmingly Maya Indians but for the first time a group of Maya insurrectionaries have managed to neither reject their traditions, as the Marxists used to, _or_ make claims as Mayas, but rather shown how even ancient traditions are vital, growing, potentially revolutionary things that can make solid contributions to contemporary world politics as equal interlocutors rather than as objects to be protected. These are just a few ways I think the Zapatistas are important. They are a zone of experiment, which actually there are lots of zones of such autonomous experiment around the world, but they are also very unusual in that they are open about it - most such zones survive because no one knows about them. 

Void Network: Can anarchism, overpass the limitations of being a mainly western based attitude and movement? How much can be the effective part of it (always speaking in a large scale) inside societies with completely differnt cultural enviroment, like lets say, a part of the islamic world?
D.G. : I have never thought anarchism to be a western-based attitude and movement to be honest, because I don't think it's an intellectual tradition, in the same sense as say Marxism, but rather, a set of orientations and attitudes and forms of practice that have always existed. There were major anarchist movements in China in, say, 300 BC, before even the Taoists, and in many ways remarkably similar to what we see now. Jim Scott has recently written an anarchist history of Southeast Asia, pointing out that a vast majority of what are called "tribal" societies are really people fleeing from and consciously defining themselves against the state - and this was by far the majority of the population through most of Southeast Asian history. Even the Islamic tradition is deeply hostile to the state; if you look at the history of the Caliphate, states had to end up using slaves as soldiers because ordinary people refused to fight in wars with other Muslims, even the legal system developed independently of the state which meant the economy came to be seen as this weird mix of free market and mutual aid, which were seen as ultimately the same thing. Obviously some of this changed with the Ottomans for instance but my point is it's all much more complicated a history than we know and all traditions have their anarchistic strains and history. To expect Chinese or Persian people start from Godwin or Proudhon or Bakunin is of course silly, and it might well be that whatever develops - is developing - in such places won't use the name "anarchism" but something else. But names are unimportant. The principles are always there.

Void Network: can absolute and immediate democracy, be combined with some radical and militant parts of antiauthauritarian approach, as it exists now?
D.G.: Through decentralization. People forget that the very idea of consensus decision making, which is designed to be the form that can work when you don't have the means to compel a minority to accept a majority view, only really works if combined with radical decentralization and local or small-group autonomy. In a more complex society of course there would be endless overlapping and cross-cutting small group networks which would prevent things reverting to any sort of tribalism or local chauvinism. But that's long-term - I assume you're referring to more immediate strategic and tactical concerns.

Void Network: what is your present attitude about the end of traditional labour?Would you like to give us some more analysis of your current approach?
D.G. : Well, our horizon has to be the abolition of work in it's conventional form. For me, I again find myself both agreeing and disagreeing with the Italians who say the production of value is now dispersed through all forms of social life, so we need to think about a social wage. My objection is they seem to think there's something new here, that "immaterial labor" or the dominance of such is a new development. I find this racist and sexist. They seem to think that in the 19th century, value was produced exclusively by factory work, or anyway paid employment, but that now, especially since the '70s, the real cutting-edge is the production of the informational and stylistic content, and context, or commodities - "immaterial labor" (a stupid phrase, it's not immaterial in any sense). Why? Well, when looking at such analysis, the way to understand it, I always say, is to follow a simple principle: "follow the white guys." Was there no one working outside the factory on the informational or stylistic or cultural aspects of the commodity, etc? Of course. But they were mostly women, so they say, well, who cares, that's not part of the production of value, it all in the factories where the white guys are. Now, most factory work is being done by women and/or people of color so suddenly, factory work is unimportant and it's the white guys working on computers, etc, who really producing value. Nonsense. What we need to start thinking about is how all these new forms of labor, and some very old ones, draw on one another. For every person who can push a button and instantaneously do a transaction with Japan that would have taken weeks in the past, there's some guy in Brazil or Pakistan who has to work twice as many hours or spend hours more on the bus just getting to work so he can do it. We need to look at the world as a whole. We also need to understand that war and imperial extraction still operate and how, which brings us back to the money system again (modern credit money is basically war debt created by governments who borrow the money to create the means of coercion, then allow the bankers to lend that debt to everyone else - and use the means of coercion to enforce the debts. This is the regime under which all labor now operates.) 

Void Network: what could be the basic forms of the new movement in the next 10 years? Is there any possibility of prediction? Is it neseccary a kind of prediction, just to make somebody be more convincing?
D.G. : Someone once said history is made up of those events that couldn't have been predicted before they happened. I think we're due for a lot of history quite soon.

Void Network: revolution in reverse? How about that? How can reality and fantasy be melting and merging together, towards a new moment of social and rebellious clarity?
D.G. : Well, I wrote that piece in part to point out that the imagination has always been the center of our very idea of the left, the necessary tension between imagination and violence, but also, to highlight the role of feminism in throwing all our received assumptions about what a revolution would even be like into disarray. It was a way to understand a particular historical moment, but also to understand what it reveals about things that have always been happening and that, in the past, perhaps we could not directly see. Nothing is more important than feminism in opening our eyes to things that were sitting right in front of us but that we - or at least, we as men, though to some degree everyone - just couldn't identify. In rethinking tactics and strategies in Greece now, I think it might be very useful to start from a similar place of analysis. I mean, I can't tell you where it should take you. It's not my part to tell other people what to do. I can just say what I've seen that seems to have worked in the past and speculate about how such lessons might be applied to other problems.  But what I was trying to do in that essay was take some of the insights of feminism seriously in trying to reimagine revolutionary strategy, but also to understand how it has been developing, in the places I was most familiar with (US, Canada, UK...) and I'd be very interested to see what would come of a similar project in a very different environment like Greece.

Thank you for your time, and i hope you will send me some answers as soon as it is possible!
written by Yiannis Aktimon // Void Network
[http://voidnetwork.blogspot.com] 


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