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		<title>The ‘Gemeinwesen’ Has Always Been Here: An Engagement with the Ideas of Jacques Camatte</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2020/07/16/the-gemeinwesen-has-always-been-here-an-engagement-with-the-ideas-of-jacques-camatte/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2020 13:55:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Communism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacques Camatte]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The following article (re-published here by Void Network) was sent to Ill Will Editions by ex-Monsieur Dupont co-author Peter Harrison. In addition to offering a wide-reaching analysis of many central motifs in Camatte’s thought (‘inversion’, the ‘wandering’ of the species, the eclipse of the classical horizon of revolution, and the overcoming of the politics of ‘enmity’) the text may also be read as a confession or testament concerning the author’s own journey with the Dupont writing project, of which Nihilist Communism remains the most well-known result. While certain conceptual or logical leaps made here might strike some readers as hasty</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2020/07/16/the-gemeinwesen-has-always-been-here-an-engagement-with-the-ideas-of-jacques-camatte/">The ‘Gemeinwesen’ Has Always Been Here: An Engagement with the Ideas of Jacques Camatte</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p class="has-normal-font-size">The following article (re-published here by Void Network) was sent to <strong>Ill Will Editions</strong> by ex-Monsieur Dupont co-author Peter Harrison. In addition to offering a wide-reaching analysis of many central motifs in Camatte’s thought (‘inversion’, the ‘wandering’ of the species, the eclipse of the classical horizon of revolution, and the overcoming of the politics of ‘enmity’) the text may also be read as a confession or testament concerning the author’s own journey with the Dupont writing project, of which <em><a href="https://libcom.org/library/nihilist-communism-monsieur-dupont">Nihilist Communism </a></em>remains the most well-known result. While certain conceptual or logical leaps made here might strike some readers as hasty or willful (<em>are there no non-millenarian and non-workerist concepts of war or conflict?…no non-voluntarist understandings of action?</em>) we admire the author’s uncompromising spirit of polemic and hope this text invites discussion and debate among our readers.</p>



<p><strong><a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://illwilleditions.com/the-gemeinwesen-has-always-been-here-an-engagement-with-the-ideas-of-jacques-camatte/?fbclid=IwAR3Chl5g9GFKi7oX110aLde7ZVMoOV2mEDq8I3TLV2Yj6KDNqr8CqfhnJWE" target="_blank">-Ill Will Editions</a></strong></p>



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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The ‘Gemeinwesen’ Has Always Been Here: An Engagement with the Ideas of Jacques Camatte- by <strong>Peter Harrison</strong></h2>



<p>The less you <em>are</em>, the less you express your own life, the more you <em>have</em>, the more pronounced is your alienated life, the greater is the aggregate of your alienated being.</p>



<p>-Karl Marx,&nbsp; <a href="http://www.zeno.org/Philosophie/M/Marx,+Karl/%25C3%2596konomisch-philosophische+Manuskripte+aus+dem+Jahre+1844/%255B3.+Manuskript%255D/%255BBed%25C3%25BCrfnis,+Produktion+und+Arbeitsteilung%255D">Economic-Philosophical Manuscripts, 1844</a> [1]</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Jacques Camatte’s writings, which are regularly added to, can be found on the site <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/index.html"><em>Invariance</em></a>. Born in 1935, he was a prominent radical Marxist theoretician in European left-communist circles during the fifties and sixties. However, the events around 1968, particularly in France, caused him to gradually shed his left-communist affiliations. He saw that humanity was now caught in an impasse. There could no longer be any overthrowing of the bourgeoisie by the proletariat because all of humanity had now become ‘domesticated’ by capital. Therefore, any organised revolt <em>against </em>capital now only helped it develop. His proposal is that instead of fighting capital – a strategy that, if ‘successful,’ only returns capital to us in a stronger form – we must, somehow, <em>abandon </em>it. The taking leave of this capitalist world entails recreating connections with the natural world… it does not mean going to war against capital in order to topple it.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The abandonment of ‘<em>this world</em>’ (<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/cemondequitter.html"><em>This World We Must Leave</em></a>) and all it stands for, including the human <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/inimitie.html"><em>enmity</em></a> for all things (other animals, other things, other humans) – something that has become embedded in the modern human psyche and which causes us to repeatedly create situations of ‘battle’ or <em>discontinuity</em> – will, he argues, begin a process that leads to the formation of a genuinely human community, one that is <em>continuous</em> with nature and itself. It will transform <em>Homo sapiens</em> (literal meaning: ‘wise man’) into a new species: <em>Homo Gemeinwesen</em>. This process, Camatte insists, is always already begun, and perpetually re-emerges.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte takes the term <em>Gemeinwesen</em> from Marx. <em>Gemeinwesen</em> translates as ‘community’ but Marx insists that the true essence of <em>individual humans</em> is their immutable existence as <em>social beings</em>, and this confers another significance to the word. As he wrote, following Feuerbach: “<a href="http://www.zeno.org/Philosophie/M/Marx,+Karl/%25C3%2596konomisch-philosophische+Manuskripte+aus+dem+Jahre+1844/%255B3.+Manuskript%255D/%255BPrivateigentum+und+Kommunismus%255D">The individual <em>is </em>the<em> social being</em></a>” [2]&nbsp; <em>Gemein</em> translates as ‘common,’ and <em>wesen</em> as ‘being,’ or ‘essence’. So, it can also be read as ‘common essence,’ or ‘common being’ and it is via these avenues that Camatte uses the term Gemeinwesen to mean the true human community, or the immediate, or <em>unmediated</em> community… in other words, the true goal of communism as envisaged by Marx.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Marx writes:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“This communism is humanism as a perfect naturalism and naturalism as a perfect humanism [it is important to recognise that Marx understands that this can only be achieved through empiricism, or ‘the scientific method,’ see <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/german-ideology/ch01a.htm#a1">here</a>, and <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1886/ludwig-feuerbach/ch04.htm">here</a>]. It is the genuine dissolution of the conflict between man [sic] and nature, and between man and man, the true resolution of the conflict between existence and being, between reification and identity, between freedom and necessity, between individual and species. Communism is the riddle of history solved, and it knows itself to be this solution” [3].</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Marx asserts that, “<a href="http://www.mlwerke.de/me/me01/me01_392.htm">The <em>human being</em> is the <em>true community</em> of humankind.</a>” Camatte has utilised this particular phrase throughout his work as a touchstone for his ideas (although, as he wrote in <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/glosesprussien.html">2010</a>, he has tried to mitigate the anthropocentric and humanist connotations associated with the term ‘human being’ by stressing that it is the particular species’ ‘life form,’ or the individual itself, that is, at one and the same time, the true community of humankind).&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">To better understand this phrase – which is another version of ‘the individual <em>is</em> the <em>social being</em>’ – it is useful to know that Marx is here using it in the context of revolts against “<a href="http://www.mlwerke.de/me/me01/me01_392.htm">dehumanized life</a>” – whether they be in France in 1789, or across the USA in 2020. He is arguing that such revolts against <em>things as they are</em>, constitute a deep psychological attempt by people to reconnect to the original human community that most of us lost long generations ago. They are attempting to reverse the conditions of their lives, which are marked by an ever-increasing separation from <em>a human life</em>, from human nature, <em>from themselves</em>, in fact.&nbsp; These regular expressions of discontent and revolt occur because <em>humans are separated from the community that enables them to be fully, or properly human</em>. The discontent of even one small district – “because it starts from the standpoint of the <em>single, real individual</em>” – is enough, he asserts, to expose the tragedy of our separation from the communal essence of human nature. Camatte clarifies the nature of these kinds of revolts by stating that such “<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/errance.html">rebellion is largely a rebellion of bodies</a>,” they are, “an act of understanding that takes place not only on an intellectual level, but also sensorially.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Indeed, Camatte used the original longer quote containing these ideas (from <em>The Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844</em>, and which is interpreted in the above paragraph) in a <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/semainerouge.html">leaflet</a> distributed during the French strikes in May 1968.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">What Marx is arguing, and what Camatte pursues in his own theory, is that humanity has lost its own community. The community of humans has been replaced, for example, with the community of money, or the community of capital and, because of this, humans have become wretched and lost, and not even properly human… and they sense this loss. Camatte argues that the loss was initiated when humans first began to separate themselves from nature, millennia ago. From that time, they have become increasingly detached from the world and from themselves – since their own nature is as a social being – and this has led to an incessant <em>wandering</em>.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image"><img decoding="async" src="https://i1.wp.com/illwilleditions.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Mari-Shimizu-.jpg?resize=477%2C719&amp;ssl=1" alt="" class="wp-image-20277"/></figure>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The concept of a ‘wandering’ humanity was explored by Emil Cioran in 1949, in <em>Précis de Décomposition </em>[4] (<em>A Short History of Decay</em>). What Marx refers to as a sense within the species of <em>the loss of community</em>, Cioran refers to as <em>nostalgia</em>, by which he means a yearning for a <em>place</em> and a home, a ‘homesickness.’ Cioran writes:&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Since Adam all the endeavour of mankind [sic] has been to modify <em>the man</em>. […] While all beings have their <em>place</em> in nature, man [sic] remains a metaphysically wandering [5] creature, lost in Life, peculiar in Creation. No one has found a valid goal for history, but everyone has proposed one, and in the abundance of such a plethora of disparate and fanciful goals the idea of purpose is cancelled out and vanishes like a ridiculous product of the mind.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Cioran asks how humanity can find a compromise between the unremitting, <em>interior</em> longing, or nostalgia – he uses the words, “<em>Sehnsucht, yearning, saudade</em>” – for a home, or a <em>place</em>, and the rootless, peripatetic condition of our existence. His answer is that there is no compromise – there is no remedy for the affliction:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“On the one hand we have the yearning to be immersed in the indivisibility of the heart and hearth, while on the other we absorb space in a never-satiated hunger. And the space we consume offers no limits since it only generates new wanderings, though the goal recedes ever further as we move forward. […] There is no solution to the tension between the Heimat [home/homeland] and the Infinite: it is to be rooted and uprooted at one and the same time.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">While, probably unknowingly, echoing Marx, Cioran also prefigures Camatte’s depiction of the trauma – “<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/ontose1.html">the founding <em>trauma</em> of discontinuity</a>” – embedded in the human psyche when they separated from, or became discontinuous with, nature, when he writes:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“To be torn from the earth, enduring in exile, cut off from one’s immediate roots… is to yearn for a rehabilitation with the originary source, to yearn for a return to the time before the rupture of separation.”&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte has expanded and re-articulated this notion of separation and wandering. By ‘wandering’ Camatte insists that, since their separation from nature, humans have felt the need to <em>justify their existence</em>: they are constantly searching for a meaning to their lives and a purpose for their existence. For Camatte, the dilemma revolves around the centuries-old question of whether humans are part of nature or outside of it. The ‘wandering,’ as both Cioran and Camatte affirm, is an expression of the profound identity crisis that afflicts the species: if humans are part of nature then <em>how</em> are they part of it, and if they are above or beyond nature then <em>where exactly</em> is humanity located? (The <em>content</em> of wandering, by-the-way, can be understood effectively and usefully, as I have written <a href="https://www.ilcovile.it/scritti/COVILE_B_554_Inglese_1_Instaurazione.pdf">previously</a>, as <em>history</em>.) &nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Whereas Cioran sees no hope of an escape from the current human condition, Camatte, now having abandoned his Marxist and ‘revolutionary’ credentials, sees the possibility of the emergence of a new type of human being. Camatte envisages that <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/depart.html">Homo Gemeinwesen</a> will be “the successor species to Homo sapiens. It will be in continuity with nature and the cosmos. Its processual knowledge [its <em>becoming</em> or, crudely, its consciousness], will not have a justificatory function, as it will operate solely within the dynamics of enjoyment.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">In ‘<em>The Wandering of Humanity</em>’ (1973), Camatte goes into a little more detail as to what the new society of the Homo Gemeinwesen will look like, although, since he hadn’t properly formulated the concept of the Homo Gemeinwesen at that time, he simply refers to the new society as ‘communism’:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Communism puts an end to castes, classes, and the division of labor (onto which was grafted the movement of value, which in turn animates and exalts this division). Communism is, first of all, union. It is not domination of nature but reconciliation, and thus regeneration of nature: human beings no longer treat nature simply as an object for their development, as a useful thing, but as a subject (not in the philosophic sense) not separate from them, if only because nature is in them. The naturalization of man [sic] and the humanization of nature (Marx) are realized; the dialectic of subject and object ends. What follows is the destruction of urbanization and the formation of a multitude of communities distributed over the earth. […] Only a communal (communitarian) mode of life can allow the human being to rule his reproduction, to limit the (at present mad) growth of population without resorting to despicable practices (such as destroying men and women).”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">He continues…&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“It is obvious that this cannot be a return to the type of nomadism practised by our distant ancestors who were gatherers. Men and women will acquire a new mode of being beyond nomadism and sedentarism. Sedentary lives compounded by corporeal inactivity are the root cause of almost all the somatic and psychological illnesses of present-day human beings. An active and unfixed life will cure all these problems without medicine or psychiatry.” [6]</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Writing in <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/instauration.html">2020</a>, it is clear that Camatte sees this process of leaving the world of capital and arriving at the destination of a new species – the Homo Gemeinwesen, or the true human community – as taking “thousands of years.” So, one should not make the mistake of thinking that Camatte is proposing any kind of ‘forced’ population reduction.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">It is also useful to be reminded that he is not proposing any kind of confrontation with the world as it is. He explicitly states that constructing an ‘enmity’ to capital in order to topple it will merely make it stronger. This was the conception he formed on reflection of the events around 1968: “<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/devoilement.html#_edn4">The more we fight against capital, the more we strengthen it.</a>”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">So, the key is to begin, somehow, to create new ways of living: “The problem is to create other lives.” [7] Indeed, Camatte appears to find interesting any new social experiments that indicate a different way to live, or which contain a refusal of aspects of this society, such as the hippie movement [8], or alternative <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/inversiondevoilement.html">agricultural methods</a>, although he is, of course, aware how these movements can become <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/devoilement.html">re-incorporated</a> into capital. But there is also an urgency attached to this abandonment of things as they are, since the choice is now hurtling toward that between “communism or the destruction of the human species” [9] And these refusals or revolts are always susceptible to <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recuperation_(politics)"><em>recuperation</em></a> by capital: “Capital can still profit from the creativity of human beings, regenerating and resubstantializing itself by plundering their imaginations” [10].</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image"><img decoding="async" src="https://i0.wp.com/illwilleditions.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/John-Baldessari-Kiss-Hair-Hands-1986-.jpg?resize=411%2C595&amp;ssl=1" alt="" class="wp-image-20281"/></figure>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The impulse to begin a regeneration of community and nature is not a simple or straightforward one for Camatte though.&nbsp; As it is not a ‘political’ alternative, it is not a toppling of the old regime and a replacement with a new one, it is not a revolution as commonly understood. More recently, Camatte uses the term ‘<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/inversiondevoilement.html">inversion</a>’ to describe the leaving of this world. This concept is not meant to imply a <em>simple</em> reversal of things as they are, nor does it mean a return to a time prior to our dehumanisation. It is the accessing of the seed of naturalness inside us, which has long been repressed and concealed, and helping it to germinate. In this way, the new species of Homo Gemeinwesen will begin to emerge. One can see how this idea is closely linked to the way Marx described the essence of revolt above, but in Camatte’s conception all ‘politics’ is removed. As Camatte <a href="https://illwilleditions.com/inversion-is-not-a-strategy/">insists</a>: “Inversion is not a strategy, it is totally outside of politics, which is the dynamic of organizing people, of controlling them. We must abandon everything that is part of its world.”</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>A Millenarian Residue?</strong></h2>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Jacques Camatte has come from the modern revolutionary tradition encompassed by Marxism that Yuri Slezkine describes, in his monumental work, <a href="https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691176949/the-house-of-government"><em>The House of Government</em></a>, as <em>millenarian</em> [11]. Millenarianism, which can be religious or secular, is the belief that human society is in need of a great transformation and that after this transformation people will live in peace and harmony. It is the eternal recurring impulse of those who live within exploitative and hierarchical societies, by which is meant, of course, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_(polity)"><em>a State</em></a>.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The conditions of life within a State – work, exploitation, hierarchy, ennui, poverty, wealth, despair – are the causes of millenarianism and, as the anthropologist Pierre Clastres has suggested with the social movement of the <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/02/24/is-it-as-impossible-to-build-jerusalem-as-it-is-to-escape-babylon/"><em>karai</em> prophets</a> in the Amazon, even <em>the threat</em> of a burgeoning State can produce millenarianism [12].&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Very significantly, Clastres further suggests that the <em>karai</em> millenarians – who “mobilized” more than 10,000 people to migrate toward the Land Without Evil, in the direction of the setting sun – accomplished “that impossible thing in primitive society: to unify, in the religious migration, the multifarious variety of the tribes. They managed to carry out the whole [unifying] program of the chiefs with a single stroke” [13]. Clastres’ startling and profound observation is that millenarianism – the revolutionary overthrow, or escaping, of existing conditions – contrary to what it pretends to be, is actually the most efficient way to homogenise people, to unify them for a cause external to themselves. Revolutionaries then, and one can glean it from history if one looks properly, are the State-builders <em>par excellence</em>.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Millenarianism, therefore, is a recurring response, in various forms, to the State, which is a society that is deeply unsatisfactory. When historian Christopher Hill assessed contemporary historical analysis in 1972, in <em>The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution</em>, he wrote: “we now see millenarianism as a natural and rational product of the assumptions of this society.” Millenarianism – another term for ‘revolutionism’ – is then, objectively, <em>a function of the State</em>. Millenarianism also, invariably, has some kind of relationship to the idea of a ‘fall from grace,’ or a loss of naturalness and community… and so one can see that the millenarian impulse comes from the same standpoint as that of those whom Marx describes above as <em>rebelling</em> – because they sense that they are <em>dehumanised</em> or, at least, bereft of the community that makes them human. We all contain the germ of millenarianism inside us, it is a facet of our response to an unsatisfactory life… Albert Camus, in <em>The Rebel</em>, advises us not to “unleash” it [14].</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Perhaps the first evidence of millenarianism we have in history is from Iran with the arrival of Zoroaster, some three thousand years ago. As <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_Age">Karl Jaspers</a> argued, this era in the development of civilisation – which he termed ‘the axial age’ – was one of flux and uncertainty, in which there was a proliferation of radical thinking and the expression of discontent. Slezkine writes:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Zoroaster made history – literally as well as figuratively – by prophesying the absolute end of the world. There was going to be one final battle between the forces of light and darkness and one last judgement of all human beings who had ever lived – and there would be nothing but an all-encompassing, everlasting perfection: no hunger, no thirst, no disagreement, no childbirth, and no death. The hero would defeat the serpent one last time; chaos would be vanquished for good; only the good would remain – forever” (Slezkine: 76-77) [15].</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Millenarianism,” Slezkine affirms, “is the vengeful fantasy of the disposed, the hope for a great awakening” (Slezkine: 99). This vengeful fantasy, of course, is entirely understandable, and probably inevitable, and therefore impossible to prevent from returning in new forms… but the problem with it is that it never leads to peace on earth, and usually makes things far worse. Slezkine continues the history:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Most millenarian sects died as sects. Some survived as sects, but stopped being millenarian. Some remained millenarian until the end because the end came before they had a chance to create stable states. Christianity survived as a sect, stopped being millenarian, and was adopted by Babylon as an official creed. The Hebrews and Mormons survived their trek through the desert and traded milk and honey for stable states before being absorbed into larger empires. The Muslims created their own large empires bound by routinized millenarianism and threatened by repeated ‘fundamentalist’ reformations. The Münster Anabaptists and the Jacobins took over existing polities and reformed them in the image of future perfection before losing out to more moderate reformers. Only the Bolsheviks destroyed ‘the prison of the peoples,’ vanquished the ‘appeasers,’ outlawed traditional marriage, banned private property, and found themselves firmly in charge of Babylon while still expecting the millennium in their lifetimes. Never before had an apocalyptic sect succeeded in taking control of an existing heathen empire (unless one counts the Safavids, whose millennial agenda seems to have been much less radical). It was as if the Fifth Monarchists had won the English Civil War, ‘reformed all places and all callings,’ contemplated an island overgrown with plants that the heavenly father had not planted, and stood poised to pull up every one of them, ‘<em>root and branch, every plant, and every whit of every plant</em>.’ [16] The fact that Russia was not an island made the challenge all the more formidable” (Slezkine: 180).</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">All serious&nbsp;<em>movements</em>&nbsp;that seek to radically alter, abolish, or escape State societies are millenarian movements. Millenarianism is a product of the critique of the State in which the masses are perceived to be the dupes of evil. The remedy necessitates the sweeping away of all the mechanisms of evil – the laws, the norms, the traditions – along with all those who, through pure malice, weakness, or sloth, facilitate or maintain the evil. Only the good in heart – that is, the most loyal to the cause – will arrive safely at the other side of the revolution.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">But less dramatic versions of millenarianism also exist: some religious sects insist on simply waiting – and being ready – for the apocalypse, which will be delivered when God decides. This strategy mirrors the belief of far-left communists, or ultra-left revolutionaries, or anarchists who wait in readiness – remaining close to ‘the cause’ and engaging others, perhaps to convince them – for the confluence of events that will give them the opportunity to become the midwives of communism.&nbsp;</p>



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<p class="has-medium-font-size">This strategy of far-left communist groups is (equivocally) endorsed by, for example, the group <em><a href="https://endnotes.org.uk/file_hosting/EN5_We_Unhappy_Few.pdf">Endnotes</a></em> [17], in 2019, who describe the apparent, but <em>false</em> – as they regard it – choice for contemporary ultra-left, far-left communist, or left-communists, etc. [18], as being between “‘revolutionary intervention’ or <em>attentism</em> (wait-and-see-ism).” That is, “there is either a revolutionary communist way of relating to struggles or one should not be involved at all.” They solve the false choice by referring back to Marx and Engels’ notion of communism as ‘<a href="http://mlwerke.de/me/me03/me03_017.htm">the <em>real</em> movement</a>’ [19] and stating that, “it is not <em>we</em> but class struggle that produces theory [understanding].” But <em>Endnotes</em> do not seem to recognise that there is <em>no such thing</em> as being able to ‘not be involved at all.’ Even the dead are involved in our present life, as Marx noted: “<em>Le mort saisit le vif!</em>” (The dead seize the living!) [20]</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">In practice, of course, both quietist millenarians and non-party, anti-‘political,’ or anti-vanguard revolutionaries (like <em>Endnotes</em>) are always involved <em>in events</em> whether it be in <em>preparing themselves</em> by learning how to be closer to God, or by getting closer in understanding to, as Marx put it, ‘the <em>real</em> [concrete] movement [<em>becoming</em>] that abolishes the current conditions’ [21] – <em>or</em> in simply attempting to attract others to one’s point of view in order to increase the number of the blessed… so that at the appointed hour – when either God appears in His fury, or the Proletariat rise in Theirs – there will be enough believers to get those who are worthy to the other side.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">I should note that, as one half of the producers of the book – or “archaeological artefact,” [22] – <em>Nihilist Communism</em>, I too have been millenarian. Our advice to those who, like us (we called ourselves <em>Monsieur Dupont</em>), wanted <em>the great transformation that will bring peace and harmony</em> but saw its arrival as coming from the class struggle and the intervention of ‘revolutionaries,’ rather than God, was to: “be ready for a long wait, to have no great expectations, to be ready for failure, and to keep going for decades.”&nbsp;[23]</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Compare this last instruction, or appeal, with the <a href="https://biblehub.com/kjv/luke/8.htm">Parable of the Sower</a>, from <em>The King James Bible</em>: “Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God… [and it is deemed to have fallen on good ground when those that hear the word] keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience.” Or this from the <a href="https://biblehub.com/kjv/revelation/2.htm">Book of Revelation</a> (<em>Apokálypsi</em>), in which God writes letters to ‘seven churches’ through visions given to a prophet, probably in 95CE: “I&nbsp;know thy works, and thy labour, and thy patience… And [how thou] hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name’s sake hast laboured, and hast not fainted.” Perhaps the unconscious repeating of such a directive, almost 2000 years later, is an example of <em>eternal recurrence</em>…</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The State – or that which oppresses us, whatever it is – will always be <em>critiqued</em>. The State necessarily, or naturally, creates the conditions for this critique, and, therefore, millenarians – that is,&nbsp;<em>revolutionaries</em> – are <em>functions</em> of the State. They do not appear where there is no State. They do not appear in non-State societies. But, counter-intuitively, the critique of the State or ‘present conditions’ is not harmful to the State (though it may prove so for particular elements in the State hierarchy). In fact, it is necessary to its objective development, as recorded examples beginning with the English Civil War at least, attest.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Wherever there has been a revolution the State has become stronger, and the exploitation of the working classes has been escalated, become more brutal, and made more efficient, for a short time at least. The English and French Revolutions enabled the institutional ascendency of the bourgeoisie: the new ruling class, as well as the new middle class, the bureaucrats. Both revolutions enabled both countries to maintain and expand their position as a world power. The Russian Revolution is easily recognisable as <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/02/04/re-contextualizing-fascism/">the revolution of the children of the emergent middle-classes</a> – the bureaucrats – and they introduced industrialisation at an unprecedented speed and on an unprecedented scale. The Chinese Communists also introduced industrial capitalism at breakneck speed – don’t be deceived by the fact that they called themselves ‘communist.’ The same can be said for those ‘developing’ countries, such as Cuba, where industrialism was introduced to a rural region under the banner of communism or socialism. Revolutionaries then, in the grander scheme, are not <em>counter-functions</em> of the State and capital, they are just functions – they <em>aid</em> the development of the economy and the control of the labouring classes.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte, observing the history of the twentieth century, discovered that in this period the nature of capitalism changed so that, as noted above, ‘the more we fight against capital, the more we strengthen it,’ but one could also have made that observation from all the revolutions in the capitalist era, beginning with the English one. So perhaps it is more correct, or at least universal, to say: the more we fight against <em>the State</em>, the more we strengthen it. Of course, in our era there is no clear dividing line between State and economy – or State and capital, indeed, in capitalism the State found its perfect marriage – and the all-consuming, global, and ubiquitous nature of our economic system means that the imagining of a State existing in the world that is <em>not capitalist</em> constitutes a laughable and ridiculous whimsy.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte has certainly tried, consciously or otherwise, to shy away from the millenarian bases of his original political adherences. This is demonstrated by his absolute refusal to be part of any ‘organisation,’ and his insistence that what he is now arguing for is not a politics of any kind. Yet still, in his vision of the arrival of a new human species he fulfils the millenarian criterion: millenarianism, which can be religious or secular, is the belief that human society is in need of a great transformation and that after this transformation people will live in peace and harmony. And he still engages his vision with people, he still produces texts, and informs others of a better way to think [24]. His millenarianism though, like that of <em>Endnotes</em>, as well as <em>Monsieur Dupont</em>, is a quietist one.&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>A Contradiction?</strong></h2>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte argues that the class struggle is long finished because, as those involved in the ‘revolutionary’ events around WW1 demonstrated, the only thing the working class is now able to achieve is not communism but <em>self-managed capitalism</em>, since its aims are ‘<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/Contre.html">full employment and self-management</a>.’ Therefore, he is claiming that any revolutionary struggle against capital that is based on the (now-defunct-as-a-potential-creator-of-communism) <em>working class</em> will only return capital to us, after the glorious deception of the revolutionary moment, in a stronger and more vicious form.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">But it is worse than this. Just as there is no genuine working class anymore – it has been absorbed into capital – there are no classes at all, society is no longer organised on the basis of a living social relationship (bad though it was)… capital has ‘run away’ from the control of the bourgeoisie and is now operating as an autonomous system. All humans, are now capitalised, that is, they are all hanging desperately off the coat-tails of the “<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/mort.html">automated monster</a>” of capital that proceeds – robot-like, or zombie-like (because it is a dead thing, it is no longer a social relation) – on its own course.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">How to stop the monster? Camatte has already discounted opposing it, since that will just strengthen it – because in our opposition we are acting within its terrain, that is, on its own terms. Camatte therefore argues that to stop the monster we have to abandon it, and not in an organised political way – because that would be an immediate creation of an opposition: an enmity. We all have to begin abandoning ‘this world as it is,’ somehow organically, by choosing to live different lives. If we do this then not only will zombie-capital die of starvation, but after a few thousand years the new species will have fully emerged, and humans will live in community with nature and themselves.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">But if people are already capitalised (Camatte describes it as <em>their madness</em>), meaning that if they fight the system they only bring it back stronger, then would not that also imply that if they left the system they would just take their capitalist brains with them, even though, like the oppositionists, they do not intend to?&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Is it not the case that every escape from capital or the State, or <em>things as they are</em>, every sect, or movement – from the Vikings who escaped the burgeoning power of Harald Finehair’s expanding kingdom by settling in Iceland, to the tragedy of Jonestown – that has gone somewhere else to found a new world has just brought the sickness with them? &nbsp;</p>



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<p class="has-medium-font-size">The problem is centered on whether one can <em>will</em> a genuine <em>change</em> in one’s life, as an individual or as a group. If one is <em>willing</em> the change then it is logical to assume that the imagining of the change emerges from the very circumstances of the thing one is opposing – the desired change is bound by the parameters of the original thing one is trying to escape. We are social beings, we are socially constructed, we can only see the world through our own perspective, though we can recognise that there may be other perspectives.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">It is useful here, in order to explain what I mean, to think about how the concept of <em>time</em> is perceived in two different eras: the modern era (capitalism), and the European Middle Ages (feudalism).&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">We can, for example, <em>understand</em> when someone tells us that medieval peasants lived by a cyclical calendar derived from agrarian existence but, despite this, we are unable to view time as <em>a rotation</em> because we cannot look up from this page and comfortably accept, or throw out the notion, that time is not <em>linear</em>. As the historian <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Categories-Medieval-Culture-J-Gurevich/dp/0710095783">A. J. Gurevich</a> writes of the transition from feudal to urban capitalist conceptions of time: “The alienation of time from its concrete content raised the possibility of viewing it as a pure categorical form, as duration unburdened by matter.” It was the success of the modern economy, which needed coordination to operate efficiently, that changed our conception of time. It was the introduction of supply chains, distribution, and factory work, culminating in railway timetables, that led to the abandonment of any sense that time was ‘cyclical,’ ‘seasonal,’ or connected to the earth. This linear expression of time is now hard-wired into our brains.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">We cannot see through the eyes of a person inhabiting a different mode of living. Our consciousness is determined by the daily life we live, and the principles and values generated by and acting upon this actual daily existence. Once a society is established, then that society becomes an organic whole, a <em>mode of living</em> (not necessarily an ‘economy’). A twenty-first century Parisian can as little <em>decide</em> to understand time as cyclical as a medieval European peasant could decide to understand time as a separate linear category of the universe [25].&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">One can also see how change in oneself is often impossible through simple <em>willing</em>. Genuine, grief, over the death of a loved one, for example, cannot just be wished away, it slowly lessens over time, or is forgotten in other pursuits (as long as those pursuits are not taken up specifically to forget about one’s grief, in which case the pursuit itself is a constant reminder). Therefore, it would be true to say that the solution to disabling grief does not come from our thinking about it and putting it into perspective, but from <em>time</em>. Genuine changes – or <em>solutions</em> – are always delivered to us on levels other than our conscious willing.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">In an articulation, or extension, of Marx’s historical materialist proposition – “<a href="http://www.mlwerke.de/me/me08/me08_115.htm">People make their own history, but they do not make it freely, and not in circumstances of their choosing, but under circumstances that are proximate, pre-existing , and handed-down</a>” – the Marxist scholar Ernest Mandel formulated the term <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/mandel/1989/xx/nosense.htm"><em>parametric determinism</em></a>. This is a useful concept to utilise when thinking about the limits of our possible understandings of other eras, or other cultures… or other animals. He argues:&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Most, if not all, historical crises have&nbsp;<em>several possible outcomes</em>, not innumerable fortuitous or arbitrary ones; that is why we use the expression ‘parametric&nbsp;<em>determinism</em>’ indicating several possibilities within a given set of parameters.”&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">We could substitute the words ‘historical crises’ with ‘situations,’ or even ‘imaginings.’ The point being that we are products of the society we are born into. We cannot simply <em>will ourselves</em> to be the products or functions (or reproducers) of another society (for example, ‘a truly communist’ society), no matter how close we feel to understanding the particular social organisation we are observing or considering. Radical changes in society – such as the transition from feudalism to capitalism – do not happen via human will, they happen on other levels. The revolutions that made capitalism official – such as the English, French, and Russian – were the institutionalising, or ratifying, of an economic force that had <em>already</em> achieved actual predominance. Of course, Camatte does stipulate that the emergence of the new human being will take thousands of years and perhaps, therefore, he is recognising the problem involved in changing one’s perspective or changing one’s entire way of living. And perhaps he is arguing that if we just make certain changes now – changes that are connected to the ‘naturalness’ that still lingers inside us – then we will set ourselves on the way to becoming the new species… I am not so certain in my ‘resistance’ to Camatte’s particular ideas here, and am reminded of Voltaire’s solution in <em>Candide</em>, which I will come to below.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">In the end, there is still a ‘problem’ in Camatte’s urging of us to <em>leave this world</em>… the logic of his writings compel us to wonder how, in ‘leaving the world’, we will not just take the world with us. If we can’t fight it without making it stronger, then maybe we can’t leave it without making it stronger either. Capital is, after all, the recuperator <em>par excellence</em>. Even <em>détournement</em> became a means for making money.&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>The Already Existing Human Community</strong></h2>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte proposes that all rebellion that is linked to a yearning for human community, that is, those rebellions, or movements, that called for ‘universal brotherhood [sic]’ or mutual aid in the past, for example – since these calls are a connection to the lost Gemeinwesen – are beginnings of the <em>inversion</em>: the process of regaining a true human community. The problem is that capital has developed so much that most of these beginnings are now completely useless if they exist as organised political projects. For such <em>beginnings</em> – as we have seen with the mutual aid and solidarity in the recent events around covid-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement – to be effective and unrecuperable they must develop into situations where ordinary people no longer appeal to or confront the system in order to change it. People must instead start living different lives, lives that embrace these human values. Inversion can only be <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/prefazionedivenire.html">begun</a> when there is no feeling of <em>enmity</em>, and when there is no feeling that some ideological prop, such as ‘the working class,’ or ‘justice,’ is needed to justify one’s actions. If we dispense with the damaging notions and images of <em>enemy</em> and <em>friend</em> – for example, <em>the bosses</em> and <em>the working class</em> – we can get on with trying to live. Camatte’s hope is that there will be a mass abandonment of our current way of living when people realise the madness they have had to endure.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">As already noted, Camatte predicts that the new human species will take thousands of years to come fully into being. To assist with the emergence of the new being Camatte suggests a number of practical measures that need to be somehow implemented as soon as possible. In <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/e.d.htm">Emergence and Dissolution</a>, Camatte lists some of these changes, which include: “The immediate cessation of the construction of roads, highways, airfields, ports, and cities;” the abolition of tourism, “the most elaborate form of the destruction of men, women and nature;” and the abolition of sport, “an absurd activity, a theatrical form of capitalist competition, and a fundamental support for advertising.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">When one reads Camatte’s ‘list of demands’ from this 1989 article it is difficult not perceive them as potentially authoritarian measures to be put in place for the good of the planet, and in a footnote added in 2008 Camatte notes this: “It would have been better to have [only] written ‘cessation,’ because ‘prohibition’[as well as cessation, in the list, he uses the term ‘prohibit’ or ‘ban’] inevitably evokes and calls for repression.” Still, one has to wonder how we can stop things like construction projects, tourism, and sport without either becoming part of a government, or without fighting against these phenomena. Unless all the construction workers, tourists and sports fans stay at home to tend their vegetable gardens and allotments, and don’t turn on their televisions… causing those industries to collapse.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">There is a strangely powerful allure in this vision of a mass of humanity just ‘leaving the world’ to tend their own gardens, a phenomenon that would, of course, require a collective effort, or communal cooperation. Maybe the essence of the beginning of Camatte’s ‘inversion’ – as a ‘leaving of this world’ – can be understood in practical terms by reference to Candide’s advice at the end of Voltaire’s <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candide">novel</a> of the same name – which is that while we can wonder about the world all we like, the most useful thing is to ‘cultivate one’s own garden.’ Candide says this after he and his ‘<em>petite société</em>’ have withdrawn from worldly pursuits and are concentrating on sustaining themselves by their own means, learning all sorts of skills, and being useful to one another. As one of them remarks: “Let us work without calculation (<em>travaillons sans raisonner</em>), for that is the only way to make life bearable.” If one decides to follow Camatte, is one also following <em>Candide</em>?</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Returning to the notion that it will take thousands of years for this new communal species of human being to grow to maturity, one must perhaps – despite Camatte’s indicating that the species will form a true human community – sense that we cannot really know what this new community will truly be like. I think Camatte would agree with this. The new community – the new species – he predicts is something impossible to describe beyond partial indications, and this has profound implications once one remembers the societies of ‘tribes’ around the world who have little or no contact with the global economy: it is impossible for us to fully understand these peoples either. These are the societies that, as Pierre Clastres has shown, are ‘<a href="https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/society-against-state">against the State</a>‘ [26].</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte does refer to the work of Pierre Clastres a couple of times, but only briefly. In <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/larevolutionintegre.html"><em>The Integrated Revolution</em></a> (1978), Camatte appears to recognise the centrifugal social organisation of ‘primitive’ (non-State) societies, described by Clastres, as valuable in resisting the threat of homogeneity and the loss of diversity between communities – which is carried out through ‘violence,’ or ‘war’- but he does not think that this is an appropriate strategy ‘for us’ since society has already been homogenised and any recourse to a diversity-amplifying violence would simply be a “blind” violence without any proper context. It is unfortunate that Camatte only considers Clastres’ observations and theories as a tool for rectifying the ills of civilised society, therefore rejecting them quickly, rather than exploring them further. Clastres himself never suggested that the social organisation of the non-State societies he encountered in the Amazon should be taken up by radicals in civilisation. He merely noted that ‘the savages’ had resisted the State – somehow – for <em>a long time</em>, and that they effectively represented the last real humans.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">What might one learn – using a Camattian lens – from the ethnography of those peoples who live beyond the State?&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Clastres suggests that the goal of these societies is not ‘peace and harmony,’ it is not unification. The ‘community’ that exists within groups and between groups is operational on different levels to the ones we might understand. Their ‘enemies’ are closer to them than our ‘friends’ ever will be, enmity is bound up in their conception of the relations with themselves, and others, even the dead [27]. This is one indication of the problem in Camatte’s defining of what a true human community will look like… he cannot know. The foundation of his notions of true human community come from the Enlightenment and the ideas of democracy. He, like all of us, is an inheritor of the ideas of Spinoza and Marx, who reflected the radical implications of the Enlightenment, a phenomenon that itself reflected the growth of capitalism as a form of society. ‘The savages,’ as Clastres has observed, do not want peace.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Peace, since the establishment of the first State, has always been the prize of slaves. As subjects of a State this is, naturally, what both Camatte and I want too. But one should keep this aim for oneself, and not bring it to non-State peoples.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The other thing one might discover, if we extend Camatte’s, or Cioran’s, analysis – which concludes that humans are discontinuous with nature and therefore psychologically traumatised, and now even <em>obsolete</em> – to the ‘uncontacted tribes,’ is that there are two types of ‘human being’ on the planet… but only one type can truly call itself ‘human.’&nbsp;</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>The Second Type</strong></h2>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The ‘human beings’ who <em>cannot</em> truly call themselves human, according to Camatte, include myself and all the others who are products and functions – not of the earth from which we originate – but of the economy we know as capitalism… whether they reap the benefits of the demented ‘wealth’ that capitalism generates, or whether they struggle to survive in the depths of the madness that is the flipside of the madness of progress and technological advance. I agree whole-heartedly with Camatte here, these so-called humans (you and I) are fictions, or creations – or the hollowed-out drones – of an uncontrollable and autonomous economy that has severed all their links – beyond romantic fancies and false claims – to other animals and the earth itself [28].</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">How did this human come into existence? Since I am talking about the kind of human who lives in a State I must then ask why and how the State emerged. There is a lot of mystification from all sectors of the political and academic spectrum on this but, as I have attempted to demonstrate elsewhere, while we cannot know the specific circumstances by which original – ‘pristine,’ they are called – States came about, we can understand why: the State is a managerial solution for the problem of a population that has become too large for the maintenance of traditional ways of living.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Most narratives of the emergence of the State begin with the rise of a chief who bullies people, which leads to a Royal Family, which leads to a retinue that eventually forms a bureaucracy. It is this bureaucracy that then wields the real power. The bureaucracy spreads out over the land and becomes a kind of closed proto-democracy. Eventually there are so many people helping to run the State directly through supervisory – the nascent ‘middle class’ – and entrepreneurial means that it becomes clear to them that the real power is in their hands and that they should have that power recognised. They begin a movement based on the new circumstances. Oliver Cromwell was landed gentry. Gerrard Winstanley – the leader of the Diggers, the far left of the revolutionists of the ‘English Civil War’ – was a middle-class businessman. Robespierre was a lawyer. Lenin was famously middle-class. Castro was born into a prosperous farming family and studied law at university. Guevara was a doctor. The workers and peasants get behind them because they also like this new ‘democratic’ idea and because they need some improvement in their lives – in fact, of course, the vocational revolutionaries can only <em>appear</em>, and fulfil their function, if the workers and peasants are already at some level of revolt. Then there is a revolution (we are not talking about ‘revolts’ here), sometimes it is bloody. The new leaders realise that the workers and peasants had a slightly different idea about how things should proceed and begin a clampdown. Often the first leaders of the revolution are kicked out, and new people, with a more reasonable agenda step in.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">I agree with the whole of this narrative except for the very first part. My research into how peoples prior to the rise of a State (including present-day ‘uncontacted tribes’) organised themselves socially shows how one of the priorities was to keep group numbers small, and if numbers did start to escalate these groups would ‘fission’ – they split. Robin Dunbar has famously done work on optimal group sizes and he argues that for humans to operate successfully without coercion they must be able to have regular face-to-face interactions – everyone must know everyone else. Once the group becomes too numerous for everyone to know each other it becomes necessary for laws to be laid down.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">My research suggests that the key element in the emergence of a new State – Mesopotamia, the Indus, Mesoamerica, etc – was not agriculture or alluvial valleys but the fact there was a rise in the population and for some unknowable reason the group was unable to split.&nbsp;</p>



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<p class="has-medium-font-size">The classic narrative for the rise of a chiefdom/State is that a rapacious thug organises a group and takes over the tribe. But the anthropological record suggests that humans were able to resist vainglorious thugs for thousands of years. And how come there are ‘egalitarian’ tribes outside of States right now? There must be something else. Many anthropologists and historians suggest that advances in technology – for example, irrigation – led the way for numbers to rise and for people to become enslaved. But how come modern ‘uncontacted tribes’ haven’t invented modern farming techniques, increased their numbers and set up a ruthless dictatorship to serve under? Are they just <em>stupid</em>?&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The reason powerful Chiefs emerged was because the populace reluctantly agreed that the new circumstances demanded a new way of organising things. Everyone did not know everyone else anymore and so people could get away with things, cliques could form, ‘crimes’ could be committed. Laws had to be made and people had to follow them – but the people who didn’t like the laws just ignored them. Finally, and this probably happened very quickly, a charismatic person seized the chance for self-aggrandisement… and in the end the populace agreed. A strong leader backed up by thugs would at least keep some peace.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Of course, the power would usually go to the Chief’s head and atrocities would be normalized, and if the people weren’t totally downtrodden they might support a rival Chief’s bid to topple the present one… and so history was written… right up to Representative Democracy.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The State itself is neither evil nor good, it is a managerial solution to the problem of a large population. Imagine the scene, two people sitting under a rockface discussing the future:&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“Yeah, Enki and his gang reckon they can sort out all the problems as long as everyone does what he says and gives him a tribute by sending daughters and sons to work for him, and building him a really good place to sleep in. The whole place will be a lot easier to live in, less chaos, but we’ll have to stay where we are and work harder to make sure he gets enough recompense for his trouble. We don’t want him to put his thugs on us, but it will be good if he sorts out those lazy thieving bastards who live up by the chickpea bushes…”&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The State is often viewed as an obstacle to the ideals of peace and love – and communism – but maybe there is no escaping an authoritarian State when there are so many people jammed together? Perhaps this is one of the many lessons of the Russian Revolution? (Anyone who suggests here that perhaps the way to peace, love, and communism is therefore to reduce the human population is – apart from articulating real evil – missing the point that as functions of capitalism they would merely be recreating capitalism in a new situation, just as the Bolsheviks did in 1918.)</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Jean-Jacques Rousseau opined for the freedom had before the advent of the State and civilization, but he recognized that living in a society where everyone – no matter their place in the hierarchy – was dependent upon everyone else meant that humans could not go back.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">He decided that we had to make the best of a bad job [29], and this was the message in his book ‘<em>Of the Social Contract</em>.’ Rousseau’s book, of course, was used by the Jacobins to justify their Parisian dictatorship in 1793-4, as David Wootton writes in his introduction to Rousseau’s ‘<a href="https://www.hackettpublishing.com/the-basic-political-writings-second-edition">Basic Political Writings</a>’: “Robespierre and the Jacobins admired him greatly, but they misunderstood him profoundly (their Rousseau was invented to serve their own purposes).”&nbsp; Rousseau’s practical and humane – and anti-millenarian – approach to being trapped, in what might be ironically termed, a less-than-satisfactory society has been echoed much later by writers who have witnessed or considered the millenarian outcomes of the Russian Revolution, such as Albert Camus.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">In 1951, arguing in favour of <em>rebellion</em> – that is, an opposition to all forms of dictatorship – as opposed to <em>revolution</em>, he writes, “Instead of killing and dying in order to produce the being that we are not, we have to live and let live in order to create what we are.” He continues:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“The revolutionary is simultaneously a rebel or he [sic] is not a revolutionary, but a policeman, or a bureaucrat, who turns against rebellion. But there is absolutely no progress from one attitude to the other, but co-existence and endlessly increasing contradiction. Every revolutionary ends by becoming either an oppressor or a heretic. In the […] universe that they have chosen, rebellion and revolution end in the same dilemma: either police rule or insanity” [30]. &nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Vasily Grossman, writing about Soviet Collectivisation and the Terror Famine in the Ukraine in 1932-3 through the character Anna Sergeyevna, in <em>Everything Flows</em>:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“When I look back now, I see the liquidation of the kulaks [31] very differently. I’m no longer under a spell… ‘They’re not human beings, they’re kulak trash!’ – that’s what I heard again and again, that’s what everyone kept repeating. And when I think about it all now, I wonder who first talked about kulak trash. Lenin? Was it really Lenin? How the kulaks suffered. In order to kill them, it was necessary to declare that kulaks are not human beings. Just as the Germans said that Yids [sic] are not human beings. That’s what Lenin and Stalin said too: The kulaks are not human beings. I can see now that we are all human beings” [32]</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>The First Type</strong></h2>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The other type of human is the one that still lives in the forests, in the hills, or on the plains, avoiding the advances of civilization. But their existence is precarious and is becoming more fragile with each passing day. These peoples are the last humans.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">We cannot know who these peoples really are because to go to them is to bring all our psychological and biological sicknesses to them. But what we can know, from the literature of anthropologists (and we have enough of that – there is no need for any other budding student of anthropology or professor of ‘the exotic’ to invade the space of these peoples), is that these peoples do not work; they do not have an economy; they do not have hierarchies; they do not have social control as we know it [33]; they do not have money; they do not have history, but they do have collective memory; they do not seek to conquer the world; they do not have books; they do not destroy nature; they do not treat each other with disrespect; they do not treat other animals with disrespect; they live for enjoyment…</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">On the Homo Gemeinwesen, the ‘successor species to Homo sapiens,’ Camatte writes, as noted above:</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">“It will be in continuity with nature and the cosmos. Its processual knowledge [its <em>becoming</em> or, crudely, its consciousness], will not have a justificatory function, as it will operate solely within the dynamics of enjoyment. […] It is obvious that this cannot be a return to the type of nomadism [34] practised by our distant ancestors who were gatherers. Men and women will acquire a new mode of being beyond nomadism and sedentarism. Sedentary lives compounded by corporeal inactivity are the root cause of almost all the somatic and psychological illnesses of present-day human beings. An active and unfixed life will cure all these problems without medicine or psychiatry.”</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">Camatte’s description is remarkable because it describes communities that already exist, present-day uncontacted tribes – <em>these peoples are already here</em>. They live alongside us.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The quote from Marx used at the beginning of this text is also usefully repeated here – “The less you <em>are</em>, the less you express your own life, the more you <em>have</em>, the more pronounced is your alienated life, the greater is the aggregate of your alienated being” – because the list above of what non-State peoples <em>have</em> can only be written by civilised people like ourselves as what they, in the main, <em>do not</em> have. This is an indication of how separate we are from them in all respects.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image"><img decoding="async" src="https://i1.wp.com/illwilleditions.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/australia-bushfire.jpeg?resize=1024%2C580&amp;ssl=1" alt="" class="wp-image-20304"/></figure>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">The uncontacted and Indigenous peoples (who are defended by the organisation <a href="https://www.survivalinternational.org/">Survival International</a>) are the last humans. They are the revolution that has always been here. They have had no ‘fall from grace’ in the way we have. They have not embarked on a relentless <em>wandering</em> – or <em>history</em> – that has brought the world to the point of complete ecological collapse. They do not live in drudgery and empty despair; they have not had their spirit and humanity hollowed out of them.&nbsp;</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size">As for us, we are trapped in a world that can never be made perfect because it will always need to be <em>managed</em>. And maybe we don’t really have much control over what we do, over the choices we can make… since we have no control over <em>who we are</em>. Perhaps the best one can do ‘politically’ is to keep trying to oppose ‘injustice,’ and oppression, to keep resisting dictatorship, even though it will inevitably keep returning. One could also try to help non-State peoples remain in their lands, separate from our world… even if everything has already gone too far… and the global ecological collapse – predicted to begin in earnest around 2040 – is going to take all of us with it.&nbsp;</p>



<p>-Peter Harrison</p>



<p>June 2020</p>



<p>Featured image: Lisa Brice, <em>Wilderness</em> (<a href="https://www.goodman-gallery.com/artists/lisa-brice">2005</a>)</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">NOTES</h2>



<p>[1] All translations of quotes are by the author, unless indicated by a footnote reference.</p>



<p>[2] See: <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/04/22/does-the-theoretical-arrow-fired-by-jane-goodall-end-at-the-feet-of-jair-bolsonaro/">Does the Theoretical Arrow…</a> Also, Feuerbach, L. 2012, <em>The Fiery Brook: Selected Writings</em>, Zawar Hanfi (ed. and trans.), Verso, London, P98.</p>



<p>[3] “Dieser Kommunismus ist als vollendeter Naturalismus = Humanismus, als vollendeter Humanismus = Naturalismus, er ist die<em>&nbsp;Wahrhafte</em>&nbsp;Auflösung des Widerstreites zwischen dem Menschen mit der Natur und mit dem Menschen, die wahre Auflösung des Streits zwischen Existenz und Wesen, zwischen Vergegenständlichung und Selbstbestätigung, zwischen Freiheit und Notwendigkeit, zwischen Individuum und Gattung. Er ist das aufgelöste Rätsel der Geschichte und weiß sich als diese Lösung.” From: <a href="http://www.zeno.org/Philosophie/M/Marx,+Karl/%25C3%2596konomisch-philosophische+Manuskripte+aus+dem+Jahre+1844/%255B3.+Manuskript%255D/%255BPrivateigentum+und+Kommunismus%255D">Ökonomisch-philosophische Manuskripte aus dem Jahre 1844</a><em>.</em></p>



<p>[4] Emil Cioran, 1949, <em>Précis de Décomposition</em>, Éditions Gallimard (1978), Paris. Translations by Harrison. All quotes used are easily locatable in the book, in French or English, so I have refrained from adding even more footnotes.</p>



<p>[5] Cioran uses the word ‘divagante’ here, which is best translated as wandering, or straying. Elsewhere he uses the term <em>divagation</em> in a variety of contexts, all of which also translate as wandering, straying, rambling, etc. Divagation is also a word used in English, meaning digression, detour, tangent, etc. Camatte prefers the word, <em>errance</em>, which means wandering also, but can also mean vagrancy. Camatte does use the word <em>divagation</em> as the title for <a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/divagation.html">one text</a>, in which he states that he is using it because of its old meaning: <em>errer ça et là</em>, ‘to wander here and there.’</p>



<p>[6] “The Wandering of Humanity”, in <em>This World We Must Leave and Other Essays</em> (1995), Alex Trotter (ed.), Fredy Perlman and Friends (trans.), Autonomedia, New York. Quotes are from P66 and 67 respectively. The simplicity of this last insight should not obscure its profound implications.</p>



<p>[7] Ibid., 56. [8] Ibid., 168. [9] Ibid., 34 [10] Ibid., 63.</p>



<p>[11] Yuri Slezkine, 2017, <em>The House of Government</em>, Princeton University Press, Princeton.</p>



<p>[12] Pierre Clastres, 1981, <em>Archeology of Violence</em>, Jeanine Herman (trans.), Semiotext (2010), P160-162.</p>



<p>[13] Pierre Clastres, 1974, <em>Society Against the State</em>, Robert Hurley and Abe Stein (trans.), Zone Books (2013), Brooklyn, P217-8.</p>



<p>[14] Albert Camus, <em>The Rebel</em>, (1951), Anthony Bower (trans.), Penguin, 1982, P265.</p>



<p>[15] For why religion is the child of politics, and not the other way around as many would have it, eg., philosopher John Gray, see, <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/02/18/religion-is-a-repeating-chapter-in-the-history-of-politics/">Religion is a Repeating Chapter in the History of Politics</a>.</p>



<p>[16] Slezkine, Ibid., P180. Quotes are from Thomas Case, in addresses to the House of Commons, 1641. See also House of Government, p122. See also Bernard Capp, <em>The Fifth Monarchy Men: A Study in Seventeenth-Century English Millenarianism</em>, Faber and Faber, 1972/2011.</p>



<p>[17] <em>Endnotes</em> is a group that has existed since 2005, with a prehistory (to 1992, in a UK group called <em>Aufheben</em>), which has become “<a href="https://endnotes.org.uk/about">increasingly international</a>.” In their agonising over who they are and how they relate to “the class struggle” in the article <em>We Unhappy Few</em>, they have decided that they are theoreticians of current conditions and their abolition (not recruiters to a cause), and that the group should last “only so long as they feel they are contributing something useful” (P53). But how are they to know if they are contributing something ‘useful,’ even if it is just ‘a feeling,’ and useful to whom? What do they mean by ‘useful’? Are things only ‘important’ if they have ‘a use’?&nbsp; Their quietist millenarianism, though they insist they have never been a sect “in the normal sense,” (P21) is explained in this sentence: “A purpose that we have found that takes our interest[,] indeed to which we have found ourselves driven[,] is communist theory, the thinking about capitalism and its overcoming” (P53). This is the waiting, in studious and steadfast readiness, for the arrival of ‘God.’</p>



<p>Non-hyperlinked quotes from ‘We Unhappy Few,’ the first (unsigned – perhaps ‘group editorial’?) article, in <em>Endnotes #5: ‘The Passions and the Interests,’</em> 2019, UK/USA.</p>



<p>[18] It is always difficult to make this kind of list for readers who may not already be ‘in the know’ as to the milieu I am referring to, which includes anarchists, councilists, left-councilists, situationists, Bordigists, and the libertarian left as well. The easiest way to imagine this milieu is to think of everyone that Lenin was attacking in his work of 1920, <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/">‘Left Wing’ Communism: An Infantile Disorder</a>.</p>



<p>[19] One must understand the notion of ‘the real movement’ in the context of Marx and Engels’ whole-hearted support for ‘the scientific method,’ which is how they developed their notion of <em>the dialectic</em> as the driving force in ‘history.’ A famous line from Marx is rarely understood: “Philosophers have hitherto only&nbsp;<em>interpreted</em>&nbsp;the world in various ways; the point is to&nbsp;<em>change</em>&nbsp;it.” This line was never a simple urging of philosophers to ‘get active’ for the good of things, it meant that philosophers had to abandon the world of ‘universal absolutes’ (think <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_forms">Plato’s theory of Forms</a>) and work within the social and environmental processes that were <em>actually in existence</em>. If they did this, Marx believed, they would no longer be ‘idle philosophers,’ they would be <em>scientists</em> – in Marx’s era it was the scientists who were seen to be changing the world, and proletarians and philosophers would be able to do likewise if they became ‘scientists’ too or, more precisely, dialecticians of the materialist conception of history (historical materialism). See, for example, <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1886/ludwig-feuerbach/ch04.htm">Engels’ explanation</a>, from the paragraph beginning: “But what is true of nature…”</p>



<p>[20] Marx, K. 1867, <em>Capital Volume 1</em>, Penguin Books, 1976, P91.</p>



<p>[21] There are several references to ‘the real movement’ in <em>We Unhappy Few</em>. The quote from Marx is usually translated as something like: “the real movement which will abolish the present state of things,’ and is used frequently in the literature of ‘communization’ theory. The whole sentence from Marx is “Communism is for us the <em>real</em> movement which will abolish the present conditions.” Since the early 1970s the line, starting at ‘the real movement…,’ has become something of a magical incantation for left communists. The notion of ‘the real movement’ was referred to, but not referenced, in <em>Eclipse and Re-Emergence of the Communist </em>Movement, by the ultra-leftists, Gilles Dauvé (Jean Barrot) and François Martin, and it was here that the notion of <em>communization</em> first appeared. In 2000, Dauvé indicated that communization theory emerged from the Situationist International’s ‘<a href="https://www.troploin.fr/node/5">critique of separation</a>.’ Amusingly, in 1983, Camatte described ‘Dauvé and his companions’ as “<a href="https://revueinvariance.pagesperso-orange.fr/mort.html#_edn13">the living dead</a>” in response to <a href="https://archivesautonomies.org/IMG/pdf/gauchecommuniste/gauchescommunistes-ap1952/labanquise/labanquise-n01.pdf">their criticism</a> of Camatte’s ‘optimism.’</p>



<p>[22] Preface to second edition of <em>Nihilist Communism: A Critique of Optimism – the religious dogma that states there will be an ultimate triumph of good over evil – In the Far Left</em>, Ardent Press, 2009, Page ix.</p>



<p>[23] Ibid., 101. It should also be noted that <em>M. Dupont</em>, the collective name for the two people who produced NC, was never ‘a group.’ The book was assembled from correspondence between us (and with others who were generally hostile to us), it was an expression of a friendship, a kind of romance, now lost in time. See also: <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/03/06/the-tyranny-of-the-consciousness-raisers-leninism-anarchism-and-jesus/">The Tyranny of the Consciousness-Raisers</a>.</p>



<p>[24] It would seem that many of us, I include myself here, have an inbuilt urge to endlessly <em>proselytise</em>. Emil Cioran writes, in <em>A Short History of Decay</em>, that people “are the chatterboxes of the universe” and that many insist on speaking for others… they use the word ‘we, for example,’ to describe what <em>they themselves</em> think. Anyone, he continues, “who speaks in the name of others is an imposter.” But we can temper our proselytism by refusing the diktats of serious, political, or academic prose by writing <em>I</em> instead of <em>we</em>, and never starting sentences with phrases such as: “Our task is to…” or “We need to…”</p>



<p>[25] These two paragraphs are from an earlier <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/04/22/does-the-theoretical-arrow-fired-by-jane-goodall-end-at-the-feet-of-jair-bolsonaro/">article</a>, which draws on <em>The Freedom of Things: An Ethnology of Control</em>, P. Harrison, 2017, TSI Press, where the issue is discussed in greater depth.</p>



<p>[26] For a detailed exploration of Clastres’ thought see <em>The Freedom of Things</em>.</p>



<p>[27] For a detailed review of the anthropological literature see the section, “Enemy Relations,” in <em>The Freedom of Things</em>.</p>



<p>[28] Much of this and the next section is taken from an earlier article that can be found <a href="https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/04/10/the-last-humans-or-why-revolutionaries-should-drop-their-millenarianism-and-support-survival-international/">here</a>.</p>



<p>[29] See Rousseau’s <em>Discourse on Inequality</em> for his analysis of civilisation as a society of centripetal <em>dependence</em>, from which we cannot escape. Discussed in <em>The Freedom of Things</em>.</p>



<p>[30] Quotes are from pages 215 and 218 respectively, from <em>The Rebel</em> by Albert Camus, Anthony Bower (trans.), Penguin, 1982.</p>



<p>[31] The kulaks were portrayed by the Bolsheviks as ‘rich’ peasants who were in the way of the socialisation of the land but, in reality, they were simply <em>all</em> peasants. The peasantry – and the relationship between the land and the city – has been a perennial problem for revolutionaries, as Marx wrote in 1875: “The peasant exists on a mass scale as a private land proprietor, where he even forms a more-or-less considerable majority as in all the countries of the West European continent, where he has not disappeared and been replaced by agricultural laborers, as in England – the following will take place: either the peasants will start to create obstacles and bring about the fall of any worker revolution, as he has done before in France, or else the proletariat (for the peasant proprietor does not belong to the proletariat; even when his situation places him in it, he thinks that he doesn’t belong to it) must, as the government, take steps as a result of which the situation of the peasant will directly improve and which will therefore bring him over to the side of the revolution.” (quote is from <em>The Marx and Engels Reader</em>, 1978, Robert Tucker, but can also be found <a href="https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1874/04/bakunin-notes.htm">here</a>.)</p>



<p>The group, <a href="https://sites.google.com/site/theoriecommuniste/home">Théorie Communiste</a>, who are close to the group <em>Endnotes</em>, wrote in <a href="https://libcom.org/files/Communization-and-its-Discontents-Contestation-Critique-and-Contemporary-Struggles.pdf">2011</a>: “The essential question which we will have to solve is to understand how we extend communism… how we integrate agriculture so as not to have to exchange with farmers.” <a href="https://libcom.org/files/Communization-and-its-Discontents-Contestation-Critique-and-Contemporary-Struggles.pdf">P58</a>.</p>



<p>Maxim Gorky is <a href="https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-unknown-gulag-9780195385090?cc=au&amp;lang=en&amp;">reported</a> as having once said: “You’ll pardon my saying so, but the peasant is not yet human… He’s our enemy, our enemy.”</p>



<p>[32] Vasily Grossman, <em>Everything Flows</em>, Robert and Elizabeth Chandler with Anna Aslanyan (trans.), Vintage, 2011, P128-9.</p>



<p>[33] The notion of ‘reverse-dominance hierarchy,’ for example, as expounded by Christopher Boehm, is contested in <em>The Freedom of Things</em>. There is also an in-depth examination of ‘the feud’ in non-State societies that shows why this phenomenon is/was also not an exercise in ‘social control.’</p>



<p>[34] While ‘hunter-gatherers’ (my, less pejorative, term is <em>wild-fooders</em> – see <em>The Freedom of Things</em>) were certainly not sedentary by our standards they also were not nomadic in the way this term is generally understood.</p>



<p>______</p>



<p>Source: <a href="https://illwilleditions.com/the-gemeinwesen-has-always-been-here-an-engagement-with-the-ideas-of-jacques-camatte/?fbclid=IwAR2kt3dC6KazHj2qqYore3bJCf4y33_E6Kam8oFDQoKB6xB-_VSi207f-0U" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Ill Will Editions</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2020/07/16/the-gemeinwesen-has-always-been-here-an-engagement-with-the-ideas-of-jacques-camatte/">The ‘Gemeinwesen’ Has Always Been Here: An Engagement with the Ideas of Jacques Camatte</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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		<title>&#8220;The New Nihilism&#8221; by Peter Lamborn Wilson aka Hakim Bey</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2015/08/25/the-new-nihilism-by-peter-lamborn-wilson-aka-hakim-bey/</link>
					<comments>https://voidnetwork.gr/2015/08/25/the-new-nihilism-by-peter-lamborn-wilson-aka-hakim-bey/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[voidnetwork]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2015 10:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anarchy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[antiracism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green anarchy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hakim Bey]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160; It feels increasingly difficult to tell the difference between—on one hand—being old, sick, and defeated, and—on the other hand—living in a time-&#38;-place that is itself senile, tired, and defeated. Sometimes I think it’s just me—but then I find that some younger, healthier people seem to be undergoing similar sensations of ennui, despair, and impotent anger. Maybe it’s not just me. A friend of mine attributed the turn to disillusion with “everything”, including old-fashioned radical/activist positions, to disappointment over the present political regime in the US, which was somehow expected to usher in a turn away from the reactionary decades</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2015/08/25/the-new-nihilism-by-peter-lamborn-wilson-aka-hakim-bey/">&#8220;The New Nihilism&#8221; by Peter Lamborn Wilson aka Hakim Bey</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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<p><img decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12467" src="https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/486427_154728018026245_12228406_n.jpg" alt="486427_154728018026245_12228406_n" width="600" height="401" srcset="https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/486427_154728018026245_12228406_n.jpg 600w, https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/486427_154728018026245_12228406_n-300x201.jpg 300w, https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/486427_154728018026245_12228406_n-480x321.jpg 480w" sizes="(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">It feels increasingly difficult to tell the difference between—on one hand—being old, sick, and defeated, and—on the other hand—living in a time-&amp;-place that is itself senile, tired, and defeated. Sometimes I think it’s just me—but then I find that some younger, healthier people seem to be undergoing similar sensations of ennui, despair, and impotent anger. Maybe it’s not just me.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">A friend of mine attributed the turn to disillusion with “everything”, including old-fashioned radical/activist positions, to disappointment over the present political regime in the US, which was somehow expected to usher in a turn away from the reactionary decades since the 1980s, or even a “progress” toward some sort of democratic socialism. Although I myself didn’t share this optimism (I always assume that anyone who even wants to be President of the US must be a psychopathic murderer) I can see that “youth” suffered a powerful disillusionment at the utter failure of Liberalism to turn the tide against Capitalism Triumphalism. The disillusion gave rise to OCCUPY and the failure of OCCUPY led to a move toward sheer negation.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">However I think this merely political analysis of the “new nothing” may be too two-dimensional to do justice to the extent to which all hope of “change” has died under Kognitive Kapital and the technopathocracy. Despite my remnant hippy flower- power sentiments I too feel this “terminal” condition (as Nietzsche called it), which I express by saying, only half- jokingly, that we have at last reached the Future, and that the truly horrible truth of the End of the World is that it doesn’t end.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">One big J.G. Ballard/Philip K. Dick shopping mall from now till eternity, basically.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">This IS the future—how do you like it so far? Life in the Ruins: not so bad for the bourgeoisie, the loyal servants of the One Percent. Air-conditioned ruins! No Ragnarok, no Rapture, no dramatic closure: just an endless re-run of reality TV cop shows. 2012 has come and gone, and we’re still in debt to some faceless bank, still chained to our screens.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Most people—in order to live at all—seem to need around themselves a penumbra of “illusion” (to quote Nietzsche again):— that the world is just rolling along as usual, some good days some bad, but in essence no different now than in 10000 BC or 1492 AD or next year. Some even need to believe in Progress, that the Future will solve all our problems, and even that life is much better for us now than for (say) people in the 5th century AD. We live longer thanx to Modern Science—of course our extra years are largely spent as “medical objects”—sick and worn out but kept ticking by Machines &amp; Pills that spin huge profits for a few megacorporations &amp; insurance companies. Nation of Struldbugs.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">True, we’re suffocating in the mire generated by our rule of sick machines under the Numisphere of Money. At least ten times as much money now exists than it would take to buy the whole world—and yet species are vanishing space itself is vanishing, icecaps melting, air and water grown toxic, culture grown toxic, landscape sacrificed to fracking and megamalls, noise-fascism, etc, etc. But Science will cure all that ills that Science has created—in the Future (in the “long run”, when we’re all dead, as Lord Keynes put it); so meanwhile we’ll carry on consuming the world and shitting it out as waste—because it’s convenient &amp; efficient &amp; profitable to do so, and because we like it.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Well, this is all a bunch of whiney left-liberal cliches, no? Heard it before a million times. Yawn. How boring, how infantile, how useless. Even if it were all true&#8230; what can we do about it? If our Anointed Leaders can’t or won’t stop it, who will? God? Satan? The “People”?”</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">All the fashionable “solutions” to the “crisis”, from electronic democracy to revolutionary violence, from locavorism to solar- powered dingbats, from financial market regulation to the General Strike—all of them, however ridiculous or sublime, depend on one preliminary radical change—a seismic shift in human consciousness. Without such a change all the hope of reform is futile. And if such a change were somehow to occur, no “reform” would be necessary. The world would simply change. The whales would be saved. War no more. And so on.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">What force could (even in theory) bring about such a shift? Religion? In 6,000 years of organized religion matters have only gotten worse. Psychedelic drugs in the reservoirs? The Mayan calendar? Nostalgia? Terror?</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">If catastrophic disaster is now inevitable, perhaps the “Survival- ist” scenario will ensue, and a few brave millions will create a green utopia in the smoking waste. But won’t Capitalism find a way to profit even from the End of the World? Some would claim that it’s doing so already. The true catastrophe may be the final apotheosis of commodity fetishism.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Let’s assume for the sake of argument that this paradise of power tools and back-up alarms is all we’ve got &amp; all we’re going to get. Capitalism can deal with global warming—it can sell water- wings and disaster insurance. So it’s all over, let’s say—but we’ve still got television &amp; Twitter. Childhood’s End—i.e. the child as ultimate consumer, eager for the brand. Terrorism or home shopping network—take yr pick (democracy means choice).</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Since the death of the Historical Movement of the Social in 1989 (last gasp of the hideous “short” XXth century that started in 1914) the only “alternative” to Capitalist Neo-Liberal totalitarianism that seems to have emerged is religious neo-fascism. I understand why someone would want to be a violent fundamentalist bigot—I even sympathize—but just because I feel sorry for lepers doesn’t mean I want to be one.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">When I attempt to retain some shreds of my former antipessimism I fantasize that History may not be over, that some sort ofPopulist Green Social Democracy might yet emerge to challenge the obscene smugness of“Money Interests”—something along the lines of 1970s Scandinavian monarcho-socialism—which in retrospect now looks the most humane form of the State ever to have emerged from the putrid suck-hole of Civilization. (Think of Amsterdam in its hey-day.) Of course as an anarchist I’d still have to oppose it—but at least I’d have the luxury of believing that, in such a situation, anarchy might actually stand some chance of success. Even if such a movement were to emerge, however, we can rest damn-well assured it won’t happen in the USA. Or anywhere in the ghost-realm of dead Marxism, either. Maybe Scotland!</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">It would seem quite pointless to wait around for such a rebirth of the Social. Years ago many radicals gave up all hope of The Revolution, and the few who still adhere to it remind me of religious fanatics. It might be soothing to lapse into such doctrinaire revolutionism, just as it might be soothing to sink into mystical religion—but for me at least both options have lost their savor. Again, I sympathize with those true believers (although not so much when they lapse into authoritarian leftism or fascism)— nevertheless, frankly, I’m too depressed to embrace their Illusions.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">If the End-Time scenario sketched above be considered actually true, what alternatives might exist besides suicidal despair? After much thought I’ve come up with three basic strategies.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">1) Passive Escapism. Keep your head down, don’t make waves. Capitalism permits all sorts of “life-styles” (I hate that word)—just pick one &amp; try to enjoy it. You’re even allowed to live as a dirt farmer without electricity &amp; infernal combustion, like a sort of secular Amish refusnik. Well, maybe not. But at least you could flirt with such a life. “Smoke Pot, Eat Chicken, Drink Tea,” as we used to say in the 60s in the Moorish Church of America, our psychedelic cult. Hope they don’t catch you. Fit yourself into some Permitted Category such as Neo-Hippy or even Anabaptist.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">2) Active Escapism. In this scenario you attempt to create the optimal conditions for the emergence of Autonomous Zones, whether temprorary, periodic or even (semi)permanent. In 1984 when I first coined the term Temporary Autonomous Zone (TAZ)</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I envisioned it as a complent to The Revolution—although I was already, to be truthful, tired of waiting for a moment that seemed to have failed in 1968. The TAZ would give a taste or premonition of real liberties: in effect you would attempt to live as if the Revolution had already occurred, so as not to die without ever having experienced “free freedom” (as Rimbaud called it, liberte libre). Create your own pirate utopia.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Of course the TAZ can be as brief &amp; simple as a really good dinner party, but the true autonomist will want to maximize the potential for longer &amp; deeper experiences of authentic lived life. Almost inevitably this will involve crime, so it’s necessary to think like a criminal, not a victim. A “Johnson” as Burroughs used to say—not a “mark”. How else can one live (and live well) without Work. Work, the curse of the thinking class. Wage slavery. If you’re lucky enough to be a successful artist, you can perhaps achieve relative autonomy without breaking any obvious laws (except the laws of good taste, perhaps). Or you could inherit a million. (More than a million would be a curse.) Forget revolutionary morality—the question is, can you afford your taste of freedom? For most of us, crime will be not only a pleasure but a necessity. The old anarcho-Illegalists showed the way: individual expropriation. Getting caught of course spoils the whole thing—but risk is an aspect of self-authenticity.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">One scenario I’ve imagined for active Escapism would be to move to a remote rural area along with several hundred other libertarian social- ists—enough to take over the local government (municipal or even county) and elect or control the sheriffs &amp; judges, the parent/teacher association, volunteer fire department and even the water authority. Fund the venture with cultivation of illegal phantastice and carry on a discreet trade. Organize as a “Union of Egoists” for mutual benefit &amp; ecstatic plea- sures—perhaps under the guise of “communes” or even monasteries, who cares. Enjoy it as long as it lasts.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I know for a fact that this plan is being worked on in several places in America—but of course I’m not going to say where.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Another possible model for individual escapists might be the nomadic adventurer. Given that the whole world seems to be turning into a giant parking lot or social network, I don’t know if this option remains open, but I suspect that it might. The trick would be to travel in places where tourists don’t—if such places still exist—and to involve oneself in fascinating and dangerous situations. For example if I were young and healthy I’d’ve gone to France to take part in the TAZ that grew around resistance to the new airport—or to Greece—or Mexico—wherever the perverse spirit of rebellion crops up. The problem here is of course funding. (Sending back statues stuffed with hash is no longer a good idea.) How to pay for yr life of adventure? Love will find a way. It doesn’t matter so much if one agrees with the ideals of Tahrir Square or Zucotti Park—the point is just to be there.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">3. Revenge. I call it Zarathustra’s Revenge because as Nietzsche said, revenge may be second rate but it’s not nothing. One might enjoy the satisfaction of terrifying the bastards for at least a few moments. Formerly I advocated “Poetic Terrorism” rather than actual violence, the idea being that art could be wielded as a weapon. Now I’ve rather come to doubt it. But perhaps weapons might be wielded as art. From the sledgehammer of the Luddites to the black bomb of the attentat, destruction could serve as a form of creativity, for its own sake, or for purely aesthetic reasons, without any illusions about revolution. Oscar Wilde meets the acte gratuit: a dandyism of despair.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">What troubles me about this idea is that it seems impossible to distinguish here between the action of post-leftist anarcho-nihil- ists and the action of post-rightist neo-traditionalist reactionaries. For that matter, a bomb may as well be detonated by fundamentalist fanatics—what difference would it make to the victims or the “innocent bystanders”? Blowing up a nanotechnology lab—why shouldn’t this be the act of a desperate monarchist as easily as that of a Nietzschean anarchist?</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">In a recent book by Tiqqun (Theory of Bloom), it was fascinating to come suddenly across the constellation of Nietzsche, Rene Guenon, Julius Evola, et al. as examples of a sharp and just critique of the Bloom syndrome—i.e., of progress-as-illusion. Of course the “beyond left and right” position has two sides—one approaching from the left, the other from the right. The European New Right (Alain de Benoist &amp; his gang) are big admirers of Guy Debord, for a similar reason (his critique, not his proposals).</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">The post-left can now appreciate Traditionalism as a reaction against modernity just as the neo-traditionalists can appreciate Situationism. But this doesn’t mean that post-anarchist anarchists are identical with post-fascism fascists!</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I’m reminded of the situation in fin-de-siecle France that gave rise to the strange alliance between anarchists and monarchists; for example the Cerce Proudhon. This surreal conjunction came about for two reasons: a) both factions hated liberal democracy, and b) the monarchists had money. The marriage gave birth to weird progeny, such as Georges Sorel. And Mussolini famously began his career as an Individualist anarchist!</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Another link between left &amp; right could be analyzed as a kind of existentialism; once again Nietzsche is the founding parent here, I think. On the left there were thinkers like Gide or Camus. On the right, that illuminated villain Baron Julius Evola used to tell his little ultra-right groupus- cules in Rome to attack the Modern World—even though the restoraton of tradition was a hopeless dream—if only as an act of magical self-creation. Being trumps essence. One must cherish no attachment to mere results. Surely Tiqqun’s advocacy of the “perfect Surrealist act” (firing a revolver at random into a crowd of “innocent by-standers”) partakes of this form of action- as-despair. (Incidentally I have to confess that this is the sort of thing that has always—to my regret—prevented my embraing Surrealism: it’s just too cruel. I don’t admire de Sade, either.)</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Of course, as we know, the problem with the Traditionalists is that they were never traditional enough. They looked back at a lost civilization as their “goal” (religion, mysticism, monarchism, arts-&amp;-crafts, etc.) whereas they should have realized that the real tradition is the “primordial anarchy” of the Stone Age, tribalism, hunting/gathering, animism—what I call the Neanderthal Liberation Front. Paul Goodman used the term “Neolithic Conservatism” to describe his brand of anarchism—but “Paleolithic Reaction” might be more appropriate!</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">The other major problem with the Traditionalist Right is that the entire emotional tone of the movement is rooted in self-repression. Here a rough Reichean analysis suffices to demonstrate that the authoritarian body reflects a damaged soul, and that only anarchy is compatible with real self-realization.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">The European New Right that arose in the 90s still carries on its propaganda—and these chaps are not just vulgar nationalist chauvenist anti-semitic homophobic thugs—they’re intellectuals &amp; artists. I think they’re evil, but that doesn’t mean I find them boring. Or even wrong on certain points. They also hate the nanotechnologists!</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Although I attempted to set off a few bombs back in the 1960s (against the war in Vietnam) I’m glad, on the whole, that they failed to detonate (technology was never my metier). It saves me from wondering if I would’ve experienced “moral qualms”. Instead I chose the path of the propagandist and remained an activist in anarchist media from 1984 to about 2004. I collaborated with the Autonomedia publishing collective, the IWW, the John Henry Mack- ay Society (Left Stirnerites) and the old NYC Libertarian Book Club (founded by comrades of Emma Goldman, some of whom I knew, &amp; who are now all dead). I had a radio show on WBAI (Pacifica) for 18 years. I lectured all over Europe and East Europe in the 90s. I had a very nice time, thank you. But anarchism seems even farther off now than it looked in 1984, or indeed in 1958, when I first became an anarchist by reading George Harriman’s Krazy Kat. Well, being an existentialist means you never have to say you’re sorry.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">In the last few years in anarchist circles there’s appeared a trend “back” to Stirner/Nietzsche Individualism—because after all, who can take revolutionary anarcho- communism or syndicalism seriously anymore? Since I’ve adhered to this Individualist position for decades (although tempered by admiration for Charles Fourier and certain “spiritual anarchists” like Gustave Landauer) I naturally find this trend agreeable.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“Green anarchists” &amp; AntiCivilization Neo-primitivists seem (some of them) to be moving toward a new pole of attraction, nihilism. Perhaps neo-nihilism would serve as a better label, since this tendency is not simply replicating the nihilism of the Russian narodniks or the French attentatists of circa 1890 to 1912, however much the new nihilists look to the old ones as precursors. I share their critique—in fact I think I’ve been mirroring it to a large extent in this essay: creative despair, let’s call it. What I do not understand however is their proposal—if any. “What is to be done?” was originally a nihilist slogan, after all, before Lenin appropriated it. I presume that my option #1, passive escape, would not suit the agenda. As for Active Escapism, to use the suffix “ism” implies some form not only of ideology but also some action. What is the logical outcome of this train of thought?</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">As an animist I experience the world (outside Civilization) as essentially sentient. The death of God means the rebirth of the gods, as Nietzsche implied in his last “mad” letters from Turin— the resurrection of the great god PAN—chaos, Eros, Gaia, &amp; Old Night, as Hesiod put it—Ontological anarchy, Desire, Life itself, &amp; the Darkness of revolt &amp; negation—all seem to me as real as they need to be.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I still adhere to a certain kind of spiritual anarchism—but only as heresy and paganism, not as orthodoxy and monotheism. I have great respect for Dorothy Day—her writing influenced me in the 60s—and Ivan Illich, whom I knew personally—but in the end I cannot deal with the cognitive dissonance between anarchism and the Pope! Nevertheless I can believe in the re-paganaziation of monotheism. I hold to this pagan tradition because I sense the universe as alive, not as “dead matter.” As a life-long psychedelicist I have always thought that matter &amp; spirit are identical, and that this fact alone legitimizes what Theory calls “desire”.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">From this p.o.v. the phrase “revolution of everyday life” still seems to have some validity—if only in terms of the second proposal, Active Escapism or the TAZ. As for the third possibility— Zarathustra’s Revenge—this seems like a possible path for the new nihilism, at least from a philosophical perspective. But since I am unable personally to advocate it, I leave the question open.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">But here—I think—is the point at which I both meet with &amp; diverge from the new nihilism. I too seem to believe that Predatory Capitalism has won and that no revolution is possible in the classical sense of that term. But somehow I can’t bring myself to be “against everything.” Within the Temporary Autonomous Zone there still seems to persist the possiblity of “authentic life,” if only for a moment— and if this position amounts to mere Escapism, then let us become Houdini. The new surge of interest in Individualism is obviously a response to the Death of the Social. But does the new nihilism imply the death even of the individual and the “union of egoists” or Nietzschean free spirits? On my good days, I like to think not.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">No matter which of the three paths one takes (or others I can’t yet imagine) it seems to me that the essential thing is not to collapse into mere apathy. Depression we may have to accept, impotent rage we may have to accept, revolutionary pessimism we may have to accept. But as e.e. cummings (anarchist poet) said, there is some shit we will not take, lest we simply become the enemy by default. Can’t go on, must go on. Cultivate rosebuds, even selfish pleasures, as long as a few birds &amp; flowers still remain. Even love may not be impossible&#8230;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">SOURCE:<b> The Anvil Review</b><a href="http://theanvilreview.org/" target="_blank"> http://theanvilreview.org/</a></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">for further inquiry follow the comments here: <a href="http://anarchistnews.org/content/new-nihilism">http://anarchistnews.org/content/new-nihilism</a> and here: <a href="http://www.anarchistnews.org/content/new-nihilism-forum-topic-comment-section">http://www.anarchistnews.org/content/new-nihilism-forum-topic-comment-section</a></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b>a comment at the essay by Emile:</b></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b>THE FOURTH OPTION NOT MENTIONED BY WILSON</b></span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">i kind of like this author&#8217;s [peter lamborn wilson’s] writing style with its nuance of coolness and humour, and have the feeling that it&#8217;s been on anarchistnews.org before (it was evidently written in july, 2014).</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">meanwhile, my gut reaction is rejection of this boring and repeated insistence that change in the world is something we are going to see. &#8216;here it comes, folks, &#8230; things are starting to move in the right direction, &#8230; we&#8217;re on our way now, &#8230; put your shoulder behind it and we&#8217;ll take it the full hundred yards down to touchdown.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">surely this impression that we have to see change happening is our ego talking. how about &#8220;life is what happens to us while we&#8217;re busy making other plans&#8221; [john lennon]. what about that sort of change? &#8230; where we&#8217;re blind-sided by it?</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">are we not too much the puppet of our own intention? &#8220;i want this to happen and it is not happening,&#8230; here&#8217; comes my childhood-tantrum&#8221;.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">there are quite a few references to nietzsche here, but none to ‘amor fati’, love of fate;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“My formula for greatness in a human being is amor fati: that one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity. Not merely bear what is necessary, still less conceal it…but love it. &#8212; Nietzsche, &#8216;Ecce Homo&#8217;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">it is only a cheap form of anti-authorianism that rejects all imposition of authority except one’s own. “this revolution or transition has to start happening now, damn it, or i am going to have to give up on this world”.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">in true anarchist style, nietzsche sees the world in terms of a ceaseless, goal-less Becoming, as in the ‘transforming relational activity continuum of modern physics’;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“And do you know what “the world” is to me? Shall I show it to you in my mirror? This world: a monster of energy, without beginning, without end; a firm, iron magnitude of force that does not grow bigger or smaller, that does not expend itself but only transforms itself; as a whole, of unalterable size, a household without expenses or losses, but likewise without increase or income …” –Nietzsche, ‘The Will to Power’, 1067</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Such a world is not in the state of ‘becoming’ in the sense of working its way towards a goal outside of it, in which case, it’s current state would be deficient relative to that goal, kind of like a sinful world that is in the process of being redeemed.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">no doubt, most of us are not keen on even ‘trying on’ this amor fati because we don’t want to ‘get comfortable’ with ‘not caring’ whether anything changes in the way we want to see it change. we don’t want to lose our Atman individuality and dissolve into pure Brahman holeness.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">But, maybe its possible to be ‘both at the same time’ so it could be interesting to follow along with Nietzsche and see what he’s up to with the Amor fati thing, per this guided tour by ulfers and cohen;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“Amor fati is the embrace of the world that is as it is—eternally Becoming—not as it “should” be, for there is no “should,” no imperative that it be, or be transformed into, something other than it is. Put differently, Amor fati is the embrace of a world that is an implicate order of freedom and necessity: of freedom in that it is free from any “should” that would judge it to be deficient, and from any goal that “should” be attained, and of necessity because the lack of a goal to be achieved allows the world its “must,” its having to be what it is, not what it is made by an authority beyond the perimeters of the world.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">&#8230; In other words, fate, as Nietzsche interprets it, is the emblem of his insight that there is nothing—nihil—outside the transitoriness of the world of eternal Becoming. Fate, then, is the name for a totally immanent, perpetually transitory world that is not subject to the finality of a goal outside of it, the achievement of which would redeem the “guiltiness” of Becoming. Amor fati is the embrace of the world that is as it is—eternally Becoming—not as it “should” be, for there is no “should,” no imperative that it be, or be transformed into, something other than it is. Put differently, Amor fati is the embrace of a world that is an implicate order of freedom and necessity: of freedom in that it is free from any “should” that would judge it to be deficient, and from any goal that “should” be attained, and of necessity because the lack of a goal to be achieved allows the world its “must,” its having to be what it is, not what it is made by an authority beyond the perimeters of the world.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">In particular, it can be said that Nietzsche’s appeal to love of fate is the consequence of his thesis of the “death of God,” love of a supreme center of the value of Being that guaranteed meaning to a meaningless world of Becoming—the authority beyond the limits of the world. The fate of Amor fati “frees” us, then, to a world of radical immanence, a world beyond the dualism of immanence and transcendence. Nietzsche characterizes this world as whole in the sense of an interconnectedness or web-like structure Nietzsche describes as Verhängnis (literally a “hanging together”), a word that also means “fate.” Given that the world of interconnectedness (Verhängnis) is its own fate (Verhängnis), it is beyond any outside determinism because there is no outside to the whole. Given a radically holistic world, there is no outside to its Verhängnis, and thus we must be what we are: Verhängnis. As Nietzsche puts it succinctly: “One is necessary, one is a piece of fatefulness [Verhängnis], one belongs to the whole, one is the whole.” &#8212; Friedrich Ulfers and Mark Daniel Cohen. Nietzsche&#8217;s Amor Fati – The Embracing of an Undecided Fate. Poiesis – A Journal of the Arts and Communication. 2002. (English)</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">whether or not we can ‘get into it’, there is this suggestion here that everything finds its meaning and value in everything else in a relational web-structure. this is a shift from where we are when we are impatient for change to start rolling out in the direction we want it to. because that has to be coming from our ego, and our confidence that we know what’s good for the world and we want to help ‘bring it on’. but in a ‘web-of-life’ situation, we are the pushing and pulling we are situationally included in. we are the evolving world. we are the agents of transformation.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">meanwhile, we tend to think of ourselves as little ants who can’t make a mark on world change unless we can band together and have a whole lot of ants pulling or pushing together in the same direction. and if that’s no happening then we feel like giving up on changing the world, and when that happens, its like the world is drifting along without us and is impervious to our attempts to change it.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">this is the nihilism that nietzsche warns about. it comes from ‘the death of God’ in a simple sense of leaving the world and life ‘meaningless’ since there is nothing above it all to give it meaning. however, the death of a source of meaning that lies beyond the world of becoming could mean that the ‘meaning’ or ‘value’ is inside the world in the evolutionary web-of-life itself. in this case, whatever is unfolding is unfolding the way it must.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">so, &#8230; we go [in our understanding of ourselves] from being an ant amongst ants who need to band together to construct a future state of the world that we know is a ‘good’ state, &#8230; to abandoning the notion that the world needs to go to some state that is improved over where it is and understanding ourselves as being co-evolver of the world, &#8230; then we are never ‘out of the game’ and never rendered ‘useless’. instead of seeing ourselves as ‘doers of deeds’ that must somehow make a mark on the world, we see ourselves ‘as the world’, as agent of transformation flow features in the fluid world.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">nietzsche was on the same wavelength as emerson on this;</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“Whilst a necessity so great caused the man to exist, his health and erectness consist in the fidelity with which he transmits influences from the vast and universal to the point on which his genius can act. The ends are momentary: they are vents for the current of inward life which increases as it is spent. A man’s wisdom is to know that all ends are momentary, that the best end must be superseded by a better. But there is a mischievous tendency in him to transfer his thought from the life to the ends, to quit his agency and rest in his acts: the tools run away with the workman, the human with the divine.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘The Method of Nature’</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">dealing with the frustration of our ego in this way, is not amongst the options given by wilson, but it clearly seems to be one that was actually exercised by nietzsche, who felt that the sort of change he was looking for; i.e. the tranvaluation of all values, &#8230; was a couple of centuries away which would be punctuated by a bad bout of nihilism before we had cultivated the amor fati antidote.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">it’s not that this transition isn’t possible. indigenous anarchist infants are brought up with this web-of-life worldview foundation. but the challenge in getting back into it after being raised a Western civilized kid, is enormous. while it is more difficult than the three options that wilson mentioned, it is not impossible and it is therefore worth mentioning it as a fourth (and preferred) option.</span></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2015/08/25/the-new-nihilism-by-peter-lamborn-wilson-aka-hakim-bey/">&#8220;The New Nihilism&#8221; by Peter Lamborn Wilson aka Hakim Bey</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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		<title>Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) talks with Void Network / Συζήτηση του Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) με την συλλογικότητα Κενό Δίκτυο</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2014/04/25/wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-talks-with-void-network-%cf%83%cf%85%ce%b6%ce%ae%cf%84%ce%b7%cf%83%ce%b7-%cf%84%ce%bf%cf%85-wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-%ce%bc%ce%b5-%cf%84%ce%b7%ce%bd-%cf%83/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Apr 2014 08:54:00 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Living for Today / Fighting for Tommorow(Athens Anarchist student&#8217;s demo DEC.2013)&#160; Wolfi Landstreicher is an amerikan anarchist philosopher and political activist. During the 60 years of his life he succeeds to combine romanticism, critical stand-point and theory with deep understanding on Max Stirner&#160; into a&#160; poetic and surrealistic unity that leads into the insurrection of subjectivities and a revolutionary way of life. He is a traveller, a wonderer and a poet. He edited the anarchist publication Willful Disobedience, which was published from 1996 until 2005 and now he publishes his inspirational texts through his project, Venomous Butterfly Publication. Under the</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2014/04/25/wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-talks-with-void-network-%cf%83%cf%85%ce%b6%ce%ae%cf%84%ce%b7%cf%83%ce%b7-%cf%84%ce%bf%cf%85-wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-%ce%bc%ce%b5-%cf%84%ce%b7%ce%bd-%cf%83/">Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) talks with Void Network / Συζήτηση του Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) με την συλλογικότητα Κενό Δίκτυο</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/gallery_shocking_scenes_from_the_vancouver_game_riots.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img decoding="async" border="0" src="https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/gallery_shocking_scenes_from_the_vancouver_game_riots.jpg" height="302" width="400" /></a></span></div>
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<p><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Living for Today / Fighting for Tommorow</span><br /><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">(Athens Anarchist student&#8217;s demo DEC.2013)&nbsp; </span></p>
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<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;"><span style="color: magenta;"><span style="font-size: large;">Wolfi Landstreicher</span></span> is an amerikan anarchist philosopher and political activist. During the 60 years of his life he succeeds to combine romanticism, critical stand-point and theory with deep understanding on Max Stirner<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>into a<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>poetic and surrealistic unity that leads into the insurrection of subjectivities and a revolutionary way of life. He is a traveller, a wonderer and a poet. He edited the anarchist publication Willful Disobedience, which was published from 1996 until 2005 and now he publishes his inspirational texts through his project, Venomous Butterfly Publication. Under the pseudonym <span style="color: magenta;">Feral Faun</span> he published many essays from approximately 1982 to 1992. </span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">The </span>talk<span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">of <span style="color: magenta;">Wolfi Landstreicher</span> with <span style="color: magenta;">Yiannis Aktimon</span> from Void Network includes subjects as:</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">&#8211; the dialectic relation of person and society</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">&#8211; the new nihilism of our era</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">&#8211; the new translation of Wolfi for the book of &#8220;The Ego and Its Own&#8221; of Max Stirner and his radical understandings of the thought of the German philosopher</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">&#8211; actions and revolutionary strategies in the post-2008-crises-era and post-2010-2012-&#8220;occupy the planet&#8221; movement</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>Α<span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;">lso they share an interesting talk about what is called by Void Network as &#8220;21st Century Class Theory&#8221;, a talk that includes theoretical tools as &#8220;The Collective Individual&#8221; and &#8220;The Class of the Dispossessed&#8221;. They make an interesting effort to analyze the conditions where we can signify the self-conscious arising of this &#8220;class of the dispossessed&#8221; into a revolutionary view/relation, the Existence and Ontology of Revolution.</span></b></span></div>
<p><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><br /></b></span><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span style="color: magenta;"><span style="font-size: large;">LISTEN THE TALK HERE:</span></span></b></span></p>
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<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: x-large;"><a href="http://i.mixcloud.com/CH5D1R"><span>http://i.mixcloud.com/CH5D1R</span></a></span></span></b></span></div>
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<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>O <span style="color: magenta;"><span style="font-size: large;">Wolfi Landstreicher</span></span> (Γούλφι Λάντστράιχερ), είναι ένας Αναρχικός αμερικανός φιλόσοφος και πολιτικός ακτιβιστής που στα 60 χρόνια της ζωής του, έχει καταφέρει, να ενώσει τον ρομαντισμό, την κριτική στάση και θεωρία, και τις εσωτερικευμένες τοποθετήσεις του πάνω στο έργο στου Μάξ Στίρνερ, σε μια, ποιητική και σουρεαλιστική ενότητα, που ο στόχος της είναι η εξέγερση των υποκειμένων, και ως συνέπεια, ο επαναστατημένος τρόπος ζωής. Υπήρξε βασικός συγγραφέας και επιμελητής του αναρχικού εντύπου Willful Disobedience που κυκλοφόρησε από το 1996 έως το 2005 και τα τελευταία χρόνια εκδίδει τα επιδραστικά κείμενα του μέσω του δικού του εκδοτικού εγχειρήματος Venomous Butterfly Publication. Ταξιδιώτης, ποιητής και στοχαστής δημοσίευσε επίσης πολλά κείμενα του από το 1982 έως το 1992 κάτω από το ψευδώνυμο <span style="color: magenta;">Feral Faun</span>. </b></span></div>
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<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>Η συζήτηση του<span style="color: magenta;"></span><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;"><span style="color: magenta;">Wolfi Landstreicher</span> με</span> τον <span style="color: magenta;">Ιωάννη Ακτήμωνα</span> από την συλλογικότητα Κενό Δίκτυο, αγγίζει θέματα διαλεκτικής σχέσης ατόμου και κοινωνίας και ζητήματα σχετικά με τον νέο μηδενισμό.&nbsp;</b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>Επίσης γίνεται ευρεία συζήτηση για την μετάφραση που έχει μόλις ολοκληρώσει στο &#8220;O Μοναδικός και η Ιδιοκτησία του&#8221; του Μάξ Στίρνερ, με ορισμένες ρηξικέλευθες θεάσεις<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>να κρύβονται σε αυτή την νέα ανάγνωση του κλασσικού κειμένου, καθώς και ζητήματα δράσης και επαναστατικής στρατηγικής/θεωρίας, στον Κόσμο-μετά-την-έκρηξη-της-κρίσης-του-2008, αλλά και του παγκόσμιου κινήματος καταλήψεων των πλατειών του 2010-2012.</b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>Τέλος οι Wolfi και Ακτήμων, συζητούν και σχολιάζουν μέρη της θεωρίας που το Κενό Δίκτυο ονομάζει &#8220;Ταξική Θεωρία του 21ου Αιώνα&#8221; μέσα από έννοιες-εργαλεία όπως το &#8220;Συλλογικό Άτομο&#8221;,&nbsp;</b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b>&#8220;Η Τάξη των Απαλλοτριωτών&#8221; και οι ανάλογες συνθήκες όπου &#8220;η Αυτοσυνείδηση αυτής της Τάξης των Συλλογικών Ατόμων εκφράζεται σε ένα ανώτερο επίπεδο,σημείο όπου η επαναστατική στάση-σχέση-θέση, συνιστά Ανοικτότητα, ΥΠΑΡΞΗ και ΟΝΤΟΛΟΓΙΑ της Επανάστασης&#8221;</b></span></div>
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<p><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span style="font-size: large;"><span lang="EN-US"><span style="color: magenta;">ΑΚΟΥΣΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΣΥΖΗΤΗΣΗ ΕΔΩ:</span></span></span></b></span></p>
<div><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span style="font-size: x-large;"><a href="http://i.mixcloud.com/CH5D1R">http://i.mixcloud.com/CH5D1R</a></span></b></span></div>
<p><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><b><span lang="EN-US" style="mso-ansi-language: EN-US;"><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></span></b> </span></div>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2014/04/25/wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-talks-with-void-network-%cf%83%cf%85%ce%b6%ce%ae%cf%84%ce%b7%cf%83%ce%b7-%cf%84%ce%bf%cf%85-wolfi-landstreicher-feral-faun-%ce%bc%ce%b5-%cf%84%ce%b7%ce%bd-%cf%83/">Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) talks with Void Network / Συζήτηση του Wolfi Landstreicher (Feral Faun) με την συλλογικότητα Κενό Δίκτυο</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Contemporary Nihilism&#8221;  an essay On Innocence Organised / by ADILKNO, the foundation for the Advancement of Illegal Knowledge</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2013/07/31/contemporary-nihilism-an-essay-on-innocence-organised-by-adilkno-the-foundation-for-the-advancement-of-illegal-knowledge/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jul 2013 14:52:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[anticapitalism]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>With the emergence of a privileged mediocrity, the innocent life became accessible to the masses. No longer was joe average part of a class striving to historical ends, e.g. revolution or fascism; enter a cold era, now devoid of passion. While outside, storms raged and change rapidly followed change, one&#8217;s own life was left to grind to a halt. Time, regardless of history, fashion, politics, sex and the media, was to take its due course. The innocent made no fuss, they despised it. &#8216;Come what may&#8217;. Average folks considered themselves cogs in some giant machine, and were proud to admit</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2013/07/31/contemporary-nihilism-an-essay-on-innocence-organised-by-adilkno-the-foundation-for-the-advancement-of-illegal-knowledge/">&#8220;Contemporary Nihilism&#8221;  an essay On Innocence Organised / by ADILKNO, the foundation for the Advancement of Illegal Knowledge</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">With the emergence of a privileged mediocrity, the innocent life became accessible to the masses. No longer was joe average part of a class striving to historical ends, e.g. revolution or fascism; enter a cold era, now devoid of passion. While outside, storms raged and change</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">rapidly followed change, one&#8217;s own life was left to grind to a halt.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Time, regardless of history, fashion, politics, sex and the media, was to take its due course. The innocent made no fuss, they despised it.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">&#8216;Come what may&#8217;. Average folks considered themselves cogs in some giant machine, and were proud to admit it. They saw to it the trains ran on schedule, and returned home at night in time for supper. Instead of the</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">old barriers, such as caste, sex, and religion, innocence introduced such bromidae as tolerance, openness, and harmony. Positivism become lifestyle. Positivist critique served the reconstruction of politics and culture. Good times were had, one was busily and dynamically</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">engaged and abundantly employed. Reigned a clear and simple view on reality. The innocent did not incorporate the Good, they just hadn&#8217;t a clue, though not lacking in standards. Crime was not for them.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">&nbsp;Thus, they involuntarily became the objects of strategies of Good and Evil.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">We are talking a life without drama, immediacy, &#8216;Entscheidung&#8217;. Things will never get hot. Nothing will ever have to be decided on. You don&#8217;t need to break out, in order to be just you. Rock ye no boats. The innocent thrive on everyday ritual, it&#8217;s what makes them happy.&nbsp;</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">A failing washing machine suffices to drive one up the wall: the bloody thing just has to function. The plight against materiality is that it&#8217;s always breaking down, failing, malfunctioning and generally behaving in</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">odd ways, and that it cannot be quietly replaced. Untrammeled consumption holds a promise that from now on, nothing will ever happen.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">In this undisturbed existence, luxury becomes so natural it goes unnoticed. The innocent conscience is distinguished by its air of cramped grass-rootsiness, evoking a universe where personal irritations may explode without warning: time and again, streetlights, traffic jams and delays, bureaucratic hassles, bad weather, construction noises,</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">diseases, accidents, unexpected guests and ditto incidents, comprise an assault on innocent existence. Nonetheless, one is caught up in uncalled for events. This attitude of disturbance-deterrence, devoted</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">to job and professional affairs, excludes all risk and has relegated to the attainable the status of sole criterion. The summum of happiness consists of soft porn, moped, the new medium-priced car, one&#8217;s own house and mortgage, interesting hobbies, club life, kids, elaborate</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">birthdays of family members and friends, book clubs, christmas cards, cross-stitched embroideries, ikebana, tending the garden, clean clothes, the biosphere of pets and indoor plants, guinea pigs, the rabbit in the yard, the pigeons in the attic, holiday destinations,</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">dinners out, a bit of catching up or a general chat, Greenpeace membership or tele-adoption through Foster Parents Plan. This ideal of an unrippled and spotless life is characterized by an endearing pretence of being literally everybody&#8217;s goal. Innocence is under constant treatment from doctors, therapists, beauticians, accupuncturalists, and garage keepers. Innocence likes to be tinkered</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">at. It considers it its duty to further develop and, if necessary, re-educate. Courses are taken, adilkno sessions participated in, the theater, concert halls, expos visited, books read, directions to forest walks followed, and martial arts actively engaged in. Innocence as a</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">universal human right encompasses animals, plant life, architecture, landscapes and cultural expression. This is the condition under which the world may be ultimately salvaged: neither utopian nor fatalistic,</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">but smoothly functioning.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">The advertisement campaigns accompanying this way of life, appeal to the childlike joy of having one&#8217;s accomplishments rewarded. Scenes of</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">smiling dads and mums who can afford just anything. A reference to the authoritarian circumstances under which the child is raised to maturity and learns to talk. Innocence presupposes the enclosed security of</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">family, school, company, and sports club. Under &#8216;infantile capitalism&#8217; (Asada), desire is tempted by the offer of a secure existence. By displaying good behaviour, the ongoing changes in the vast world outside are assured not to cause any catastrophes. Rebellion is punished and virtually pointless. The household comprises a fortified</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">oasis. The others are just like you, and moving from one cell to another you get the impression that life is swell. Surprises are solely permissible within well acquainted constellations. The crush alone makes for a composed exception to the rule. In sex there may yet be</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">room for assaults, with all that may imply. This is why the personal ad is such an innocent medium, having nothing to do with prostitution or moral decline whatsoever. The highlight of innocent existence consists of wedding day, the happiest day of your life. Marriage is the one occasion in his/her existence on which joe/jill average may dress up in</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">all his/her decorations, and show themselves to the world at large. The ordering of the wedding gown, the white or red worn for all to see, the bouquet, the bridegroom&#8217;s shoes, the orchestra outside, the cabriolet</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">or carriage, the cheering onlookers, the historical wedding room, the moving clergyman&#8217;s speechlet, the standing ovation and gifts, the</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">dinner at some fashionable restaurant, the subsequent feast till the small hours: no trouble or expenses are spared to create a surroundings in which everybody ends up getting terribly pissed, yet never severely</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">disgracing themselves. A day to remember in horror for the rest of your life, yet forever impossible to forget, a wound in your life, a mental tattoo ruthlessly inflicted by family members. Millions of couples shack up forever, just so they won&#8217;t have to cope with this. The pressure lies in the fact that there is no option but for the whole thing to proceed smoothly, so that even if it does, any fun that might</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">have been there is definitely out. The greater misery the night before, the bigger joy come wedding night. Afterwards, it&#8217;s safe havens forever.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">As innocence to a substantial degree consists of defence, it cannot remain neutral under the continuous outside threat facing it (thieves, rapists, hackers, counterfeiters, the incestuous, psychopaths, renegades, bacteria, missiles, toxic clouds, aliens, etc.). Neither can it summon any childlike curiosity concerning events in the outside</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">world. Innocence&#8217;s protective coating mirrors any threat posed by its environment, thus causing it to take on an aura of organisation. The mafia, youth gangs, criminal conspirators, sects, drug cartels, banditry, pirates, are all thought to be after mediocrity&#8217;s naivit.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">They&#8217;re omnipresent spooks. Before you know you may be involved, guilty of, or victimised by, fraud. Innocence, desperate to turn its head, to pretend that nothing&#8217;s the matter, threatens to succumb. Ignorance may</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">prove fatal, a more practical strategy consists of localising and channeling attacks. Hand out to each individual an electronic guarantee</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">of innocence and sooner or later any felon will end up in some specialist jail. In fact, innocence shouldn&#8217;t need any legitimisation, all this registration and surveillance merely causes it to lose its ura. Everyone is a potential illegal immigrant; even though the cntrary be proven, one remains a risk factor. At the present phase, ecape in anonymity becomes daily more dangerous and undesirable.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Neutrality thus appears a chosen isolation, the final outcome of which is grotesque exclusion. Those who aren&#8217;t thoroughly on line can make no</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">appeals to organised innocence&#8217;s compassion.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Organised innocence is obsessed with Evil, gazing at and dissecting it, categorizing and exposing it, in order to finally bypass it altogether. Innocence owes its existence to its seeming opposite. One cannot confess innocence, for every confession must needs be one of guilt, any</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">gesture a false pose pertaining to goodness itself. Everybody is informed to start with, everyone knows all about the next person and there&#8217;s a silent agreement that some things are best left unsaid. The innocent are discreet and do not interfere with certain hidden domains</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">(of power, of lust, of death). No boundary violations here. Holidays may offer some compensation, but everything has its season. Next of kin are those causing maximum annoyance. They are parsimonious neighbours,</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">noisy kids, funny couples. First annoyances are quickly made emblems, forever there to fall back on. The others are scrutinized distrustingly, a form of surveillance which it is impossible to sanctionize since there no longer exists any common intercourse defining a norm. Normality can no longer define any aberration. Only drug related nuisance, streetwalkers&#8217; districts and cribs, travellers&#8217;</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">sites and refugees&#8217; centers may now temporarily unite citizens in mobs, for fear of declining property values. This neighbourhood resistance is</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">not ideologically motivated, one simply never gets down to the point of formulation of transferable ideas. The neighbours are doing model</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">airplanes, one self preferring Pierre Boulez, what room is left for any exchange? There is more to separate us than mere garden fences.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Therefore, too, accusals of racism or discrimination are off the mark here. There isn&#8217;t any moral order to deteriorate into bigotry.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Stereotypes get blurred. Noone knows what a Jew might look like, or what distinguishes Turks from Moroccans (&#8216;All Turks go by the name of Ali&#8217;). &nbsp;The other&#8217;s features don&#8217;t stick, because one has no sense of</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">identity oneself. So much for pc advertising, public information campaigns, even cookbook recipes. Multiculturalist society is a clash</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">of featureless citizens and the heirs to identities. There is a severe misunderstanding with the Innocent concerning the Other come from afar.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">There is a great readiness to accept the concept of differing cultures.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">They&#8217;re assumed to function in the same type of isolation as ours. Who would wish to visit upon another a dull life like our own, culminating</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">as it does in likewise padded solitude? Tolerance means envy of the other&#8217;s simplicity. Friday rounds are not considered backward (as were</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">once the strictly Reformed), but as proof of a devotion and consistency no longer available to oneself. The suburbs are polytheistic: everything is believed in. There is more than what&#8217;s been taught you at school &#8211; but what? Seeking, one has found, but anxiety remains as to</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">what more is gonna show up. Gurus, healing stones, skyward apparitions, voodoo, and encounters all slip past, without one having ever a chance of sharing these experiences. For a moment, one gets the impression</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">that there&#8217;s quite a bit going on, that the surrounding world is full of deep acquaintances, of promises and optimistic prospects. Before long, one finds oneself alone with all the acquired experiential cross-country attributes, the textbooks, perfumed oils, the dandy windbreaker the two of us bought together remember, the empty personal</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">organizer and holiday pictures&#8217; albums. What macro-social guiding principle may dissolve all this weeny human suffering, will resolve our confusion? Where are they, the builders of this new state of affairs, amidst and around us? The refugee, as a cultural carrier, may prove</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">prophetic. Ultimately, it is they who reintroduce to us our exiled spirituality, so sought after in the West.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Innocence may be lost through committing murder, participating in a little S&amp;M, joining a bikers&#8217; club, opting for art, going under cover, yet the underworld of entertainment offers no consolation. One final option much in vogue consists of defecting to the war or genocide.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">There can, however, be no refuge from the conglomerate and its diktata. The Mountain Bike, T-shirt, Olilly clothing, compu games, graffiti, bumper sticker, spoiler, cap, sloppy casual wear, hair gel, are all the &#8216;objets nomades&#8217; of Jacques Attali&#8217;s Europe heading for a stylised</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">uniformity. Innocence cannot be negated, or compensated for, by its opposite. The one thing it can&#8217;t stand is party poopers. This process of decomposition within normality offers no alternative and puts up no fight, nor even does it make a point. Through it, innocence is exhausted. One cannot be sprite and happy all day, forever tearing</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">asunder the grime by constructive thinking. Innocence is not in danger of being wiped out by either revolution or reaction. It can only wither, go under in poverty, slowly vanish out of sight, as though meant to waste away. Grounded love affairs are resolved by ordering a</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">dumpster in which one&#8217;s accumulated innocence is disposed of, in order to make a cleaner, wilder start after interior redecoration procedures.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">A generation before, the politicization of the private managed to get some innocence out the front door, but it&#8217;s regrouped with a vengeance and now has grunge rockers, generation X&#8217;ists, trance freaks and other</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">youth categories all searching in vain for some firm footing they can react against in some other format than that of fashion or the media, innocence&#8217;s latest organisational modi. Government itself is now the most outspoken anti-racist, anti-sexist, anti-fascist, anti-homelessness, and generally anti- anything the well-intended</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">insurrectionist are liable to oppose. The one thing left for innocent younger generations to vent their anger, are all forms of organised innocence itself. Abundant material for grounding an enormous social movement, to start working at innumerable separate issues, in order to</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">discover a common grounds in all those disparate little divisions.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Boycott insurance companies, raid those self-assured infant clothings&#8217; shops, torch them redundant gift stores &#8211; we&#8217;ve a consumers&#8217; paradise</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">to destroy! But let&#8217;s not get excited. We&#8217;ll have innocence fade away, see it quiet down, tell you what, we&#8217;ll not even mention it.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">ADILKNO, the foundation for the Advancement of Illegal Knowledge</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">(a.k.a. BILWET), Amsterdam, 1995</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">translated from the Dutch @ Sakhra Bey la-Bey/Ziekend Zoeltjes</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;"><br />
</span><span style="font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Produkties, Amsterdam, 1995</span></p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2013/07/31/contemporary-nihilism-an-essay-on-innocence-organised-by-adilkno-the-foundation-for-the-advancement-of-illegal-knowledge/">&#8220;Contemporary Nihilism&#8221;  an essay On Innocence Organised / by ADILKNO, the foundation for the Advancement of Illegal Knowledge</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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