Kermit Snelson on Tue, 23 Jul 2002 05:21:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime> how to defeat activism |
It isn't news that protest movements are being simultaneously intimidated by violence, bribed into submission with money or perquisites, slandered in the media and infiltrated by police and intelligence agencies. It was ever thus, and so will it ever be. My favorite thought concerning this problem was Lenin's. He was once asked in the early days what he did when the Czar's secret police managed to infiltrate his organizations. He replied, "We put them to work." Not yet in command of Siberia's prison camps, "work" to Lenin then meant passing out leaflets in the street. Are successful activists themselves innocent of sharp-elbowed political tactics? Of course not, nor should they be. Violence? Seattle is famous precisely because the military tactics of the demonstrators defeated those of the police (and also of rival demonstrators.) Bribing with money and perquisites? Look how far Bono gets with the Washington and Davos crowds simply by flattering those congenitally hankering geeks with his star presence and glamour. Slandering opponents in the media? That's the raison d'être of most activist groups these days. Infiltrating opposing groups? If activists aren't doing much of this, they damn well should be. Political struggle is political struggle regardless of which side you're on. The winners tend to be those who grasp the facts quickly, persuade successfully and organize appropriately. On the other hand, there are those who let themselves be convinced by thick, incoherent "movement" bestsellers that facts are not something to be grasped, but invented; that the purpose of political writing is not to persuade, but to mystify; that disorganization and mob rule are not political weaknesses, but strengths; and that name-calling, body piercing and rioting comprise "cultural labor" and effective political resistance. Are we suddenly so eager to find examples of how corporate interests are turning activism into slacktivism? Why look further than the Harvard University Press? Or Duke University's Joe Camel Center for Marxist Studies? But my aim here isn't to load the thread with illustrations of how "they", even the best-selling "Marxist" superstars in tobacco-funded US universities, are undermining "our" movements. That's not to say they wouldn't be correct. It is indeed an example of the success of their tactics, and the ludicrous failure of ours, that the world's protest movement now amounts to not much more than yet another Americanized, Starbucks-style, middle-class lifestyle choice based on the consumption of aggressively marketed fad products. But I think it would be only an exercise in resentment to complain about the tactics directed against our clueless selves in a class struggle which is, after all, not only a fact of life but even a sign of health. And to speak of its potential news value, such a complaint could just as easily have appeared in 1886. What I'm arguing, instead, is that changing the world means embracing the Great Game and playing to win. This means not only that you must enter the same brotherhood as your opponents, but even that such a brotherhood of opponents is perhaps the only true one. "Napoleon died on St. Helena. Wellington was saddened." It is indeed impossible to resist without being attacked, and (worse, in the eyes of some) without becoming part of the game itself. Anybody who has ever made it onto the world's stage, whether the name was George Bush or Martin Luther King, has known that. But what is so horrifying about this? And what on Earth is so appealing about "negative critique" ideologies that glorify permanent marginalization, permanent poverty, permanent failure? That refuse to advance any positive recommendation for fear that one may actually succeed through "co-optation"? That view even being called to the negotiating table by one's opponent as a destructive act of hostility that must be refused? That in fact glorify "The Great Refusal" as an end in itself? History has occasionally given us saints, but their probability is so vanishingly small that only a few generations can boast of one. So barring that, the only real alternative to struggle, negotiation and compromise with the real world is a retreat into suicidal insanity and destruction. Having read both Hamlet and Thucydides, the only reason I claim news value for this observation is that we recently seem to have entered a period in which such an ethos of negation and inward-looking despair, previously only a sad but private personal neurosis, is again a dangerous world-historical force. Even when disguised as religious fervor (bin Laden) or as a pseudo-revolutionary mania of desire (Negri), this utterly sick but growing resentment and refusal of rough-and-tumble reality is something activists should fight, not embrace. Kermit Snelson _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold