Brian Holmes on 29 Sep 2000 22:51:19 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] S26 and after |
Well, finally I was among what the know-it-all Economist calls those "exuberant irrationalists on the streets," and yes, Your Honor, I must admit it was a blast to meet all my activist friends in Prague, to dream about ways to outwit the police, to admire all the artistic creations at the Convergence Center and lend a hand here or there, to wave posters and stick stickers and sing Spanish anarchist chants on the Big Day. Yes, it was really great fun to see the "tutti bianchi" of Ya Basta go forth heroically in their hilarious padded white suits to face the armored personnel carriers and the water cannons and the lines of cops behind their shields, it was trepidating to pour the vinegar on the rag that's supposed to protect you from the tear gas, it was heart-quaking to hear the helicopter going throb throb throb and to see the smoke rising up out of the valley where the blue group was fighting it out along the railroad line; and honestly, I could feel no particular regret later that night when those masked and black-clad youths began smashing up that poor lonely McDonalds beneath the towering palace-turned-museum of downtown Prague. But it was also intellectually challenging to sit there at the counter-summit in the Domovina Culture House and listen to Walden Bello and George Caffentzis and Silvia Federici and Boris Kagarlitsky and all the rest (I think the Hungarian economist Lorant Karoly gave the best case study of the East's endless "transition"). You had to keep your wits about you to correlate all the statistics on the debt and the historical effect of oil prices and the contemporary imposition of economies-for-export with everything you already knew or already forgot since the IMF riots in the mid-eighties, and sometimes it was tough to cut through the Bolshevik rhetoric to see the political possibilities in the present for organizing some effective resistance to neoliberalism. But it was fantastic after twenty years to see them finally on the run, Wolfensohn falling all over himself to admit that the protesters had something to say, Stiglitz in town to keep the heat on his former employers at the IMF, while tracts informed you that the World Bank's civil-society consultancy programs were backfiring and producing unpublishable critiques of structural adjustment, or that the respectable Catholic Jubilee 2000 was gettin' down and gettin' radical and calling for the outright cancellation of African debt. Even if you've already read a lot and heard a lot of lectures and clicked through a lot of websites, there's nothing like rubbing shoulders with a bunch of organizers and researchers and NGO holy warriors to make you want to hit the books again, maybe become an amateur expert on some obscure branch of organized global expropriation. At the same time, the counter-summit was a lot more about tactics and strategy than about statistics. And personally it was music to my ears to hear Boris Kagarlitsky say with inimitable humor what I figured out for myself a while ago, which is that if you realistically want any reform at all you better call for revolution, and in this case abolition of the IMF and the World Bank. Which is another way of saying what *everyone* on the opposition side believes in their secret heart, which is that the direct action movement, whatever the black-and-white simplicity of some of its adherents, has been tremendously effective in forcing change onto the global agenda and hasn't by any means ceased to surprise us all. So now that the dust has cleared and the windows have been boarded up and the official meetings have been put to an early close, now while hundreds of people are still being held in jail and apparently are getting abused and even tortured by the cops, let's talk about everyone's favorite subject, The Violence. Are you for it or against it? I want to say something painfully obvious: in Europe, unlike in America, there is no way you can organize a protest on this scale without the guys in the black clothes and scarves showing up, and they're there to break windows and throw flagstones, or better yet, Molotov cocktails. How many times have we seen that happen in Paris after some innocent high-school kids demo? As for the direct actionists themselves, they'll almost always say they're going to be non-violent and civilly disobedient and artistic, but then in the protests you find that the police are between you and what you're there to do, and when the guys in the black masks start heaving stones, to sit down and passively resist is suicide, so... As for the NGOs and the more political critics short of the Trotskyists, of course they're going to say they condemn the violence whether they really do or not, because how can you legitimately dissent in a democratic society with a Molotov cocktail? Especially if you're the handful of Czechs who risked their asses to organize this explosive thing on their home ground? So everyone has to pick their position, do their thing and trot out their line to explain it, and maybe take time to see the big picture too. As for the by-standers who either weep and moan about the nasty anarchists for busting up Ronald McDonald or rail against the hypocritical NGOs for being reformist, OK, so you prefer the time when there was no world-wide movement fighting neoliberalism on all fronts? The truth, for anyone who knows a little history, is that the exuberant and irrational capitalist passion for free trade is so exploitative, so inegalitarian, that it's likely to get the whole world embroiled in a war, of which the tiny flare of violence in Prague on S26 is just the salutary warning sign, or the frightening harbinger if it's ignored. So there it is, been there, done that, and I guess after A26 there's always a little free-trade bashing at the Summit of the Americas next April in Quebec city, a tempting excuse to go find out when spring really starts in Canada. In the meantime though, and despite a lot of excellent work from a lot of committed people, I reckon there's still a tremendous amount to be done in translating this extremely complicated and extremely impassioned movement into political terms that have the resonance of, say, the recent truckers' blockades in Europe. The depressing thing is, the populist right can use direct action too, and though our cause is the good cause, a lot of them seemed pretty confident about what they were doing too. The winning strategy for the left is going to be international, against the national petty bourgeoisies and little bosses whom the big money loves to manipulate. And in terms of that international strategy, you have to say that the one thing that didn't come to pass in Prague was massive participation by the Czechs. Will A26 turn out to have been a moment of consciousness-raising for tomorrow's Czech activists? I think it's an interesting question, and I'm curious to learn the answer. Brian Holmes _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold