Alexander Karschnia on Sun, 14 Feb 2016 03:37:16 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> notes from the DIEM25 launch |
As a person who watched the evening on live-stream, but spend the day in the Volksbühne to listen to the discussions of the âworking groupâ I just want to add: the âworking groupâ was not working â too many people who spoke too short, no real discussion. BUT it was good to get an impression on who-is-who of the activist scene in Europe. Not big names (âIs Negri not coming?â), but groups and initiatives. To catch the spirit of the Catalanian municipalities, the determination of the Irish RIGHT2CHANGE-movement, the Belgian Alter Summit (to name only a few). Their contribution made it very clear that an European democracy-movement has to combine both: pushing for the transformation into a transnational democracy AND strengthening the local level at the same time (municipalities, town hall meeting etc.) Striving towards a constitutional assembly to turn the EU into a real republic AND working on the ground in assemblies. Peaceful co-existence between a sovereign European parliament (not just a loose collection of national parties vaguely working together) AND a network of ârebel citiesâ (like Barcelona) as well as a wide-spread network of smaller assemblies: a âthird wayâ between representative democracy and direct, basic or âpresentistâ democracy. This is also a question for the âthought collectiveâ that Geert proposed. So much about the future, now about the past - the future of the past. I want to mention Boris Buden's contribution who spoke very strongly about the far-right government of Croatia, pointing towards their mission of historical revisionism. The discourse on âtotalitarianismâ that was developed in Germany during the 80's to relativize the German guilt-question, now has become a political weapon in the hands of the successors of their former collaborators. Buden's resumee: âIt is not yet clear anymore who won the second world war: ANOTHER PAST IS POSSIBLE!â It is clear who were the forces that had a vision for a democratic Europe: the antifascist resistance-movements. A movement to democratise Europe ought to be â no: IS an antifascist movement! It is the merit of Stephane Hessel to have called this legacy back into mind. Hannah Arendt had written about that long before. It was also her who worried that a pan-European movement would inevitably develop into an anti-American one. The anti-American affect was not very present at all at DiEM, that is already a lot taking into consideration how strong it is in some of the contemporary movements: the so-called âpeace-movement 2.0â (around Ken Jebsen) in Germany has been mentioned before, there are other examples of right-wing movements who want to join forces with left-wing movements to form a so-called âQuerfrontâ (political crossover-front). DiEM might be an alternative to this left-right-crossovers by trying to open a âpopular front 2.0â from liberals and greens, socialdemocrats and socialists to the post-autonomous movements such as blockupy, anarchists with the little @) or Bookchin-style democratic federalists. I hope my impression is correct, because that is what is urgently needed from my point of view. A central theme was, of course, the ârefugee-crisisâ: Europe once was not a place to escape to, but to escape from. The concept of âfortress Europeâ has this background: Nazi-Germany at the end of WWII. In the late 70's a book was published by the new nazi-networks in Germany called âEurofascismâ which elaborated on how many European volunteers came to Germany to join the German army to fight against Russians and Americans. The author distanced himself from Hitler and most of the nazis for being too german-centric, but he praised some fringe of the German army to develop a âEuropean visionâ. The concept of âfortress Europeâ has to be seen as the manifestation of what Buden called âanother pastâ. Last, not least: EU-colonialism. It was a Belgian artist Sven Augustijnen who pointed out that the EU was not only founded by civil servants who made their experiences as administrators in Congo, but also the EU-flagg resembles the flagg of Belgian-Congo! The EU was a neocolonial project. And it is our duty to change it into a postcolonial one. For these reasons I am hoping for a DiEM25 meeting in the near future in Brussels and I would suggest to invite Sven Augustijnen. All in all there were not enough artists involved, I felt. But most of all: there was a real lack of involving Europeans-without-European-background for a movement that says: ANOTHER EUROPE IS POSSIBLE! 2016-02-13 20:42 GMT+01:00 Felix Stalder <felix@openflows.com>: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-02-13 19:05, morlockelloi@yahoo.com wrote: > The trend(s) that Europe is seeing itself dragged to are not result > of 'wrong' thinking and misbehaviour of supposedly powerful masses. > They are the result of material circumstances, and no amount of > magical (group)thinking will change that. > Material circumstances are mostly related to technologies of > social control, I think you are overrating technologies of control, neither the Stasi nor the KGB could save their systems from collapse (though the ruined a lot of lives....). <...>
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