Felix Stalder on Tue, 2 Feb 2021 13:20:15 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> GameStop Never Stops |
I find the GameStop saga endlessly fascinating, on so many levels. For one, it's a fitting continuation of the year of American discontent, that started with #BLM, continued with #StopTheSteal, and reached now Wall Street with #Gamestop. Politically, these movements are, of course, very different. The first reacting to deep historical, systemic injustice and violence, the second bought into a political lie and the third one, well, that's hard to say. But all three express, in their own way, a belief, shared by large segments of the population, that "the system" -- the institutions of policing, democracy and the financial system -- are fundamental rigged against them, and that they have to do something against it, even at considerable personal risk. If you followed all three over the year, even only superficially, you got a crash course in institutional critique on an epic scale. Here's pretty good segment from hill.tv, a relatively respectable Washington outlet, that makes pretty much this argument: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTT4it_f7Jc&feature=youtu.be In terms of GameStop, I think a good starting point is to assume that there are predominantly bad-faith actors involved, that everything expressed is part of an agenda, that may, or may not, be in line with what is expressed. Additionally, we are in an environment that is fully artificial, made up of ultimately arbitrary, but consequential rules. If you are a deeply immersed gamer, or belief that we are living in a virtual simulation, as people like Musk apparently do, then you are right at home. That doesn't mean that this is not political. It's a lot of things at the same time. An insider-game between billionaires, a populist revolt, a get-rich-quick-scheme, total market failure, and the free-markets fully functioning. It's ultra cynical and naive, deeply individualistic, and full of expressions of solidarity. It's deadly serious and hugely entertaining. It's all about money and the recognition, after a decade of quantitative easing and crypto bubbles, that money is somehow meaningless. It expresses itself in spreadsheets and memes, and, no doubt, soon also in congressional hearings. While I don't expect this one event to have immediate, dramatic consequences, I expect this to simmer on for a long time and light other fires, in unexpected places.
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