[iDC] What is Left? / What Does a Distributed Politics Look Like?
Abe Burmeister
abe at abstractdynamics.org
Thu Sep 20 01:26:40 UTC 2007
Hi Brian,
First off thank you for you quick and insightful reply and please
forgive me when I say that I can't take much solace from your answer.
Solidarity is of course a historically important tactic for the left,
and in all likelihood will continue to be important in certain times
and spaces. But it also seems to me that it is a tactic that's
effectiveness is tied to the land. That is to say, when it is used in
a struggle against a power that needs to stay in place, it can be
quite effective. But when a power is dematerialized, when it can
shift across the globe in miliseconds, or even days & weeks, how much
can it accomplish. Its something that can be seen rather readily when
you look at where unions are effective, at least here in the US.
Locate a strong trade union and odds are you will find an industry
that is locked into a limited location. It's no coincidence that
government workers are the most unionized of all workers in the US,
the governments power in it's entirety is tied to the land. Similarly
as I'm sure you are well aware, it's far easier (but not of course
easy) to unionize (and keep unionized) highly centralized industries,
namely large industrials like automakers and steel. The reason is
simple of course they have nowhere to go, the factories are to large
and too heavy to move. They can fight the union or attempt to pull in
scabs from outside the area, but if a union achieves real solidarity
within itself and it's community it has a good chance of achieve real
victories. In the pure economic terms the company managers like to
use, it's cheaper to negotiate with the union than to either fight it
or to relocate. Hence in an industry like garment manufacture, where
the equipment is literally small enough to be carried by one person,
the success of unions, and really the success of solidarity is
fleeting, the conditions don't improve the jobs just pick up and
leave for spaces with less solidarity.
None of this is new of course, but I put it out there really as a
reminder for just why I think it's important that the left look to
build create and discover new tactics for a distributed age. To
borrow some terminology from internet, we live in a time when
corporations can literally route around solidarity, and that requires
an answer in kind, no?
cheers,
Abe
On Sep 17, 2007, at 6:25 PM, Brian Holmes wrote:
> Abe Burmeister wrote:
> > What is Left?
> > What does a distributed
> > politics look like? For we are just beginning to create a tool
> set to really look at and understand the distributed networks that
> interweave the globe.
>
> Hello Abe,
>
> Thanks for this question. And happiness to Trebor and Jenny and
> their new baby!
>
> You are right, what the Left is cannot be answered by neuroscience.
>
> In history a key word stands out: solidarity. An Italian guy named
> Bobbio looked deeply into the question a decade or so ago. He came
> up with essentially that answer: the aspiration to equality, and
> the solidarity required to achieve it.
>
> Since 1968, tremendous changes in the structure and demands of
> capital have been interpreted in complex ways by many different
> kinds of people in the developed sectors of society who formerly
> would have identified themselves as Left, who at once benefited
> from various forms of liberation that happened in the 20th century,
> and suffered from many other things. At the same time, the failure
> of the classical Left national modernization programs to do
> anything about gaping class divides has pushed many people on to
> other solutions for the existential problem.
>
> Today the compass is broken. None of the old definitions is going
> to help, including the one that identified Left with a certain kind
> of vanguard. The capitalist elites have become so crazy about the
> future which they think they posses by birthright, that it's a
> actually a little scary. Still I don't feel conservative. A Left
> split between nostalgia for its past, and uncertainty whether the
> fact of being "distributed," or "digital," etc. will be simply lost
> in its own kaleidosope.
>
> Around us is tremendous suffering, injustice, assaults on every
> kind of freedom, a dangerous world. There is no organized force to
> confront it, even if many are trying. Pretending that spontaneity
> or the magic of technology would create what is needed is childish
> and only the privileged would have the time and emotional security
> to dream of it. The only answer I can see to your question is to
> contribute to the necessity of a new formulation of the Left, by
> weighing one's own acts and words and work in the light of what
> that could be. The historical Left arose out of long struggles in
> which people learned to be aware of their particular class position
> and work beyond it. We can do that today. Around the world and by
> by any media necessary.
>
> solidarity,
>
> Brian
>
>
>
> Abe Burmeister wrote:
>> What is Left?
>> The left perhaps has never been unified. Perhaps it has always
>> been a patchwork of interests: labor unions, marxists,
>> socialists, feminists, queers, green activists, anarchists,
>> progressives, billionaire followers of Karl Popper, Hong Kong
>> born pyramid schemers, a whole slew of post-hippie entrepreneurs,
>> and who knows what else all get mushed together under the same
>> banner, although a few might deny it themselves. Unity is perhaps
>> a luxury reserved for the right, although it of course has it's
>> own divides, particularly between those whose politics stem more
>> from a desire to gain and retain power and those whose politics
>> are more about a reluctance to embrace change.
>> Last week a study in Nature Neuroscience [ http://www.nature.com/
>> neuro/journal/vaop/ncurrent/abs/nn1979.html ] presented a very
>> 21st century interpretation of left vs. right. Those on the
>> political left apparently are more cognitively open to and aware
>> of change itself. The classic conservative vs. liberal divide has
>> been reconstructed as a neuro-politics. For those that identify
>> themselves as being on the left (and I suspect most of this list
>> does in at least some regard) it's a tantalizing study, for it
>> basically says that to be conservative is to be stupid.
>> Unfortunately though it is based entirely on a study of the
>> letters "M" and "W" being flashed on screen in a set up where
>> response time is measured. Hardly enough grounds to make large
>> scale conclusions about politics at large, or at least one would
>> hope. For one thing the left is far more conservative than many
>> of it's members would like to let on.
>> The right wing (or at least a small intellectual section of it)
>> after all has long been struggling to reclaim the word liberal,
>> while large sections of the left are increasingly mired in fits
>> of nostalgia. In the French Revolutionary era of course the left
>> rapidly moved rightward as new more radical members joined the
>> Legislative Assembly. Yet today if there is any movement at all
>> it is probably best described as a churning. The center left is
>> alternately busy dismantling the gains of the 20th century or
>> busy frantically trying to hold on to and defend what remains.
>> The most active and charged leftist movement of today is the
>> green movement, which has the scientific community behind it, and
>> increasingly the media and in some spaces popular politics behind
>> it as well. Yet at its roots environmentalism (or at least large
>> strains of it) is about conservation, that is to say conservatism
>> by another name.
>> It's not just in environmentalism where the left flirts with
>> conservatism. It's perhaps most visibly apparent in architecture
>> at least in America, the more liberal the town or neighborhood,
>> the more regressive the housing stock. Meanwhile it is
>> conservatives who are more likely to embrace genetically modified
>> food, nuclear power and the latest march to war. The liberal /
>> conservative divide as laid out in by neuroscience is all about
>> change yet it breaks down when applied across the actual politics
>> of people. There are other vectors for explaining and dividing
>> politics of course, power being the most glaring of them. But
>> when you start combining it all, power, money, change, faith,
>> race, land, freedom and whatever else people bring to the table,
>> the political landscape that emerges does not divide on left
>> versus right axis at all, nor on straight top to bottom hierarchy
>> either but instead fragments in many dimensions, and into the
>> multifold complexities that make up real politics the world over.
>> What is left then is of course... very complicated.
>> This is being posted to the "Institute for Distributed
>> Creativity" and the real question being asked is: What does a
>> distributed politics look like? For we are just beginning to
>> create a tool set to really look at and understand the
>> distributed networks that interweave the globe. From power laws
>> to protocols, through tracings and generations, and as it goes
>> almost without saying by utilizing the unprecedented ability to
>> transmit information across the globe, a whole new way of looking
>> at politics is now at least theoretically possible. There are
>> antecedents of course, Bruno Latour and company's Actor Network
>> Theory (ANT) in particular comes to mind. But while ANT and its
>> variations has resulted in some rather interesting and detailed
>> tracings/portraits of complex networks, it has done little to
>> incorporated the actual advances in network theory itself. By
>> understanding these dynamics and ever evolving interconnections is
>> it possible to move beyond the politics of left and right, the
>> politics of have and have not and towards an understanding of
>> distributed politics?
>> - Abe Burmeister
>> New York City, September 2007
>> ps. Big thanks to Trebor for inviting me to moderate this list, as
>> I non-academic I suspect it will be quite an intriguing and
>> hopefully exciting experience...
>> Abe Burmeister | abe at abstractdynamics.org | +1 917.806.8177
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>> Abstract Dynamics | www.abstractdynamics.org
>> Abe Burmeister Design | www.abeburmeister.com
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>
> --
>
>
> http://brianholmes.wordpress.com
> www.u-tangente.org
>
Abe Burmeister | abe at abstractdynamics.org | +1 917.806.8177
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Abstract Dynamics | www.abstractdynamics.org
Abe Burmeister Design | www.abeburmeister.com
A Nomad Economics | www.nomadeconomics.org
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