#1

The social opposition is defined by public action: the presence of collectivities in political meetings, individuals speaking at public meetings, activists marching in public squares, militant trade unionists confronting employers, poor people demanding sites for housing and public services from public authorities…

To address an active assembled public meeting, to formulate ideas, programs and propose programs and strategies through political action defines the role of the public intellectual. To sit at a desk in an office, in splendid isolation, sending out five manifestos per minute defines a “desktop militant”. It is a form pseudo-militancy that isolates the word from the deed. Desktop “militancy” is an act of verbal inaction, of inconsequential “activism”, a make-believe revolution of the mind. The exchange of internet communications becomes a political act when it engages in public social movements that challenge power. By necessity that involves risks for the public intellectual: of police assaults in public spaces and economic reprisals in the private sphere. The desktop “activists” risk nothing and accomplish little. The public intellectual links the private discontents of individuals to the social activism of the collectivity. The academic critic comes to a site of action, speaks and returns to their academic office. The public intellectual speaks and sustains a long-term political educational commitment with the social opposition in the public sphere via the internet and in face to face daily encounters.



The internet has become contested terrain, a new form of class struggle,engaging national liberation and pro-democracy movements. The major movements and leaders from the armed fighters in the mountains of Afghanistan to the pro-democracy activists in Egypt, to the student movements in Chile and including the poor peoples’ housing movement in Turkey, rely on the internet to inform the world of their struggles, programs, state repression and popular victories. The internet links peoples’ struggles across national boundaries – it is a key weapon in creating a new internationalism to counter capitalist globalization and imperial wars.

To paraphrase Lenin, we could argue that 21st century socialism can be summed up by the equation: “soviets plus internet = participatory socialism”.



The internet has played a vital role in publicizing and mobilizing “spontaneous protests” like the ‘indignados’ (the indignant protestors) mostly unaffiliated unemployed youth in Spain and the protestors involved in the US “Occupy Wall Street”. In other instances, for example, the mass general strikes in Italy, Portugal, Greece and elsewhere the organized trade union confederations played a central role and the internet had a secondary impact.

In highly repressive countries like Egypt, Tunisia and China, the internet played a major role in publicizing public action and organizing mass protests. However, the internet has not led to any successful revolutions – it can inform, provide a forum for debate, and mobilize, but it cannot provide leadership and organization to sustain political action let alone a strategy for taking state power. The illusion that some internet gurus foster, that ‘computerized’ action replaces the need for a disciplined, political party, has been demonstrated to be false: the internet can facilitate movement but only an organized social opposition can provide the tactical and strategic direction which can sustain the movement against state repression and toward successful struggles.

In other words, the internet is not an “end in itself” – the self-congratulatory posture of internet ideologues in heralding a new “revolutionary” information age overlooks the fact that the NATO powers, Israel and their allies and clients now use the internet to plant viruses to disrupt economies, sabotage defense programs and promote ethno-religious uprisings. Israel sent damaging viruses to hinder Iran’s peaceful nuclear program; the US, France and Turkey incited client social opposition in Libya and Syria. In a word, the internet has become the new terrain of class and anti-imperialist struggle. The internet is a means not an end in itself. The internet is part of a public sphere whose purpose and results are determined by the larger class structure in which it is embedded.



http://petras.lahaine.org/?p=1880

#2
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#3
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#4
#5

Crow posted:

#6
I always see people whine about anarchists like the ones in Oakland who smashed shit up but really the only substantial change I've seen from any activist in my lifetime is possibly the rise of a nickel on the collective tax the people have to pay for a burning police car or rise in insurance rates because of some smashed windows.

Everyone sees that things are going to collapse because of resource scarcity, environment, debt, wars, etc., so they're just hoping we can have just one more, oh please just one more, generation before everything implodes. In a tiny way the violent elements speed it up but I've read these protests have only cost $13 million. This country spends over $20 billion a year on air conditioning to keep the twoops all nice and frosty in between peasant massacres and they think they're going to break this bitch with a $13 million bill over the course of two whole months?

The electricity bill created by all the useless internet leftists combined have probably generated more cost to this country's infrastructure than these tent protests. Judging by the crying from the Pentagon about their precious budget when cuts start to bite in 2013 and how those cuts will compete with domestic spending it seems maybe through circumstance these protests are a placeholder for something better when things really start going downhill but for now they're like Joker in the Dark Knight. They just... do things.

And those things don't cause nearly as much damage as they should.
#7
agreed. i stole a sub-$1 pair of glasses off a street mannequin during a march on nov 17th and some guy chastised me for three blocks about it. i just put the glasses on anyway, anarchy b1tch.
#8
he pulled down his anonymizing bandana mask to tell me its looters like myself that discredit the movement
#9
Wow, you should be ashamed of yourself.
#10
lol. ordering me to feel shame. whats next in your obstacle course, smoking a bowl?
#11
in toronto some radicals went to a supermarket and loaded up their carts with $210 worth of food each and then went to the till and handed over fake IOUs that said the government had cut welfare by $210 a month so they couldn't buy the food they wanted. and like well that's fine although the main effect will be some poor sap working overtime to put all your jars of pesto back or whatever. but like most people around the world who do that sort of thing actually take the food.

so next time you should put a pair of sunglasses on the counter and say "i would buy these... but i can't.. because of capitalism" and then walk away while rage against the machine plays from speakers on your shoulders.
#12
How many symbolic acts does it take to make a revolution? We might just find out in the months to come!
#13
well yeah some twit whose high noon was accessorizing one (NOT BOTH) mannequins has by now been thru requisite paroxysms but its like, you want to believe private property is theft you gotta really believe that shit
#14
death to lawbreakers
#15
HEY TOM ITS DREW MAN LONG TIME NO TALK HOW U BEEN?
#16
who
#17
On my way to those protest by the way I jokingly asked my roommates if they wanted me to loot anything for them and they were Very surprised and disappointed that someone with such usually measured views on the subject of ows would consider reprehensible acts like that. And i just didnt know which way to turn, do I get offended by the implication that I would actually loot, or reveal in my true belief that the directed, measured, but fundamentally chaotic destruction of symbolic things is all that will scare the powerful? As you can see I chose a middle road. Kudos to me for my bravery, imo.
#18
i used to steal food from my school cafeteria all the time in university, so like, okay mr. marx, i think i know what i'm talking about when i call myself a revolutionary
#19
I did very much enjoy climbing up on things I wasnt supposed to be on like vans and library windows and bus stops, I hope that's my job after Capital vanishes like a puff of mummy fluff
#20
"after the revolution every intersection will be a dance floor" - a noted anarchist songwriter and junkie
#21
Well, no, we have dance floors for that - The reactionary capitalist bureaucrat failure shill forehence referred to as DAD
#22
fuck you steve you're not my REAL dad
#23

swampman posted:
On my way to those protest by the way I jokingly asked my roommates if they wanted me to loot anything for them and they were Very surprised and disappointed that someone with such usually measured views on the subject of ows would consider reprehensible acts like that. And i just didnt know which way to turn, do I get offended by the implication that I would actually loot, or reveal in my true belief that the directed, measured, but fundamentally chaotic destruction of symbolic things is all that will scare the powerful? As you can see I chose a middle road. Kudos to me for my bravery, imo.

time for new friends. Anarchy fatwa. Khrushchev ftw

#24
Angry Area Teen Hadn't Reached a Save Point When Revolution Happened
#25

Crow posted:
fatwa

omg my new kindle is an agent provocateur. Vigilance

#26
Swampman would you not loot because of fear of the repercussions or because of your personal convictions w/r/t the issue of mob-inspired-property-reappropriation?
#27

Crow posted:
Crow posted:
omg my new kindle is an agent provocateur. Vigilance


lmao what did you think it was supposed to be. now order some gorky or somethin. its so easy

#28

DRUXXX posted:
Swampman would you not loot because of fear of the repercussions or because of your personal convictions w/r/t the issue of mob-inspired-property-reappropriation?


well i'll go as far as the crowd wants to go, and i know there'll come a point when the crowd wants to smash up a chase bank, but that point hasnt come yet, so right now i dont loot or riot because the movement would expel me and i'd go to jail. if i go to jail i want to go with the movement behind me. im "afraid" of the repercussions in that landing in jail with OWS decrying my act of vandalism would keep me from doing all the other things i like to do irl. but personally i dont give a fuck about any of that property and it would look better to me if people used & abused the space however they chose to.

#29

swampman posted:
Crow posted:
Crow posted:
omg my new kindle is an agent provocateur. Vigilance

lmao what did you think it was supposed to be. now order some gorky or somethin. its so easy


I actually like Gorky so I'm gonna download a Pdt file. Smash the Christian crusaders

E:GODDAMMIT AMAZON

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#32

swampman posted:



Right, I figured that was the case. I just wanted to check but I guess as long as american capitalism exists in any form the looting will probably never be appropriate. The minute looting is no longer looting then the mission is accomplished and you don't have to loot.

Also just 2 clear things up I don't sit around at home on the internet and get high like some sort of drug abuser I smoke blunts with my friends sometimes when we're hanging out or making music! Jeez!