Brian Holmes on Mon, 2 Dec 2002 01:24:24 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> joxe's empire of disorder |
Keith's Hart's answer to Ken Wark is brilliant writing, because it takes all the terms of the arguments seriously enough, and historically enough, that a next step can then be envisaged. Keith recounts "the formation [in the 1860s-70s] of new industrial states by means of national revolutions from above, all in the name of democracy and science." I'd say the next step or the next scale of that kind of argument begins right here > In 1973, an increase in oil prices plunged the world >economy into a depression from which it has still not recovered. The 1973 depression was caused by the increased oil prices; but behind them was the larger issue of an inability of the capitalist states to go on extracting resources, under the conditions of their own choosing, from the formerly colonized countries. The increase in the raw materials bill coincided with a resurgence of class conflict in the core countries, with steep increases in the working hours lost to strikes (the highest levels were reached in Britain in the early 70s). "Neoliberalism" emerged, in Britain and the US, as what now appears an ultimately untenable solution to this double crisis, both of imperialism and of the capital-labor compromise. The "solution" was fiscal, geographic, and financial. Cut taxes on corporations; negotiate traties making it possible to produce wherever labor is cheapest, and to sell products wherever there is money to buy; and create a world financial market that could gather capital for the creation of productive plant and infrastructure. This was sold on the rhetorical level as being an extension of "liberal" thinking, i.e. free market plus democracy. What's "neo" about it is what really sold it: the impossibility for countries to compete if they don't join free-trade zones; the unrefusable offer of foreign investment capital once the free trade zone is installed. The "positive" effect was to reimpose an economic discipline both on the working class in the advanced countries (through fear of losing jobs to the south), and on the formerly colonized countries (through debt and dependency on investment). Call it globalization. I think that what we are seeing now is that the disciplinary mechanism of financially regulated globalization doesn't work. Subjugated economies collapse (Argentina); fractions of the world population revolt (terrorism); the US cannot maintain its lucrative position as the banker/coordinator of world industrial development (stock market crash). Under these conditions, the fragility of the nation-state as the political form of a compromise imposed by capital on populations becomes too great. The crisis of the 1970s returns. But the real solution being proposed is obvious, and has been under preparation all along. The nation state consolidated in the late nineteenth century will be abandoned for regional blocs: NAFTA/FTAA, the enlarged EU, and an enlarged ASEAN including and dominated by China (for which the treaties now exist). These blocs would allow direct administration of labor and markets over large and very unequally developed areas, without all the pseudo-liberal complexities of the financially governed "borderless world." And the blocs would also fight to exploit what they don't directly control (Mideast oil, anyone?). But to achieve that "solution" means abandoning some of the post-89 rhetoric of liberalism and democracy - and for that, you'd need serious reasons. If we're unlucky, it may be that in retrospect a world civil war whose beginning is marked by September 11 will be seen to have played the same kind of role in cementing the unequal class relations of the new regional blocs as the conflicts of the 1860s and 70s did in establishing the capitalist-dominated democracies of the industrialized nation-states. Had Engels lived in the globalizing 1990s he would never have "feared" that society was being coordinated faster at the top than at the bottom: because it was painfully obvious. Only since 1994 and above all since 1999 have people even begun to imagine that alternative forms of coordination from the bottom up might be possible on the regional-bloc and world scales. One of the things that has pushed me to collaborate on the mapping work I've been doing with Bureau d'Etudes (more on that sometime later) is the desire to contribute to the very possibility of conceiving those scales in some kind of detail. As for the step after that, what I see, darkly, are efforts to make uuniversal rights substantial by constructing and defending "commons" where free access does not equal destruction of resources: this, from natural resources like water to social ones like housing, energy, mobility and communication. I think the coming battle with capital will have to take place in these areas, and not only over the terms of waged labor. Now, to get back to Keith Hart, I don't know if liberalism in the manner of John Locke can really help in this process of imagining, then articulating an alternative coordination that can operate on the regional/world scales. But I'm willing to look at the arguments! I suppose it has something to do with legal and technical architectures allowing trade between freely associating individual producers, outside of the price-fixing markets that corporations create to their advantage under state capitalism. But haven't we had these arguments on nettime before ("digital artisans," "post-fordist labor," De Landa's borrowings from Braudel on small-scale markets)? And don't those kinds of alternative economies also depend on the existence of socialized commons? Sounds like multitudes to me. Not all the Left is against that kind of thinking. But whatever you want to call it, the tough and truly political question is how to institute some more egalitarian relations in this crazy world. Brian Holmes # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net