šŸ’¾ Archived View for library.inu.red ā€ŗ file ā€ŗ dermot-sreenan-back-to-the-future.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 09:17:30. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

āž”ļø Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Back to the Future
Author: Dermot Sreenan
Date: 20 May 2011
Language: en
Topics: after the revolution, future, Irish Anarchist Review, fiction
Source: Retrieved on 22nd December 2021 from http://www.wsm.ie/c/imagining-future-post-revolutionary-world
Notes: Published in the Irish Anarchist Review Issue 3.

Dermot Sreenan

Back to the Future

Editorsā€™ Note:

Much of our time as revolutionaries is spent on the routine of

organising in the here and now ā€“ building a campaign, organising for a

demonstration, planning for a trade union meetingā€¦. Too often we donā€™t

manage to take time to step back from the here and now and imagine or

envisage what itā€™s all about. But without dreaming, without imagining a

future the daily humdrum can seem dispiriting.

To really build for a new society, we need to try to paint a picture of

what that society might look like. And we need to be able to suspend

reality and dream of the sort of future that might be out there. This

article is the first of what we hope will be a series which will attempt

to look into a post-revolutionary future and imagine what such a society

might look like.

Read and dreamā€¦.

---

As an anarchist, itā€™s not difficult for me to envision life after

revolution. The idea of a world which is free from authority,

exploitation, enslavement and brutality is the dynamo in my soul which

powers me through this life, and inspires me to attempt to build this

future.

Recently my mother, who is nearly 80, went into a psychiatric hospital

and again it reminded me of how our society is so poorly equipped to

deal with basic needs. The right to treatment when you are slowly

slipping into insanity is a basic need. Yet, the fact that she has

private health care meant that she was admitted after waiting one week,

instead of the standard two months, to gain entry to the hospital. The

other day a nurse asked me for ā‚¬150 to ensure that she could have a CT

(Cat) Scan. No money no scan. Due to this scan not being done, it led to

a delay in a treatment which might bring some relief to this elderly

woman who is tortured with paranoid delusions. So as I write this

article she sits in a closed psychiatric ward, rocking back and forth

believing terrible things are happening to her, to her family, to her

children, and her grandchildren.

ā€œFrom each according to his ability, to each according to his need

(or needs)ā€: Marx

ā€˜I think it is going to be difficult for me to explain how society works

now to someone who grew up or only knew society as it was in the early

21^(st) Centuryā€™. Thatā€™s what I said to my tutor when he assigned me

this essay. He said, ā€˜pick someone from your past, someone who was alive

back in the early part of this century and write to them about how life

is nowā€™. This made it easier for me, as I knew that my Great Grandmother

was around then. She was born in 2010.

One of the things that she said to my grandfather about that time was,

ā€œWe finally all came to the conclusion that people had needs, all over

the world, that were not being met by the system. Thatā€™s when it was

decided that it (the system) had to change. Thatā€™s what started this all

off.ā€ When she said this, there was a wave of changes in various nations

where people pushed for democracy where there was none. Then they got

this and realised it wasnā€™t fulfilling their needs so they pushed for

the next thing. People also realised, thanks to the continuing series of

ecological disasters like melt-downs from the old energy system called

nuclear and from the heavy cost of extraction of fossil fuels, that the

planet could not take much more of the system which was called

Capitalism then.

But this is all social history, and I havenā€™t decided to take Social

History and my great grandmother would probably be more interested in

how life is now, in the year 2085.

The essay is for Social Humanities, which is a course which we all sit

for the first 18 months when we come to University. As we leave school

at 17, no one is certain what to do, so you spend a year working with

your local district volunteer committee and then you can come to

University. It was decided by some ancient referendum that all people

should do this 18 month course prior to deciding what to do in college.

In the time we do SocHum we also can drop into lectures on any other

subject and see what we think of it.

Accommodation

I live in an apartment with 3 other friends near to the University.

Probably the most important thing is that I donā€™t have to pay money for

this, the apartment or the University. All citizens are given the option

of going to college. Some people choose to just go straight into jobs

for training in electronics, but they still sit the course on SocHum.

Before I moved into the apartment, I was living at home with my folks,

in another apartment on the North side of the city. I am linked into

that district from the point of view of voting in the local assemblies

every month on local issues. Obviously on the all island votes, I can

vote via the web.

I suppose this attitude towards property is something that has changed.

People donā€™t feel the need to own stuff as much as they used to. My

folks have lived in that district all their lives, and they put

themselves down for an apartment there, and I may well return there if I

donā€™t go abroad after college. Accommodation was one of those issues

that people had in the early part of this century. We, the local

district, or City build the houses for their citizens because they need

people to live and work in the city to make society function. But people

then live there, and they can move to other districts as their job or

life takes them. No one pays rent. For the most part, families have

strong connections to certain districts and tend to stay in those

districts.

In order to understand how society is now, you need to understand

something about the great changes which happened. First there were the

revolutions which changed where power resided. As my great grandmother

said ā€“ ā€œWhen power resides at the top, you find peopleā€™s needs not being

met at the bottom.ā€ So power in society was broken down at the time of

the revolutions.

Assemblies

Decisions that directly affect local communities started at that time to

be taken by groups of people from that community. It made sense. These

became more formalised over time, and are now called district

assemblies. From each of these there are elected recallable delegates

who go and make representations at a regional level. This leads to a

series of proposals which all people get to vote on regularly, when

proposals are agreed amongst the four regions on the island.

Thatā€™s how decisions are made, and we make use of our extensive

information network on the web to keep ourselves updated and informed on

what is taking place in our society.

This decision making system didnā€™t come about overnight. Many of the

changes happened after the revolution and in the time of the Great

Transformation. This was my grandfatherā€™s time. Thousands of jobs

disappeared once we built a system based on the needs of humanity, and

not on the need for profit or satisfying the markets.

But in the efforts to build a new society, everyone was able to make a

contribution. There is some video footage in the family digital achieve

of my great grandmother sitting on a committee to re-allocate workers

after the revolution. Some young Banker sits in front of a table

containing my great grandmother and two other young earnest men. She

growled at him ā€œIn a few years weā€™ll have done away with money ā€“ your

foolish ways of accumulation, tax avoidance, and making the rich richer

will not be needed. What way can you contribute to our new society?ā€

Calmly he responded ā€œBeing a Banker has taught me about the allocation

of scarce resources ā€” How to manage them and how to maximise the return

from them! I feel that I can make use of these skills and I wish to work

in the Transport area, comradeā€ They all used this old Russian word back

then. Anyway that banker went on to create the clean transport system

that we have today.

Unlocked Potential

The Great Transformation really came about because a huge amount of

potential was unlocked when society no longer had to make profits or

answer to the speculative wishes of market investors. The resources were

put into finding solutions to problems faced by all humanity. Useless

jobs were eliminated and this unleashed a huge wave of peopleā€™s hours

which they now put to better use. People were inspired to leave behind

the old system, to free themselves of the old ways, of doing tasks of

work in offices for which they felt no pleasure or could not see the

value in.

Many of those working in media and advertising went into setting up our

information network for informed debates, so that people can make good

decisions about where we are going to go from here. It also freed up the

total number of hours that people had to work. People went from being

accountants to being educators, from being van drivers, to landscape

gardeners. No one was unemployed; they were inspired because they saw

the possibility for real changed and grasped it.

Huge investments were made between all the post-revolution countries in

seeking a new form of alternative energy. After years of co-operation on

findings, scientists came up with a new way of generating electricity

which did not entail environmental damage. 50% of our energy needs are

met by this new way and the other 50% is made up of the advances we made

in wave and wind. [1]

Now, all transport is electric, flights are made via electronic planes,

the train and tram system is upgraded so that you can get from London to

Paris in less than an hour, and most of our travel in Europe is via this

high speed train network.

Scientific Advances

Advances have also been made in medicine, where weā€™ve found a cure for

cancer and a way of killing immune attacking viruses. The exchange of

information and the pooling of resources take place across all the

post-revolutionary societies. Australia benefited due to our work in

geological engineering meaning we were able to save cities from

desertification.

I almost forgot to mention it, but most disease, hunger, and early

mortality were all eliminated within 5 years of the revolution.

I think the big difference which would be hard for my great great

grandmother to understand is that almost everything is collectively

owned and managed for people. A citizensā€™ card gets you use of the

10,000 [2] electro bikes that are set in stands throughout the city. You

can also get use of an eco-electro car if you wish to travel out into

the countryside with your friends or family using this card. You can

walk into any hospital and be given a bed and the greatest medical care

with this card.

When society moved away from the ideas of profit and accumulation,

almost all crime was eliminated. Most of the crime had arisen out of

poverty, or addiction. Now, there are still people who are mad and ill

but they are treated and not punished and incarcerated like before.

There is only a need to ensure that theyā€™re not allowed to interrupt or

destroy the harmony that exists in our society. So we use the advances

in medicine and refine their treatment so that they can be fully

integrated back into society.

Justice

If someone commits a crime, or does something that damages society, or

infringes on individual liberty, then some of the privileges of

collective living are removed from them for a time. This is decided by

their fellow citizens. There is no such thing as Judges anymore. People

atone for their crimes and are forgiven and move on with their lives.

But there is precious little of anything like this anymore.

At the end of this college course in SocHums I go back and volunteer

onto the district volunteer committee, and that means that I spend that

time doing some of the work that no-one wants to do full time. It could

mean fixing a drain, it could mean refuse collection, it could mean

sweeping a road, or ensuring the water supply is working in the local

district allotment. On these crews, as one of the younger ones who are

there, I get to use some of the new fancy machinery for some of the

jobs.

Last time in my work on the DVC I actually got to drive the community

ambulance that picked up people and drove them down to the local day

care clinic. One of the old women that I met when doing that, Lucy,

reminded me of my great great grandmother. She said she remembered

meeting her once during the days of ā€˜The Great Transformation.ā€™

[1] In 2008 ā€“ Denmark had 27% of its energy supplied by Wind

[2] There are 3,000 bicycles in Lyon ā€“ a city with the same population

as Dublin, yet we have 452 bikes.