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Title: For a University Against Itself Author: Filler Collective Date: 2017 Language: en Topics: university, university of pittsburgh, student movement, student power, students, pittsburgh, pittsburgh autonomous student network, pittsburgh student solidarity coalition, universities, communisation, anarcho-communism, autonomy, autonomous marxism Source: https://fillerpgh.wordpress.com/2017/04/18/for-a-university-against-itself/
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Click here to view or print the imposed pdf of the zine.
Our material environment arranges life into a procession of neat little
rituals. All that is possible or desirable is administered according to
the routines built into Campus Life.
No one is quite sure why the lobby of Litchfield Towers is first and
foremost a place to glide through in passing, to dodge the solicitations
of student clubs, or to purchase coffee. Nor is there much reason to
question such fixtures of everyday life; these structures are simply
taken for granted as part of our unspoken consensus on reality.
And who really even gives a shit in the first place?
Well, try using a university space for even slightly different purposes
and youâll find out pretty quickly. After all, there are people whose
paychecks are predicated on having to give so many shits that they will
physically retaliate against any breach in routine. But uniforms are
easy targets, rhetorically speaking. The relations encoded in the
blueprints of the places they are paid to defend, on the other hand, are
what reproduce normalcy.
For an education that liberates.
For a classroom that no longer spectates.
For house parties where Pitt students,
workers, and faculty can throw down together.
For a campus culture that terrifies Pittâs board of trustees.
For a campus that celebrates life.
Back in the spring of 2015, a couple friends brought hot food, some
boxes of clothing, toiletries, books and zines into the lobby of
Litchfield Towers to give away for free. This was the same school year
that the University of Pittsburghâs administration decided to raise
tuition, organize a food bank for its students as a sort of half-assed
apology, and then jack up tuition a second time just a few short months
later. Needless to say, shit was getting rough for a lot of kids at
Pitt.
I thought using a student space to share stuff was a cool idea, so I
grabbed a few sweaters I could spare on my way out the door that
morning. But before I even made it to campus, our group chat started
blowing up.
My friends had been kicked out within half an hour of setting up. By the
time I got there, a Pitt cop was already chasing them out the door,
frantically squawking into his radio, flailing his free arm and
demanding they come back to face the consequences.
âMust fulfill duty to defend Law and Order,â said the robot in his head.
âFinally, some action!â thought the man behind the uniform.
Rather than deferring to age and experience, we can sharpen our
analytical skills through discussion groups, general assemblies oriented
towards communication as an end in itself, and more writing, theorizing,
and critique. These are the processes that enable a crew, a community,
or a distributed network of subversives to gain mutual understanding and
refine their analyses in order to speak precisely about what is
happening, what must be done, andâmost importantlyâhow to do it. It is
essential to find the time and space to do this with people you trust,
whose analysis you also trust, and ideally who come from a range of
backgrounds and experience.
â âAfter the Crest: Part IV,â Rolling Thunder #11
This is not a populist appeal. Nor is this a program to be enacted by
some specialized minority of student organizers, âsocial justiceâ
activists, or would-be insurgents. This issue of Filler is about
starting a conversation.
In Pittsburgh, weâve seen a small but exciting resurgence in everything
from reformist mass mobilizations to insurrectionary shenanigans. I have
no clue what might go down next semester, but some shit seems to happen
over and over again. There are patterns, if youâre looking for them;
Campus Life has a way of dissolving back into routine.
An effective analysis of our situation, and a healthy bit of
introspection and reflection on ourpersonal objectives, might offer a
vision for momentum. But no analysis is fundamentally correct, and
certainly no analysis is correct outside the context in which it is
conceived. A correct analysis is simply whatever interpretation of
social reality best informs our efforts to achieve a given objective.
Ideas and conflicts persist, but radical youth scenes, and therefore
coherent strategies, are as transient and short-lived as our attention
spans.
The conceptual frameworks proposed in this zine are meant to work in
tandem with the organizing that folks are already engaged in. The task
at hand is to figure out, for ourselves, how to conceptualize and
organize the University struggle: what entrances are we neglecting, and
where might we find points of departure from which to rekindle the
excitement we once felt? After all, the shit we pull off today will
determine both starting points and horizons for the next generation of
Pitt students.
This zine is also an attempt to contextualize Pittsburghâs nascent
student movement, to frame the coming unrest in a way that just might
make some careerist liberal think twice before mentioning their time as
club president on a future résumé.
Organizing has never meant affiliation with the same organization.
Organizing is acting in accordance with a common perception, at whatever
level that may be. Now, what is missing from the situation is not
âpeopleâs angerâ or economic shortage, itâs not the good will of
militants or the spread of critical consciousness, or even the
proliferation of anarchist gestures. What we lack is a shared perception
of the situation. Without this binding agent, gestures dissolve without
a trace into nothingness, lives have the texture of dreams, and
uprisings end up in schoolbooks.
â The Invisible Committee, To Our Friends
History under capital is a history of erasure, or else it would tell a
story far more personable than the presidents and cash crops so familiar
to students.[1]â
Today in Pittsburgh, we learn how to reproduce the logic of the men who
stamped their names on lecture halls, museums, and libraries. Over a
century ago, but only a few miles up the road in Homestead, 19-year-old
Andrew Henry Striegel died as a partisan for the living wage: a gunshot
to the neck, delivered courtesy of two men also named Andrew and Henry.
What is lost in high school textbooks is no mere anecdote, but an entire
way of relating, being, and inhabiting that sidesteps the mediation of
capital: the urge to live and to act directly in accordance with oneâs
understanding of the world.
But this is nothing new. History is written by the victors or whatever,
right? The histories told in the classroom are just the stories popular
culture prefers, an interlocking web of myths to explain the modern
world.
All of Americaâs fundamental mythsâproperty, borders, nations, liberty,
debt, democracyâwere born in acts of violence, are affirmed by violence,
and reality is now mediated through their logic. The mythology of the
University is no different.
The reemergence of an american student movement carries two discourses.
One is familiar; the other is older and emerges far less often. The
first is positioned within the march of progress, the student struggle
for peace and opportunity, heated debates in the âmarketplace of ideas.â
Itâs always returning to notions of civic duty and a generationâs
political awakening, to celebrations of American democracy with a push
from below. And itâs not just liberals or reformists that prefer this
discourse. Plenty of so-called radicals fester in nostalgia for the old
movement: the workerism of labor leaders, the naĂŻve conservationism of
the Greens, the rebranded demands for all-too-familiar concessions
(whose benefits hardly last a decade before the economy is again
restructured to render them meaningless), or the fatalistic certainty of
an impending âfinalâ crisis of capitalism. For these populist radicals,
the day will come when all of the single-issue campaigns finally merge
towards a swift and (relatively) peaceful transition into social
democracy. Progress and Democracy, the Bernie-Broâs wet dream.
The other discourse revolves around interpreting the social violence
that sustains Everything, seeking out opportunities for material
opposition and counterviolence. These kids orient themselves according
to the latest communiquĂ©s and spectacles of the global civil warâthe
call-and-response discourse of Social War. Youth struggling against the
american University inherit war stories from those few generations that
figured out what the word âpeaceâ really means, although their
historical moments have likely been interpreted beyond recognition.
While we can scrounge through the fractured bits of text, theory, and
counterculture that these kids left behind, these artifacts do little
more than hint at their movementsâ key points of departure. Still, the
fragments of their stories that somehow survived history are at least
enough to inspire. For each retelling, itâs a question of improvising
the plot gaps needed to link the acts. Good improv is hard, but not
impossible. Sometimes all it takes to work out a strategy for momentum
is a contagious tactic, as the 2009 student movement proved by occupying
campus buildings all across California. But more often than not,
would-be insurgents are left recycling tactics without a broader vision
for sustaining disruption or infrastructure.
Of course, no single narrative is capable of telling the whole story,
and fixating on a single discourse risks suppressing improvisation.
Behind every discursive wave of Social War, from Santiago to Athens, are
the privatized ruins of failed social democracies. But the key point
here is that, ever since the movement of the 1960s, itâs the youth who
are improvising theories of change: rejecting routine, escalating
populist campaigns, pushing movements to their limits, writing their own
mythologies, and even forfeiting their lives to fend off both State and
fascist reaction.
The spectacle is not a collection of images, but a social relation among
people, mediated by images.
â Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle
The administration, the University, the student government, the
Stateânone of these institutions wield power.
Power is a relation, a social structure, a logic. It is both the
physical and the psychological force of routine, both the pigsâ monopoly
on the legitimate use of violence and the racialized colonial alliances
that so often complement it. Power is fused within the organization of
space; it is the way in which the flow of things and people (in that
order) is enforced and reproduced through infrastructural patterns,
ritualizing social hierarchies to the point that they become material
conditions. âThose in powerâ are simply the ones enforcing and
rationalizing the arrangement, or perhaps slightly adjusting it to
better suit the flow of capital.
Routine is a mechanism whose parts can be infused, even conflated, with
oneâs identity; both the material organization of a space and its
accompanying roles and relations are dependent on popular, undisputed
participation and faith. We see this in the games of respectability and
professionalism played every day on campus. The dormitory resident
assistant is your age, but you will never be their peer. How could you
be? At any minute, they could receive an order to search your dorm,
summon armed men to detain you, get you thrown out of school.
Behind all power relations are a series of affirming images, reproduced
ad nauseum on billboards and social media, personalized in the
commodified identities sold on shelves and television shows, and
circulated by the institutions that assign and define roles and tasks.
From your dormâs overzealous RA, to the cops that he called on the
stoners down the hall, âthose in powerâ are really just fronting the
aesthetics of power. They would have us believe that theyown exclusive
rights over arranging and organizing the places we inhabit, or over the
deployment of violence to enforce those modes of relations. Look, they
have even the shiny badges to prove it!
The continued reproduction of the images, roles, and identities within a
given space is only stable so long as nothing interferes with the
rhythms of routine. Whether itâs a student refusing to put her cellphone
away in a San Antonio middle school, a young man suspected of
shoplifting cigarillos walking down a street in Ferguson, or a few dozen
Black youth hanging out at a public pool in a white suburbâany potential
disruption of the routine functioning of power relations within a space
threatens to destabilize the arrangement and function of that space.
Which is to say, disruption carries the potential to temporarily
rearrange and repurpose a space toward the production of subversive,
non-hierarchical power relations.
Since disruption cuts off the dominant relations at the point of
production, the social roles that have been granted âlegitimateâ uses of
force are employed as the first line of defense. The student questioning
her teacherâs authority is also questioning the relations encoded in her
school; the prospect of a suspected shoplifter making off with a few
dollars worth of merchandise warrants extra-judicial execution because
it challenges the sanctity of property; the presence of Black bodies in
a white space threatens a regime of segregation. Behind every identity
that categorizes and enforces ways of being, behind every arrangement of
space that directs and determines the relationships that comprise things
and people, is a latent violence. Disruption exposes this reality, but
it cannot experiment with new forms of life without the capacity for
self-defense, for counter-violence.
Exercising force is a tactical maneuver in the discourse of legitimacy.
The function and arrangement of a space (public school, convenience
store, white neighborhood) must encode a distribution of power that
considers the agents tasked with imposing it (cops, pigs, murderers) to
be legitimate. In the heart of the Empire, spectatorship translates as
passive compliance with the rules of the game, as deference to the
legitimacy of white supremacist and capitalist logic; in each of the
above examples, white police officers savagely attacked young Black
people with legal impunity. The aesthetic of power, then, is also the
aesthetic of legitimacy: legitimacy is white, he flashes a badge, he
wears a suit, he is a professional, he works within the parameters of
the law, he carries a megaphone, he is comfortable in his neon-yellow
marshalling vest, he is a man.
Genuine acts of resistance make no appeals to conventional legitimacy,
to the symbolic terrain of representation, to negotiation with those
fronting the aesthetics of power. Rather, genuine resistance leverages
force against the material structures that reproduce reality, in hopes
of opening new possibilities.
The academic life contains reinforcing counterparts to the way in which
extracurricular life is organized⊠academia includes a radical
separation of the student from the material of study. That which is
studies, the social reality, is âobjectifiedâ to sterility, dividing the
student from lifeâŠ
â Tom Hayden, The Port Huron Statement
The University is a knowledge factory, a think-tank expanding capital, a
colony in the service of Empire: a site of social control.
The University of Pittsburgh, and the surrounding Oakland neighborhood,
is a fucking police state. City cops, Pitt police, Carnegie-Mellon
police, Point Park police, Pennsylvania State police, and park rangers
all have jurisdiction here (and this doesnât include rent-a-cops like
university security). The administration doesnât even bother trying to
cover up the Universityâs colonial project; Pitt raises tuition every
single year, ensuring that each semester brings richer and whiter
students to Oakland. Meanwhile, its legion of pigs occupies the remnants
of the original Oakland community to stabilize the process. The colony
must grow in order to survive; everywhere, the public University is in
its death throes, self-cannibalizing in desperate hopes that the
commodification of knowledge, paired with the expansion of its consumer
base and labor force, might offset the crisis facing the traditional
reproduction of the working class.
The social organization of the University-Colony is a voluntary caste
system. The material reality of University infrastructure is sustained
by the constant reproduction of social roles: student, faculty,
employee, administration, campus police, etc. But those mythical
identities only exist in relation to the routines of the University. So
in order to ensure that social activity on campus is performed in
accordance with the proper University-prescribed identities, Pitt must
detach Campus Life from Pittsburgh lifeâthe University âcommunityâ must
exist outside of the society that constitutes it. And even that
âcommunityâ is itself further divided into separate social groups, from
the academics to the service workers, each premised on a series of
affirming images. Pitt hoodies and student ID cards insist the spectacle
of Campus Life is not simply a ritualized social performance, but a
natural order.
So long as social interaction is directed by the logistics of the
neoliberal Universityâso long as the workerâs labor is converted into
the administrationâs capital, or the studentâs research and debt is
transformed into the schoolâs endowments and marketable reputation, or
the untenured professorâs job insecurity is realized as another
boring-ass slideshow and multiple-choice examâall relationships will be
mediated by the caste system of Campus Life. So long as capitalists are
in control of the University, so long as the University is comprised of
capital, the University will oppress and exploit.
Campus Life is a frontline in the social war. Its pretensions of
colorblindness, gender equality, and academic liberalism are little more
than a smokescreen to cover up the fact that the University itself can
never be a neutral institution. A cursory glance at Pittâs track record
is all we need to draw lines in the sand. The normalization and
legitimization of misogynist andtransphobic platforms, the Pitt Policeâs
protection of sexist broâs and subsequent harassment of queer students,
the administrationâs utter inaction in response to campus rape
cultureâthis is not naive ignorance to the reality of conflict. This is
partisan activity.
To expand one example, Pitt will never seriously address campus rape
culture: not simply because acknowledging the routine violence of Campus
Life might detract from the schoolâs reputation and therefore its
income, but also because patriarchal violence is an integral part of the
functioning of the University-Colony. Without that constant violence,
and without the resistance to that violence being mediated by the
relations of Campus Life, the governance of gender cannot be enforced,
and patriarchy is left vulnerable to attack. Without that constant
violence, the capitalist University might lose out on a highly
profitable form of economic exploitation and social control. Some might
go so far as to interpret this violence as an unspoken
counter-insurgency strategy, where the brutal repression of half the
population is so normalized that any resistance, let alone offensive
militancy, is unthinkable.
The University is also a factory, and its owners control the means of
knowledge production.Neoliberalism insists on reifying education as a
product to be purchased, as a private commodity that can be divorced
from daily experience and public life. But, of course, Pitt is somehow
both public and private. And so some leftists desperately want to
believe that education is still a public good to be defended,
consequently ignoring the fact that all of the campus buildings (and
everything inside of them) are University propertyâŠ
If Pitt owns of the means of education, then our performance of
âstudentâ produces knowledge only as a marketable commodity. We donât
perform research to better understand our world. We donât go to class
for the sake of advancing, unpacking, and challenging our collective
knowledge. Pitt isnât searching for answers to the crises of this
civilization. Finals week doesnât mean shit. College is just work,
except that we fund our bosses and get paid in promises. Academic labor
is a glorified means of pushing the frontiers of specialization for the
sake of economic growth; everywhere, the University promises its city an
economic miracle that never materializes, swearing that the tech
students are ushering in their very own Silicon Valley. A financial
bubble to rationalize the campus bubble.
The true purpose of academic labor is obvious enough when weâre talking
about the students with âpracticalâ majors. Geology, engineering,
environmental sciences? Training for the fracking industry. Economics,
biology, business? UPMC is the new Carnegie Steel. Some cling to the
liberal arts college as if it were the last outpost for receiving an
authentic education purely in the pursuit of knowledge. Forbes Magazine
calls the liberal arts degree the âhottest ticketâ to the tech industry.
Each graduating class is the University-Factoryâs latest upgrade to its
most popular product: the designer labor force. Nearly a decade of state
funding cuts canât be balanced entirely through tuition hikes. Private
and corporate donors funded around 62% of Pittâs budget in the 2015-2016
fiscal year (30% came from tuition and other fees, a meager 7-8% from
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania). These donors, which include
corporations like Google and Chevron Oil, donât shell out cash from the
good of their hearts. They want returns on their investments, and Pitt
prioritizes its funding accordingly. The University of Pittsburghâs
state-of-the-art Chevron Science Center teaches us commercial sciences
that serve the interests of capital, not people.
Pittâs annual harvest of designer workers is primarily recruited by the
same companies that funded their specialized education. The more
innovative graduates join the writers of the algorithmsâbecoming
programmers, city planners, UPMC specialists, engineers. The
entrepreneurs among them eagerly await the opportunity to commodify what
little remains outside of the economy, perhaps producing trendy apps for
couch-surfing, socializing, or sex.
But those jobs are reserved for the cream of the crop; the
infrastructure that once provided the conditions needed to support
middle class life now lies rotting across the Rust Belt. Capital doesnât
know what to do with our generation, and so weâre sent to school for 30
years, locked away in prisons, or left to fight over menial jobs to keep
up with loan payments. The majority of us will graduate as indentured
servants. Our generation looks forward to settling the frontiers of
economic life, where we will labor in the newly colonized fields of the
service industry and the sharing economy. Bill Peduto eagerly prepares
East Liberty for the new residents Pitt promised him. Like their liberal
mayor, white hipster graduates mourn the postponement of the latest
Whole Foods and nod excitedly while watching Last Week Tonight with John
Oliver.
The ongoing evictions tearing across predominantly Black and working
class communities will never end so long as the University exists.
Radicals hardly obstruct this process. After all, Campus Life ensures
that malcontents only mimic the appearance of resistance. We end up
policing ourselves to build the legitimacy needed for the administration
to take us seriously, organizing as âstudent alliesâ to abstract
identity groups rather than fostering connections with individual
workers and faculty, substituting the aesthetics of our countercultures
for a concrete break from the images that reproduce Campus Life, working
long hours to make Pitt a progressive and democratic universityâŠ
Pitt not only accommodates the appearance of resistance, but depends on
it in order to stabilize the social groupings that make up the mythical
University âcommunity.â The University needs its student labor force to
produce the kind of critical feedback that can reenergize and
relegitimize its project of technical specialization, capital
accumulation, academic centralization, and colonization.
To fight for a progressive and democratic University is to fight for a
more brutal and pervasive exploitation, and better ways to disguise it.
Until our actions break free from the logic of legitimacy and consensus,
until our struggles are oriented outside of all University-prescribed
myths â until we openly organize against the University â our anger will
be deflected and rerouted into more palatable channels for Campus Life
to accommodate.
The interlocking series of myths, the University power structure and its
relations, the spectacle of Campus Life that obscures the power
structureâthese all constitute consensus reality. Consensus reality is
more than just the ways of relating that reproduce heteronormative
patriarchy, capitalism, white supremacy, state control, specieism, and
the myriad other hierarchies that constrain and destroy life. It is also
âthe range of possible thought and action within a system of power
relations⊠enforced not only through traditional institutions of
controlâsuch as mass media, religion, and socializationâbut also through
the innumerable subtle norms manifested in common sense, civil discourse
and day-to-day lifeâ (Terror Incognita11).
It doesnât matter what you think so long as you behave, so long as your
sense of the possible and your experience of desire does not break with
the popular consensus. âConsent discourse presumes that what we want is
knowable and can be articulated within the framework of our shared
realityâ (Terror Incognita 16).
Face it, our reality offers nothing to those seeking liberatory social
change. Pittâs consensus reality offers desires (potential courses of
action, wants, needs, ways of defining and creating value) that serve
only the interests of the University, of neoliberal capitalism. Nothing
new can be built, let alone conceptualized, so long as those in power
administer the frameworks in which we experience, express, and define
our desires. If we have any hope of connecting our own stories to the
growing web of insurgent realities waging social war against this
reality, consensus must fracture into open conflict.
It follows that Campus Life can only be subverted in a situation of
seductive and genuine participation, where the desire to act shatters
the passivity and mediation of consensus reality. Should a number of
folks at Pitt find a reason join conflictual spaces that negate Campus
Life, which is to ask should they conceive of reality as a collaborative
project, as participation in an ongoing war between autonomy and social
control, how many might never fully return to their normal routines?
Near-life experiences are addictive in that way. Suddenly, momentarily,
Campus Lifeâs professional titles like âundergraduate,â âprofessor,â or
âjanitorâ might be seen for what they truly are: barriers to forming
relationships with others on your own terms, prescriptive categories
constricting your capacity to define yourself, for yourself. Permits and
property laws might no longer meet the collective consensus requirements
needed for their reality to continue getting in the way of potential
good times. Grades, bills, and three-day study sessions at the library
might stop fucking with what were supposed to be the âbest years of your
life.â
Seriously, though. I sure as hell wasnât radicalized after hitting up
some student groupâs meeting. Iâm here because Iâm still chasing the
high from that first punk show in a squat house basement, that first
queer potluck, that first renegade warehouse party, that first
unpermitted protest, that first smashed Starbucks window.
For conflictual spaces to be truly dangerous, they must constitute a
point of participatory, horizontal connection between as many social
margins as possible. This requires mobilizing people beyond your social
caste within the University-Colony, subverting the spectacular relations
of Campus Life, and actively reorienting struggle in a way that violates
consensus reality. Put another way, an effective conflictuality
essentially breaks the spell, as a young militant told the cameras in
Seattle â99. The broader social war is already raging beneath the
fragile peace of consensus reality.
Last November, a student-led march ended with a brief occupation of the
Litchfield Towers dormitory lobby. We seized a space that exists
explicitly for our use, that is maintained through our tuition, and we
briefly repurposed that space to suit our needs. We left the lobby
peacefully, singing,
Donât walk in front of me I may not follow,
Donât walk behind me I may not leadâŠ
As people left, cops detained one kid from a crew that was trying to
prolong the occupation by setting up a sound system from behind
makeshift barricades of couches and tables. The march returned to the
lobby to ensure the studentâs safe release, and within seconds the
University police brutally attacked the few protestors that made it back
inside. The pigs even charged a student with felony trespassing on her
own fucking campus.
That night ended with radical questions circulating beyond our
countercultural bubble for the first time in recent memory: Do the Pitt
Police really have the right to beat the students theyâre supposed to
protect? Wait, donât we pay to use that building? Well shit, do the
police even have the right to dictate how students use our campus in the
first place?
The following Monday, the crisis of legitimacy reached new heights. A
broad coalition of campus organizations called for a last-minute rally
at the site of the previous weekâs police violence. That morning, the
administration sent out a text message and an email to every student
enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh, warning them about the
demonstration. On Towers patio that afternoon, nearly the entire Pitt
police force, many donning masks, manned a militarized zone that
separated students from the dormitories we pay to maintain. Inside the
lobby, the Pitt administration cowered behind their armed guards.
Outside, a small crowd of about 50 students, along with a few faculty
members and Pitt workers, refused the adminâs sheepish request for us to
send a single representative inside for a dialogue with the
administrators. Instead, we proposed they come out and join us in the
cold, where they would have no opportunity to control us by appointing
and manipulating a leader.
The crisis of legitimacy, no longer abstract, was reified in the guns
and batons that prevented students from entering the very building many
of us call home.
Disruptions, undertaken individually or collectively, can become a force
of negation. Disruptions are a threat on the assembly line, in the
streets, in the lecture hall; anywhere the logic of capital administers
the structure of space. But disruptions are not enough. As Franz Kafka
reminds us, âFrom a certain point onward, there is no longer any turning
back. That is the point that must be reached.â
An occupation is the realization of the threats we make through
disruption. To occupy is to strike, to remove a material place from
capitalist time and space, to derail alienated activity and ride its
inertia off the tracks, to rip open latent contradictions in the fabric
of consensus reality. When we occupy, we create a base from which to
launch new negations, but more importantly a subjectivity that is
actively experimenting with new forms of life.
Disruption, negation, experimentation, occupation â the suspension of
routine and rhythm, the conversion of a thousand plagiarized,
angst-ridden zines into something terrifying and new: the insurrectional
desire to experience unmediated forms of life here and now, to live
communism and spread anarchy.
In a university that also operates within (and maintains) consensus
reality, orienting action as a search for conditions that might solidify
and circulate anti-capitalist relationships is more than mere
prefiguration. It ensures the reproduction of alternative social ties,
spaces, ideas or desires as an offensive tactic. It is an attack on
isolation: an opportunity to share our experiences with one another, to
celebrate our differences, and to expose the real lines being drawn in
the social war. Elaborating insurrectionary potential requires more than
blockading the flow of relations conducive to capital; it is a process
of reorienting relationships and shared spaces towards the creation of
new and transient collective realities. In other words, we must
constantly recreate a âweâ that isnât a lie.
The crisis sparked by the brief occupation of the Litchfield Towers
lobby drew lines in the sand, and suddenly kids from both populist and
autonomous scenes found themselves sharing a declaration of âwe.â The
front page of the Pitt News read, âStudents, administration clash over
Thursday night protest.â
The front page of the Pitt News read, pick a side.
Itâs been two years since the fabric of Pittâs consensus reality really
started fraying. In April of 2015, 78 Pitt faculty signed a letter
protesting neoliberal-Playboy Chancellor Gallagherâs call for âMaking an
Impact Through Commercialization.â
Keeping knowledge free is in our own professional self-interest. The
open and free exchange of research and data is essential to advancing
scientific knowledge, and commodification threatens this fundamental
principle of scientific inquiryâŠ
In addition, universities are increasingly subject to pressure from
their corporate âpartnersâ to manipulate, suppress or simply avoid
research that counters the interests of those who fund itâŠ. We must be
prudent in devising strategies for the production and dissemination of
knowledge that maintain intellectual integrity, are inclusive rather
than exclusive, and that create opportunity for and empower all members
of our communities.
The university is one of the few places where our society might find
leadership in developing the ideas and models we need to re-orient
society in ways that can help to ensure that everyone today and in
future generations can share in the benefits that so many of us at Pitt
enjoy.
In 2017, our teachers are no longer on the defensive. The faculty and
graduate students areboth organizing with the United Steelworkers, with
many comrades among them. But in order for these efforts to force a
rupture that reveals the social war raging behind every new Starbucks
and tuition hike, radical agitation should also shift to the offensive.
The discourse ofProgress and Democracy is especially dangerous after the
election of Donald Trump. Radicals working within reformist groups need
to exploit the heightened polarization and emphasize an anti-fascist
framework if they want to prevent liberals and Trump-collaborators from
pacifying these campaigns. The radicals on the outside need to
familiarize themselves with the new social terrain, identify
opportunities for militant disruption, constantly reevaluate their ideas
of autonomy, and develop a broader strategy for circulating alternative
social ties and desires. If we canât generalize such a conceptual shift
soon, popular consensus will normalize not only the Trump regime, but
also the impending escalation of reactionary violence and State
repression.
On our end, student-faculty and student-worker solidarity efforts are
almost exclusively defensive, not to mention predicated on the
relationships between self-appointed representatives of abstract
identity groups. Fighting for specific reforms that could help our
friends survive in the short-term is no substitute for finding ways to
meet those needs ourselves: a gradual accumulation of concessions will
never outpace the march of neoliberalism and the resurgence of fascism,
let alone offset the rising cost of living. Conventional approaches like
âraising awarenessâ about issues like union neutrality, the far-right,
shitty wages and tuition hikes are crucial in base-building, and they
could potentially present a counter-narrative to the administrationâs
justifications and propaganda. But waiting around for the University to
fuck up on its own isnât going to start the insurrection.
âIf you want to force a change,â Milton Friedman advised his Chicago
Boys, âset off a crisis.â
The same people who practice âcritiqueâ are also the most susceptible to
cynicism. But if cynicism is simply the inverted form of enthusiasm,
then beneath every frustrated leftist academic is a latent radical.
â CommuniquĂ© from an Absent Future
There is a peculiar grasp of method in the student organizing scene: the
student group, the coalition, the teach-in, the petition, the
letter-drop, the buttons and felt squares, the op-eds, the one-on-ones,
the classic A-to-B march around Oakland, the discourse of accessibility
or of buzzwords (intersectionality, systemic, anti-oppression, safe(r)
space, self-love, revolutionary, collective liberation, community,
consensus). Yet despite all of the base-building and the
âmeeting-people-where-theyâre-at,â student groups at Pitt rarely break
out of the initial education/negotiation stage of a campaign.
Each yearâs new organizational leadership is drawn from that small base
of students who spent their time as underclassmen slowly building their
organizer cred: attending panel discussions and meetings, doing grunt
work like flyering or gathering signatures, and then (maybe) hitting the
streets during the occasional national mobilization. And each year the
new board members, steering committees, core collectives, presidents,
and âphilanthropy chairsâ mount their pylons of networking in-crowds and
NGO internships only to gape helplessly at the massive turnover of the
next semester.
For the student radicals working within reformist organizations,
campaign strategies are inherited from the upperclassmen that bought
them beer back when they first got involved. Itâschic to vaguely
identify with anti-fascist and feminist politics, but some organizers
cringe at âisms and are always sure to lecture newcomers on why itâs
alienating to reference political theory. The only acceptable discourse
is that of Progress and Democracy, which offers few tools for critiquing
reform campaigns, but plenty of buzzwords for drafting petitions.
For the students who donât try to disguise their analysis in the
language of bourgeois populism, an unrelenting emphasis on
intersectionality, autonomy, and horizontalism is the only authentic way
forwardâalthough nobodyâs quite sure what these things look like in
practice. This crowd is often lazily defined as the millennial
activists; youth who conflate âorganizingâ with a directionless activism
that is marred by ideological purity, adventurism, and (an admirably
merciless) militancy. Itâs a tired critique, but it definitely rings
true whenever our organizing efforts and direct actions are oriented
towards public visibility, rather than their emotional and material
impact on both the community we long to build and the reality we
despise. Besides, if the goal of an action is purely symbolic or
designed to attract media attention, it ends up being little more than
an impatient and unsuccessful populism (see: Democracy Spring).
Whatever way you spin it, student radicals in Pittsburgh are
experiencing a degree of strategic polarization comparable to the
tensions within highly mobilized campuses. One camp is acting out the
politics of a populist routine, the other performs a pseudo-radical
spectacle: one is base-building around modest demands without ever
actually escalating, the other rides shotgun to trending hashtags from
the latest revolt; one is checking off boxes on the never-ending list of
âsomethingsâ to accomplish before the final crisis of capitalism, the
other desperately reblogs every adventurous breach in the anxiety of the
everyday.
That being said, this section is not intended to define these tensions
within some false dichotomy of âactivistsâ versus âorganizers,â or
âautonomistsâ versus âpopulists.â Rather, I hope to challenge radicals
working within one or both of the two most prevalent discourses
(Progress and Democracy and Social War), to critically evaluate their
relationships to the organizational frameworks, identities and desires
produced by consensus reality. We wonât build momentum through the
reconciliation of abstract tendencies, but thereâs a chance things might
start rolling if frustration can be articulated as the need for
experimentation, or if the struggle to get out of bed nurtures a spirit
of negation.
Critique illuminates all the errors of a society that its managers have
overlooked. It is the perfect interlocking mechanism of stagnation,
stunting the growth of burgeoning, subjective revolt by offering one a
whole buffet of irresistible, irrelevant options for âchange.â A release
valve for intellectual dissonance, critique today resembles the
state-sponsored âstrikesâ of communist countries, where the desire for
resistance is satiated by a regimented diet of acceptable means of
conflict, supervised by its very enemies.
â Preoccupied: The Logic of Occupation
Itâs true that the populist campâs suspicion of ideology is a positive
development. The tragedy of the 1960s is often told with fingers drawn
at Maoist vanguards or lifestylist dropouts and escapist communes. But
at least in the â60s you could generally figure out what the fuck it was
that the people working with you really believed in. The problem today
is that just about every populist, reform-oriented student group is a
âBig Tentâ organization, except that instead of involving the
coordinated effort of multiple theoretical tendencies, thereâs just a
vague political spectrum that goes from âsorta liberalâ to âhella
radical.â With this in mind, it makes sense that the default discourse
for most student groups is that of Progress and Democracy.
Regardless of oneâs place in the spectrum, the ambiguous and moralistic
populism surfacing alongside the Progress and Democracy discourse is now
developing as an ideology.
The populist, much like their cultural mirror in the hipster, is quick
to shed or appropriate new political aesthetics, shrugging off any
attempt at classification with the flick of a hand-rolled cigarette. The
absence of any theoretical framework or clear ideological affinity
within student groups leads many organizers to act out populism as a
sort of cautious defeatism, often under the guise of being ârealisticâ
or âpatient.â Populism is encouraged by the Unions and NGOs that assign
demands to student front-groups, administer the organizing frameworks,
and then recruit and fund young radicals. This practice is typically
rationalized with talk of building power through a gradual procession of
concrete âwinsâ and creating accessible, entry-level political spaces.
Such arguments ignore the reality of the situation: most student
organizations are reproducing the logic of capital.
Not merely capitalist logic, like equating brand recognition with public
support, or choosing tactics based on the input of popular opinion
(read: market research), but the logic of capital. The organizational
leadership determines and enforces the character of the individual
organizersâ productivity, extracting surplus value from their activism
in the form of social capital, brand recognition, and financial
donations or grants. The organizersâ productivity itself is valued
according to event turnout, or by the sympathy that the student group
wins from the administration (which is to say, the organizersâ
efficiency in siphoning the inclinations of individuals into an agenda
the student group controls). But most of all, the logic of capital
emphasizes its own never-ending reproduction, of the definition of
âactivismâ as it exists within the confines of Pittâs consensus reality.
Reformist organizations are ultimately conflating quantifiable âwinsâ
and concessions with building movement momentum, conflating the range of
possible reforms granted by the discourse of Progress and Democracy with
the process of improving material conditions. Consequently, radicals
working within the populist camp face a much higher risk of being
co-opted; many end up adopting populism as an ideology, rather than
using it as an accessible discourse for organizing conflictual spaces
and materially supporting the people that inhabit them.
At Pitt, each and every student group is competing for our
participation. Students really donât have much free time, so of course
itâs easier to focus on the things that are immediately accessible.
Genuine concern for the working conditions of the people who create the
products we consume translates into pressuring the administration to
divest from this or that unethical company, or perhaps into individual
choices like shopping fair-trade. But are these viable solutions? Now
that the campus bookstore has a friendly face, the University can resume
profiting from its brand name and new progressive image, and the
âethicalâ companies can continue selling their particular brand of green
capitalism. Having a clean conscious is far too often a luxury that
comes with the kind of price tag few can afford, although taking out
loans is always an option. Good intentions are sabotaged by reality.
Time constraints force student radicals to narrow our rage into a single
issue, or else risk overextending ourselves and sacrificing our mental
health. After weâve chosen a focus, reformist groups shape and mold that
rage into a passionate-but-reasonable simmer in order to appeal to a
broader audience. Each single-issue organization must specialize its
labor force, lest its workers distract from the campaign narrative, or
(god forbid) start assuming tasks that are generally reserved for the
top-dog organizers, such as making PR decisions, organizing meetings and
actions, networking with other groups, and writing propaganda pieces.
Sound familiar? Thatâs because itâs the same logic of our neoliberal
education. Studentsâ skills are specialized during a point in our lives
when we should be exploring our interests in ways that arenât predicated
on utility or dictated by specialists. Iâm not trying to suggest thereâs
something inherently wrong with becoming skilled in a field, or
committed to winning a demand, and itâs not like students have spare
time to dedicate to every hobby we entertain. But just as students
cannot keep ignoring the ways in which our education is centralizing
knowledge production and training us for participation in the capitalist
economy, the radicals working for populist organizations cannot keep
ignoring the ways in which reformist campaigns are centralizing agency
and training organizers for careers in the non-profit industrial
complex. The liberal tendencies within student groups are dangerously
close to monopolizing dissent on campus, and the populist discourse of
Progress and Democracy is turning well-meaning radicals into another
specialized class of students telling other students what to say and how
to act.
Seriously, are there any radicals working in the populist camp that
havenât been lectured by some condescending liberal about cuss words and
respectability? Hasnât everyone heard an older, more âexperiencedâ
organizer exaggerate a sigh before vapidly explaining the difference
between essentialist abstractions?
disruptive/confrontational/alienating, and the merits of more
âstrategicâ tactics, such as symbolic protest or asking super
toughquestions;
those that are building the movement (or rather, their organization);
certain identity groupâs self-proclaimed âleadersâ (as if everyone
within that identity has the same interests and beliefs as those that
speak on their behalf), and the âbad alliesâ actively prioritizing
social and political affinity?
Letâs not even bring up the violence vs nonviolence dichotomyâŠ
The problems with the populist camp only amplify with scale. At the
individual level, populist frameworks for activism and organizing do
little to challenge the desires and social roles allowed by the
Universityâs consensus reality. At the organizational level, the student
group is structured by the relations of capital and thus depends on the
perpetual specialization, reproduction, and exploitation of labor-power.
The discourse of Progress and Democracyproduces a populism that is both
ideological and anti-theoretical, confining student groups to reformist
narratives whilst depriving the radicals within them of the ability to
collectively evaluate their efforts in relation to a broader vision for
revolutionary change. When viewed as a whole, itâs clear that there is a
widespread deference to the sorts of actions, decision-making processes,
people, and ideas that are perceived to be âlegitimateâ within the
campus Left; meaning that the majority of student-led
campaignsâsuccessful or notâdo little to disrupt the Spectacle of Campus
Life, cultivate actively (as opposed to passively) desiring individuals
and collectivities, or subvert the myths that uphold Pittâs consensus
reality. The heteropatriarchal / white-supremacist / neoliberal
Universityâs ongoing colonization of social and economic life remains
unchallenged at best, reenergized and relegitimized at worst.
We seek to push the university struggle to its limits. Though we
denounce the privatization of the university and its authoritarian
system of governance, we do not seek structural reforms. We demand not a
free university but a free society. A free university in the midst of a
capitalist society is like a reading room in a prison; it serves only as
a distraction from the misery of daily life. Instead we seek to channel
the anger of the dispossessed students and workers into a declaration of
war.
â CommuniquĂ© from an Absent Future
The emergence of an autonomous scene at Pitt is not the result of the
spontaneous self-organization of radicals. In this early stage, it is a
reaction-formation to the alienation of both Campus Life and the
Populist Left.
Under Campus Life, each layer of alienation is turned into a private war
with boredom, anxiety, and misery. The Pitt employeeâs creative power is
wasted on a 40-hour week of swiping IDs for students who will never
learn his name. The adjunct professor must compete with her colleagues
for a position, and even if she lands the job sheâs not sure if sheâll
be able to put food in her kidâs lunchbox. The student, perpetually
intoxicated (if not through substance use, then through the countless
other opiates sold to us), ironically satirizes and downplays the
desperation underpinning their every attempt to balance life
prioritiesâto finish class assignments, to keep in touch with distant
relatives and loved ones, to calculate just how many hours of their life
they must sell just to pay off their loans, to grapple with the scale of
just how fucked we all are, to feel intimacy beyond the games of social
capital and political manipulation. Everywhere, a quiet resignation to
routine.
To be politically engaged, to root for one brand of elite interests
against another, is no less a resignation to routine than going to work
in the morning. To organize for University reform, to beg for the
privilege to play faithful advisor to the administrationâs strategic
plan, is more of an endorsement of neoliberalism than an indictment.
Last yearâs âstrategic forumsâ once again channeled student anger into
mediation, representation, and routine. The potential for a multi-front
confrontation with the administration was outright squandered by a few
prominent organizers, who leaped at the opportunity to represent the
student body as student-advisors to Pittâs strategic plan. In response
to the populist leftâs blatant complicity with these self-appointed
student leaders and the administrationâs recuperative efforts and
propaganda, a few small crews of students broke away from their student
organizations. Some of us opted to call for an alternative, autonomous
âstudent action forum.â We thought the forum would create a space for
students to discuss and self-organize around the issues closest to them.
The forum was a flop (someone please remind me to at least hit up like a
facilitation training or something before I ever try to call another
general assembly), but it was also a turning point.
Autonomy attracts us because weâve seen its potential to transform oneâs
sense of individual and collective power, to seduce spectators into
active participation: its potential to inspire others to search for
liberatory experiences and projects on their own terms. But autonomy is
also a process. It requires intentionally theorizing and experimenting
with our conceptions of autonomy in order to determine what practices
will result in the active provocation, solicitation, and circulation of
contradictory and complementary insurgent desires. Without continual
experimentation and negation, without an intention that goes beyond
âfuck that liberal bullshit,â we become passive consumers of the
aesthetics and practices associated with autonomy, all the while
reproducing the same relationships and arrangements of space that
centralize power, agency, and legitimacy. In other words, we can cling
to âspontaneity,â âhorizontalism,â or âself-organizationâ (abstractions
likely passed down from Occupy) all we want, but these words are
practically meaningless until we start to facilitate spaces that provide
the skills, platforms, tools, dialogue, material and emotional support
required to inspire and nurture spontaneity, horizontalism,
self-organization, autonomy.
The radicalism in our autonomous scene is reactionary primarily because
it fails to break from the frameworks we are reacting to. Just because
Pitt doesnât recognize our crews as legitimate student organizations and
none of us have âclub presidentsâ doesnât mean anythingâs changed. The
reactionary autonomist stagnates with their radicalism as an aesthetic;
they parade their consensus processes, rowdy actions, militant rhetoric,
nominally non-hierarchical meetings, and discourse pissing-contests in
order to disguise the fact that they are reproducing the same organizing
styles found in the populist camp, albeit with a sexier attitude.
If you think Iâm projecting, thatâs because I am.
Four years ago, my first real week spent âorganizingâ on a campaign
ended with a series of banner drops that were timed to coincide with an
SEIU strike. Shortly after, the more âexperiencedâ student organizers
suddenly stopped working with me. I found myself on a sort of unspoken
blacklist after word got out that I allegedly dragged barricades into
the street and vandalized University property with labor slogans. It was
my first real mobilization; I honestly had no fucking clue what the word
âescalationâ implied, or how my actions might have made the campaign
look bad. All I knew was that I wanted Something to happen, and that my
decision to act on that desire managed to piss a good number of people
off.
I still tried to be involved; I kept turning up at meetings long after I
had stopped participating in any meaningful way. The older organizers
gave me the cold shoulder, and I would leave early to cry alone in my
dorm, or to smoke weed with you under the bridge in Schenley.
I donât know where Iâd be now if we hadnât found each other. Like me,
you were alone, stoned, and binge-watching that super dope first season
of Vice on HBO. We rolled into every Free the Planet meeting high off
our asses, even though we felt pretty unwelcome showing up there
anymore. We spent most nights together, smoking by the Shrine under the
bridge, throwing illegal bonfire parties on the lake by the train
tracks, hitting every basement show at Bates Hardcore Gym, tripping face
â sometimes twice a week â on Flagstaff Hill, passing around that grimey
notebook I eventually scanned and printed as the second issue of Filler.
I still remember holding your frostbitten hands as we climbed down from
the roof of Towers Lobby; fifteen minutes spent fumbling with frozen
wire, trying to drop our first banner together in the middle of a
blizzard.
Months after the coalition splintered back into its original
organizations, we realized we were still admins of the Facebook page. We
hijacked that shit and told ourselves that weâd use it to organize
differently, that weâd encourage militant action instead of shaming it,
that weâd push the student movement toward the attack. We called for the
first explicitly anti-capitalist march on Pittâs campus since Occupy
imploded, and all 40 of us marched for two blocks down the sidewalkâŠ
Some older Pittsburgh radicals took notice, but despite their help we
still had no idea what the fuck we were doing. We stagnated as those
angry kids yelling on street corners, we fractured after our âformalâ
accountability processes proved worthless. We dedicated the weight of
our emotional energy to the mere maintenance of our tiny organization
before burning out one by one⊠by the end of the semester, we all
retreated back into our respective countercultures.
We donât talk much anymore, but itâs still comforting to read through
the goofy shit you wrote in our notebook,
People come and go, itâs never going to change.
But those times were still fun, and probably really strange.
By the end of 2014, I was slowly plugging back into the populist scene,
albeit as part of a different student group. This time, I took their
organizing trainings to heart, convinced that our failure to organize
autonomously stemmed from a lack of organizational formality. I began
rehearsing my interactions with people to the point that they were
script-like, my voice echoing the cold, indifferent speech I picked up
while attending countless meetings. I complied with every request to
bottomline bullshit tasks; I found myself competing with the other
underclassmen to get the most petition signatures in hopes that the
older organizers might take my politics seriously.
It wasnât all that long before a new âweâ broke away once more to
organize autonomous action, yet by that point I had already turned into
a âseriousâ âorganizer.â We threw benefit parties, but I stressed over
attendance numbers and the zine table instead of enjoying myself and
catching up with friends. We called for general assemblies hoping to
inspire intersectionality, or to present alternatives to the
administrationâs âstrategic forums,â but really I just wanted everyone
else to adopt my proposals and integrate their work into my own vision
for a student union. We organized Share Fairs and Really Really Free
Markets to build community and practice mutual aid, but I secretly
valued people for the material items they contributed instead of the
energy they brought to the space. We wiggled our hands in all the
gestures of consensus process, but it was always the same people
proposing ideas and facilitating the meetings. I adopted all the
aesthetics of radicalism only so I could pretend that I was creating
space instead of taking it.
Still, this new scene had real momentum, and it was only a matter of
months before some of us started conspiring to escalate a populist
march. The escalation was part of our plan for a series of autonomous
interventions in the 2016 United Students Against Sweatshops
convergence, which the Pitt chapter was putting in hella work to host
that year. We thought the convergence presented an opportunity to push a
national organization, with chapters on dozens of campuses, in a more
radical direction⊠but also, like, personal politics. After the populist
radicals found out about our plan, they invited me to the organizing
meetings for the big march. Finally! I had been given a seat at the
table. People were taking our mess of an informal coalition seriously! I
didnât even mind when I noticed that the list of participating
organizations printed alongside the meeting minutes concluded with
âooglesâ where it should have read âPittsburgh Student Solidarity
Coalition.â I mean, shit, that was pretty funny.
But then the professional organizers started telling me what they needed
âmyâ âorganizationâ to do, and somebody gave me a clipboard. Which was,
of course, the last thing my ego needed. When the big day came, I
indulged my newfound legitimacy and took my place alongside the other
march marshals. Clipboard in hand, I micromanaged each step my friends
took, hoping to control every beat of the march so I could pull off a
pointless escalation that was, in all honesty, motivated more by
personal politics than a strategic vision. When the time came for the
autonomous crews to escalate, no one followed the plan, because by then
it had become myplan. I was too busy sulking to notice the circle of
young radicals forming around the Food Not Bombs shopping cart. I didnât
recognize it at the time, but free food and a black flag did more to
spark an autonomous scene than a strictly choreographed extra fifteen
minutes in the streetever could have. Most of those kids are now close
friends and comrades.
It is not a question of choosing between these two sides, nor of
synthesizing them, but rather of displacing the priority of this
opposition. The real dialectic is between negation and experimentation:
acts of resistance and refusal which also enable an exploration of new
social relations, new uses of space and time.
â âWe are the Crisisâ in After the Fall: CommuniquĂ©s from Occupied
California
The autonomous scene has grown exponentially since the USAS convergence.
Thereâs no sense in constructing some fancy framework for analyzing our
interpersonal relationships, as my use of the phrase âautonomous sceneâ
is simply shorthand for a series of overlapping networks (of
organizations, informal crews, circles of friends, accomplices,
codefendants, bitter enemies) that are, to varying degrees, coalescing
outside of the mediation of University-affiliated student groups or
political parties. The âautonomous sceneâ is an intentionally vague
phrase, and itâs far bigger than any of the various acronyms we use to
form social clusters within it.
Our anxiety, boredom, and misery inhabit a critical historical moment.
Our relationships are indisputably militant, as every time we manage to
really, truly connect with someone, itâs because our realities merged
along some plane of revolt against isolation, mediation, domination,
control. Even the administration canât ignore that âweâ are
experimenting with the communization of our segregated realitiesâthat
âweâ are learning how to, if only briefly, create autonomous spaces in
which there really is a âwe.â And we want more.
If defining the scene in concrete terms risks suppressing its potential
to nurture relationships that donât fit neatly within Campus Life, then
how can it be critiqued? Without a clear picture of what counts as being
a part of âtheâ autonomous scene, without formal specialization or
hierarchy, how can we generalize a shared perception of our situation?
What sort of frameworks for decentralized coordination can extend beyond
our immediate social circles, when we struggle to do so even on a scale
as small as Pittsburghâs radical youth scene?
The social war is already all around us. Itâs not a question of merging
the various social and political circles into some unified campaign, but
of facilitating the realization of mutual desire.
Find each other, because the Something weâre waiting for is never going
to happen unless we become Something. If each of us acts on our own
ideas and desires, a shared perception of our situation is temporarily
understood every time we act collectivelyâevery time we create spaces,
projects, and experiences together. Which is really just a roundabout
way of saying,what you do or donât do makes all the difference.
In California, the kids spray-paint We are the Crisis on the walls of
occupied lecture halls. In Greece, they write We are an Image from the
Future.
What could âweâ be?
âWe arenât revolutionaries, but we are the revolution.
And sometimes I think that the whole movement is just me and youâŠâ
There is at least one practice worth prioritizing and refining. Healthy
doses of introspection, taken alone or with the guidance of trusted
comrades, might be a step in the right direction. Some questions I find
myself habitually returning to:
steps, and how can I take them while staying true to my beliefs?
radicalizing new people? Or can it be better accomplished with a few
close friends who are already on the same page?
together, and to unpack each otherâs shit?
for integrating and welcoming new people? Should there be a separation
between public events and collective meetings? What sort of decisions
are made in these spaces, and how are they made? Is everyone in the
crew/organization participating in planning the next public
meeting/event, and if not, whatâs the difference between being a member
and part of the general public? Are there informal hierarchies that
negatively impact the participation of others? Yeah, no shit there are,
so what are you going to do about them? Whatâs the most strategic way to
address them?
my crew and I intervene in campaigns that seem to be stagnating? Are my
organizing efforts, actions, and events actually getting me closer to
any of my objectives?
participation in an organization/campaign over its capacity to
emotionally and materially support the people that comprise it?
consensus on whether itâs actually necessary to form or participate in a
formal organization? How is everyone doing on, like, an emotional level?
Maybe itâs time to just chill and enjoy each otherâs company for a bit?
create space for healing?
of capitalist conceptions of productivity?
[1] â So, what is capital? Fredy Perlman defined capital as, ââŠat once a
name for a social relation between workers and capitalists, for the
instruments of production owned by a capitalist, and for the
money-equivalent of his instruments and âintangibles,â âŠâ Capital is a
social relation that necessitates the use of things in a specific way,
and it is those things in so far as they are directly reproducing this
social relation in the process of value accumulation. As Marx emphasized
in the Grundrisse, capital must be understood as a process. Marx defined
capital variously as âa social relation of production,â âvalue in
process,â âa Moloch,â âaccumulated labor,â and most poetically as âdead
labour which, vampire like, lives by sucking living labour, and lives
the more, the more labour it sucks.â â Jan D. Matthews, An Introduction
to the Situationists