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Title: Anarchy Against Unity Author: Isa Marjan Date: March 2020 Language: en Topics: anti-fascism, fascism, leftism, post-left, the left Source: Retrieved from *Lewaniaan I*, pg. 44-48. lewaniaan.com
1. The left-wing of ideology obfuscates as much as its right-wing
counterpart.[1]
The left operates according to a calcified logic that veils the nature
of the social order around us. Regarding anti-fascism, this confusion
manifests within the context of a false dichotomy imagined between
fascism and democracy. The master plan is that anti-fascism must
function immediately as a means of restoring capitalism to its more
“human” state, demonstrable trajectories of fascism as an outgrowth of
liberalism be damned. Other instances of muddled theory include
reductive frameworks that posit class as the sole site of struggle, the
obsession with consciousness raising, and an unyielding faith in the
democratic principle.
2a. Leftist mystification is reflected concretely in its organizational
efforts.
In the real world, leftist organizations approach anti-fascism through
certain avenues. The theoretical defense of democracy for instance means
many leftists stand readily available to fight alongside the bourgeois
state. The poverty of the struggle when conceived in such ways has been
noted by those on the margins of both anarchist and Marxist groupings.
Such figures rightly saw this anti-fascism as simply being the politics
of the Popular Front, and all the failures associated with it: class
collaboration, betrayal, and defeat (often in this order).
At the same time, the emphasis on consciousness has leftists squander
valuable time, energies, and material resources attempting to convert
reactionaries to their “side.” Never is it asked if those from the
far-right have anything to offer in the first place, as converted
leftists or otherwise.
More generally, the naked opportunism of viewing struggles against
fascism as part of a battle for followers is worth considering as well.
Taken to its logical conclusions, one finds a practice that is as
amusing as it is repulsive. Next to anarchist efforts to arm Black
individuals against racist militias in the disaster zone of post-Katrina
Louisiana, members of the now-defunct International Socialist
Organization attempted to sell their newspapers. The anarchists forced
them to leave at gunpoint.
2b. Perhaps more crucially, sections of the left uphold a politics that
is functionally indistinguishable from fascism itself.
If fascism is understood as a specific historical phase of capitalist
development, then nothing, excluding a handful of European societies
during the early to mid-twentieth century, can be classified as such. If
fascism is, however, conceptualized as a broader category of setups
where a modern capitalist state attempts to establish control over a
disintegrating order, in the process creating a highly regimented
society, fostering a militant nationalism and cult of personality,
eliminating segments of the population, and destroying space for even a
farcical opposition, then certainly many leftist programs were fascist.
Any differences would have seemed largely academic to the millions of
proletarians worked to death, minorities dispossessed and subjected to
genocide, or queers brutalized in the gulags.
3. Appeals to expedience are discredited by the near-zero influence the
left wields as a political force.
Many who would like to disregard the divisions outlined above hold there
to be an urgent need for leftist contributions in the fight against
fascism. Such an appeal to realism ignores the very real fact that
politically and in terms of combat capabilities, the left forms an
utterly insignificant configuration today. Though scattered groups of
Marxist-Leninists, Trotskyists, and anarcho-syndicalists in the milieu
feature prominently in “radical spaces” and the academy, it remains that
in terms of boots on the ground, they are at best useless and at worst a
hindrance due to their active alienation of everyone who is not already
a committed believer.
Distant are the days when the unions and communist parties were at the
very least a disruptive force to be dealt with, mobilizing millions of
working class within their social terrain. Left unity is therefore less
an expression of pragmatism than it is an idealist effort at
resurrecting long-dead beasts.
4. An alliance with the entirety of the left opens a Pandora's box of
collaboration.
Given leftist theoretical shortcomings, record of repression, and
impotence as a force on the streets, it is always worth asking advocates
of left unity, “Where are these lines drawn?” Would it also be useful to
work with White nationalists against globalization, right-libertarians
against certain functions of the state, or Salafi-Jihadis against
Western policy in the Middle-East?
As offensive as the above suggestions may seem, such esoteric games make
perfect sense within the logic of dominant anti-fascist discourse.
Beyond the endless hair-splitting at conferences, beyond the posturing
at demonstrations, beyond platitudes one may hear in a more polite
reading group, it remains that leftist opposition to fascism is as
superficial as the above groups' positions—and all would like to see
anarchists done away with the moment these very specific battles are
won.
5. Programs based on unity can only exist alongside an utter lack of
anarchist imagination.
Focusing primarily on fascism as the enemy to be defeated at all costs
forms part of a maddeningly narrow worldview. Instead of analyzing the
struggle against fascism as only one step along the way to the world one
wishes to inhabit, many on the left consider fascism and anti-fascist
efforts to be the principal contradiction today.
The divide between these orientations cannot be overstated. Whereas the
former position approaches the social relations of capital and the state
(both in their fascist and democratic forms) as obstacles that must be
removed in the process of creating anarchy, the latter presents
grappling with these systems as the social struggle in its totality.
There exists no observable desire for a freer existence beyond the
experience of a miserable struggle. It is not difficult to see how such
a perspective can leave one open to allying with those diametrically
opposed to one's beliefs.
[1] In the years following actions carried out by North American
anti-fascists from 2015-2017, many of us involved with such work felt
the need to critically reflect upon our experiences and ponder new ways
forward. This required relating our work to previous struggles as well
as aiming to destroy our role as anti-fascist militants, thereby
discovering new ways of conceptualizing attack. This short piece was
written in that context, penned originally in the summer of 2019 after
discussions I had with like-minded individuals, before being
significantly revised and reproduced in the first issue of Lewaniaan.
Any comments, questions, or critique may be sent to
lewaniaan@protonmail.com