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Title: Rave New World?
Author: Anarchist Communist Federation
Date: 1996
Language: en
Topics: raves, drugs, United Kingdom, Organise!
Source: Retrieved on May 13, 2013 from https://web.archive.org/web/20130516074404/http://www.afed.org.uk/org/issue43/rav.html
Notes: Published in Organise! Issue 43 — Summer 1996.

Anarchist Communist Federation

Rave New World?

As the ecstasy debate continues with the recent sensationalised Daily

Mirror anti-Ecstasy campaign, and the ‘All about E’ Guardian discussion;

the general emphasis as always, and not surprisingly , has been on the

negative aspects of E — the consequences and the oft quoted statistics

of between 50 and 60 casualties from E since 1988; (incidentally drink

causes an estimated 28,000 fatalities in Britain per year [Melody Maker

8/6/96]). Even the so called progressive attitudes of the various drug

information agencies and experts concentrate on possible harm and side

effects. But what about the positives? Are there any? Can millions of

people each week be wrong? Does raving /Ecstasy have any place within

revolutionary politics? Is it anti-revolutionary? How has it affected

the social environment of Britain?

Social Environment

“...The turn of the decade and the pop clock begins to bring politics

into fashion as organised raves and warehouse parties are busted, banned

and trashed by cops throughout Britain. Just south of Leeds, the biggest

mass arrest ever seen in this country...during one large outdoor rave..

the authorities are putting the scare on pop, dance music, new

(different) drugs, people organising outside the established clubs.. the

threatening, sexist, macho atmosphere connected to night-clubs is

swamped by something new, exciting and even joyous...”

(Chumbawamba — Showbusiness!)

As Chumbawamba suggest, the advent of raving and the accompanying use of

Ecstasy has positively changed the social life of many; especially

women. Nicholas Saunders, in his second work about Ecstasy, Ecstasy and

The Dance Culture puts forward two possible reasons for this positive

transformation. The first, a purely biological point, proposes the idea

that as Ecstasy is a sexual suppressant, women are able to enjoy

themselves free from sexual advances and hassle from men,

“...Traditional alcohol-based events always had an undertone of trying

to score sexually through flirting and small talk...”[Saunders — Ecstasy

and The Dance Culture] The second, offers the idea that traditional

cultural values are being rejected, “...Although many young people in

the dance scene now drink and do not take ecstasy, the normal way to

behave is still without small talk or sexual aggression...”.

It is quite probable that both of these points are true; as a sexual

suppressant, especially for men, Ecstasy focuses the users attention on

other things- namely the music and dancing. The result, more often than

not, is a more relaxed and friendlier atmosphere; especially for women.

This atmosphere perpetrates the desire for more of the same, and this is

where the rejection of traditional cultural values could be seen to come

into play.

Breaking Down Barriers

Another case in point, illustrating this combination, is that of the

rave scene in northern Ireland. As the scene developed and became

popular around 1994, many young people (between the ages of 14 and 20),

both Protestants and Catholics, became involved. The difference between

this social scene and the pre-rave culture was that they became involved

together. Saunders explains further;

“...I heard rumours that the effect of young people taking Ecstasy at

raves in Northern Ireland was to break down sectarian barriers. In the

summer of 1994, just before the IRA ceasefire, I spent 3 days in

Northern Ireland... I interviewed teenage kids at a rave event in the

Catholic club with a home video camera...lots of them were keen to tell

me about the friendships they had made with members of the opposite sect

who, they assured me, they would never have met otherwise...”

Without wanting to suggest that years of political conflict could be

solved by dance music and E, Saunders’ Northern Ireland experience does

illustrate the existence of the two points mentioned which could account

for the change in the participants social behaviour. Aggression is gone,

leading to the breaking down of barriers hence the rejection of

traditional cultural values i.e. catholic only and Protestant only

clubs, “...We’ve never known anything but hatred... It’s always the

same: them over on one side, you on the other, except at raves...”.

Raving is not the only recreational activity where the participants have

experienced behaviour changes, due to the use of Ecstacy. Although also

involved in the dance/E scene, football supporters, from the 1991/92

season, showed a massive reduction in the amount of involvement they had

in incidences of football violence and associated arrests. (The

Independent 8/92 — a study.) Saunders cites a particular example of

Manchester United and Manchester City fans, notorious for their violent

clashes. He describes his experience of earlier Derby games (1989 &

1990) as being predictably violent and nothing out of the ordinary. Then

he relates the first Derby game in the 1991/92 season;

“...By this time something quite remarkable had happened. Many of the

hardcore lads from both United and City had spent most of the summer

dancing the weekends away to the sounds of house music at raves fuelled

by the drug Ecstasy. They had done this together! They had got into a

routine of meeting up at rave clubs and taking Ecstasy in groups

comprising both United and City lads...United’s fans moved off, there

were, as usual, several hundred of them. But from the vantage point of

the same bridge I had stood on two seasons earlier, I could hardly

believe that this group was largely made up of those same young men who

had looked like they were going to war. This time they looked more like

they were going to Glastonbury festival!...The match went off with

hardly any trouble and afterwards United and City’s lads once again

danced the night away... it could never have happened before E...”

Addiction

Some critics of ecstasy have argued that although E is non-addictive, in

terms of physical withdrawal symptoms, it is probable that it is

psychologically addictive. This view can be given some credence as

Saunders explains, “...Many European users do take Ecstasy every weekend

and are psychologically dependent...”. However, he also states that,

“...MDMA (Ecstasy) becomes less attractive with increased use...it’s

debatable whether it is the scene or the drug that they are addicted to

...”. In the short time that I have been involved in the scene (approx.

14 months), I have never come across a person who I have considered to

be addicted to Ecstasy. On the contrary, I have met many people who have

gone weeks, months and even years without taking E. I myself have gone

months at a time without taking, or feeling the need to take it.

Brave New World

Another criticism bandied about, regarding E, is its potentiality to

create a ‘Brave New World’; in which people accept their lot, and all

desire to fight for a better world is ‘drugged’ out of them. As every

remotely awake and sane person will realise, we already have plenty of

devices about which attempt to coerce us into such a position: cars,

dishwashers, videos, CD’s, houses, carpets, wallpaper, etc. the list is

endless. And lets not forget all about the perfectly legal drugs which

could be said to do a much better job of numbing the mind than E, such

as Benzodiazepines or anti-depressants such as Prozac.

Revolutionary?

So, can raving/Ecstasy unite enemies and bring peace where there is war?

Of course not. Violence and wars still exist and will always prevail,

until capitalism is eradicated. Raving/E, football, drinking, rock

climbing, horse racing, etc. are all temporary releases from the

mundanity of our existence under capitalism. None of these activities or

any other leisure pursuit is revolutionary or, for that matter,

anti-revolutionary. Ravers and the rave scene are as much targets for

exploitation within Capitalism as every other consumer, as Arch Stanton

points out,

“...The real threat of exploitation comes once again from the

proliferation of would-be shamans amongst the state-funded cohorts of

drug workers and their academic hangers-on. The former can barely

contain their excitement...”

[‘What Future For The Real Raver’-Arch Stanton — Here and Now no. 14.

1993].

So once the experience is over its back to the real world of wage

slavery, poverty and desperation, and either fighting to end these

afflictions of capitalism, (and hence capitalism itself) or not.

In conclusion then, to be under any illusion that E/rave culture has any

revolutionary power is to be living in a world of make believe. It is

one experience out of many (although one of the best experiences I have

ever had) which helps us to endure our existence as best we can. It will

not do away with football violence on a large scale, or work where the

Northern Ireland peace talks have not; but something which gives its

participants (especially women) a break from “...the threatening,

sexist, macho atmosphere connected to night clubs...”, and indeed most

other forms of ‘normalised’ social interaction, is, I believe, a

progression, and, as much of a liberation of the social environment as

is possible in a capitalist world.