đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș anonymous-safe-as-death.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 07:38:20. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Safe As Death Author: Anonymous Language: en Topics: freedom, repression, security Source: Retrieved on October 29, 2009 from http://machetea.blogspot.com/2009/10/safe-as-death.html Notes: From Machete #1
This article is translated to English from its original Italian, this
article appeared in Machete #1.
âThey who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.â â Benjamin Franklin
Itâs a problem that gets talked about a lot, but whose diagnosis is
terse. On the right and on the left, the verdict is the same: we live in
an âunsafe climateâ.
Everyday the news showers us with gallons of blood gathered at the
scenes of ambushes, rapes, murders. Bloody events described and filmed
with a maniacal wealth of details, making horrible shivers run up our
spines that are already weakened by daily genuflections.
Watching the misfortunes of others is no longer a consolation. We arenât
able to heave a sigh of relief at having escaped it. It is a nightmare,
because these misfortunes seem to press against the screens, so as to
hurl themselves onto our living room carpets. And if one day we become
the protagonists of these news broadcasts that now drip only death? Prey
to terror, we begin to triple lock the door, not talking to the neighbor
or going out at night any more. Panic spreads as the following certainty
is generalized: lack of safety is the scourge of our times. If it is
solved, the gates of paradise will open for us.
To be blunt, there is some perplexity over the real increase in
violence. Facing explicit demands, the âexpertsâ themselves are forced
to recognize that there is no substantial difference in comparison to
the past: the leap in statistics is the fruit of different bookkeeping
criteria. But also of visibility. It works like this. The political
class puts the question of safety at the center of all its
interventions. Journalists, accomodating to their masters as usual,
repeat the concerns of the politicians and enhance them, illustrating
them with news items. There is no lack of news to report. If the stories
arenât relegated to a paragraph on the fifteenth page, they will expand
out of proportion until they become exemplary. All that remains to the
politicians is to comment about them and the play is made: âDo you see
that our concerns were more than justified, they were indisputable?
There truly is a safety problem!â
Ultimately, all this ado would not have much importance if it didnât aim
to spread terror among the people, pushing them to demand drastic
measures from their representatives. Against whom? Why, against those
petty criminals who become giants of crime as soon as they end up under
the spotlight.
It goes wiothout saying that petty criminals are not exactly at the top
of the list of problems that disturb our lives. Quite different problems
place our survival and that of our times in danger. The planet is
threatened by ecological imbalance, cuts and restructuring loom over
workplaces, our houses are at the mercy of theft by the banks, our
health is threatened by the poisons we eat and breathe. Our entire
existence is threatened by immanent danger (no to speak of current and
future wars with their unforeseeable collateral effects), whose
consequences are much worse than the theft of a wallet on the bus. The
inventory of possible misfortunes is so vast, our days pass so much
under the sign of precariousness and misery, that it is completely crazy
to think that petty criminals are the cause of the social malaise.
Well, then, why the hell is it repeated until weâre dizzy that
aggression waits in ambush just around the corner? Simple. Because the
state can dress up as the Great Protector around which to rally and the
Righter of Wrongs to whom to turn. Muggers, purse-snatchers, drug
dealers, rapists or murderers â random or hardened, real or presumed,
native or foreign â not being the ones responsible for environmental
devastations, job losses, financial devastation, food adulteration,
workplace accidents, bombings of civilians, famines that afflict the
world or any other great social problem, is it necessary to reveal those
who are most directly responsible for all these occurrences? The
punishment of chicken thieves in the public square serves the state and
its hired killers by diverting the general attention from the private
foraging of the sharks. One worry drives out another â this is why the
institutions spread a panic to be attributed to someone else, feeding it
continuously and increasing it in every way.
As a result, the hang-up about safety provides another advantage to the
political class, justifying its recourse to increasingly tougher and
more severe measures demanded by the population itself, to obtain, first
of all, âthe certainty of punishmentâ. (For whom? but that is another
matter.) Be that as it may, a population terrorized by the possibility
of having their pocket picked applauds the increase in the forces of
order. A population intimidated by crimes committed by immigrants
welcomes the CPTs (Centers of Temporary Residence) with relief. A
population frightened by the possibility of finding that someone has
broken into their house is favorable to the spreading network of
surveillance, and so on. But the provisions enacted in the name of the
struggle against a few petty criminals will come in handy especially
against the many potential rebels. More than petty criminality, the real
danger to repress is social conflict. The political exploitation of the
feeling of being unsafe is a formidable force for repressive laws. the
climate of terror in which we live is not the natural outcome of hateful
social conditions. It has been deliberately created to slip the
satisfied city dweller into an unprecedented police regime. The state
identifies the problem of public safety with âmicrocriminalityâ with the
aim of imposing its solution: Public Safety, i.e., the cops.
All safety measures are authentic attacks on individual freedom and
couldnât be taken so lightly if there hadnât been a genuine thought
police operation aimed at imposing the idea that safety is the guarantee
of freedom rather than its preventive negation. So the disease and the
cure have been created, reconciling safety and freedom in a firm
ideological alliance. An absurd alliance, impossible between two
contradictory notions, which, like water and fire, cannot remain in
contact without dissolving each other.
The construction sites of safety are built on the tombs of freedom.
Safety has the objective of distancing all danger, while the practice of
freedom, on the contrary, entails a challenge to every danger. Itâs no
accident that the expression âmaking safeâ usually means the act of
putting something under lock and key. The typical example is that of the
wild animal snatched from the jungle to be locked in a cage. In this
way, the zoo administrators assure us, the animal is rescued from the
dangers of the jungle and made safe. Behind bars it will not incur the
risk of being shot by hunters or torn apart by savage beasts. Well, this
animal is certainly safe, but at a heavy price â its freedom. It is
well-known: when one avoids danger, one doesnât live life, one barely
preserves it; because only by going to meet danger does one live life in
its fullness.
Thus, safety and freedom are utterly incompatible.
âThe more control thare is the safer we are,â say the knuckleheaded
people. And then add: âVideo surveillance cameras are useful because
nothing can happen under their eyes.â Appalling expressions, symptoms of
unconditional love for big brother. But who would want to live a life
subject to control where nothing happens? Only at the cost of completely
clouding the mind could one happily enter into the emotional desert
through which our era trudges. Freedom is self-determination, choice of
any possibility, risk, a challenge to the unknown that cannot be
pampered under a glass bell.
But in our times the first quality required of an âhonestâ person is
precisely that he conduct his life in transparency. A transparent person
has nothing to hide, nothing to silence in his public or private life,
thus, nothing to fear from others watching him. In the name of
transparency, every intrusion is justified, any will to keep a secret
indicates guilt. It is curious how the private life of individuals,
which was once surrounded by respect and discretion is now watched with
suspicion. Through logical and rhetorical acrobatics, protecting oneâs
secrets has been made into a shady behavior. Banishing private life, it
is clear that what allows its unveiling â investigation â is consecrated
as a primary value. If this is so, then the means employed for this
purpose are not and cannot be questioned. A defense of wiretapping!
At first, this demand for transparency was developed to contain the
abuses of those who hold power. Requiring transparency in the lives of
public men, of those who have high responsibilities, has a more than
understandable function. They have to answer for the way that they
manage the âpublic thingâ, i.e., put in a position where they canât
abuse their privileges. But the reverse demand â that common people
should be transparent to the eyes of those who hold power â is more
terrible than one can imagine. Under the pretext of the exchange of
âinformationâ and of mutuality in control, the foundations for
totalitarianism are laid.
Already in itself, transparency at all costs has unpleasant fallout.
There are areas in the human being that naturally escape every
indiscreet gaze. A personâs intimacy, with his sexual tastes, is one of
these. There was a time when someone who was interested in the intimate
life of others was accused of wallowing in rumor-mongering and looked
upon with disapproval. Renamed âgossipâ, rumor-mongering is now
considered the spice that gives flavor to otherwise insipid
conversations. The dreariness of a world that has transformed private
vices into public virtues.
But who stops to reflect on what the cause of this effect might be? Our
houses have become caretakerâs lodges[1], itâs true, but it is a matter
of a contraindication to the shock treatment ordered against freedom of
thought. To flush out this freedom that can always be protected by the
secret, the whole pile gets set on fire. The demand for freedom is the
eulogy that comes before the funeral of the corpse of freedom in every
sphere of human life.
And rather than rebel before the firing squad, we bow our heads. We live
in a society where we are all on probation, and every day we diligently
go back to sign the register of resignation. Because of the uneasiness
we feel in the face of absolute freedom, without limits or boundaries;
because of the deafening media overkill that causes us to see enemies
everywhere, spurring us to opt for the lesser eveil of social control;
but also because of our coparticipation in degradation â we feel
somewhat relieved. Over the past few years, televison has reassured us
about the goodness of the police, federal agents and judges â heroes of
numberless tv shows â but how often has it invited us to directly spy
through the keyhole. So-called âreality showsâ have had the effect of
making the idea of a transparent life, that unfolds before all eyes and
is periodically judged, punished and rewarded, familiar and normative.
The protest against the devastation of discretion runs into a barrier
that has become classic: âif you have nothing to hide, you have nothing
to fear from controlâ. Astounding, cop-like reasoning, which once again
uses a logical reversal to make discretion a vice and meddling a virtue.
Mor and more, daily life comes to resemble a prison, where they take the
fingerprints of everyone born, where you walk through numberless metal
detectors, where you are observed by electronic eyes, where the
presumption of innocence has given way to the presumption of guilt.
There is a further consequence of the climate of terror fed by the
ideology of security. If everyone feels unsafe, it means that each
represents a threat to the other. Thus, there are no victims, only the
guilty and the potentially guilty. If I want to be protected from my
neighbor and my neighbor wants to be protected from me, it follows that
we are both potentially aggressors and it would be dangerous to grant us
our freedom.
We have all become suspects for what we might do if we used our freedom.
The state goes all the way with this logic and asserts its right to
punish this threat even in its most innocuous manifestations â even
preventatively repressing it. Earlier at least, it was maintained that
the individual would become punishable by law when he put his
transgressive intents into practice. Anyone could dream of killing, you
just couldnât do it with impunity (unless you were dressed in a uniform,
of course). Western, democratic civilizations loved to shove its
superiority over other civilizations down our throats. These other
civilizations were judged as obscurantist because they did not guarantee
complete freedom of thought to those within them. Just lying propaganda,
of course, but that at least had to disguise itself to appear true.
Today, repression has rid itself of the burden of any embarrassment, ,
and it is obvious to all that the mere dream of transgressing, the mere
deviation of thought, is enough to attract the iron fist of the judicial
system. An example? The busts that periodically snap the handcuffs onto
someone who has downloaded images of âchild pornographyâ from the
Internet. Ho9wever contemptible, criticizable, hateful such behavior may
be, the fact remains that these people are incriminated not for having
abused any minors, but for looking at photographs in the privacy of
their own homes. How long until the public burning of the works of Sade?
Another example on the horizon is what happened to some friends of those
arrested last February 12 in relation to the investigation of the
so-called ânew BRâ (Red Brigades). Stopped by a police patrol in the
very serious act of putting up posters, they were taken in for arrest.
Already the event is telling in itself, since atmost, a poster can
express an idea. Furthermore, the idea expressed in these posters wasnât
an incitement to armed struggle, but rather the leveling of the War on
Terrorism. How long until the raids against anti-militarists and
pacifists?
The individual, with her ideas, desires and impulses constitutes a
threat for the social order, but also for himself and others. From this
is born the climate of civil war that is spreading: nocturnal curfews,
patrols by armed soldiers, roadblocks. It is as if war had been declared
on an imaginary enemy, that isnât there, but that might be us. On
everyone and no one. If each individual is a potential criminal and if
every criminal is an enemy of the state, then a war against individuals
is being carried out. Now there is a substantial difference between the
concept of the criminal and the concept of the enemy. The former is
recognized as part of the community. The latter is not. The enemy is not
granted extenuating circumstances, his punishments are not negotiated.
No pretense is made of wanting to rehabilitate her. She is destroyed.
Against him, everything is allowed. Wars are police operations, and
police operations are wars.
There is only one way to avoid being considered an internal enemy to
eliminate. Respecting legality. But prayers to this modern idol donât
protect you from dangers, except maybe that of divine wrath. In an
atheist, however, a horrible doubt arises: Why should the law as such by
synonymous with the good? Under nazism, the persecution of Jews was
legal. The death penalty, torture as a means of extorting information,
the manufacture of nuclear warheads, these are all legal in many
states... The legality of an act merely denotes its conformity to what
is prescribed by law, i.e., to the interests of the ruling class that is
its author. It tells us nothing about the value, the meaning, the
consequence of the act. The culture of legality thus leads exclusively
to ignorance through obedience, which ceased to be a virtue many years
ago even for priests (while continuing to be the sweet dream of
tyrants).
And this isnât even the worst aspect. To catch a glimpse of the abysses
toward which the exaltation of legality pushes, it is enough to ask a
simple question: Why donât we cammit an act like, for example, rape? Do
we reject it because we consider it a repugnant act, which goes against
our ideas and feelings, or because there is an article in the legal code
that prohibits and punishes it? In the first case, our motivation could
be described as ethical. In the second, it is legal. Maintaining that
human beings should follow state legality rather than their own
individual ethic means declaring that it is impossible for an individual
to establish what is right and wrong for himself. After the capitulation
of free will in the face of the will of authority, the penal code
becomes the conscience of a world that no longer has conscience. A world
in which the human being is thought of as lacking intelligence, with
dulled feelings, insensitive to suffering â a savage beast to cage,
control, repress. It is the price to pay in order to keep ethics from
rising up against legality.
A society that sees its members as its enemies and entrusts authority
with the task of repressing their thoughts and actions, a society quick
to sacrifice every freedom in exchange for a crumb of safety, a society
that sees Good as obedience to the law and Bad as transgression of the
law, can only end up becoming totalitarian. How else can you describe a
society placed under a regime of probation by a state that is granted
every weapon and every police method for dealing with every particle of
a personâs life? As Hannah Arendt maintained, even a democracy can be
totalitarian. A totalitarian state is one that makes it a required civic
duty not only to respect the law, but also to think what those laws
require you to think. Put simply, the insurgents who broke bank windows
in Genoa in 2001 were not the only criminals; those who âpsychically
participatedâ by not stopping or denouncing them are also criminals.
This social order doesnât limit itself to repressing hostility against
itself, but also indifference: loving it is a duty, and whoever doesnât
carry it out is persecuted.
Unfortunately, there is a blind spot in our minds that keeps us from
comparing the totalitarianism of the modern world to the kind that
characterized the first half of the last century. As if the heaviness of
what happened in the past certifies the lightness of what is happening
in the present. As if the barbed wire that surrounded Auschwitz was of a
different gauge than the wire that surrounds present-day concentration
camps from Guantanamo to the Centers of Temporary Residence (CTPs). But
anyone who doesnât stop in the face of the lack of gas chambers, who
doesnât believe that the ruthless ness of a regime is determined by a
particularly gruesome aspect, canât avoid grasping the similarity that
exists between the two eras. It is enough to look around to notice the
same banality of evil, and identical alienation of the individual, the
same loss of the I through a combination of ideology and terror. Today a
single model of life reigns from west to east, without being called into
question from any side. This omnipresence is becoming its concern. As
long as capitalism had an enemy, it also had a scapegoat on which to
unload all responsibility (a thing that occurred reciprocally for the
other). But now, who is there to blame if the world finds itself on the
edge of an abyss?
The world at last affordable to all â a vast supermarket vomiting out
plastic-coated goods â has not at all increased happiness, peace or
equality. The enemy has now become anyone who protests against the
world, i.e., potentially everyone. The ideology of safety anticipates
the times. It doesnât wait for the explosion of rage. It attributes the
terror of current social relationships to the freedom of individuals,
suddenly transforming everyone into the enemy, making us all suspicious
in the eyes of the other, isolating us in our fear, provoking a war
among the poor in order to defuse a social war. And it takes the
legislative and police measures necessary for repressing such a threat.
In this sense, what some people call the safety drift can be thought of
as a huge preventative couterinsurgency operation.
Â
[1] In Italian, there is a saying: âgossip like a caretakerâ.