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Title: Theses on Covid-1984 Author: Anonymous Date: Summer 2022 Language: en Topics: COVID-19, pandemic, I Giorni e le Notti, The Local Kids, The Local Kids #8, Social Movements, emergency, revolutionary critique, technology, climate crisis, efficiency, conspiracy theory, vaccines, transhumanism, myths, science Source: Translated for The Local Kids, Issue 8 Notes: Previously appeared as Tesi sul Covid-1984 in i giorni e le notti (rivista anarchica), Issue 13, July 2021
âWhen something is presented as progress, I ask myself first of all if
it makes us more or less human.â - George Orwell
âThe most inhumane actions today are actions without humans.â - GĂŒnther
Anders
âHow could they have not noticed and accepted all this?â Thatâs what
readers of history books and moviegoers will ask themselves when, in
some decades, the many lies that were spread during the Covid-19
epidemic, which justified the projects of domination to supposedly fight
it, will be recounted. These posthumous observers will comfortably be on
the side of virtue, as we are when reading a book about the fight
against nazism or when we watch a movie about the antislavery rebellion.
Seventy years after the events of the so-called âSpanishâ flu, something
was published resembling an in-depth and reliable reconstruction of the
spread and impact it had. We could argue that the reasons for such a
delay are connected to the peculiarities of a pandemic that concluded
even more tragically that immense massacre that was the First World War.
However, they also reside in the burden that the steel net of military
censorship had on contemporaries and subsequent generations (the very
term Spanish, as is well known, derives from the fact that only the
press in neutral Spain could speak freely about it). But are we sure
that the quagmire of current sources â along with the preventive and
ferocious discrediting that has struck and still strikes every
non-aligned analysis â will itself not be considered a silicon cage by
future historians? After only one year of Covid, the amount of
scientific articles published in online magazines is so overwhelming
that Artificial Intelligence is being used to analyse them. What can
these historians be sufficiently certain of?
It is likely that the best among them will be divided and will argue â
as has already been the case for much greater historical events, such as
the colonisation of the Americas or nazism â from two approaches: a
functionalist approach and an intentionalist one. This will then be
followed by other historians who will seek a synthesis between the two
positions. The functionalist approach favours the analysis of social
dynamics. The intentionalist one assigns more importance to the stated
values and programmes of the elites. Was the extermination of the native
population of the Americas a deliberate project or was it the outcome of
a combination of causes (among others: the spread of lethal diseases by
the conquistadors played at least as much of a role as the catholic
doctrineâs portrayal of natives as soulless peoples)? Was the
destruction of the jews the result of the total mobilisation of
bureaucratic and industrial forces and structures or was it the
fulfilment of the partyâs programme (present since the beginning)?
As is well known, even when consulting the same (never exhaustive)
historical sources, interpretations can wildly diverge. Because they can
never be separated from the heuristic, ethical and political
subjectivity of the historian. For example, liberal historians, who see
nazism as a monstrous parenthesis in the progress of the 20th century,
will be inclined to explain the gas chambers as antisemitic madness,
rather than a solution produced by a technical and bureaucratic
apparatus within the steel storms of a particularly cruel war between
empires. Otherwise, the defendants at its own Nuremberg trials wouldnât
only be the nazi leaders, but also industrial executives and not few
scientific experts (and the responsibility for the extermination
factories would cross the ocean and reach the heart of the giant IBMâŠ).
Conversely, these liberal historians will tend to fade anything that
gives the British colonisation of North-America the intentionality of
extermination. Can an admirer of American democracy support (as a
historian) its genocidal origins?
The revolutionary critique has adopted the functionalist explanations of
historical phenomenons. This is not only because the materialist
analysis always contains multiple factors (heuristic reason), but also
because intentionalist interpretations end up more or less voluntarily
exonerating the social system, making horror the exception and not the
rule, transforming certain forms of oppression from structural dynamics
into political pathologies (ethical-political reason).
Nevertheless, between anarchists and Marxists, and within these two
currents of the proletarian movement itself, there has always been a
conflict over whatâs truly structural and what, in a certain way,
derives from it (and what degree of autonomy the derivative elements
have). Schematically speaking, according to anarchists power doesnât
coincide with profit and it is control that produces privileges rather
than the opposite. There are historical moments when the will of power
and its political intentions overtake the dynamic of capitalist
accumulation. Nazism is an obvious example. The final solution was
pursued even when its logistics drained more resources from the German
war machine. Why? To trace a direct line between the pages of Mein Kampf
and the gas chambers? No, because it was the functional outcome of the
totality of the techno-bureaucratic machine, which had turned
antisemitism into its fuel. If, on the contrary, we would limit
ourselves to observing the âimpersonal forces of capitalâ (deprived of
an autonomous political intention), the destruction of an exploitable
workforce would be a non-functional waste, thus hard to explain.
The revolutionary critique of conspiracy theories is also connected to
functionalism and intentionalism. For a long time, the concept of
conspiracy theory (or the police version of history) described any
explanation that â disregarding the dynamics of socio-political
conflicts â attributed the causes of historical events to the more or
less hidden plans of an elite, or to the schemes of occult lobbies, the
police or secret services. Among the best known examples we find the
fascist thesis of judaeo-masonic lodges that rule the world, or the
Stalinist one according to which the armed struggle groups in Italy were
manoeuvred by corrupt state institutions. In all theses cases the
conspiracy theories where a weapon against the movements. In fact, no
statesman or journalist has ever defined as a conspiracy theorist those
who claim that the Red Brigades were manipulated. This is because the
unacceptable scandal lies precisely in the existence of an
uncontrollable class conflict, within which the autonomous action of
combative political groups took place. Any behind-the-scenes explanation
that could dismiss this âpublic secretâ was functional for the state.
This went as far as hinting at the involvement of parts of the state
apparatus in the Aldo Moro kidnapping⊠Better a daring spy story than
the raw and simple truth that a group of workers organised and went
after the leader of the party in power. The obsessive repetition of the
former can nourish a flourishing publishing market and for many years
produce comatose-depressive social effects, while the mere mention of
the latter is enough to unsettle many arcana imperii and, above all,
risks sowing the seeds of certain bad thoughts.
But the revolutionary critique of conspiracy theories has more profound
and less contingent reasons. The first being that what appears is more
than enough to despise this world and to seek to overthrow it.
âConspiracy theoryâ has long been a term used mainly by radical
movements to distinguish between a real critique and its reactionary
parody, while also reducing the police to their sad and subordinate
function, rather than making them lead roles. Thereâs an abyss between
the historical memory of struggles and the documents of the police
stations! To so-called normal people, this adjective-noun meant little
or nothing.
Over the course of history, the poor and exploited have sought to
explain the world to themselves (and to give themselves courage) with
the tools they had at their disposal. Folklore has always been one of
these. Beliefs, songs, rituals, proverbs, legends and stories were the
spontaneous forms of a culture from below, oral, uneducated, long
unschooled. This folklore blended many elements of truth (as
self-understanding of oneâs own experience) in a fatalistic and
reflective framework (at once the expression of the subordination to the
representations of the dominant class and the outlet of a captive life).
Gramsci [1] â for whom, to be clear, I nourish very little political
sympathies â said with keen intuition that proletarian culture shouldnât
have a haughty and scholarly attitude towards popular folklore, rather
attempt to gather the elements of truth, liberating them from fatalist
representations. Togliattism was a parody of this attitude. It replaced
folkloric myths with political myths, in this case myths being what
transmit passivity and hope at the same time. Why did Togliatti [2],
following Moscowâs instructions, impose the name âGaribaldiniâ on the
members of partisan groups? Not only to underline the patriotic nature
of the Resistance (as a âSecond Risorgimentoâ) but also to technicize â
as KĂĄroly KerĂ©nyi said â a redeeming myth from popular folklore (âAddĂ
venĂŹ Garibaldi!â). [3]
In popular folklore we find both the idea of a world made unjust and
unmoveable by a kind of spell, and the idea of a magical and painful
formula capable of redeeming at a stroke, erasing debts â and
inequalities (the Jubilee [4]). If there is anything that doesnât belong
to folklore and that has been injected from the outside â itâs the
belief in a liberation step by step, following a cumulative temporality
and the ascending dynamics of a historical law.
An unprecedented element in the management of the Covid-19 epidemic is
the media use of the term âconspiracy theoryâ â referring to any thesis
that questions official truths. Such a hammering (and international) use
is not accidental, corresponding both with functional and intentional
reasons. It suffices to quote the report of the Italian secret services
for the year 2020 to give an example of this inverted use of a concept
that in the past was above all used by revolutionaries. In it this
concept is used to define the views of the far-right as well as those
from the radical circles. When a secret agent calls others âconspiracy
theoristsâ it cannot be brushed off as a simple coincidence, nor can it
be seen as an unfunny joke. It deserves an explanation. Just as
deserving of an explanation is the fact that the ideas and actions
against the 5G towers and positions against mass vaccination were the
ones branded as conspiracy theories. At the beginning (and then less and
less) we could hear about the relationship between deforestation,
industrial breeding and the transmission of viruses between species,
even on the radio. In-depth reports conducted by ever-present experts
seemed to fictitiously support a general anti-capitalist analysis to
disarm it in its immediate action. Any listener who would call in
raising the slightest doubts about vaccinations or mentioning a burned
cell tower roused uneasy reactions and the catch-all label: conspiracy
theory. Let us attempt to formulate a hypothesis about this parody (the
conspiracy theorist, historically the enemy of the revolutionary
movement, suddenly becomes an enemy of the state). Probably the
governments expected that it would mainly be revolutionaries and
radicals who would fundamentally put into question the aim and function
of their âanti-Covidâ measures. In a mixture of intentionality and
tested functionality, it was enough to present the âconspiracy theoristâ
as an enemy of collective health and the government as its guarantor
(however clumsy, incompetent or subordinated to the interests of
Confindustria [5]). This is how it was possible to align certain words
of the state and certain words of radicals (especially those concerned
about compromising their public image). In the background, as we will
see, an unresolved knot of many movements of the 20th century coagulated
in all its materiality: the question of the state.
Anyway, what happened to the belief that what they tell us on TV is all
a lie? In popular folklore, in the forms it takes in digital society.
Has âcritical cultureâ (according to Gramsciâs theory) illuminated the
elements of truth, to try to dismantle the reactionary and fatalist
ones? No. To keep away from âconspiracy theoriesâ, âfake newsâ,
ânegationismâ, it deliberately ignored its reasons â confused, partial,
naive, highly polluted, but also understandable and meaningful â into a
downward spiral: if I didnât say anything about the lockdowns yesterday,
what could I say about the curfew today? If I didnât say anything about
denied home care, what to say today about vaccines? So, as the fog
thickened and the cage strengthened, everyone traveled down the paths
they felt the safest on: the struggle against repression for some,
logistically supporting workersâ struggles for others, fighting against
environmental devastation for still others. Fair and necessary battles,
sure, but somehow aside from the terrain on which the state and the
technocrats had placed their artillery.
The dominant tendencies in the proletarian movement of the 20th century
(which have not totally disappeared after the reflux of the struggles of
the â70s and the fall of the Soviet Union, but have taken rudimentary
and volatile forms) saw in the state either a neutral political
organisation or the mere business committee of the bourgeoisie. In the
first case, the entry of workersâ parties into the institutions and the
improvement of workersâ conditions obtained by syndicalist force would
have progressively broadened democratic spaces until arriving to
socialism. In the second case, only the violent conquest of political
power would have permitted an anticapitalist use of the state (first
step towards its abolition). Stalinism made the first vision a tactic
and the second a strategy (or, more exactly, an enchanting promise that
justifies an alliance with the more âprogressiveâ sectors of the
bourgeoisie). Over time the tactic became a strategy and the
democratic-bourgeois state an insurmountable horizon. The interests of
the poor would be secured by opposing to the âprivateâ (and above all
âmonopolisticâ) forces of capital, the âuniversalâ power of the state.
Thus the state planning of the economy and the public funding of
scientific research were already at the forefront of socialism.
We can see a similar pattern in the international mobilisations against
globalization: neoliberal policies have been adopted by institutions
that are now hostage to the multinationals (and financial capital) and
emptied of all âsovereigntyâ. Should it then be surprising if certain
popular sectors see behind the Covid-19 epidemic the hand of âBig
Pharmaâ and in the constitution the only line of defence and source of
legitimacy for its âresistanceâ? The pattern is similar: scientific
research is bent to the interests of a few and the universal mission of
the state is undermined by governments sold out to big finance. Thatâs
more or less what those who demand âvaccines as a common goodâ put
forward but in a less logical and coherent manner. Can a product ever be
a âcommon goodâ when it is developed and sold by âBig Pharmaâ, in
addition to being authorized by regulatory bodies that it itself funds?
Not seeing how the intentions of pharmaceutical (and digital)
multinationals are made possible by the function of technological
development, carries a huge simplification (which exonerates the social
system and calls again on the state, on the judges, on new Nuremberg
trials). Would it be more realistic to demand that these multinationals
give up on their patents and transfer their technologies to the poorest
countries? Does it demonstrate a greater understanding of how the
industrial apparatus â private and public â of techno-science works?
Some â certainly a bit more discerning about the relationship between
state and capital â want âproletarian committeesâ to take charge of the
mass vaccination, since bourgeois institutions cannot free themselves of
the power of âBig Pharmaâ. Nevertheless, the Stalinists are right: the
state is necessary for such an undertaking. But clearer than either of
them are the thousands of people â mostly women â who took to the
streets shouting âwe are not guinea pigs!â The âfolkloricâ idea that
Bill Gates wants to reduce the global population through vaccines, is
certainly closer to the truth than the progressive illusion according to
which techno-scientific development is not only neutral, but even a
factor of emancipationâŠ
The majority of diseases that affect humanity demand not very
technological solutions like clean water, enough food, decent incomes.
Technological development doesnât solve these questions, in fact, it
only worsens them, while captivating us with its âimminent, but always
around the cornerâ promises. In 2020 alone, 500,000 children died of
starvation in Mozambique. And what is the priority for certain alleged
internationalists? To deliver GMO vaccines to that population. Exactly
what the eugenists â and sterilizers of poor women â who developed the
AstraZeneca vaccine want⊠[6] And not only to give them the vaccines but
also the technologies to develop and produce them autonomously. This
means setting up biotechnology research centres (where highly
specialised researchers and technicians specialized in Artificial
Intelligence, bioinformatics, molecular biology, nanotechnology etc. can
form a new local workforce) and constructing, just like that, at least
two high-tech factories where vaccines can be produced autonomously.
Factories which, it goes without saying, are connected to a powerful
digital network. In this beautiful fairy tale (whose subconscious is
well-meaning imperialism), such research centres and industries will
renounce, once the vaccinations are over, the duties for which they were
historically created. The objective is to boost dependance (on the
terrains of energy, agriculture, health, economy, society, politics) of
the local population on centralised and heteronomous institutions, whose
insatiable extractive motor squeezes humans, sterilises soils and
provokes epidemics. Wouldnât it be more practical to spend the money on
a network of small health centres in villages where sick people can be
treated fast, rather than on indiscriminately vaccinating millions of
people? Of course it would be, but the objective of the biotech market
is exactly to make the âordinary work of care and preventionâ obsolete
and unprofitable.
Cui prodest? Who benefits? The question is as necessary as insufficient,
and the answers can sometimes be misleading. It is not necessarily the
case that those who exploit the consequences of an event also caused it.
Among the many examples we could give, we choose two that belong to the
history of the revolutionary movement: the fire in the Reichstag and the
bomb at the Diana theatre. The first act â carried out by the Dutch
council communist Marinus van der Lubbe â provided the nazis with the
pretext for a vicious witch-hunt against all dissidents. For a long time
(and still today in quite a number of history books wrongly considered
reliable) the arson at the German parliament was considered a nazi
conspiracy (exactly, cui prodest?) and the comrade van der Lubbe, a
provocateur. Theories that were mainly â and obviously â supported by
the Stalinists. At the time, the arsonist was only defended by some
anarchist groups (like LâAdunata dei Refrattari), by German-Dutch
council communists and by some Italian left-communist newspapers (and
even among the few communists who defended him, some nevertheless
insisted on politically criticizing his actionâŠ). This ânazi conspiracyâ
has been such a widespread historical falsehood that we even find it
back in one of the first pamphlets that unveiled the origin of the bombs
of December 12th 1969, which had the hand of the state and the bosses
behind them. The text in question, signed âsome friends of the
Internationalâ and distributed a couple of weeks after the massacre at
Piazza Fontana, was entitled âIs the Reichstag burning?â (implying that
the Italian state had carried out this bloody provocation while pointing
at the anarchists as its authors, just as the nazis had set fire to the
German parliament and blamed the communists for it). That the two deeds
represent diametrically opposed ways of using incendiary-explosive
devices (setting fire to the organ of passive representation of the
âworking peopleâ, of depletion of its remaining potential for action and
of validation of state oppression, on one hand, and on the other
randomly striking a mass of farmers) didnât prevent them from ending up
under the same heading: conspiracy. The effects are observed but the
dynamics are not analysed (conditioned by the prejudice that only
collective action can be a legitimate answer to oppression).
Nevertheless, as history is the outcome of an entanglement of forces
(and the unforeseen) even the analysis of dynamics can at times be
misleading. On March 23rd 1921, when reading the news of the Diana
theatre massacre, many comrades immediately thought it was a police
provocation. Not only because of the fierce hunt for subversives it
unleashed (in short: cui prodest?), but also because of the dynamics of
the action itself. Firstly, because of the target itself: a theatre also
visited by common people, and secondly because of the methods of the
attack: a very powerful bomb. At first, it was difficult to understand
that it was instead the unforeseen effect of an action carried out by
some young and well-known comrades who wanted to âhit not the theatre,
but the hotel above it, which, according to the information then in
possession of the attackers, was regularly used as a meeting place
between Benito Mussolini and Gasti, the police chief of Milan. Both of
them merciless enemies of the anarchists and despised by them.
Particularly, it was believed that Gasti was inside the hotel that
eveningâ (Giuseppe Mariani [7]).
All of this to say that it should be the revolutionaries themselves who
should be wary of mechanically applying the logic of cui prodest?
If we would apply this logic to the Covid-19 emergency, the conclusion
would be perfectly clear: it has been mainly the digital and
pharmaceutical multinationals that have benefited from this emergency,
thus they have planned it. Posto hoc, ergo propter hoc (After this,
therefore caused by this). [8]
Nevertheless it would be naive to think that the acceleration towards
the digitalisation of society and a worldwide vaccination programme are
just two functional answers to a totally unforeseen event: the spread of
SARS-CoV-2.
In order to get a better idea of what is functional and what is
intentional, we need to understand what the fundamental tendencies of
our times are. So letâs return to two unresolved knots: the
technological question and the question of the state.
I thought long about how to define in the most precise manner the
relationship between technology and capitalist development. I find the
two most current ideas on the subject totally wrong, as history shows.
The first â common to both the liberal democratic and the Marxist vision
â considers technology as a totality of methods of rationalisation and
organisation with variable political-economical ends. While the second
sees technique as an autonomous subject of history (the history of a
fracture between human beings and their prostheses, in which the
difference between a wind mill and a nuclear power plant would only be a
question of degrees). Until now, I found the most appropriate adjective
to define this relationship in a beautiful book about the luddite
insurrection: consubstantial [9]. Enclosures and the plundering of
colonial wealth were the two original sources of accumulation of English
capitalism. However, the basis for the development of manufacturing and
of mechanization was provided by the might of the British Empire at war
with the Spanish state and then with the French state. Both the railways
and the exploitation of coal mines were born out of these war
necessities, while electricity was developed to produce weapons. Before
illuminating private homes, it was used to run factories at night. This
relation of mutual involvement between military power, industrial
development and acceleration of technique, produced a leap: technology.
This can be described as the application of increasingly specialised
scientific knowledge to an industrial production that replaced little by
little all forms of community-based and non-centralised production.
The two World Wars were the laboratory of a new fusion: between
scientific research, military institutions, industrial planning and
state bureaucracy. The Second World War also added mass media to the
fusion. And thanks to gigantic military, medical and toxicological
experiments, it kickstarted what we can call techno-science and its
social-political form: technocracy. Technological development â the
propelling force of capitalist accumulation â has itself become the
motor of economic competition (as well as the continuation of politics
by other means) in the same way that the totalising logic of profit
grows and becomes autonomous in feudal society. âPolitical regimes
change, technocracy stays.â It was within the clash of power between
states â direct agents of industrial planning â during the â40s and â50s
that paradigms were developed (cybernetics) and research programmes were
launched (computer science and genetic engineering, as well as nuclear
power). Without these there would have been neither the financialisation
of the economy (and its neoliberal policies) nor the concept to enter
human bodies as a further space of capitalist conquest. These processes
of fusion between private and state â which someone has called
techno-bureaucracy â have been lucidly grasped by spirits less
mesmerized by the sirens of progress and the alleged âemancipatoryâ
development of the productive forces: Simone Weil, George Orwell, Dwight
MacDonald, Georges Henein⊠All were more or less mocked because they
were interested in âsecondaryâ aspects and disregarded the impersonal
laws of capital. Their analyses described with precision the
intrinsically hierarchical nature of big industries (regardless of who
detains the legal ownership of the means of production), as well as the
omnivorous extension of state bureaucracy. What was certain, however,
was that the pivot of industrial planning was science â at the service
of capital â and that long range planning was the most logical
articulation of that pivot. However, thanks to enormous state funding,
that pivot has been totally integrated in the control panel, turning on
its head the relation between means and ends. Yet, the âtechnological
revolutionâ has shattered any planning â always too slow and costly
compared to the innovations of applied sciences. It remains true that
âthe basis on which technology is gaining power over society is the
power of those whose economic position in society is the strongestâ (Max
Horkheimer & Theodor W. Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment) With this
fundamental addition: this technocracy is not a ârevolutionâ but a
permanent putsch. Exactly because âthe technological rationale is the
rationale of domination itself. It is the coercive nature of society
alienated from itself,â its process of becoming autonomous encounters no
limits within the dynamics of this alienation.
Technological development has a relative contradiction (workersâ
struggles) and an absolute contradiction (the irreducibility of human
and other living beings to the machine). Technocracy will increasingly
bypass the first one to aim directly at the second. Just as the state
repression of the revolutionary movement in the â60s and â70s allowed
and accompanied the introduction of telecommunication into production,
the current employersâ and police attack against workersâ resistance in
the logistics sectors is preparing the general imposition of the âAmazon
modelâ. The state and employers had wiped out the âcontractualâ force of
the working class (through the combined use of coercive force and
technological innovations) to eliminate the proletarian offensive of the
â60s and â70s. This workforce was the product of a specific production
model â fixed factories, storage costs of goods, need of a large and
unskilled workforce â and for this very reason capable of a âscientificâ
use of absenteeism and sabotage. On a smaller scale, the digitalisation
of logistics also aims to eliminate its own relative contradiction,
expressed in workersâ blockages and pickets (the forms of struggle that
the state outlawed with its âsecurity decreesâ). To think nowadays that
technological development is a secondary factor in class conflict means
to live on another planet. When some particularly pretentious Marxist
mocks our âfearsâ (typically âpetit-bourgeoisâ!) for the ongoing
techno-totalitarian development, and defends that âtechnological
dynamismâ (which would be more announced than real) is only the symptom
of a capitalist valorization that is floundering, he shows the depths of
his lack of realism. Consequently, the identification of what is at
stake is just as unrealistic: fighting for a general reduction of the
working day, a âminimal programmeâ that would be made possible by
technological innovations.
If anything, history shows that the fight to reduce the workload
presupposes a durable capacity for self-organisation â exactly what
robotics and automatisation undermine. The mass unemployment that
digitalisation provokes and will provoke even more, produces a docile
workforce. The fairy tale according to which technological development
would free â if not automatically, at least under pressure of the class
conflict â human beings from drudgery has always been a technocratic
tale. Living labour is growing exponentially â the material digital
apparatus is based on the forced activity of millions of human beings â
but it is as technologically connected as it is socially fragmented. The
demand of a shorter work day is therefore first of all political (and
clashes with another political option: the universal basic income). Is
it really more unrealistic to demand the immediate end to production
that destroys humans and their surroundings, namely to protest against
our expulsion from the world?
Often, throughout history, effects have in turn become causes. The
financialisation of the economy â impossible without informatics,
Artificial Intelligence, data science and the huge material apparatuses
on which they are based â affects in turn the techno-industrial
development. A statement of the obvious. âDecisions seem to arise
automatically from a black box of an objective calculation mechanism.â
The technological solution thus tends to abolish any ethical judgement
and any political action.
Letâs return for a moment to the relationship between permanent
innovation and industrial planning. The nuclear industry â the outcome
of the power war between states and the massive funding of science that
made it possible â is the most macroscopic example of state planning for
a centralised, militarised and â above all â fixed system. On top of
this state production of energy are built other fixed infrastructures
(such as high-speed train lines) and high-tech laboratories that
continuously disrupt the forms and modes of production of commodities,
the extraction and treatment of raw materials, urban renewal,
territorial control, and the forms and means of war. The same could be
said of submarine cables, the installation and defence of which is
itself a matter of geopolitical and military conflict. We can be rather
certain that in a couple of decades the nuclear power plants, the
railways and the submarine cables will exist more or less as we know
them today (in the absence of a radical upheaval of society). On the
contrary, we donât have the faintest idea â except through a few
exercises in critical futurology â of how bread or cars will be
produced, nor how payments will be made, nor how bodies will be cured.
Itâs this totalitarian acceleration of innovation that has been called a
permanent technological putsch. If the imperative of extension and the
imperative of depth push the techno-scientific apparatus to conquer
every shred of human experience and transform it in data, to discuss
whether a policy is neoliberal or neo-Keynesian is simply ridiculous.
Firstly, because it is evident that digitalisation â with its
vampire-like machine learning â can only accelerate the forward flight
of finance (with the corresponding material effects: just-in-time
opening and closing of executive, logistical and productive centres).
Secondly, because state planning follows the same logic â tending
towards the technological administration of territories and populations.
We only have to read the official reports of the army (the planning
institution par excellence) to see this. Since high-tech innovation â
from drones to killer robots, from cyberwarfare to genetically enhanced
soldiersâ bodies â has already merged Defence institutions and research
centres, the political direction of programmes is increasingly being
transferred from the military bureaucracy (as fixed as a nuclear plant)
to inter-university departments. They in turn are increasingly linked to
the demands of Industry 4.0. Whatever the enemies of neoliberalism may
say, the high-tech economy is a firmly interventionist economy. The
media popularisers of the technocratic Word have waited until the
Covid-19 emergency to enthusiastically announce it: the state is back.
(To understand that it had never gone away, it would have been enough to
look at the constant increase of the so-called public debt.) Itâs no
coincidence that the hired sociologists and economists make reference to
the military organisation effort supported by the USA in the Second
World War as a precedent for the current state intervention in
industrial financing. What is being prepared is precisely a war economy.
Does this also imply the return of planning? Social-democrats and
Stalinists hope so, pushing the âmovementsâ to insert a bit of socialism
in the state plans. The most critical Marxists uncover the ideological
scam, because the money for a New Deal isnât available since capitalism
isnât in a phase of expansion but of crisis. In reality, the âreturn of
the stateâ isnât the return of industrial long range planning. Itâs the
suppression manu militari of any obstacle on the road to a permanent
technological putsch, in other words the dictatorship of machines,
experts and military. As someone has summarized: what is prepared at an
accelerated pace is an era of flaws and mishaps.
Yes, the âtechnological revolutionâ that replaces uniformly all the old
modes of production, is a myth. Technology has the pace of a Blitzkrieg.
Not only is this advance relentlessly being prepared by the cross-over
of research centres, industry, mass media and public institutions (with
the discrete presence of the military), but it determines all economical
and social spheres. If, in the global market the goods with the highest
value rate are those that incorporate the most data and the highest
scientific development, other sectors â less high-tech or not at all â
must increase unpaid labour in order to resist the competition. Only
then does the human being remains overall more profitable than
technological investments. The example of the Chinese state is
emblematic. Smart cities and labour camps are two communicating vessels
of the same technocracy. Try telling a Chinese worker, who is tracked in
every movement, that the digitalisation of the world is a myth just
because billions of anti-Covid masks are produced every day in an
essentially 19th century manner.
When we hear the word âtotalitarianâ, we mainly associate it to
âpoliceâ. Thatâs a reductive and misleading interpretation. A
totalitarian economy is an economy that doesnât leave any human
experience outside of its hold. Doing away with the police â or rather,
making the police the unfettered organisation of the city, citizen
science â is a technocratsâ utopia. Precisely because of the human and
environmental cost of technologisation, as concealed as it is
disproportionate, it produces a differentiated apocalypse. For some,
slavery in coltan mines and shortage of water and food; for others
remote working and the risk of obesity. For millions of women in the
Global South veiled programmes of forced sterilisation; for thousands of
women in the North access to assisted reproductive technology. For the
workers who assemble smartphones, labour camps; for the upperclass, a
poolside video call with their genetics adviser.
Above all, what most distinguishes a totalitarian system is the
disappearance of the criteria for understanding facts (and then to
separate the facts from their manipulation), the elimination of the
capacity to develop oneâs own experience, the obsolescence of the
faculty to grasp with oneâs senses and intellect the âresolute mysteryâ
that is the product of oneâs own social activity.
Readers of 1984 will probably remember the pages that Orwell dedicates
to Big Brotherâs announcements concerning chocolate rations. Thanks to
the permanent suppression of the past, the announcement of an increase
of rations, which is actually smaller than the one announced the
previous week, is received with hysterically enthusiastic ovations by
the Party members. It becomes impossible for the dissidents to prove
otherwise, since the data are gradually erased from the archives. 1984
isnât a âdystopic novelâ. Stalin abolished the unemployment benefits to
prove that in the so-called Soviet Union the problem of unemployment had
been resolved thanks to state economic plans. The abolition of
unemployment benefits was the objective proof that unemployment no
longer existed.
In the internet age it isnât possible to delete archives. But itâs
rather easy to direct searches thanks to appropriate algorithms as well
as discourage people from consulting them. How many, given the
triumphalist announcements that SARS-CoV-2 infections and death rates
had dropped thanks to the vaccine, wanted to look up the numbers for the
corresponding period of the previous year? In the meantime, the WHO has
changed the parameters to detect âcasesâ since also vaccinated people
can become infected (we will understand to which extend and with which
consequences in the fall or winter, when the circulation of the virus
will increase). The WHO set a maximum threshold to amplification cycles
for PCR tests and introduced the criterium of a double verification to
declare positivity. In short, the unemployment benefits are not
abolished to make the unemployed disappear, but one declares part of
them happily employed. Then, should the technocratic machine give ground
to dissent, because of the clear failures of its solutions, its
blitzkrieg against nature will already have found another threat to oil
its gears. Will the industrial slaughter of poultry on intensive farms
currently carried out in half of the world (Italy included) be enough to
stop the jump of the bird flu to humans? To be seen. To turn an
increasingly pathogenic world into âa perfectly sanitised desertâ is a
utopia that is as inhumane as unrealisable.
Is there anything more obscure than that âblack boxâ that directs
decisions based on algorithms developed by machine learning? Is there
something that provokes a more complete moral haze than the one
cultivated by the tyranny of efficacy?
In an article titled Wanted: An Unpractical Man, the eccentric
conservative G.K. Chesterton said that practical solutions can be useful
when something goes wrong, but when things go very wrong, we donât need
a practical man but a thinker and if possible âwhite-haired and more
absent-mindedâ. In itself, efficiency is a misleading criterium. âIf a
man is murdered, the murder was efficient. A tropical sun is as
efficient in making people lazy as a Lancashire foreman bully in making
them energetic.â And âefficiency, of course, is futile for the same
reason that strong men, will-power and the superman are futile. That is,
it is futile because it only deals with actions after they have been
performed. It has no philosophy for incidents before they happen;
therefore it has no power of choice.â This is what millions of people
have experienced during the management of the Covid-19 epidemic. The
techno-bureaucratic hierarchies (the so-called experts) provoked â more
than an âepistemological darknessâ â a real âcognitive paralysisâ, âa
terrible situation which recalls what happens in circumstances
constructed specifically to de-humanise subjects through the
dissociation of words and things, of language and the worldâ (Stefania
Consigliere & Cristina Zavaroni, Ammalarsi di paura). Thatâs not all,
they also contributed to the creation of a glut of âstrong menâ (leaders
ready to meet with flame throwers students who âgatheredâ to celebrate
their diploma, ministerial advisers who want to make vaccination
mandatory and to legally punish anyone who criticizes itâŠ). Some say
that the proof for the absence of an emergency command centre is found
in the disorganized manner the regions and national state acted. They
havenât reflected much on the spiralling and cascading effects that
technocratic command has always had throughout history. To have at oneâs
disposal the liberty of thousands of people in the name of a higher
cause or of the compelling necessity of efficiency, strengthens the
competition between national and local leaders in showing themselves
more decisive than others. The feeling of being part of the few who
matured thanks to science â or by politics acting in the name of science
â unfailingly leads to despising and infantilising all others. Nietzsche
understood it well: the mechanization of subhumans finds it historical
fulfilment and moral justification in the Ăbermensch. Once it took the
path of war rhetoric, the media has eagerly aligned itself with what had
been decided in the command centres. Not only because of the funding it
receives and the pressure it is under, but also because of a
self-feeding mimetic power. The smalltime, provincial journalist feels
important and even morally superior when calling on their fellow
citizens to follow government decrees. In a total mobilisation when to
act responsibly we have to do everything that authority says, even the
snitch sees themselves as an agent of Good.
Faced with a sufficiently scary threat, the âtotalisation of public
discourseâ produces two combined effects on society. On the one hand the
strengthening of national-popular unity which pushes the individual to
not perceive themselves as a âgramâ but rather as âone millionth of a
tonâ (E.I. Zamiatine, We). On the other hand, a paralysing feeling of
individual powerlessness â thereâs nothing, absolutely nothing, you can
do in the face of Covid-19, neither to understand anything about it, nor
to strengthen your immune defences, nor even treat yourself when
symptoms appear. (Not once in the daily chronicles of fear did an
âexpertâ provide the slightest medical indication besides âwear a mask,
keep social distance and wash your handsâ. A chorus that even a postman
could have repeated, or, according to Lenin, a cook [10])
Letâs take a look at the Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza
(National Recovery and Resilience Plan) of prime minister Draghi and his
government. We should throw out useless and misleading interpretive
frameworks if we want to understand the societal project it pursues (an
important point because it affects us directly and, above all, because
it shows the tendencies of this era). The PNRR is part of the Next
Generation EU programme, which, in turn, is an enlarged version of the
European Horizon 2020 programme. Itâs an explicit example of a
technocratic programme. Is technocracy classist and anti-environmental?
Without a doubt and to a high degree. But not all classist and
anti-environmental policies â which exist all along the history of
capitalism â are technocratic to the same extent. Today, technocracy is
the political organisation of convergent technologies: informatics,
genetic engineering, nanotechnology and neurotechnology. Of the 50
billion euros allocated to âsustainable energy transitionâ, as many as
25 are outright grants for companies. The left militant will repeat:
âPublic money for the bosses: the continuation of neoliberal recipes.â
This is a totally mistaken interpretation. Not only because it says
nothing about where the money is going to (robotics, automatisation,
quantum computing, Artificial Intelligence, data science, etc.), but
because it overlooks the fact that the money to reorganize public
administrations, health care, colleges and universities goes towards the
same aim. To point out that the bosses create Industry (and Agriculture)
4.0 with âour moneyâ is not a stupidity. But what is stupid, is to think
that the distinction between public and private is relevant in judging a
state programme. âOur moneyâ certainly, but to evict us from the world.
As has been said before, the technocratsâ profusion grows along with
their means. The more they can, the more they want. No need for
âconspiracy theoriesâ. Itâs enough to âcross the bridge when you come to
it.â
The PNRR systemises everything that the emergency has accelerated, under
the pretext of leaving the emergency behind. Itâs enough to observe the
optimism of science popularisers (a profession with a promising future,
considering the sudden sprouting â like poisonous mushrooms â of special
undergraduate and postgraduate degree programmes) when they announced
that the Covid-19 epidemic brought down the cultural obstacles that had
separated us from a world at a distance. Of course there are still the
âTaliban of physical experienceâ, but the politics of the fait accompli
(aka scorched earth tactic) will take care of them: either
techno-citizen or clandestine. After having learned how technology
improved our locked-down lives, why not apply it to everything? âIt
wouldnât be the end of the world,â assures professor Derrick de
Kerckhove âbut only the end of our comfortable and illusory autonomy.â A
triviality in the calculation of costs and benefits. How would we have
coped, during the lockdowns, without internet, remote working, online
classes, telemedicine, online consultations, online shopping, Artificial
Intelligence, genomics [11], biotechnology and nanotechnology?
Seriously, how would we have managed?
More than a century ago the French medical practitioner René Leriche
wrote that âhealth is life in the silence of the organsâ while disease
âis what irritates men in the normal course of their lives and work, and
above all, what makes them suffer.â
Around fifteen years ago a sociologist pointed out the tendency of the
concepts of ârisk profileâ and âsusceptibilityâ towards âmolecular
precision.â Combined with the development of genetic engineering,
millions of âasymptomatic sick peopleâ and âpre-patientsâ afflicted by
âpre-diseasesâ were produced. This sociologist concluded asking himself:
âWhich moral judgement would be made of those who will choose to live
âin the silence of the organsâ?â Quarantining is a practice that
historically precedes capitalism and the birth of the modern state. To
counter the outbreaks of contagion, ensuring that these do not spread,
was a measure deemed sensible, even in periods when medicine didnât
carry the label of science, but was simply considered an art (the same
as painting, sculpting, music or architecture). An art subject to
dominant representations, just like science today. The medical
practitioners that dared defy their congregations where few. Among them;
Hippocrates and Paracelsus. The former claiming that epilepsy wasnât a
disease of divine origin, the latter that the plague wasnât spread by
the jews. In recent times, we should mention those who recognized and
swiftly denounced the harmfulness of asbestos, of nuclear radiation or
of GMOs in agriculture. These wise and courageous contemporaries are not
many. As is well known, the plague wasnât defeated thanks to a
particular medical cure, but through improved hygienic conditions. In a
similar manner, without putting an end to the industrial war against
nature and the living, the âpandemic centuryâ is neither a doomsday
prophecy nor a health scare, but technocracyâs âcollateral damageâ, as
well as an opportunity for its further leap forward.
During the pre-genomics era, we would isolate the sick from the healthy.
As neither virus sequencing nor molecular tests existed, neither did
âcasesâ, âpositivesâ and âasymptomaticsâ. In the experience, socially
lived, rather than diagnosed on a molecular scale, there existed the
silence of the organs or suffering and death. What has this prodigious
technological civilisation done faced with an epidemic thatâs neither
the plague nor ebola? Did it immediately listen to the organs with
instruments perfected thanks to its innovations? No. It treated millions
of individuals â largely living âin the silence of the organsâ â as
potentially infected, the infected as sick, and the sick as nearly-dead,
which only heroic war medicine could save from a dreadful fate. It
doesnât stop there. It didnât isolate the sick from the healthy in the
RSAs [12]. It also didnât separate at hospital admissions the Covid
patients from those affected by other diseases. It also discouraged in
every way the intervention of local medicine, rather ordinary and not
very innovative. It renewed the lockdowns and curfews, even after the
virus had been circulating for over a year and had already infected
millions of people, while continuing to allow sick people to end up in
hospitals on oxygen. Panic, unpreparedness, weight of neoliberal
policies? Yes, of course. But to a lesser extent. The apparatus did what
it was programmed to do: not apply innovations to health, but make of
diseases an opportunity to increase innovations. Thanks to genetic
engineering, a first variant of the virus was sequenced (the Wuhan one).
Some months later, vaccines were developed based on this sequencing
(thanks to Artificial Intelligence, bioinformatics, molecular biology
and nanotechnology). The cybernetic paradigm was applied on a mass
scale, while showing no interest in understanding how the virus takes
root (airborne or intestinal infection, we donât know) [13] nor how to
favour a natural response of the organism. This paradigm being that the
individual is reduced to the information that its cells exchange with
the surrounding. The susceptibility to disease â independently of age,
of mental and physical health conditions, etc. â justified mass
lockdowns, while awaiting the equally mass Remedy (regardless of the
subjectâs already developed, natural antibodies). Why? For the gigantic
profits of the pharmaceutical industry, of course. But also because of
the belief that âgenetic informationâ introduced into the organism
through nanotechnologies are more efficient than a spontaneous response
of the body. And also because the genetics industry is made up of âbody
huntersâ (as The Washington Post called them in 2000) who were delighted
with the possibility to broaden the hunt to a planetary level. Finally,
because mass vaccination â in contrast to home cures done without
applause, without generals and heroes â allows the state to present
itself as the saviour and benefactor of public health. This means an
opportunity to strengthen its power and to unleash it on society. First
as a police measure, and later as a programmatic extension to
ânormalityâ of what happened as an âemergency.â
Disease âis what irritates men in the normal course of their lives and
work,â wrote Leriche (as previously quoted). Isnât this definition
perfectly adapted to the manner in which the state managed the epidemic?
As to the additional burden of suffering; what to say about the elderly
left to die without a last goodbye with their loved ones? What to say
about the impossibility of sharing and expressing grief? What to say
about the increasing instances of domestic violence against women? What
to say about the suicides? And the many young people still panicking at
the idea of leaving the house? Only a civilisation that separates the
body from the mind, and the individual from their relationships, can
think that isolation and the profusion of fear will not contribute to
lowering the immunity defences of human beings, and thus will not become
itself a source of diseases (âThe idea and means of health are variable
and depend directly on the cosmology in which they are locatedâ).
âWhich moral judgement will be passed on those who will choose to live
âin the silence of the organsâ?â in this world under construction, made
of genetic diagnostics, of predictive screenings and of ingestible
nano-sensors with which we can remotely check for âproto-diseasesâ.
We can already answer by thinking of those who â in the midst of a
pandemic! â would rather put their trust in symptoms than tests, or of
those who refuse biotechnological bricolage vaccines. Irresponsible,
conspiracy theorists, negationists, Talibans of the physical experience,
traitors of the nation, deserters when faced with the enemy in the hour
of danger.
The manifestos issued by the (artistic, political, scientific) vanguard
in general stated their programmatic objectives. Those who claim to
interpret the zeitgeist in which they live and to anticipate the coming
one, will almost always celebrate the historical movement which created
their existence as the avant-garde and the historical laws that justify
their role. Progressivism and futurology go well together. (That
anarchists always thought of themselves as an active minority and not as
an avant-garde is an ethical and âpoliticalâ gesture which is not at all
accidental. Walter Benjaminâs invitation to redeem past injustices by
revolutionary action instead of trusting a bright future, is an ethical
and âpoliticalâ gesture which is also far from accidental. It is by no
means accidental that a poet like Joseph Brodsky â incarcerated for
âsocial parasitismâ by the âsovietâ regime, under which âone never knows
what the past would hold in store for usâ â wrote: âthe future, in its
totality, is a lie.â)
The historical development of technoscience also has the avant-garde
that suits it: the transhumanist movement. Transhumanism asserts in a
programmatic manner what the technological machine carries out silently.
As a vanguard, transhumanism claims that its role is to overcome all the
barriers that prevent the conscious accomplishment of what humanity has
pursued unconsciously until now (Western humanity of course, which
counts for all humanity). Hasnât it always altered matter and its
surrounding? Hasnât its religion presented the curse of living as a the
fruits of Guilt: âyou will gain your bread by the sweat of your browâ
and âin pain you will give birthâ? Havenât its most esteemed
philosophers taught that the body is the tomb of the soul? Hasnât it
always sought to overcome the fear of death through the promise of
Paradise? And now these curses can be overcome and these promises can be
fulfilled thanks to technological developments. Vital processes can be
recombined in laboratories. Generalised automatisation can abolish the
physical punishment of work. Reproduction can become artificial.
Performances and perceptions can be enhanced. Limbs and brains can
hybridize with machines. Death can be defeated. The means for this
integral programme already exist: Augmented Reality, genetic
engineering, neurotechnology, nanotechnology, synthetic biology.
Nevertheless, they have to be expanded without limits and connected in
an intelligent world to function correctly. Why do the measures to deal
with the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic and the announced Recovery programmes, bear
a sinister resemblance to what transhumanism aims for? We can find an
answer in the Nanotecnologie per l'essere umano conference by Roberto
Cingolani at the University of Milan in 2014 (available online). The
research projects he funds and organises now as minister for âecological
transitionâ are the same projects he promoted so fervently in his time
as director of the Italian Institute of Technology. The conference (a 35
minutes long commentary on a Microsoft advertisement) explains rather
clearly that the (transhuman) future belongs to the intertwined
development of informatics and bio-nano-neurotechnologies. In front of
this technoscience cafĂ© public, the future minister doesnât hide that
the road to a total interconnection of men and machine is still long.
But he also reminds that âappetite comes with eating.â
In the 20th century, Nazi biopolitics were at the forefront of
fulfilling the theories of âracial degeneration.â These theories had
been developed by the Anglo-Saxon eugenist movement of the 19th century,
which in turn were rooted in the field practices of British colonialism.
Certain experiments wouldnât have left the laboratories without the
power war between states (either Berlin, or Los Alamos [14]).
GĂŒnther Anders defined the technological system as âthe
national-socialist community of machinesâ with his famous technique of
exaggeration (aiming to grasp the âsupraliminalâ, i.e. something whose
effects are immeasurable and impossible for the senses and imagination
to perceive). He wanted to say that the machines have to be understood
in their global, combined effects, but also that, if we are attentive to
the noise that comes from âthe steel lips of the machine,â we can hear
the same slogan as the Brownshirts (â⊠and tomorrow the whole world!â).
How did transhumanism (whose first Manifesto was published by Natasha
Vita-More in 1983, the same year in which the first computer data was
stored) stopped being an exercise in anti-humanist futurology to become
a real headquarter of power? Once again, thanks to the power war between
states. In fact, itâs after September 11th 2001 that the Silicon Valley
start-ups (created by MITâs brightest nerds), the CIA and the Pentagonâs
Research Department merge. The founders of Google make their first big
leap forward (in the financial sense and thus as an infrastructure: more
intelligent machines because fed with more data, more powerful servers,
etc.) by taking over a CIA-controlled company, Keyhole, to then
transform it into Google Earth. Augmented Reality, 5G, Internet of
Things, drones, facial recognition, surveillance software, quantum
cryptography, the first mRNA vaccines⊠are all marvels born from the
collaboration between digital companies, biotechnological and
nanotechnological laboratories and the military-industrial complex. The
same goes for the Progetto Genoma Umano in Italy, for deCODE in Iceland,
for UmanGenomics in Sweden, for UK Biobank in Britain or
CeleraDiagnostics in the USA. âMarket socialismâ instead of âliberal
democracyâ, the merger process is no different in China.
As early as April last year, a certain professor at MIT (an institution
that is a real incubator of transhumanists) prophesied that there
wouldnât be a âpost-pandemicâ and that we would have to get used to
digital certificates to access certain places or services. What else was
he doing but informing us on what his colleagues in the neighbouring
laboratories were doing? The same is true of Bill Gatesâ âpropheciesâ,
Amazonâs projects or IBMâs announcements.
âIf transhumanism advances without difficulties, itâs because
technocracy sells it under the banner of economical rationalityâ (and we
could add, medical hope). âThe transhumanist project is another name for
growth.â
In 2003, the neo-conservative George Bush Jr. and the neo-Labourist Tony
Blair declare war on Iraq under the pretext that Saddam Husseinâs regime
possessed weapons of mass destruction. The âCoalition of the Willingâ
participated in the bombings of Operation Enduring Freedom with the
support of Western media. At the time, the opposition movement in the
streets talked about the lie that masked the real objective of the war
and an internationally planned media strategy. Everyone thought it was a
sensible and materialistic explanation. Nobody talked about a
âconspiracyâ and not one opponent to the war was qualified as
âconspiracy theorist.â The same happened some months ago during the
Palestinian revolt against the Israeli apartheid policies. It wasnât
called a âconspiracyâ that all mass media presented the Gaza bombings as
a response to Hamasâ rockets (bombings that were arguably
disproportionate) and that the solidarity demonstrations in half the
world were largely ignored. Those who denounced a precise
political-media strategy were not labelled âconspiracy theorists.â
Nobody thought of an obscure umbrella consisting of governments,
politicians and journalists. It was just a convergence of interests.
So why call âconspiracy theoryâ the claim that the management of the
Covid-19 epidemic by almost all governments not only corresponds to
functional elements but also to a well-defined strategy?
The programme to vaccinate billions of people (which implies the massive
injection of the idea that this would be the only solution to âwin the
war against the virusâ) is born out of a similar convergence of powers
that declared âwar on terrorâ to justify bombings. Bombs or vaccines,
these are two moves stemming from the same command centres. The
statement made by Joe Biden at the latest G7 could not have been more
clear: âWe are the biggest arsenal in the global fight against the
virus.â A fight in which the âshort-sighted competitionâ between the
different pharmaceutical multinationals and geopolitical conflict
between states tend, nevertheless, to jeopardize gains. On this point
the editors of The Economist wrote: âImagine an investment that would
earn a return of 17,900% in four years. Better yet, the initial outlay
would be easily affordable. Who on Earth would pass up such an
opportunity? The answer, it seems, is the leaders of the Group of Seven
(G7), a club of rich democracies which holds its annual summit this
week. By failing to act fast enough to inoculate the world against
Covid-19, they are passing up the deal of the century.â
Obviously, since 2003 the enemy âhas neither slept nor idled.â The
mechanization of decisional power (data harvesting, development of
algorithms, automated implementation of commands) entails an inevitable
reduction in the number of decision-makers. âScience obliges usâ mostly
means this. This fact is so notorious that even pale EU bureaucrats
managed to write: âdeveloping robotics may lead to a high concentration
of wealth and influence in the hands of a minority.â (European
Parliament Resolution on Robotics, February 16, 2017)
Certain names (especially the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation) or
certain entities (Big Pharma) seem to have deliberately been spread to
mix elements of truth with hints of an occult, private orchestration
behind the emergency. Those who promote the Bill Gates-mastermind theory
(a thesis that is gaining traction) as a âconspiracy theory delusionâ
are the same government leaders who invite the founder of Microsoft to
their G20 as an exterior advisor on health and vaccines⊠Talking about
Gates could be an excellent way to avoid recognizing the small and
concrete destroyers of humanity at work in the university departments
dedicated to Artificial Intelligence or in the biotechnology and
nanotechnology laboratories completely financed with public funds.
If someone were in the mood to read the massive The Palgrave
Encyclopedia of Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism, they could observe
that the critique on the âimperialism of health care and vaccinesâ
(above all through LARCs â the slow-release âcontraceptivesâ that aim to
prevent poor women from becoming pregnant for years) practised by the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, was already undertaken years ago by
intellectuals and historians from both the academic and the militant
fronts... Vandana Shiva [15] didnât wait for Covid-19 to denounce the
âbenefactorâ imperialism that wants to make our bodies the new colonies
for the digital and pharmaceutical industries.
Yet, itâs enough to mention Bill Gates and the left militant â including
some comrades â will frown, so long as a brilliant theorist with their
endless sarcasm about Satanâs plans doesnât come along⊠If this isnât
communication warfare!
While the openly professed neo-Malthusian engagement of Microsoftâs
former chairman is undeniable (coincidentally the excess people on this
planet are those of colour, just as the women to be sterilizedâŠ). His
funding of all the companies involved in the development of the new
generation of vaccines is undeniable. His ID2020 programme aiming at
attributing to every human being a digital identity through so-called
quantum tattoos [16], is undeniable. His plan to transform bodily
activity in patentable property is undeniable. His âpropheciesâ â which
are actually work-in-progress â that bear a striking resemblance to the
anti-Covid measures taken by NATO member states, are also undeniable.
These are truths â in the Orwellian sense (2+2=4) â whatever the Western
and Eastern technocrats say on the matter.
When do partial truths become total lies? When we separate the
intentions of certain centres of power from the functionality â for all
powers â of a big technological leap forward. When states are seen as
pawns of technocracy, while they are both its historical incubators and
its political and military organizers.
Those who run the Internet of Things, govern humans. Those who govern
humans, run the Internet of Things.
A separate chapter â which we can only briefly touch on â is the
revolutionary theory in times of emergency. Those who possessed a
radical âethical-politicalâ interpretative framework, effortlessly
incorporated this small novelty that was the social incarceration of
billions of people. At its heart, the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic only worsened
the crisis of the capitalist mode of production and its anti-ecological
relation with nature. Technocratic management is only a by-product of
the capitalist war against workers and the ecosystem⊠But this
experience was a shock (and not only because of worries linked to
economical survival) for a big part of âcommon people,â who have no
preexisting theoretical filters. Not everyone internalised the measures
imposed by âdire necessityâ without resistance. For thousands of people,
that the state prevented them from going outside and from seeing their
friends and loved ones, that it imposed a bureaucratic justification for
daily activities, or that it prescribed through emergency decrees how
many people they could eat lunch with and which houses they could enter,
was a proof of âfascismâ, of a sanitary âhealth dictatorshipâ. To which
extent these people are exposed to the political-media propaganda or are
orientated to online âcounter-narrativesâ, changes the kind of
categories they use. That seems quite clear. Just as it is clear that
the way one reacts to an unprecedented situation depends on several
factors: class position, access to cultural instruments, previous
protest experiences, personal network, etc. It seems to be mainly
middle-class and left people who adapted with the most conviction to the
governmental measures. Probably because they are more sensitive to the
appeals of responsibility from institutions and the hammering argument
to âdo it for the frail.â But also because of the internalised idea that
the state expresses the general interest. Or, at least, that itâs the
only power â even if it is weakened and hindered by the economical
interests of some â capable of imposing it. Fear (of getting sick or of
getting fined) can only partially explain what happened. So much so that
milieus used to struggles and repression werenât spared differences and
conflicts. The rift opened during the first lockdown has widened, along
much the same lines, when faced with the question of vaccination. For
some the lines of rupture were already drawn. Many families (largely
from middle-class background, careful about their childrenâs nutrition,
aware of alternative medicine, environmentalists, adherents of
non-violent models, etc.) simply asked the state to not interfere in
matters of education and care. The âLorenzin lawâ in 2017 â which
introduced mandatory vaccinations on behalf of Glaxo â was for them a
kind of crash course in state doctrine. Either they capitulated faced
with the logic of fait accompli (i.e. force) or they dedicated
themselves to alternative schools, building links at the margins of
their now integrated contemporaries. The Covid-19 crisis deepened these
fractures. The refusal of online classes provided another opportunity
for protest and for the creation of micro-communities. The paradox is
that these people (rather well-informed about vaccines, GMOs, lack of
home care, and the health impacts of the 5G network) find the radical
milieus too aligned with dominant medicine. And they think that those
who didnât take sides against lockdowns and against mandatory
vaccination are subservient to âsanitary fascism.â The experience of the
last year and a half has served as a dividing line, precisely because
the government measures have taken advantage of an âapocalyptical
imagination that has lingered in the social subconscious for decadesâ
(the feeling that something is about to happen is the way bodies react
to the ongoing environmental disaster).
Thousands of proletarians and the poor are rebelling against a world in
which thereâs no room for them. Others â more privileged and with (up to
now) modest demands â no longer claim their assigned place in the world.
Ironically, a part of revolutionary theory (perfectly prepared for
disasters) has acted as a tranquillizer (the structural causes of the
epidemic, the crisis of capital⊠all anticipated) instead of as a
detonator of a besieged and belittled life.
The technocrats are right on one point: we donât restart from zero
tomorrow.
Letâs pick up in our own way the lucky intuition of Chesterton. An
inventory of efficient solutions is useless when âthings go very wrong.â
We need to change the very definition of problems. We need a utopia.
Faced with the emergency, groups and movements began to express their
programmes â previously left in the background of the intermediary
struggles. And here emerged the decisive question: the question of the
state.
Given that capitalism will never change its overtly ecocidal course,
whatâs to be done?
Use state power to stop the plunder that the âecologicalâ energy
transition only worsens. Thatâs where the Stalinists, de-growth
advocates and Leninists converge when the circumstances oblige them to
speak clearly. The less radical delude themselves in thinking that itâs
possible to instil from below a âcommon goodâ direction to state
planning (here the tendencies are divided: should the development be
stopped or nationalised?). The more coherent ones aim for an âecological
Leninism.â State power can only interrupt private profit and impose
truly ecological plans when the state is totally stripped of its
capitalist nature. Letâs put aside that small detail of the
revolutionary conquest of political power (arming of the proletariat,
insurrection, connection between the revolutionary movements of
different countries, etc.). Letâs neglect to imagine which measures
these revolutionaries would have taken if they would have been in power
during the epidemic⊠and letâs go straight to the heart of the matter.
Those who want power, want the means of power. The technological machine
(concentration of knowledge, hierarchical and functional division of
roles, efficacy as value in itself, competition in the search of the
most efficient solutions, etc.) develops because it heightens the
coercive power of those who govern society. This power â as the history
of the 20th century richly illustrates â exploits humans insofar as it
pillages nature, and vice versa. It is of little use to call oneself
anti-colonialist and to take over indigenous slogans because they are in
fashion, if one doesnât mentally deconstruct the history of colonialism.
Indigenous communities that live in a balanced relationship with their
surroundings have been and are communities without state.
The fairy tale of a temporary and transitory use of political power
never materialized. Similarly, a revolution that doesnât destroy in its
course the causes of the environmental disaster would entrust to the
state the means to stop the revolutionary momentum as well as the levers
of a pillaging machine necessary to secure a new social division between
rulers and executors. The outcome: a technocracy with a coat of green
paint.
The destruction of the state is the ecological measure that makes all
others possible.
The theoretical shortcomings in understanding the ongoing historical
transformation (in which the acceleration called emergency takes place)
probably depend as much on obsolete interpretative frameworks as on a
leftover of beliefs that theoretical knowledge alone cannot surpass.
From observing the actions of the state throughout history or in the
contemporary scenarios of war and neocolonial domination, we know that
thereâs no ethical, political or legal limit to its power politics
(nowadays technocratic). Nevertheless some conclusions seem exaggerated
to us. Is it possible that so many economical interests were sacrificed
in the short term to prepare the conditions for a Great Transition? Is
it possible that so many people were left to die to impose the public
conviction that Covid-19 was incurable, thus conditioning âreopeningsâ,
the ârestartâ and the âreturn to normalityâ on a general
biotechnological vaccination? Didnât the social engineering and
extermination practices that states carried out during the 20th century
(on average 30.000 people murdered each day) already confirm: âYes, it
is possibleâ? In the meantime the means at their disposal only
multiplied and radicalised.
In the â80s a group like Rote Zora (expression of a broader
revolutionary and radical feminist movement) attacked, among other
targets, scientific centres and genetic engineering laboratories.
Because they saw in these researchers and in these institutions the
continuation of Nazi eugenics. A continuity that wasnât only
biographical (among the directors were important figures of the
national-socialist scientific programmes) but also projectual.
Nevertheless, antifascism was a blunt weapon to grasp the continuity of
projects. Attention had to be given to the geographical dynamics of
domination, in addition to the historical ones. This was the only way to
grasp the connection between biotechnologies applied to agriculture and
genetic engineering applied to human beings, between forced
sterilisation programmes for poor women in Porto Rico, Brazil or Africa
and access to assisted reproductive technology for women in advanced
capitalism countries, between bomb imperialism and vaccine imperialism.
The conviction that these inhumane projects were very real, depended not
only on collected documentation, but also on the fact that Mengele [17]
and the Aktion T4 programme [18] were scientific-state examples still
fresh in collective memory. The attack and sabotage of a genetic
engineering that advanced at that time under the banner of democratic
welfare and the health of people was a concrete resistance against the
new horrors that were being prepared. It was also an ethical position
against orders that have to be followed, in other words, a rupture with
grandparents and parents who collaborated or had allowed it to pass in
silence. The message of these explosive and incendiary devices was:
Never again.
Why does nowadays the information that the heads of big digital
multinationals are declared and active transhumanists, seems to us
little more than a byword of the word profit? Why does the news that the
chief developer of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is a known eugenist
and advocate of the sterilisation of women in Africa, seems questionable
or exaggerated? Without a doubt because we have become more passive and
distrustful given the flood of information that circulates online. But,
above all, because of the relative comfort in which we have been raised,
impervious to any historical consciousness.
Here are the extreme words of two not particularly extremist historians
in 1980, less numbed because of their direct experience: âWithin certain
limits set by political and military power considerations, the modern
state may do anything it wishes to those under its control. There is no
moral-ethical limit which the state cannot transcend if it wishes to do
so, because there is no moral-ethical power higher than the state. [...]
in matters of ethics and morality, the situation of the individual in
the modern state is in principle roughly equivalent to the situation of
the prisoner in Auschwitz: either act in accord with the prevailing
standards of conduct enforced by those in authority, or risk whatever
consequences they may wish to impose.â (George M. Kren & Leon Rappoport,
The Holocaust and the Crisis of Human Behavior)
âMedicine constitutes one of the most obvious moments of attack on the
human body. Capitalism becomes explicit through its doctors and
scientists, an army in the front line of the war, effective final
resolution, that capital leads against living beings.
A disease, this one, terminal.
Once again, and we will never tire of whispering and screaming it, we
are faced with an ultimatum: with humans or with capital.
With humans or with medicine.â
Thatâs what 30 years ago Simone Peruzzi and my friend Riccardo dâEste
wrote in Medicina maledetta ed assassina.
War medicine isnât only a wartime metaphor with which social
militarisation and the appointment of a NATO general as Commissario
straordinario per lâemergenza (Special Commissioner for the Emergency)
was justified, but itâs indeed the description of reality.
The metaphors that are used to represent bodies and diseases were always
an important social indicator. If they donât say much about what
concretely happens to living bodies, they inform us rather well on the
changes in modes of production and in scientific paradigms. Within
certain constants, the dominant representations are updated and become
layered. The virus-disease as enemy, the body as a besieged fortress,
the immunity system as police organ of control and repression; cosmology
that separates human beings from nature, men from women, adults from
children, bodies from minds. The ascent of industrial capitalism is
marked by the vision of the body as a machine and its organs as valves,
pistons, pumps, etc. The idea that organs are replaceable pieces goes
together with Fordism as well as the birth of transplant science. What
would the body become in a digital society if not a flux of information?
Nevertheless, the Fordist paradigm doesnât disappear within the data
paradigm, it radicalises. Now tissues, liquids, molecules, genes and
cells are removable, replaceable and recombinable. And since all of
reality is a flux of information, the living cannot only be recombined
(biotechnologies), but also connected (digital therapies) thanks to
bridges (nanotechnologies). The aim is obvious: âuniversal monitoring
for health care assistance to the communityâ (already pursued in 2004
through techno-medical sensors by the UbiMon project of the Imperial
College London). Bodies-machines in a society-machine. Or if one prefers
more organic metaphors: chickens that have to be regularly vaccinated to
survive and produce in a livestock-world.
Hereâs the most anti-programmatic of programmes: to release our grip
rather than realising the umpteenth Big Work (political, economical,
technological, medical). To release our grip on ourselves, on our fellow
human beings, animals, plants, the Earth.
To sabotage the objectives of power so as to not buckle under its means.
To destroy the destruction of humans by stopping its avant-garde and by
unmasking its servants.
Planet Earth,
beginning of June 2021
[1] Gramsci was a founding member and leader of the PCI, he is nowadays
best known for his theories on cultural hegemony.
[2] Togliatti was the leader of the PCI from 1927 until 1964.
[3] This idea of a return or resurrection of a past popular figure â
saint or ruler â to act as a saviour of the common people has a long
tradition grounded in Christianity and transposed into popular and
unorthodox myths, heretic prophesies and millenarian rebellions. After
World War II the Stalinists in Italy tried to recuperate these myths by
calling on Garibaldi â a republican nationalist and main figure in the
Italian unification or Risorgimento (mid-19th century) â and Baffone â
âthe moustacheâ aka Stalin. According to KerĂ©nyi this would be a
technicized myth as opposed to a genuine myth because itâs consciously
instrumentalised as a propaganda tool and has no spontaneity and
fluidity.
[4] The Jubilee is part of Jewish and Catholic tradition as a special
year during which a kind of universal pardon is granted.
[5] Confindustria is the lobby of bosses in Italy.
[6] This seems to be a reference to the professional links two of the
lead developers have with the Wellcome Trust, a charity which seems
rather concerned about population control and is invested in the
promotion of semi-permanent birth control methods in the Global South â
which has been criticised not only for its questionable motives but also
for the intrinsic power imbalances (access to information, other
options, etc.), use of experimental methods, neglect of serious
side-effects, etc. â as well as hosting the archives of the Galton
Institute, formerly known as the Eugenics Society. Eugenics is about the
improvement of the âgenetic qualityâ of human beings through âselective
breedingâ and is the forerunner to contemporary human genetics research.
[7] The anarchist Giuseppe Mariani (1898-1974) was convicted to life
imprisonment for his involvement in this and other attacks, released
after the end of World War II.
[8] The phrase is commonly used to indicate a typical fallacy of
induction when a relationship of cause and effect is wrongly assumed
based on a simple observation of order of appearance.
[9] Consubstantial means being of the same substance or essence.
[10] As in the quote attributed to Lenin: âEvery cook can govern.â
[11] Genomics is the study of genes on an aggregate level (a genome
being all the genetic information of an organism), as opposed to
genetics which looks at genes on an individual level. Known for
developing DNA sequencing technologies.
[12] Residenze sanitarie assistanziali are living units where people,
who need some form of medical care independent from hospitals, stay for
a variable period of time (from weeks to indefinite).
[13] We do know now, despite many â including decision-makers â still
not having processed that the virus is transmitted through respiratory
droplets and not through contact as is evidenced by the omnipresence of
disinfectant gels and the general lack of ventilation systems (or lack
of differentiation between outdoor and indoor activities).
[14] The secret Los Alamos Laboratory was where the atomics bombs
dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were developed.
[15] Vandana Shiva is an Indian activist, mostly know for her opposition
to GMOs and globalization.
[16] ID2020 is a public-private partnership set up by companies
(including Microsoft) and GAVI (Global Alliance for Vaccines and
Immunization â another public-private consortium, also funded by the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation) that works for the UN towards the goal
of a digital identity for everyone thatâs always accessible, unique and
stays with you during your whole life. What that would look like in
practice stays vague at the moment but storage of personal biometric
data on a blockchain and microchip implants seem to be all on the table.
Researchers at MIT looked into quantum dots as a way to identify those
who have been vaccinated. The micro-particles with quantum dot dye (that
would be injected at the same time as the vaccine) can be detected
through the skin with a smartphone camera that has its infrared filter
disabled. The research was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation. Both projects started before the Covid-19 epidemic.
[17] Mengele was a medical doctor and SS officer, while working in
concentration camps he was in charge of selecting people to send to the
gas chambers and he conducted brutal experiments on prisoners (focused
on genetic research).
[18] Aktion T4 was a forced euthanasia programme in Nazi Germany and
occupied territories of those considered to have a mental or physical
âdefectâ. The selection process was overseen by medical doctors.