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Title: Civilisation, Primitivism and Anarchism
Author: Andrew Flood
Date: June 11, 2004
Language: en
Topics: civilization, anarcho-primitivism, critique
Source: Retrieved on 12th August 2021 from http://www.anarkismo.net/article/1451

Andrew Flood

Civilisation, Primitivism and Anarchism

Over the last decade a generalized critique of civilization has been

made by a number of authors, mostly based in the USA. Some of these have

chosen to identify as anarchists although the more general

self-identification is primitivist. There overall argument is that

‘civilisation’ itself is the problem that results in our failure to live

rewarding lives. The struggle for change is thus a struggle against

civilization and for an earth where technology has been eliminated.

This is an interesting argument that has some merits as an intellectual

exercise. But the problem is that some of its adherents have used

primitivism as a base from which to attack all other proposals for

changing society. Facing this challenge anarchists need to first look to

see if primitivism offers any sort of realistic alternative to the world

as it is.

Our starting point is that the expression ‘life is hard’ can always

receive the reply that ‘it is better than the alternative’. This

provides a good general test of all critiques of the world ‘as it is’,

including anarchism. Which is to ask if a better alternative is

possible?

Even if we can’t point to the ‘better alternative’, critiques of the

world ‘as it is’ can have a certain intellectual value. But after the

disaster of the 20^(th) century when so-called alternatives like

Leninism created long lasting dictatorships that killed millions, the

question ‘is your alternative any better then what exists?’ has to be

put to anyone advocating change.

The primitivist critique of anarchism is based around the claim to have

discovered a contradiction between liberty and mass society. In other

words they see it as impossible for any society that involves groups

much larger than a village to be a free society. If this was true it

would make the anarchist proposal of a world of ‘free federations of

towns, cities and countryside’ impossible. Such federations and

population centers are obviously a form of mass society/civilisation.

However the anarchist movement has been answering this very so-called

contradiction since its origins. Back in the 19^(th) century liberal

defenders of the state pointed to such a contradiction in order to

justify the need for one set of men to rule over another. Michael

Bakunin answered this in 1871 in his essay on ‘The Paris Commune and the

Idea of the State”[1].

“It is said that the harmony and universal solidarity of individuals

with society can never be attained in practice because their interests,

being antagonistic, can never be reconciled. To this objection I reply

that if these interest have never as yet come to mutual accord, it was

because the State has sacrificed the interests of the majority for the

benefit of a privileged minority. That is why this famous

incompatibility, this conflict of personal interests with those of

society, is nothing but a fraud, a political lie, born of the

theological lie which invented the doctrine of original sin in order to

dishonor man and destroy his self-respect..... We are convinced that all

the wealth of man’s intellectual, moral, and material development, as

well as his apparent independence, is the product of his life in

society. Outside society, not only would he not be a free man, he would

not even become genuinely human, a being conscious of himself, the only

being who thinks and speaks. Only the combination of intelligence and

collective labor was able to force man out of that savage and brutish

state which constituted his original nature, or rather the starting

point for his further development. We are profoundly convinced that the

entire life of men — their interests, tendencies, needs, illusions, even

stupidities, as well as every bit of violence, injustice, and seemingly

voluntary activity — merely represent the result of inevitable societal

forces. People cannot reject the idea of mutual independence, nor can

they deny the reciprocal influence and uniformity exhibiting the

manifestations of external nature.”

What level of technology

Most primitivists evade the question of what level of technology they

wish to return to by hiding behind the claim that they are not arguing

for a return to anything, on the contrary they want to go forward. With

that in mind a reasonable summary of their position is that certain

technologies are acceptable up to the level of small village society

sustained by hunting and gathering. The problems for primitivists start

with the development of agriculture and mass society.

Of course civilization is a rather general term, as is technology. Few

of these primitivists have taken this argument to its logical

conclusion. One who has is John Zerzan who identifies the root of the

problem in the evolution of language and abstract thought. This is a

logical end point for the primitivist rejection of mass society.

For the purposes of this article I’m taking as a starting point that the

form of future society that primitivists argue for would be broadly

similar in technological terms to that which existed around 12,000 years

ago on earth, at the dawn of the agricultural revolution. By this I do

not claim that they want to ‘go back’, something that is in any case

impossible. But rather that if you seek to go forward by getting rid of

all the technology of the agricultural revolution and beyond what

results will look quite like pre-agricultural societies of 10,000 BC. As

this is the only example we have of such a society in operation it seems

reasonable to use it to evaluate the primitivist claims.

A question of numbers

Hunter-gatherers live off the food they can hunt or gather, hence the

name. Animals can be hunted or trapped while fruits, nuts, greens and

roots are gathered. Before about 12,000 years ago every human on the

planet lived as a hunter-gatherer. Today only a tiny number of people

do, in isolated and marginal regions of the planet including deserts,

artic tundra and jungle. Some of these groups like the Acre have only

had contact with the rest of the planet in recent decades[2], others

like the Inuit[3] have had contact for long periods of time and so have

adopted technologies beyond those developed locally. These latter groups

are very much part of the global civilization and have contributed to

the development of new technologies in this civilization.

In marginal ecosystems hunter-gathering often represents the only

feasible way of producing food. The desert is too dry for sustained

agriculture and the arctic too cold. The only other possibility is

pastoralism, the reliance on semi-domesticated animals as a food source.

For instance in the Scandinavian arctic the Sami[4] control the movement

of huge reindeer herds to provide a regular food source.

Hunter-gatherers survive on the food they hunt and gather. This requires

very low population densities as population growth is limited by the

need to avoid over hunting. Too much gathering of food plants can also

serve to reduce the number of plants that are available in the future.

This is the core problem with the primitivist idea that the whole planet

could live as hunter-gatherers: there is not nearly enough food produced

in natural ecosystems for even a fraction of the current population of

the world to do so.

It should be obvious that the amount of calories available to humans as

food in an acre of oak forest will be a lot lower then the amount of

calories available to humans in an acre of corn. Agriculture provides

far, far more useful calories per acre than hunter gathering in the same

acre would. That is because we have spent 12,000 years selecting plants

and improving agricultural techniques so that per acre we cram in lots

of productive plants that put their energy into producing plant parts

that are food for us rather then plant parts that are not food for us.

Compare any cultivated grain with its wild relative and you will see an

illustration of this, the cultivated form will have much bigger grains

and a much larger proportion of grain to stalk and foliage. We have

chosen plants that produce a high ratio of edible biomass.

In other words a pine tree may be as good or better then a lettuce at

capturing the solar energy that falls on it. But with the lettuce a huge

percentage of the captured energy goes into food (around 75%). With pine

tree none of the energy produces food we can eat. Compare the amount of

food to be found in a nearby woodland with the amount you can grow in a

couple of square meters of garden cultivated in even an organic low

energy fashion and you’ll see why agriculture is a must have for the

population of the planet. An acre of organically grown potato can yield

15,000 lbs of food[5]. A a square that is 70 yards wide and 70 yards

long measures just over an acre.

The estimated population of human on the earth before the advent of

agriculture (10,000 BC) varies with some estimates as low as 250,000 [6]

Other estimates for the pre-agricultural hunter gather population are

more generous, in the range of 6 to 10 million.[7]. The earth’s current

population is nearing 6,000 million.

This 6,000 million are almost all supported by agriculture. They could

not be supported by hunter gathering, indeed it is suggested that even

the 10 million hunter gathers who may have existed before agriculture

may have been a non sustainable number. Evidence for this can be seen in

the Pleistocene overkill[8], a period from 12,000 to 10,000 BC in which

200 genera of large mammals went extinct. In the Americas in this period

over 80% of the population of large mammals became extinct.[9] That this

was due to over hunting is one controversial hypothesis. If correct than

the advent of agriculture (and civilisation) may even have then due to

the absence of large game which forced hunter gathers to ‘settle down’

and find other ways of obtaining food.

Certainly in recorded history the same over hunting has been observed

with the arrival of man on isolated Polynesian islands. Over hunting

caused the extinction of the Dodo in Mauretania and the Moa in New

Zealand not to mention many less famous species.

Living in the bog in winter

Another way of looking at the fact that primitivism cannot support all

of the people of the planet is more anecdotal and uses Ireland (where I

live) as an example. Left to itself the Irish countryside would consist

mostly of mature oak forest with some hazel scrub and bogs. Go into an

oak forest and see how much food you can gather — if you know your stuff

there is some. Acorns, fruit on brambles in clearings, some wild garlic,

strawberries, edible fungi, wild honey, and the meat from animals like

deer, squirrel, wild goat and pigeon that can be hunted. But this is

many, many, many fewer calories then the same area cultivated as wheat

or potatoes would yield. There is simply not enough land in Ireland to

support 5 million, the current population of the island, as hunter

gatherers.

Typically hunter gathers live at a population density of 1 per 10 square

km. (Ireland’s present population density is around 500 per 10 square km

or 500 times this). By extending this standard calculation from

elsewhere on the planet the number that could be supported in Ireland

would be less then 70,000. Probably a lot less as only 20% of Ireland is

arable land. Blanket bog or Burren karst provide little in the way of

food useful for humans. In winter there would be very little food to be

gathered (perhaps small caches of nuts hidden by squirrels and some wild

honey) and that even 70,000 people living off hunting would eradicate

the large mammals (deer, wild goat) very quickly. The coastal areas and

larger rivers and lakes would be the main source of hunting and some

gathering in the form of shellfish and edible seaweed.

But being generous and assuming that somehow Ireland could sustain

70,000 hunter gatherers we discover we need to ‘reduce’ the population

by some 4,930,000. Or 98.6%. The actual archaeological estimates for the

population of Ireland before the arrival of agriculture is around 7,000

people.

The idea that a certain amount of land can support a certain amount of

people according to how it is (or in this case is not) cultivated is

referred to as its ‘carrying capacity’. This can be estimated for the

earth as a whole. One modern calculation for hunter gathers actually

give you 100 million as the maximum figure but just how much of a

maximum this is becomes clear when you realize that using similar

methods gives 30 billion as the maximum farming figure.[10] That would

be six times the world’s current population!

But let’s take this figure of 100 million as the maximum rather then the

historical maximum of 10 million. This is generous estimate, well above

that of those primitivists who have dared to address this issue. For

instance Miss Ann Thropy writing in the US Earth First! magazine

estimated, “Ecotopia would be a planet with about 50 million people who

are hunting and gathering for subsistence.” [11]

The earth’s population today is around 6000 million. A return to a

‘primitive’ earth therefore requires that some 5900 million people

disappear. Something has to happen to 98% of the world’s population in

order for the 100 million survivors to have even the slightest hope of a

sustainable primitive utopia.

Dirty tricks?

At this point some primitivist writers like John Moore cry foul,

dismissing the suggestion “that the population levels envisaged by

anarcho-primitivists would have to be achieved by mass die-offs or

nazi-style death camps. These are just smear tactics. The commitment of

anarcho-primitivists to the abolition of all power relations, including

the State with all its administrative and military apparatus, and any

kind of party or organization, means that such orchestrated slaughter

remains an impossibility as well as just plain horrendous.”[12]

The problem for John is that these ‘smear tactics’ are based not only on

the logical requirements of a primitivist world but are also explicitly

acknowledged by other primitivists. Miss Ann Thropy’s 50 million has

already been quoted. Another primitivist FAQ claims “Drastic population

reductions are going to happen whether we do it voluntarily or not. It

would be better, for obvious reasons to do all this gradually and

voluntarily, but if we don’t the human population is going to be cut

anyway.”[13]

The Coalition Against Civilization write “We need to be realistic about

what would happen were we to enter a post-civilized world. One basic

write-off is that a lot of people would die upon civil collapse. While

being a hard thing to argue to a moralistic person, we shouldn’t pretend

this wouldn’t be the case”[14]

More recently Derrick Jensen in an interview from Issue #6 of The ‘A’

Word Magazine[15] said civilization “needs to be actively fought

against, but I don’t think that we can bring it down. What we can do is

assist the natural world to bring it down..... I want civilization

brought down and I want it brought down now.” We have seen above what

the consequences of ‘bringing down’ civilization are.

In short there is no shortage of primitivists who recognize that the

primitive world they desire would require “mass die-offs”. I’ve not come

across any who advocate “nazi-style death camps” but perhaps John just

threw this in to muddy the water. Primitivists like John Moore can

therefore refuse to confront this question of die off by upping the

emotional ante and by accusing those who point the need for die-off out

as carrying out ‘smear tactics’. It’s up to him to either explain how 6

billion can be fed or to admit that primitivism is no more then an

intellectual mind game.

My expectation is that just about everyone when confronted with this

requirement of mass death will conclude that ‘primitivism’ offers

nothing to fight for. A very few, like the survivalists confronted by

the threat of nuclear war in the 1980’s, might conclude that all this is

inevitable and start planning how their loved ones will survive when

others die. But this later group has moved far, far beyond any

understanding of anarchism as I understand it. So the ‘anarcho’ prefix

such primitivists try to claim has to be rejected.

Most primitivists run away from the requirement for mass death in one of

two ways. The more cuddly ones decide that primitivism is not a program

for a different way of running the world. Rather it exists as a critique

of civilization and not an alternative to it. This is fair enough and

there is a value in re-examining the basic assumptions of civilization .

But in that case primitivism is no substitute for the anarchist struggle

for liberation, which involves adopting technology to our needs rather

then rejecting it. The problem is that primitivists like to attack the

very methods of mass organization that are necessary for overthrowing

capitalism. Reasonable enough if you believe you have an alternative to

anarchism but rather damaging if all you have is an interesting

critique!

Other primitivists however take the Cassandra path, telling us they are

merely prophets of an inevitable doom. They don’t desire the death of

5,900 million they just point out it cannot be prevented. This is worth

examing in some detail precisely because it is so disempowering. What

after all is the use of fighting for a fair society today if tomorrow or

the day after 98% of us are going to die and everything we have built

crumble to dust?

Are we all doomed?

Primitivists are not the only ones to use the rhetoric of catastrophe to

panic people into accepting their political proposals. Reformists such

as George Monbiot, use similar ‘we are all doomed’ arguments to try and

stampede people into support for reformism and world government. In the

last decades acceptance that the world is somehow doomed has become part

of mainstream culture, first as the cold war and then as looming

environmental disaster. George Bush and Tony Blair created a panic over

Weapons of Mass Destruction to give cover to their invasion of Iraq. The

need to examine and dismantle such panics is clear.

The most convincing form the ‘end of civilisation’ panic takes is the

idea of a looming resource crisis that will make life as we know it

impossible. And the best resource to focus on for those who wish to make

this argument is oil. Everything we produce, including food, is

dependant on massive energy inputs and 40% of the worlds energy use is

generated from oil.

The primitivist version of this argument goes something like this,

‘everyone knows that in X number of year the oil will run out, this will

mean civilization will grind to a halt, and this will mean lots of

people will die. So we might as well embrace the inevitable’. The oil

running out argument is the primitivist equivalent of the orthodox

Marxist ‘final economic crisis that results in the overthrow of

capitalism’. And, just like the orthodox Marxists, primitivists always

argue this final crisis is always just around the corner.

When looked at in any detail this argument evaporates and it becomes

clear that neither capitalism nor civilization face a final crisis

because of the oil running out. This is not because oil supplies are

inexhaustible, indeed we may be reaching the peak of oil production

today in 1994. But far from being the end of capitalism or civilization

this is an opportunity for profit and restructuring. Capitalism, however

reluctantly, is gearing up to make profits out of developing alternative

energy sources on the one hand and on the other of accessing plentiful

but more destructive to extract fossil fuel supplies. The second path of

course makes global warming and other forms of pollution a lot worse but

that’s not likely to stop the global capitalist class.

It is not just primitivists who have become mesmerized by the oil crisis

so I intend to deal with this in a separate essay. But in summary, while

oil will become more expensive over the decades the process to develop

substitutes for it is already underway. Denmark for instance intends to

produce 50% of its energy needs from wind farms by 2030 and Danish

companies are already making vast amounts of money because they are the

leading producers of wind turbines. The switch over from oil is likely

to provide an opportunity to make profits for capitalism rather then

representing some form of final crisis.

There may well be an energy crisis as oil starts to rise in price and

alternative technologies are not yet capable of filling the 40% of

energy generation filled by oil. This will cause oil and therefore

energy prices to soar but this will be a crisis for the poor of the

world and not for the wealthy some of whom will even profit from it. A

severe energy crisis could trigger a global economic downturn but again

it is the world’s workers that suffer the most in such times. There is a

good argument that the world’s elite are already preparing for such a

situation, many of the recent US wars make sense in terms of securing

future oil supplies for US corporations.

Capitalism is quite capable of surviving very destructive crisis. World

War 2 saw many of the major cities of Europe destroyed and most of the

industry of central Europe flattened. (By bombers, by war, by retreating

Germans and then torn up and shipped east by advancing Russians).

Millions of European workers died as a result both in the war years and

in the years that followed. But capitalism not only survived, it

flourished as starvation allowed wages to be driven down and profits

soared.

What if?

However it is worth doing a little mental exercise on this idea of the

oil running out. If indeed there was no alternative what might happen?

Would a primitivist utopia emerge even at the bitter price of 5,900

million people dying?

No. The primitivists seem to forget that we live in a class society. The

population of the earth is divided into a few people with vast resources

and power and the rest of us. It is not a case of equal access to

resources, rather of quite incredible unequal access. Those who fell

victim to the mass die off would not include Rubert Murdoch, Bill Gates

or George Bush because these people have the money and power to

monopolise remaining supplies for themselves.

Instead the first to die in huge number would be the population of the

poorer mega cities on the planet. Cairo and Alexandria in Egypt have a

population of around 20 million between them. Egypt is dependent both on

food imports and on the very intensive agriculture of the Nile valley

and the oasis. Except for the tiny wealthy elite those 20 million urban

dwellers would have nowhere to go and there is no more land to be

worked. Current high yields are in part dependent on high inputs of

cheap energy.

The mass deaths of millions of people is not something that destroys

capitalism. Indeed at periods of history it has been seen as quite

natural and even desirable for the modernization of capital. The potato

famine of the 1840’s that reduced the population of Ireland by 30% was

seen as desirable by many advocates of free trade.[16] So was the 1943/4

famine in British ruled Bengal in which four million died[17]. For the

capitalist class such mass deaths, particularly in colonies afford

opportunities to restructure the economy in ways that would otherwise be

resisted.

The real result of an ‘end of energy’ crisis would see our rulers stock

piling what energy sources remained and using them to power the

helicopter gunships that would be used to control those of us fortunate

enough to be selected to toil for them in the biofuel fields. The

unlucky majority would just be kept where they are and allowed to die

off. More of the ‘Matrix’ then utopia in other words.

The other point to be made here is that destruction can serve to

regenerate capitalism. Like it or not large scale destruction allows

some capitalist to make a lot of money. Think of the Iraq war. The

destruction of the Iraqi infrastructure may be a disaster for the people

of Iraq buts it’s a profit making bonanza for Halliburton and co[18].

Not coincidentally the Iraq war, is helping the US A, where the largest

corporations are based, gain control of the parts of the planet where

much future and current oil production takes place.

We can extend our intellectual exercise still further. Let us pretend

that some anarchists are magically transported from the Earth to some

Earth like planet elsewhere. And we are dumped there without any

technology at all. The few primitivists amongst us might head off to run

with the deer but a fair percentage would sit down and set about trying

to create an anarchist civilisation. Many of the skills we could bring

might not be that useful (programming without computers is of little

use) but between us we’d have a good basic knowledge of agriculture,

engineering, hydraulics and physics. Next time the primitivists wandered

through the area we settled they’d find a landscape of farms and dams.

We’d at least have wheeled carts and possibly draft animals if any of

the large game were suitable for domestication. We’d send out parties

looking for obvious sources of coal and iron and if we found these we’d

mine and transport them. If not we’d be felling a lot of lumber to turn

into charcoal to extract whatever iron or copper we could from what

could be found. The furnace and the smelter would also be found on that

landscape. We have some medical knowledge, most importantly an

understanding of germs and medical hygiene so we’d have both basic water

purification and sewage removal systems.

We’d understand the importance of knowledge so we’d have an education

system for our children and at least the beginnings of a long-term store

of knowledge (books). We could probably find the ingredients for

gunpowder, which are quite common, which would give us the blasting

technology need for large-scale mining and construction. If there was

any marble nearby we could make concrete, which is a much better

building material then wood or mud.

Technology did not come from the gods. It was not imposed on man by a

mysterious outside force. Rather it is something we developed and

continue to develop. Even if you could turn the clock back it would just

start ticking again. John Zerzan seems to be the only primitivists

capable of acknowledging this and he retreats to the position of seeing

language and abstract thought as the problem. He is both right and

ludicrous at the same time. His vision of utopia requires not only the

death of the mass of the worlds population but would require the

genetically engineered lobotomy of those who survive and their off

spring! Not of course something he advocates but a logical end point of

his argument.

Why argue against it?

So why spend so much space demolishing such a fragile ideology as

primitivism. One reason is the embarrassing connection with anarchism

some primitivists seek to claim. More importantly primitivism both by

implication and often in its calls wants its followers to reject

rationalism for mysticism and oneness with nature. The are not the first

irrational ecological movement to do so, a good third of the German Nazi

party came from forest worshipping blood and soil movements that sprang

up in Germany in the aftermath of world war one.

This is not an empty danger. Within primitivism a self-proclaimed

irrational wing has developed that if not yet advocating “nazi-style

death camps” has openly celebrated the deaths and murder of large

numbers of people as a first step.

In December 1997 the US publication Earth First wrote that “the AIDS

epidemic, rather than being a scourge, is a welcome development in the

inevitable reduction of human population.”[19] Around the same period in

Britain Steve Booth, one of the editors of a magazine called ‘Green

Anarchist ‘, wrote that

“The Oklahoma bombers had the right idea. The pity was that they did not

blast any more government offices. Even so, they did all they could and

now there are at least 200 government automatons that are no longer

capable of oppression.

The Tokyo sarin cult had the right idea. The pity was that in testing

the gas a year prior to the attack, they gave themselves away. They were

not secretive enough. They had the technology to produce the gas but the

method of delivery was ineffective. One day the groups will be totally

secretive and their methods of fumigation will be completely

effective.”[20]

This is where you end up when you celebrate spirituality over

rationality. When the hope of ‘running with deer’ overcomes the need to

deal with the problem of making a revolution on a planet of 6 billion

people. The ideas above have only reactionary conclusions. Their logic

is elitist and hierarchical , little more than a semi-secular version of

gods chosen people laying waste to the unbelievers. It certainly has

nothing in common with anarchism.

We need more not less technology

Which brings us back to the start. Civilisation comes with many, many

problems but it is better than the alternative. The challenge for

anarchists is in transforming civilization to a form that is without

hierarchy, or imbalances of power or wealth. This is not a new

challenge, it has always been the challenge of anarchism as shown by the

lengthy Bakunin quote at the start of this essay.

To do this we need modern technology to clean our water, pump away and

process our waste and inoculate or cure people of the diseases of high

population density. With only 10 million people on the earth you can

shit in the woods providing you keep moving on. With 6 billion those who

shit in the woods are shitting in the water they and those around them

will have to drink. According to the UN “each year, more than 2.2

million people die from water and sanitation related diseases, many of

them children”. Close to one billion urban dwellers have no access to

sustainable sanitation. Data for “43 African cities .... shows that 83

percent of the population do not have toilets connected to sewers”[21].

The challenge then is not simply the construction of a civilization that

keeps everyone’s standards of living at the level they are now. The

challenge is raising just about everyone’s standard of living but doing

so in a manner that is reasonably sustainable. Only the further

development of technology coupled to a revolution that eliminates

inequality across the planet can deliver this.

It is unfortunate that some anarchists who live in the most developed,

most wealthy and most technological nations of the world prefer to play

with primitivism rather than getting down to thinking about how we can

really change the world. The global transformation required will make

all previous revolutions fade into insignificance.

The major problem is not simply that capitalism has been happy to leave

a huge proportion of the world’s population in poverty. The problem is

also that development has been aimed at creating consumers for future

products rather then providing what people need.

Transport provides the simplest example. A variety of forms of mass

transport exist that can move huge numbers of people from place to place

at great speed. Yet in the last decade capitalism has concentrated on

the form that uses the greatest resources per traveler both in terms of

what goes into making it and what is required to keep it running. This

is the individual car.

Across large areas of the most developed parts of the globe this is

pretty much the only way to get around in an efficient manner. The car

has created the sprawling mega city of which Los Angeles is perhaps the

most infamous example. There a city has been created whose urban layout

makes individual car ownership almost compulsory.

This form of transport is simply not a solution for most of the world’s

population. And it’s not simply that most people cannot afford a car at

the moment. The resources consumed in the construction of the 3 billion

odd cars needed for every adult inhabitant of the globe are simply not

available. Nor are the resources (petrol) to run these 3 billion cars

available.

So taking hold of existing technologies and developing new ones cannot

simply mean carrying on capitalist production (or production methods)

under a red and black flag. Just as a future anarchist society would

seek to abolish the boring monotonous work of the assembly line so it

would need to radically change the nature of the products that are

produced. At a simple level in terms of transport this would perhaps

begin with greatly reducing the production of cars and greatly

increasing the production of bicycles, motorbikes, trains, buses, trucks

and mini-buses.

I’m neither a ‘transport expert’ nor a worker in the transport industry

so I can do no more then guess at what these changes might be. But we

should be aware that outside of the west the need for transport is often

solved in far less individualistic ways. Only the wealthy can afford a

car but the mass of the population can often move almost as quickly from

one location to another making use not only of bus and rail but also of

systems of long distance collective taxis and mini-buses that run

between towns whenever they are full.

This is the challenge for anarchism. Not simply to overthrow the

existing capitalist world order but also to see the birth of a new

world. A world that is at least capable of delivering the same access to

goods, transport, healthcare and education as is accessible to the

‘middle class’ in Scandinavian countries today.

It is that new society that will decide what new technologies are needed

and how to adopt existing technologies to the challenge of a new world.

It is quite likely that some technologies, if not discarded, will be

very much downgraded. It’s hard to believe we would happily decide to

build new nuclear power stations for instance. GMOs would need to prove

something beyond the possibility of GMO’s meaning greater profits and

monopolies for corporations, not least that the benefit was greater than

the dangers.

As long as capitalism exists it will continue to wreak environmental

havoc as it chases profits. It will only effectively respond to the

energy crisis once that becomes profitable and because there will be a

lag of many years before oil can be replaced this might mean worsening

poverty and death for many or the poorer people in the world. But we

cannot fix these problems by dreaming of some lost golden age when the

world’s population was low enough to support hunter gathering. We can

only sort it out by building the sort of mass movements that can not

only overthrow capitalism but also introduce a libertarian society. And

on the way we need to find ways to halt and even reverse some of the

worst of the environmental threats capitalism is generating.

Primitivism is a pipe dream — it offers no way forwards in the struggle

for a free society. Often its adherents end up undermining that struggle

by attacking the very things, like mass organization, that are a

requirement to win it. Those primitivists who are serious about changing

the world need to re-examine what they are fighting for.

[1]

flag.blackened.net

[2]

www.guardian.co.uk

[3]

www.heritage.nf.ca

[4]

www.yukoncollege.yk.ca

[5]

www.gardensofeden.org

[6]

biology.queensu.ca

[7]

qrc.depaul.edu

[8]

geography.berkeley.edu

[9]

qrc.depaul.edu

[10]

www.google.ie

(sorry for the long URL but the page is not directly accessible)

[11] “Miss Ann Thropy,” Earth First! Dec. 22, 1987, cited at

www.processedworld.com

[12]

www.eco-action.org

A Primitivist Primer By John Moore

[13] http///www.eco-action.org/spellbreaker/faq.html

[14] the Practical Anarcho-Primitivist: actualizing the implications of

a critique -Coalition Against Civilization, online at

www.coalitionagainstcivilization.org

[15] Issue #6 of The ‘A’ Word Magazine, this interview online at

www.infoshop.org

[16]

struggle.ws

[17]

www.abc.net.au

[18] For a reasoned critique of collapism from a Green anarchist

perspective see

pub47.ezboard.com

[19] Earth First!, Dec. 22, 1987, cited at

www.processedworld.com

[20] Green Anarchist, number 51, page 11, a defense of these remarks was

published in Number 52. The author Steve Booth was a GA editor (and the

treasurer) at the time

[21]

www.unhabitat.org