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Title: The New Revolution
Author: Levi Raskin
Language: en
Topics: syndicalism, revolution, anarcho-syndicalist, anarcho-syndicalism

Levi Raskin

The New Revolution

An anarchist with an iPhone is the new revolutionary. Gone are the days

of bushy beards and well-groomed moustaches and enter the

flannel-wearing, soymilk-drinking iPhone user. While this is meant

mostly in jest, this example illustrates the great oxymoron of modern

anarchist, and for that matter leftist, life: we as anarchists strive to

work against the capitalist system and overthrow the tyranny of the

spectacle, but we can be beholden to it in our daily lives. What we

preach and how we act are contradictory. Karl Marx, the father of

leftist philosophy, would be utterly appalled at how far we have come

from his vision. There is no possible way to achieve class consciousness

when we are beholden to the sole identity granted by our Twitter handles

and our Instagram likes.

At least in the United States, daily work and experience is so dependent

upon cellphones, television, and other forms of placating media where no

work is necessary to understand. Books, poems, art. Three mediums which

have slipped into the avant-garde of daily living. These events and

experiences require a significant amount of critical thought to relate

to, more so than would be required while vegetating in front of

television. Even “educational” channels and shows suffer from the

inherent vapidity of the viewer; they operate under the delusion that

they teach when they merely give. There is no questioning of the facts,

no interpretation of the data, no drawing from your own experiences of

the world when you suffer through the tedium of viewing television.

Books, poems, art, and other methods unmentioned, of course, all require

comparison of ideas, interpretation of literary meaning, and simply work

done by you, the viewer. It is easier to succumb to the spectacle, to

allow oneself to be overtaken by the products of capitalism, simply

because that is the purpose of these devices: to addict.

It is for this reason that the oxymoron raised earlier is invalid. While

in the better future these capitalist constructions that seek to enslave

the masses to the opiate of the new release would be meaningless and

disappear, that is not intended to fault those who have succumbed to the

spectacle. School children cannot be blamed for boredom, classrooms are

inefficient and unexciting. Those under the effects of their environment

must be removed from said environment when possible, and when separation

is impossible, then mitigation must occur. The work towards minimizing

the placating effects of the spectacle and maximizing the elating

effects of your true passions is the new revolution.

Within a society that does not value the human and only values the

corporate, just societies do not exist on a large scale, but a small

one. Only within these microcosms can we attempt this revolution by

acting right, speaking right, and defending what is right. By these

fairly vague terms I simply mean that we, as anarchists, have the duty

to act in such a way as to best enable our victory over the spectacle,

even if that means reading a book for half an hour a day instead of

watching TV or working on some other productive task as opposed to

consuming what is provided; to speak out about the perils of this

current society to those within our circle of influence, though of

course with tact and respect; and by using whatever free time we might

have to fight this system. The monotony of the 9-5 is monotony that

exhausts and depraves those that in order to survive, must produce to

enrich someone else. Whatever dignity that can be recovered is dignity

that must be retained as closely as possible.

The retention comes from the continual drive, even if it must be

conscious, to produce for you and you alone. Consumption is meaningless

in the capitalist world; the spectacle has degraded television and

everyday entertainment to mindless drivel. Production for the sake of

consumption by yourself and those within your circle is meaningful

production because it comes out of desire for the human connection. The

interpersonal relationships, complete with both positive and negative

emotions, are relationships that are simply more powerful and important

to the human condition than the one-side relationship consisting solely

of admiration that consists the spectacle.

Lives within these private societies, where production occurs for the

sake of the interpersonal, is the only way to combat the spectacle and

eventually topple the capitalist regime. People producing for the human

connection is the very antithesis to the capitalist model of producing

for the sake of profit. Yes, an anarchist with an iPhone is ironic, but

only if they allow the spectacle to overtake their rationality. If they

are true anarchists, their internal battle with the spectacle is ongoing

and raging. This is a battle that, if planned carefully and executed

thoughtfully, can be won: they are the vanguard of the new revolution.