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Title: Communiqué N° 0 Author: The Invisible Committe Date: February 7th, 2022 Language: en Topics: Tiqqun, communique, imaginary party, Insurrectionary Source: Retrieved on 2022-02-17 from https://illwill.com/communique-n-0 Notes: Translated by Ill Will
The political and moral significance of thinking comes out only in those
rare moments in history when âThings fall apart; the center cannot hold
/ Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,â when âThe best lack all
conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity.â At
these moments, thinking ceases to be a marginal affair in political
matters. When everybody is swept away unthinkingly by what everybody
else does and believes in, those who think are drawn out of hiding
because their refusal to join is conspicuous and thereby becomes a kind
of action.
âHannah Arendt, âThinking and Moral Considerationsâ
The Invisible Committee was originally a workersâ conspiracy in Lyon
during the 1830s. In his Arcades Project, Walter Benjamin writes, âThe
Invisible Committee â name of a secret society in Lyon.â In the
conclusion of the La Fabrique edition of Theory of Bloom, released in
February of 2000, one reads, âThe Invisible Committee: an overtly secret
society / a public conspiracy / an agency of anonymous subjectivation,
whose name is everywhere and headquarters nowhere / the
revolutionary-experimental polarity of the Imaginary Party.â The back
cover of the same book was even more politically explicit: it defined
the Invisible Committee as an âanonymous conspiracy that, from sabotage
to uprising, eventually liquidates commodity domination during the first
quarter of the twenty-first century.â By âImaginary Partyâ we
understood, and still understand, the whole ensemble of those who find
themselves in conflict â whether in open or latent war, in secession or
in simple disaffection â with the technological and anthropological
unification of this world under the sign of the commodity. To this
process of unification by which the planet is constituted as a
âcontinuous biopolitical fabricâ we assigned the indifferent name
âEmpireâ or âworld of the authoritarian commodity.â In 2022, the
obviousness of such notions, or at least of the intuitions to which they
attest, can be ignored only at oneâs own expense.
Under such conditions, the Imaginary Party forms both the blind spot and
the unspeakable enemy of a society that today acknowledges only errors
to be corrected in its impeccable programming â as well as a handful of
demons to be urgently crushed. Whenever a sudden burst of activity
nevertheless leads the Imaginary Party to erupt into the Spectacle, it
is quickly denounced as the action of some âmarginal minority.â Of
course, one must dutifully avoid ever acknowledging that the margin in
question henceforth lies everywhere, and that this society produces it
all the more continuously as it pretends to absorb it. Constantly cast
back into the unreality of a specter, the Imaginary Party is the form of
appearance of the proletariat âduring the historical period in which
domination imposes itself as the dictatorship of visibility, and
dictatorship in visibilityâ (Tiqqun 1, âTheses on the Imaginary Partyâ).
It is also true that the kind of inner disaffiliation that afflicts this
society is generally so mute, so diffuse and so discreet that it tends
to accentuate its disposition to paranoia â that atavistic and often
deadly disease of power. As we noted at the time, âin a world of
paranoids, the paranoid are right.â
These theses, which at the time were considered alarming, insane and
even downright criminal, have been confirmed point by point over the
past decades, despite all efforts to the contrary, including our own. In
September 2001, the opening text of the journal Tiqqun 2 concluded with
this premonition: âThe preceding phrases will usher in a new era that
will be shadowed, in ever more tangible ways, by the threat of a sudden
unleashing of reality. At some point, the âInvisible Committeeâ was the
name given to the ethic of civil war expressed in these pages. It refers
to a specific faction of the Imaginary Party, its
revolutionaryexperimental wing. We hope that with these lines we can
avoid some of the more vulgar nonsense that might be uttered about the
nature of our activities and about the era just now dawningâ
(âIntroduction to Civil War,â Tiqqun 2). As predicted, no shortage of
the âmost vulgar nonsenseâ was uttered in November 2008, at which time a
dozen people were arrested for âterrorismâ on the double pretense of
having committed a series of anti-nuclear sabotages and of having
written a book, The Coming Insurrection, signed by the Invisible
Committee. The press proceeded to make a fine display of how it goes
about its task of informing the public, taking over the governments
fabulations wholesale, and with them those of the anti-terrorist police
too. It made a complete fool of itself, which obviously taught it
nothing about either itself or us. This whole shaky edifice ended up
collapsing, yet not before inducing the wider public to read the
Invisible Committee, at the price of some inconvenience for all those
involved. If anyone still needed confirmation of the essentially
police-like character of very notion of authorship â the need to hold
someone âresponsibleâ for a truth uttered in public â the whole affair
seemed designed to deliver up the definitive proof. After ten years of
painful proceedings, the indictment of the public prosecutorâs office
eventually came down heavily on the identity of the man accused of
sabotage and suspected of having been the âprincipal authorâ of The
Coming Insurrection. The needs of the defense â since when do we owe the
truth to our enemies? â led one of the accused, who risked nothing in
the event of a trial and who had not written three lines of The Coming
Insurrection, nor of the subsequent books, to claim authorship of the
pamphlet before the judge. In an epoch in which mystification reigns, it
could be expected that this lie would eventually be passed off as truth,
and that the liar would end up almost convincing himself of it, by dint
of passing as such. Since he therefore became the spokesperson for the
accused, this boy went on to illustrate the structural tendency toward
autonomization characteristic of modern communication, which allows one
to believe that simply having an account on Twitter, all alone behind
oneâs smartphone, is sufficient to shape reality. Even governing
authorities themselves manage to stumble over this carpet of illusion.
In any case, spokespersons are generally not expected to have a deep
understanding of what they speak; it can even be detrimental to their
task.
On the other hand, the torments of publicity were not taken into
account. The Invisible Committee has never been a group, and still less
a âcollective.â We have long been aware of the dangers of âterrible
communities.â It is therefore not susceptible to any dissolution,
neither legal nor voluntary. It was always spared that tragi-comedy of
small groups described by Wilfred Bion already in 1961. On the other
hand, it did not escape the throes of publicity. How many âmembers of
the Invisible Committeeâ have we heard about, that we have never met?
And how many people we have met who owe their scant aura to the mystery
they nourish about the fact that they âmight have beenâ a part of it, or
even âmight beâ again? This risk of usurpation, as well as the entire
regime of pretense that the latter authorizes, counts among the few
downsides of anonymity in these dark times. In any event, such shams
only fool the foolish. The Invisible Committee names a certain partisan
intelligence of our epoch, scattered like splinters among all those
unreconciled with their times. Clearly, what matters is not being a part
of it but the work itself, that of gathering the fragments: to maintain,
across and against all the maneuvers of integration, a position
apparently lost in the war of time. âWho else, then, can change the
world? Those who donât like it.â This was already Brechtâs answer, in
1932, in Kuhle Wampe.
The Invisible Committee functions as a site of strategic enunciation.
Those who write under its name have been able to do so only after
undergoing a certain asceticism, a certain practice of desubjectivation,
which strips from them all the defense mechanisms that form, in the last
resort, the âIâ: they drop the ego. Only on this condition do they
manage to do something other than to âexpress themselves,â to instead
express what they find suspended in our epoch, and therefore fatally
also in ourselves. The texts of the Invisible Committee are assembled
out of this dust of intuitions, observations, events, words seized on
the fly, experiments and experiences undertaken or undergone, gestures
accomplished or thwarted, confused sensations, distant echoes and
gleaned formulas.
This explains why we have always regarded it as a matter of indifference
that one or another of us writes an overwhelming part of this or that
text. Whoever writes under this signature is literally nobody, or
everybody. Among those who hold the schismatic position of the Invisible
Committee, all the friends will debate this or that unilateral
formulation, this or that thesis, this or that perception. In short: we
are scribes of our time, which is to say, of the real movement that
destitutes the existing state of things. Whence the absence of any
author for these texts. The method seems to work fairly well: few can
claim, after two decades, to have not a word to withdraw from what they
said about their time, and to have been able to hold such a scandalous
position throughout. âTo refuse to hold the state of things as valid is
the attitude that proves the existence, I would not even say of an
intelligence, but the existence of the soulâ (Dionys Mascolo).
The recent publication of a truly anonymous book, the Conspiracist
Manifesto, perfectly unacceptable to its epoch, has provided the
occasion for a remarkable campaign of revenge on the part of all those
who long felt humiliated by the âsuccessesâ of the Invisible Committee
to date. The signal for this public lynching was given to LâExpress on
the basis of âinformationâ emanating from the police â sloppy detective
work that was followed by the interception and destruction of
correspondence from a âprestigiousâ Parisian publisher, a snoop work
that it would not be hard to attribute, once again, to the DGSI (General
Directorate for Internal Security). The journalistic flunkies bravely
followed suit, without any memory of how little success theyâd
previously had in howling with the wolves against the Invisible
Committee. At the climax of their campaign, they boasted that they
understood nothing of the Manifesto, but not without first complaining
that the book was too informed in too many areas to contradict it â poor
guys! Finally, the old Negrist partisans of âminor biopoliticsâ or even
of âinflationary biopoliticsâ joined the throng, those whose historical
defeat coincided precisely with the victory of their ideas on the side
of the Empire. Today it is Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum who
is invited to the Vatican to discuss with Pope Francis his philanthropic
project of universal income. As for âinflationary biopolitics,â after
the last two years no one needs any help picturing whatâs at stake.
âBecause the most formidable stratagem of Empire lies in its throwing
everything that opposes it into one ugly heap-of âbarbarism,â âsects,â
âterrorism,â or âconflicting extremismsâ (âThis is not a Program,â
Tiqqun 2), our failing Negrist spectres and other sub-Foucauldians
hastened to shriek âconfusion,â âfascism,â âeugenics,â and why not â
while weâre at it â ânegationism.â It is true, after all, that the
Manifesto in question makes a mess [fait un sort] of positivism. QED.
Yet those who have been invalidated by the course of events ever since
the Yellow Vests prefer to tell themselves that it is the revolts
themselves that are confused, and not themselves. The âfascismâ they see
everywhere is merely the one they desire at base, since it would make
them right, if not intellectually, then morally. They would then have
some chance of finally becoming the heroic victims they dream themselves
to be. Those who have given up fighting historically prefer to forget
that the war over the epoch is also waged on the terrain of ideas â
without which, incidentally, Foucault would not have wrested
âbiopoliticsâ from its Nazi and behaviorist designers. As for the belief
that there is a kind of revolution that comes draped in purity, or that
it is by multiplying moralistic anathemas, political prophylactic
measures, and cultural snobbery that one defeats counter-revolutions â
we leave all this to the imperial left. The latter only condemns itself,
decomposing behind its sanitary cordons and its preventive measures,
clinging to what it believes to be its accumulated political capital â
condemned to watch as its rhetoric inclines asymptotically towards that
of the rulers.
As for us, we prefer to attack, to take some shots and to give some too.
We prefer to engage.
We will never surrender.