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Title: Papers and Tigers Subtitle: Was Lenin Really an Anarchist? Date: April 23, 2012 Source: Retrieved on 8<sup>th</sup> December 2021 from [[https://viewpointmag.com/2012/04/23/papers-and-tigers-was-lenin-really-an-anarchist/][viewpointmag.com]] Notes: <em>This post is part of a debate on the relevance of Lenin, which started with [[https://viewpointmag.com/2012/04/09/the-actuality-of-the-revolution-reflections-on-lenins-state-and-revolution/][Salar Mohandesi]] and [[https://viewpointmag.com/2012/04/16/how-does-theory-guide-practice-a-response-to-salar-mohandesi-on-state-and-revolution/][Todd Chretien]]. See the response by [[https://viewpointmag.com/2012/04/27/occupy-the-russian-revolution/][Pham Binh]], and [[https://viewpointmag.com/2012/05/23/all-tomorrows-parties-a-reply-to-critics/][Mohandesi]]âs final response.</em> Authors: Malcolm Harris Topics: Critique of leftism, Tiqqun, Lenin, Occupy, Political parties, Recuperation, Debate Published: 2021-12-08 13:28:09Z
âDuring the lifetime of great revolutionaries, the oppressing classes constantly hounded them, received their theories with the most savage malice, the most furious hatred and the most unscrupulous campaigns of lies and slander. After their death, attempts are made to convert them into harmless icons, to canonize them, so to say, and to hallow their **names** to a certain extent for the âconsolationâ of the oppressed classes and with the object of duping the latter, while at the same time robbing the revolutionary theory of its **substance**, blunting its revolutionary edge and vulgarizing it.â â Vladimir Lenin, **State and Revolution**
âAsked afterwards about whether the Russian circus was going to kill the tiger involved, the trainer responded with honesty. âIf we were to shoot every tiger that attacks us, there wouldnât be any remaining.ââ â Jason Hribal, **Fear of The Animal Planet**
Comrade Lenin is just one in a long line of heroes I donât know a lot about. Heâs the kind of historical character engineered to model, made for a time when revolutionaries pinned up newspaper headshots over their beds and went to bed vowing to wake up and be more like Che or Mao or Gaddafhi or Carlos or Ulrike or Huey or even masked Marcos. The 20th Century saw Communist Parties and partying communists, but both had their icons. We are, however, iconoclasts; some bold sans-serif lulz-text in place of a black line.
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This will then be a series of somewhat disjointed thoughts about organizational and strategy in the short-medium term.
I begin with an observation: we do not have a party. Whether we ought coalesce into a party to maintain and grow the Occupy sequence is beside the point; what is clear is that we have not and do not appear to intend it any time soon. The inquiry should then be along these lines: why donât we have a party, and why wonât we be making one?
The August 2 General Assembly in New York marked a shift away from the tongue-biting tolerance the hard-left has offered socialist parties. We went into the plaza with a party and came out with a strategy instead. For all the grousing about a minority of anarchists who screw everything up, no one has put forward an alternative organizational program to loose consensus that doesnât get them laughed out of the trust circle. Remember when the OWS âDemands Working Groupâ was a thing? Neither does anyone else. Throughout the whole process Iâve heard a lot of calls for some kind of restrained decision-making hierarchy, but Iâve not once heard anyone put themselves forward to lead. And with good reason: weâd assume they were a cop or a con, a co-opter or a crazy.
Salar calls in his remarks for âan historically specific programâ and then ends, for thatâs the limit. To actually prescribe the program would be to misunderstand his relationship as a scholar and theorist to the actions in the street. These days no one is expected to command the army, conquer the dialectic, and conduct the marching band at the same time.
Toddâs pedantic article is a perfect example of why we should be careful not to be too careful. Revolution is not a genie lying dormant since 1917 in the right underused library book. By the end of his statements, he has reduced the goal of the discussion to sparking another sustained examination of the strengths and weaknesses of the Russian Revolution. If this is accomplished âthen we will have done our jobs.â As a scholar, perhaps this is the case â I wouldnât know, Iâm not a specialist in the field â but no revolutionaryâs job is done with the raising of awareness or debate.
It seems worth noting that the badge-check gate at Left Forum, where Salar and Todd gave their remarks, was stormed by marchers under an âOccupyâ banner, who went around the conference beseeching participants to join them at Zuccotti Park only a couple blocks away rather than deliberate about the future of the occupation inside an expensive event. Some joined, most did not.
Revolutionary theory should inform our behavior in the streets, but certainly no more than our experiences in the streets should inform our theory. It has been astonishing to see how disciplined, creative, but most importantly, intelligent, Iâve seen crowds be during this sequence. Much has been made of Twitterâs role in aiding in the coordination of demonstrations, but thereâs been less said about the amount of capital invested in making these activists strong post-Fordist workers. The same traits that the âknowledge economyâ valorizes (spontaneity, ambition, self-organization, quick always-on communication, working in teams) are what have enabled the occupations to take hold in the particular form that they have. âIdle chatterâ between workers was a threat on the Fordist production line, now itâs a site of capture. Weâre trained to do it. Of course the revolutionary workers went to look for Lenin at the crucial moment â but would we?
A historicized analysis has to take capitalâs role in the production of subjectivity seriously, not as a spell to be undone or a veil to be lifted, but as a material element of a revolutionary situation. Capital births its own very specific gravediggers; or, to do some violence to a couple of sage koans: you donât go to war with the army you want, but if you try sometimes, you just might find, you go to war with the army you need.
If capital really wanted to cripple Occupy, it could stop producing Adderall. But it canât.
This raises a couple questions I want to address. First: its relation to the Lenin quote that begins both this piece and **State and Revolution**, and second: what it has to do with a party. These are the same question.
1.
Lenin is writing of Marx, but a better contemporary example might be Cornel Westâs description of anti-apartheid militant Nelson Mandelaâs rehabilitation in Occidental eyes as âSanta-Clausification.â And heâs not even dead.
Capital must grow to survive â we all agree on this. That means subsuming new spaces of human activity, a literal and figurative colonialism. Over time, there are fewer and fewer spaces left to invade, but the need for growth doesnât diminish. There are a few options, one of which is to colonize and extract value from the future through the innovation of financial products and the growth of student debt. But capital inevitably faces what Alberto Toscano describes as a double bind, having to encourage thought and behavior that is not yet necessarily in its interest. **The Matrix** popularized this line of thought when the writers had to find a way to explain why revolution was still possible in a reality completely manufactured by malevolent machines: if it werenât, the whole program wouldnât work. A circus needs tigers.
The recuperation Lenin describes definitely still happens â most notably in Appleâs âThink Differentâ series, an almost comically textbook application of the theory â but methods must develop with the growth. While Marx could be exclusively âhoundedâ in his lifetime, todayâs capitalists donât have that luxury. But revolutionary affect is a dangerous space for a capitalist to tread â if it werenât, the program wouldnât work. No risk, no reward. Unleash the chaos.
His own subsumption didnât have to come into Leninâs decision calculus as a leader. He could reasonably believe his political program could advance faster than its appropriation. We no longer have that luxury; instead, we wonder whatâs going to be in Ben and Jerryâs Occupy flavor. And Iâm not just talking about the formal subsumption of revolution either â using at-hand pitchforks and buying guns and relying on rentiers like Twitter, Livestream, and Kickstarter are three different things. Iâm talking your-face-on-a-t-shirt-while-youâre-still-alive shit. Appropriate or be appropriated. We donât need more icons, we need more black lines.
2.
Passive voice is nearly always a hint to look closer, to find the subject. Who is the subject in âAnarchy Symbol Updated To Appeal To Todayâs Teens?â The answer to the joke about the limits of capitalâs ability to subsume its own antagonists is repetition in a flat voice: **Sell anarchy!** Sell anarchy. And by who else but a brand that had hit the limit of sexploitation advertising, accidentally associating themselves with the desperation that underlies the appeal. Who updates the anarchy logo? The market does.
Witness Leviâs having to pull an ad because of the Tottenham riots. It ended up coming off in context as a really strong propaganda short-film in favor of generalizing the unrest. One of the arguments against partyless organization and spontaneous action is that there is no time to craft a message in advance. But here it was, off the air but in the YouTube bloodstream, perfectly calibrated. After all, you canât **just sell people jeans** any more. That no video editor took the five minutes necessary to cut out the Leviâs branding and paste in âsolidarity means attackâ is a crime.
Of course, the Axe marketing campaign leaves something to be desired when it comes to revolutionary instigation. But who says we canât all be guerrilla marketers for Anarchy? It would be easy to make official-looking Axe Anarchy t-shirts **because the logo is a graffiti stencil.** The fake shirts would be realer than the real thing. Unilever has already spent millions making Anarchy a trusted brand; capital doesnât just birth its grave diggers, it equips us with machinery.
If we have a party, we have the only party that finds a way to include everyone in its operation, the party that works whether members believe in it or not, the only one thatâs structurally invulnerable to any single member being killed or discredited.
Who turned the occupations into Occupy?
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Tiqqun has attempted to theorize such an organization in the form of the âImaginary Party,â which âcomposes itself to this day of the negative multitude of those who do not have a class, and do not want to have one, of the solitary crowd of those who have re-appropriated their fundamental non-appearance in commodity society under the form of a voluntary non-participation in it.â Here membership in the party is based on a kind of awareness and a corresponding refusal: âthere are in this society but two parties: the party of those who pretend that there is but one party, and the party of those who know that there are in truth two. Already from this observation, one will know to recognize our party.â
One part Bartleby, one part **Fight Club**, this âvoluntary non-participationâ deserves some more scrutiny. Participation and party have the same root, but I have to assume the Imaginary Party does not just include the very few people in the West totally self-excluded from commodity society. When Tiqqun describes the conservative segments of the Party (âlibertarian militias, right-wing anarchists, insurrectionary fascists, Qurbist jihadists, ruralist militiasâ), the list includes groups that could hardly be said to be non-participants. American Renaissance held their last national conference at an Olive Garden. To break a window is to employ a glazier. Your books have barcodes too. If membership in the Imaginary Party is determined by style of life, then as a revolutionary organization it will remain decidedly imaginary.
So weâre talking about some sort of non-compliance of the will, of the spirit, if not of the hands and stomach. There are two parties: those who get something fundamental about this reality and those who donât. The awake and the asleep.
That the Imaginary Party is apparently constituted in large part by organized and violent misogynists doesnât come up.
But in Sanford, Florida, is it the armed Nazi patrolling the streets or whoever put six shots in an empty cop car thatâs a member of the Party? In the event that the two come in contact, would that be what Tiqqun calls the intra-Party civil war? The process they call âparty building?â Which of the two parties was Trayvon Martin, forever associated with Skittles and Arizona Iced Tea, in? I believe any conceptual apparatus or political map that canât at very least address this conjunction of actors will be irrelevant in the time-frame Iâm attempting to think.
In Tiqqunâs formulation then, Iâm a member of the first of one party. There is indeed one party, and weâre all participants.
I once met an Italian at a conference who told me over beers about how he and his comrades used EU grants designed to facilitate cross-border youth cultural exchange to convene groups of revolutionary communists. He must have sensed some hesitation on my part because he pulled up his sleeves and thrust his arms toward me as if the words were no longer in his throat but in his palms: âThese hands are not clean! There are no clean hands!â
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To return to my original question: we wonât be having a party because, like a goldfish looking for a glass of water, we already have one â we are a party to the capitalist state. The CP is organized but riddled with contradiction, always trying to run and untie its own shoes at the same time. Within the party of capital, the Left is just one of dozens of esoteric millenarian sects devoted to the wider organizationâs self-destruction. Not predetermined, but foretold in a great many languages and codes.
Sabotage occurs from the inside, with and to the equipment at hand. To put down our tools â either in search of the perfect working class organizational âswordâ or to wedge our hands in the gears â would be **to put down our tools**. A militant policy of stopping capitalâs flows leaves you standing in the middle of the street hugging a truckâs bumper. But grab a few reflecting vests and a few signs and suddenly youâre directing a column of speeding steel.
In Hribalâs book about animal resistance, he details the difference between refusal and sabotage. Apparently, performing animals about to go on rampages are very good at pretending nothing is wrong, and going along with the show as planned before snapping at the crucial moment. The story of the tiger who attacks his trainer is always already part of the show, or it wouldnât be much of a show at all. So why refuse to go on when you can practice that bit where they put their head in your mouth?
What will be the importance of Lenin in the next two years of anti-capitalist revolutionary struggle? I donât know, but I expect it will be minor on an absolute scale. If itâs as large as the temporary interest in Marx that preoccupied **The Economist** for a few weeks during the height of the housing crisis, I would be surprised, and thatâs still relatively minor. The problem isnât that Lenin is an empty symbol of revolution, but that the Left has a lot invested in his symbolic meaning, while our enemies have almost nothing. We have little to gain and a lot of time to lose â itâs a sucker bet. But things change; maybe theyâll do a biopic. Leo DiCaprio with a furrowed brow, a sharp goatee. Let them print the posters.