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2021-12-20

Anarchy and the Collapse of the West

Dear comrades,

Today, I want to convince you of something else. I think some of my

other letters and emails have been well received, and it is my hope

that this one will be as well. I am, however, somewhat conscious of

the fact that what I am about to say will probably not be as easy to

digest as before:

I believe we here in the West--Australia most perceptibly--are

undergoing a process of political, economic--societal--collapse.

Some of the most obvious signs that this is so is the social and and

individual atomisation that is continuing to accelerate in our

communities. To put myself--for example--to productive use in our

city, I have had to engage various forms of state and non-governmental

(read: privatised) organisations in order to navigate my way through

mental health rehabilitation. Each interaction I have with a person

who represents these bodies is more faceless than the next. I have no

idea what relationship each Centrelink officer bears with the

others. The whole process is as mysterious to me as it is harrowing.

Another prominent example I have to evince for my argument that our

society is collapsing is to point to a factor that is even more baldly

situated in materialist analysis: the cost of living.

We--and I mean each of us concretely and locally--are not merely a

generation relatively more impoverished than the last. We are many

times more impoverished. Somehow, I think the reality that we, us

youngsters, may be just as, if not less wealthy than our great

grandparents may be difficult to accept. But I think it is

true. Whatever social equality that was reached in the late-1970s and

early-1980s here in Australia has more than completely been undone.

If you need me to provide some numeric data on the issue, I believe I

can. Just look at the graphs recently calculated that illustrate the

share of GDP that returns to capital as opposed to the people: ‌

[Source]

This is enough for myself alone to remain convinced that we are

undergoing a societal collapse. We, the workers, the people, have not

really gotten any wealthier than we were in 1972.

What Is To Be Done?

The silver lining in these dark clouds I predict--certainly the trend

is going to continue, and things will degenerate further--is that

Anarchy has, perhaps for the first time in a long while, a chance for

a beautiful flourishing. Nobody but the anarchists has the correct

analysis, and most effective remedy to State and Capital. The

Bureaucratisation of human social relations, and abject plundering of

our human energies and creative essence by State Capital does not have

to continue.

Many I talk to--either somewhat educated on the topic, or

otherwise--on the radical left who do not identify with anarchism seem

completely unable to grasp the nuance that Anarchy does not represent

"Chaos", and "Hyper-individualism". It lead me, for a time, to believe

that anarchists must be a somewhat fanatical and impulsive bunch.

I suppose I find this instructive. Along with my observation that

"Anarchy" is on the lips of many youngsters these days,* I think we

may be able to identify three lessons about the perennial fact that

anarchism is a philosophy that is misunderstood due, in large part, to

ignorance.

These lessons are that we can:

all-looming, and, now steadily encroaching power of State Authority.

anarchists better than any other method aids the Authoritarian.

relations and activities as a key component of organising, but

actively embraces and includes it.

In the interest of brevity, I will only say one thing in support of

each of these points.

We should, in the case of point #0, never forget that anarchists have

the clearest and most solid biological argument for our vision of a

new society. Let us hold our comrade Peter Kropotkin in high

esteem. Over and over again it has been demonstrated that organisms

that become organised into societies of cooperative and socially

interdependent patterns are the ones that best 'succeed' in adapting

to their environmental selection pressures.

Further, when I turn to address #2, I cannot help but be reminded of

the practice of anarchism we undertake here in Perth. The reason

anarchy remains a live undertaking here, I feel, is the solid cadre of

comrades that have coalesced around our collective practice. It is our

interpersonal practice here, our interrelated and intersubjective

understanding of the tradition that allows us to be strong. If anarchy

didn't begin with the concept of Free Association, we would be

no-where near as deep and firmly committed here in Perth as we are. We

would be battered leaves in the wind.

I feel this naturally leads me to conclude with the second lesson that

we will be able to impart on others in the context of our societal

collapse here in the West. The precept of mutual aid unlocks the

anarchist secret to the abolition of Capital and the State. Not only

does anarchy demands that consumption be ethical--that is, free from

power relations; those of domination. It also insists that production

and distribution become transformed into processes free of hierarchy

as well. Somehow, Marxists believe that while production can be solely

relied upon to exculpate any immoralities within distribution and

consumption. Let this, too, be not forgotten.

I hope deeply in my heart that each of you are doing and surviving as

happily as you presently can,

~vidak. ‌ ‌

equal and opposite reaction to the massive speeding reach of the

State in the wake of the Covid Pandemic is causing an increase in

the popularity of Anarchy.