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The New Insurrectional Thinking

by: Nicolas Truong  |  Le Monde

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According to Nicolas Truong, the "Invisible Committee," author of the French best-selling "Coming Insurrection," suggests that, "since 'the present has no exit,' it's useless to seek empty social compromises. Since the catastrophe 'has already taken place,' it's impossible to further an ecumenical ecology that supplies capitalism with its most perfect ideological legitimization." (Artwork: Jean-Pierre Hovel)

    Put on sale in March 2007 by the publishing house La Fabrique and with over 27,000 copies already sold, "L'insurrection qui vient" ["The Coming Insurrection"] (7 Euros), authored by the mysterious "Invisible Committee," is poised to become a real best seller. Its popularity also owes much to the active complicity of the government which has taken this invitation to "block everything" and to "form communes" by a possible "take-up of arms" quite seriously.

    Considered by the police as a piece of evidence against the alleged saboteurs of the TGV overhead wires, "L'insurrection qui vient" is much more than a manual for juvenile civil disobedience. Far from the snow job by poseurs that some commentators have depicted, the work takes the form of a simultaneously dangerous and coherent synopsis of the decay of an empty era. For many readers, this little green book seems to be the insurrectional manifesto, the revolutionary breviary of certain disillusioned youth.

    This "imaginary collective" considers that a specter haunts the French Republic: that of the November 2005 riots, the fires of which "continue to throw their shadow over all consciousness, over everyone's conscience." But the "unheard-of" aspect of those events does not reside in the confrontation between the center and the periphery, the City and the suburbs, the police and neighborhood youth.

    The novelty, the authors assert, consists in the total absence of message, leader or demand on the part of the insurgents. Thus have the suburban rioters, according to the authors, set the tone for any new guerilla action. Since "the present has no exit," it's useless to seek empty social compromises. Since the catastrophe "has already taken place," it's impossible to further an ecumenical ecology that supplies capitalism with its most perfect ideological legitimization. Since everything must be made spectacle, traceable, legible, one might as well become "invisible."

    This strategic upheaval is a political turning point. Most alternative movements have sought to attract the attention of newspapers, even though that risked their transformation by the media into official trouble-makers. So it's not only against all union and militant bureaucracies, but also against all coordinated movements that "reproduce so many governments in miniature," that the "Invisible Committee" pits its anonymity, its permanent dissolution. This fraction that assumes the form of a little army of shadows takes aim at all the glories of subsidized subversion and other TV children with out-sized egos: "Seeing the maws of those who are somebody in this society may help you to understand the joy of being nobody in it." Thus, to be "socially nothing" paradoxically constitutes "the condition for maximum freedom of action."

    The sudden media coverage of Julien Coupat, whom the police and the prosecutors' office consider the alleged ringleader of this "imaginary collective" and sometimes stage as a replica of Guy Debord (1931-1994), founder of the Situationist Internationale, will undoubtedly alter the group's strategy. Nonetheless, the surfacing of the cutting edge of Julien Coupat's radical remarks - Coupat, who along with his friends has been subjected to a legal-police relentlessness - dispatches a certain kind of leftism to its obsolescence. Thus, in the eyes of Julien Coupat, "the extreme left à la Besancenot" offers nothing but "Soviet grayness barely retouched by Photoshop" (in May 26's Le Monde). As though suddenly Trotsky's made-over children, Che nostalgics, Fidel Castro aficionados were sent back to their not-only-authoritarian, but also counter-revolutionary, references.

    What returns with "L'insurrection qui vient," a corrosive essay for which Eric Hazan, director of publisher La Fabrique, has been abusively interrogated, is a social criticism that until now had been reduced to its cultural dimension. People frequently remember a single image only from Guy Debord, one of the "Invisible Committee's" main sources of inspiration: that of the gang leader who becomes a master in the art of misappropriating American comics intended to feed the results of contemporary art galleries. So they forget that the author of "La Société du spectacle" ["Society of the Spectacle"] (1967) bet among other things on the advent of new workers' councils, along the lines of those in Barcelona in 1936-1937 or Budapest in 1956.

    The movement Julien Coupat has emerged from - in spite of all the efforts to erase the trails of that heritage - from the anti-industrial criticism of Jaime Semprun, founder of the publisher, Encyclopédie des nuisances, to writer Annie Le Brun's critique of techie rationality - applies itself to conducting a radical and coherent critique of the present. If this "Invisible Committee" was seeking to renew the voluntary opacity, theoretical preciousness, rhetoric of excess and apology for violent action that were especially present in the first issues of the review Tiqqun (see Le Monde's June 28-29 edition), which was one of its branches, then it would risk adding to the general disorientation.

    But perhaps that wouldn't entirely displease this little party of subversive defection.

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    Translation: Truthout French language editor Leslie Thatcher.

  

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Comments

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What's worse: Civil unrest,

What's worse: Civil unrest, or a government, that instead of digging deep and trying to fix society, would rather use martial law, to quell the cries of dissent. The anger of the people, in general around the world, is not unfounded. There is something radically wrong with how the world, functions. Secrets, torture, wars, an elite few profiting, from events that have occurred within the last ten years. When it comes right down to it, how far would you go, to protect your family, your life, your freedom, to protect the fundamental foundation, of your country? Why, is our military, at the ready in the US, to take up arms against US citizens ? What has politicians so spooked in congress?

This is bound to

This is bound to disintegrate into a free for all atmosphere. There are many hands grabbing at the gauntlet. Nations and religions both wish to rule the Earth. Secret societies working to undermine each other. What a mess.

Playing into the hands of

Playing into the hands of the globalists, if not indeed spearheaded by them - the One World Government crowd needs insurrection to legitimize their coup. What is feared most is an organized revolt - through representative government - against fractional reserve banking. The banks have corrupted capitalism through the Ponzi scheme of collecting interest from us and our government on loans they conjure out of thin air. They have looted the country and divided us into left and right, top and bottom. All it takes is a small number of us picking up the phone and calling our reps and reminding them that we own them, not the banks. Support HR 1207 - audit the Federal Reserve Bank and clean out the rat's nest - ending capitalism is throwing out the baby with the bathwater. Let's keep our aim on the perps here and not get distracted.

Just goes to show that what

Just goes to show that what passes for "liberal" in this country is in fact pathetically right-of-center when notions of personal liberties and economic justice are concerned. Even the so-called liberals are so invested in the oppressive status quo — largely out of fear of real democracy breaking out — that they don't dare consider the possibilities of an actual progressive program. Who was it who said that the difference between Europe and America is that in Europe the governments fear the people, while in the States, the people fear the government?

"Ending capitalism is

"Ending capitalism is throwing out the baby with the bath water." ...as if capitalism hasn't ruined our environment and consumed vast amounts of natural resources so that we in the North can eat whatever we like whenever we like, corrupted the hearts of our elected representatives (give 'em a call...right, like they're listening), generated vast wealth for a few and misery for many, destroyed civil society by promoting rabid individualism and abdicating responsibility (that's what a corporation is for, isn't it, to protect people from responsibility?), denied millions of people basic medical care, and led directly to the deaths of millions through wars and exploitation for profit. Capitalism is simply the most effective machine ever devised for the creation and maintenance of inequality and oppression.

Ever visited a communist

Ever visited a communist country, Carlisticeday? If you wanted to understand real hardcore environmental degredation, lack of civil rights, economic inequality and overall hardship, you should have visited the former Soviet Union or any of the other failed experiments in anti-capitalism. Only ignorant spoiled brats bark about how awful capitalism is - ask one of the many talented and intelligent people from those places who went through a lot of pain for the privilege of living here (now they are in total shock as to how incredibly stupid we are to contemplate a non-capitalist economy, and many are now leaving). The problems we are having in this country are because we were not vigilant and we let the private international bankers hijack the country's economy - just as Jefferson warned against. They now control our social institutions. When was the last time you acted like a citizen and contacted your rep to give them hell about being such cowards and not going after the banks (or about anything else, for that matter)? So don't blame capitalism - blame laziness and apathy and get off your behind and demand an audit of the Federal Reserve Bank.