|
Is
primitivism realistic? An anarchist reply to John Zerzan and
others
by Andrew Flood - WSM (personal
capacity) Thursday, Dec 1 2005, 2:15pm
international
/ anarchist
movement / feature
A reply
to primitivist critiques of 'Civilisation, Primitivism and
Anarchism'
 |
One of the major
confusions in the anarchist movement in the USA and parts of
Europe arises out of primitivism and its claim to be part of
the anarchist movement. But primitivism is not a realistic
strategy for social revolution and it opposes the basic
purpose of anarchism - the creation of a free mass society.
Primitivists have attempted to reply to these criticisms but
these replies are easily exposed as more to do with faith
then reality.
Sections of the actual
anarchist movement have also constructed a set of
ideological positions that almost seem designed to make
successful mass work impossible. Large sections of the
anarchist movement seem to have forgotten that the goal of
anarchism is to change the world, not simply to provide a
critique of the left or be a minor thorn in the side of the
state.
I’ll summarise my
argument from the previous essay. Primitivism generally
argues that the development of agriculture was where it all
went wrong. It therefore implies we should return to
pre-agricultural methods of getting food, that is
hunter-gathering. |
But agriculture allows us to get
vastly greater quantities of food from a given area.
Estimates can be made of how many people could live on the planet
as hunter-gathers based on the amount of food that would be
available to them. These estimates suggest a maximum
population of around 100 million.
Is primitivism
realistic:
an anarchist reply to John Zerzan and others
Last year I published the article 'Civilisation,
Primitivism and Anarchism'* to sketch out what I saw as the
glaring contradictions in primitivism and where it clashed with
anarchism. Primitivism, I argued, was an absurdity that could
never happen without the 'removal' of the vast majority of the
world's population. And far from being related to anarchism it was
in contradiction with the basic tenet of anarchism; the
possibility of having a free mass society without a state.
The article has circulated on and
off-line over the year and sparked numerous discussions. A number
of primitivists, including John Zerzan (1), have replied directly
to it, and others have published what appear to be indirect
replies. Here I want to answer the direct replies and, in doing
so, expand the critique of primitivism.
The original essay was also using 'primitivism'
as a stalking horse to address what I see as one of the major
problems in anarchism as it appears in the 'English speaking'
world. That is a large-scale failure to take itself seriously.
So-called ‘anarcho’-primitivism is the most obvious example.
But sections of the actual anarchist movement have also
constructed a set of ideological positions that almost seem
designed to make successful mass work impossible. Large sections
of the anarchist movement seem to have forgotten that the goal of
anarchism is to change the world, not simply to provide a critique
of the left or be a minor thorn in the side of the state.
Is primitivism realistic?
This reply continues in the same
vein, on the surface it is about primitivism but you don't have to
dig that deep to see that some of the criticisms can be applied in
a more general sense. A good place to start in that context is
with a poster calling himself Aragon who posted on more than one
of the sites that carried the original article. In a comment on
AnarchistNews.org Aragon states that Flood "seems to
focus his critique on what he calls the question of whether
primitivism provides ‘any sort of realistic alternative’ which
always seems like a bizarre metric for an anarchist to use as
measurement” (2). This is the statement that inspired the
title of this essay. Here we have someone who openly
proclaims it to be “bizarre” to even ask if primitivism
provides a realistic alternative to capitalism.
Far from being a refutation to the
original essay this re-enforces the central point of it. That
there is no way the advocates of primitivism could take the idea
seriously if they thought its consequences through. A lot of
primitivism theory strikes me as the work of those who like
playing with ideas but really have no idea of how these ideas
could be implemented. As with Aragon who even finds the idea of
implementation of his own ideas “bizarre”. But this
is also a problem in the anarchist movement. All too often plans
are drawn up or slogans trotted out without asking if they are
realistic. Can they actually achieve what they claim to be about?
The only test that appears to be used is whether the plan is
'pure' enough. What sort of test is this for anything except
perhaps for a religious sect?
The core issue
Generally responses to the essay
from primitivists were often a lot more constructive then what I
expected. I expected to get mostly abuse, and I did but a few did
attempt to address the arguments. However there was no real
attempt to address the core point of my original article. Which
was that the 'population question' made a joke out of any claim by
primitivism to be anything beyond a critique of the world. This is
unsurprising - as far as I can tell there is no answer to the very
obvious problem that emerges when you compare the number of people
living on the planet (6 billion plus) and the optimistic maximum
of 100 million (2% of this) that the planet might be able to
support if civilisation was abandoned for a return to a
hunter-gather existence (3).
I’ll summarise my argument from
the previous essay. Primitivism generally argues that the
development of agriculture was where it all went wrong. It
therefore implies we should return to pre-agricultural methods of
getting food, that is hunter-gathering. But agriculture
allows us to get vastly greater quantities of food from a given
area. Estimates can be made of how many people could live on
the planet as hunter-gathers based on the amount of food that
would be available to them. These estimates suggest a
maximum population of around 100 million.
This is what is called an
‘Elephant in the living room’ argument. The question of
what would happen to the other 5,900 million people is so dominant
that it makes discussion of the various other claims made by
primitivism seem a waste of time until the population question is
answered. Yet the only attempts at a response showed a
rather touching faith in technology and civilisation, quite a
surprise (4). This response can by summarised as that such
population reductions can happen slowly over time because people
can be convinced to have fewer or even no children.
There was no attempted explanation
for how convincing the 6 billion people of the earth to have no
children might go ahead. Programs that advocate lower numbers of
children are hardly a new idea. They have already been implemented
both nationally and globally without much success. China's
infamous 'One Child' program includes a high degree of compulsion
but has not even resulted in a population decrease. China's
population is forecast to grow by 100 to 250 million by 2025. An
explanation of how primitivists hope to achieve by persuasion what
others have already failed to do by compulsion is needed yet no
such attempt to even sketch this out exists.
As if this was not difficult enough
for primitivists the implications of other arguments they make
turn an impossible task into an even more impossible task.
For primitivist arguments normally include the idea that
civilisation is about to create a major crisis that will either
end, or come close to ending life on the planet. Whether
caused by peak oil, global warming or another side effect of
technology we are told this crisis is at best a few decades away.
Even if primitivists could
magically convince the entire population of the planet to have few
or no children this process could only reduce the population over
generations. But if a crisis is only decades away there is
no time for this strategy. For even if 90% of the population was
to be magically convinced tomorrow it would still take decades for
the population to reduce to the 100 million or less that could be
supported by hunter-gathering. And in the real world there
is no mechanism for magically convincing people of any argument
– not least one that requires them to ignore what many people
find to be a fundamental biological drive to have children.
Some of the older primitivists I know even have children
themselves. If they can’t convince themselves then why do they
think they can convince everyone else?
The contradiction between these two
positions is so obvious that I can only conclude that those
primitivists who have put forward this 'convince everyone to have
fewer babies' position have only done so in order to shore up
their faith. It is an argument invented to try and hide the
elephant in the living room but really it only hides it from
themselves. It is impossible to see how they could expect
anyone else to find it a convincing answer to the population
question.
Zerzan's reply
John Zerzan's reply to my essay
included a variation of this defence of primitivism.
"It could also be noted
that population is hardly a given. It seems to be more an effect
than a cause, for instance: an effect of domestication ab
origino (Latin for 'from the beginning/from the source'
(5)), if we are talking about civilization. And so it seems
to me likely that the numbers might come down fairly quickly
were we to move away from domestication. I do not know anyone
who says this could happen overnight, Flood to the contrary.(1)"
Well first off population is a
given. I am not imagining that there are 6 billion people on the
earth - there are six billion plus on the planet. We cannot simply
wish that there were 100 million. There are 6 billion and this is
a figure that is forecast to rise. Whatever about the forces that
drove the development of agriculture 12,000 years ago (where there
is a debate about cause and effect) the reality today is that
stopping the cultivation of all domestic plants and animals would
result in the death by starvation of 5.9 billion people. So yes a
move away from domestication would indeed mean that "numbers
might come down fairly quickly": starvation only takes a
few months.
Zerzan is also misquoting me.
I never claimed that some primitivists said civilisation had to go
"overnight". One can see why Zerzan needed to invent
this particular red herring, like other primitivists he believes
that time is running out. In an interview with fellow primitivist
academic Derrick Jensen, Zerzan himself said "in a few
decades there won't be much left to fight for. Especially when you
consider the acceleration of environmental degradation and
personal dehumanization." Again I’ll point out if we
only have “a few decades” this is hardly the time
span in which a 'voluntary' reduction of the earth's population by
some 98% could occur. In particular as the Earth’s population is
actually forecast to rise to perhaps to as much as 10 billion in
that time.
The evasive language Zerzan uses in
his response to me is typical of the primitivist approach to the
population question. And although he might throw out the red
herring that "I do not know anyone who says this could
happen overnight " in the original essay I actually
quoted some primitivists who either saw the collapse of
civilisation as a short term inevitability or who worse - like
Derrick Jensen - wanted to bring it on. As I pointed out in the
original article, Jensen is on record as writing "I want
civilization brought down and I want it brought down now”
(6). In fact since my article was published he has taken this
further with a call for concrete action "We need people
to take out dams, and we need people to knock out electrical
infrastructures" (7). So while Zerzan may be smart
enough to be evasive on this not all of his followers are (8). And
while Zerzan may have forgotten Jensen he does know him - at least
he was interviewed by him in 2000 (9) and the 10,000 word
interview that was published which would suggest they have at
least spent some hours in each others company.
Zerzan, like other primitivists,
continues to evade the logic of his own position. It's all very
well to talk of a gradual population reduction but just how does
he think primitivists are going to achieve a population reduction
from 6 billion to 0.1 billion "in a few decades"?
What would be gradual about this? This would require a ban
on all but 2% of the earth's population having any children at
all!
The ball is really in Zerzan's
court; he needs to demonstrate a mechanism for a non-compulsory
and rapid reduction in population that would require the vast
majority of the earth's population to be happy to have no children
at all. He needs to explain how he can even explain this message
to all of the people in the world - never mind convince them of
it. And Zerzan needs a 'voluntary' mechanism of ensuring that
those he fails to convince do not undermine this reduction, for
instance religious or other minorities who disagree with the
primitivists and choose to have many children . And all this has
to happen within his own deadline of "a few decades".
With this sort of burden of proof it is easy to see why
primitivists are not so keen on demonstrating that they have a
realistic alternative.
| The nasty
side
Those not blinded by ideology
looking at this burden of proof will conclude either that
primitivism is of no practical use or that those
primitivists who are rational and still hold to primitivism
have some program they are not revealing. Quite clearly some
of those who see themselves as primitivists do favour die
offs or advocate policies that would make them inevitable.
Jensen's call for people "to take out dams ... to
knock out electrical infrastructures" would result
in large numbers of deaths if any number of people were to
take him seriously. It's just a toned down version of Steve
Booth's lauding of the Tokyo Sarin attacks and Booth's
fantasy in Green Anarchist that "One day
the groups will be totally secretive and their methods of
fumigation will be completely effective." |
 |
These sorts of murderous anti-human
sentiments are not only tolerated within primitivism but their
authors are promoted - you'll find their essays uncritically
reproduced all over the web and in various print publications.
My previous essay produced howls of
outrage because I pointed out the existence of such writings.
But the problem here is not that I point out their existence, it
is that the primitivists ignore them until it is pointed out. Yet
they work with these people, they publish these people and then
they shuffle around with embarrassment and cry unfair when what
they say is pointed out. And it is not just the primitivists even
sections of the anarchist movement in the name of maintaining a
broad church uncritically publish Jensen and invite him to address
meetings. This is quite astounding given the consequences of what
he is advocating. I can only presume he is tolerated in some
anarchist circles because of the general confusion that equates
militant tactics with militant politics, forgetting that elements
of the far right can also use militant tactics.
There is no critique of the die off
point of view from those who call themselves 'anarcho'-primitivists.
Zerzan is happy to do a lengthy interview with someone who says he
wants "civilization brought down and I want it brought
down now" without even bringing the consequences of such
a position up with them. If he wanted to distance himself from
Jensen he has already had the opportunity to do so.
The centrality of the
agricultural revolution
Elsewhere Zerzan has written of the
development of agriculture that;
"The debasing of life in
all spheres, now proceeding at a quickening pace, stems from the
dynamics of civilization itself. Domestication of animals and
plants, a process only 10,000 years old, has penetrated every
square inch of the planet. The result is the elimination of
individual and community autonomy and health, as well as the
rampant, accelerating destruction of the natural world” (10)
This is relevant because a number
of people who replied objected to me choosing the development of
agriculture as the point at which civilisation can be said to have
developed (11). But as the original essay explained, "Of
course civilization is a rather general term .. For the purposes
of this article I'm taking as a starting point that the form of
future society that primitivists argue for would be broadly
similar in technological terms to that which existed around 12,000
years ago on earth, at the dawn of the agricultural revolution".
I could have picked an older date - the first cave paintings for
instance but this would not only have been more arbitrary but
would have presented an even greater population problem for the
primitivists.
I could have picked a more recent
date but this would hardly have helped the primitivists
as they then would have had to include many of the features of
civilisation - including the state - in their primitive utopia.
And, as our ability to support a large population has escalated
sharply in recent years, even a 'primitive' society that only
aimed to return to say, 1800 would still have to get rid of
the majority of the earth's population. Evasion aside, it is quite
clear that from the primitivist point of view it was the
agricultural revolution and the changes that happened alongside
this where things went bad.
For understandable reasons (not
wanting to deal with the population question) primitivists and
their fellow travellers tend to avoid any date even as general as
the agricultural revolution. But it's the one I choose to work
with and this appears to be fair enough with those primitivists
more willingly to openly argue their position. Agriculture also
seems a very logical starting point because agriculture is what
makes a mass society possible. Hunter-gathers can't gather in
large groups for a long period because they exhaust local food
sources. Nor do small groups of hunter-gathers generally have the
surplus food required to develop a high degree of specialisation
of labour, and any specialisation is a bad thing according to most
primitivists.
I also think its hard to construct
a coherent primitivism that does not exclude agriculture since the
dawn of agriculture and class society seem to occur together. This
fact has been understood on the left at least as far back as
Engels ‘The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the
State’ and I’ll discuss its implications next. But in
terms of the overall argument about food production this is a side
argument - the earths current population requires the agricultural
technology of the last 100 odd years - going back to primitive
agriculture is not much more of an option then going back to
Hunter-gathering. It would still leave billions of facing death by
starvation.
Is primitivism a branch of
anarchism?
It is true that agriculture is
required before the surplus is generated on which a state
structure can be built. This is about the only argument the
primitivists have - the state has always been a feature of
civilisation. The challenge for those who want to abolish the
state - and this has always been understood as a central
challenge of anarchism from the 1860's - is to create a
civilisation that does not have the mechanisms of state repression
that all civilisations to date have had.
This brings me onto another issue
that upset some of those who wrote replies to my essay.
Teapolitik's "Primitivism isn't, in itself, a critique of
anarchism at all. It is a supplement to anarchism" is
the best-developed expression of this sort of reply. Teapolitik
goes on to assert that "…civilization (and for some,
technology, agriculture, language, and other products of human
society) is not compatible with ecological sustainability--and
that the persistence of civilization, whether feudal, capitalist,
socialist or anarchist, would lead to the eventual destruction of
the life-sustaining qualities of this planet." (11)
I think the case for primitivism
being a break with rather than a development of anarchism is very
clear - I outlined this at some length in my original article. The
primitivist argument is essentially identical to the liberal
argument for why the state is necessary. The state they claim is
what allows mass society to exist - without the state we would
have 'the war of all against all'. The primitivists agree but as
they are anti-state they are therefore required to also be
anti-mass society. Yet the origins of anarchism lie in a movement
that sought to go beyond this seeming contradiction - a movement
built on the idea that you could have a free society without the
state. This was the ideological corner stone on which anarchism is
founded.
Bakunin, for instance writing on
Rousseau's Theory of the State, wrote in words that are as
applicable to the core argument of primitivism as they were at the
time to liberalism that;
"According to the theory
.. primitive men enjoying absolute liberty only in isolation are
antisocial by nature. When forced to associate they destroy each
other's freedom. If this struggle is unchecked it can lead to
mutual extermination.” But for anarchists "it is
now proven that no state could exist without committing crimes,
or at least without contemplating and planning them, even when
its impotence should prevent it from perpetrating crimes, we
today conclude in favour of the absolute need of destroying the
states. Or, if it is so decided, their radical and complete
transformation so that, ceasing to be powers centralised and
organised from the top down, by violence or by authority of some
principle, they may recognise -- with absolute liberty for all
the parties to unite or not to unite, and with liberty for each
of these always to leave a union even when freely entered into
-- from the bottom up, according to the real needs and the
natural tendencies of the parties, through the free federation
of individuals, associations, communes, districts, provinces,
and nations within humanity." (12)
Bakunin’s argument is that
liberals insist that large numbers of people cannot live together
without a state to supervise them as they would come into conflict
with each other. But anarchists insist that large numbers of
people can come together and preserve their freedom though a range
of bottom up organising methods. Mass society and freedom
are possible. This is something primitivists deny.
In a similar vein Kropotkin wrote;
"recent evolution…has
prepared the way for showing the necessity and possibility of a
higher form of social organisation that may guarantee economic
freedom without reducing the individual to the role of a slave
to the State. The origins of government have been carefully
studied, and all metaphysical conceptions as to its divine or
"social contract" derivation having been laid aside,
it appears that it is among us of a relatively modern origin,
and that its powers have grown precisely in proportion as the
division of society into the privileged and unprivileged classes
was growing in the course of ages” (13).
Here Kroptkin is arguing that
humanity can create forms of mass organisation that do not require
the state and which can create economic freedom. And while
the liberals may argue that the state is required for the
existence of mass society this seems to be a recent argument
invented to justify the division of society into classes.
As can be seen - from the beginning
- anarchism has included a rejection of the core idea of
primitivism - that there is an irreconcilable contradiction
between mass society and liberty. It has sought alternative ways
to organize mass society that eliminate the role of the state. For
these "free federation of individuals, associations,
communes, districts, provinces, and nations within humanity"
are all features of mass society. In the 1860's the argument that
there was such an irreconcilable contradiction was an
anti-anarchist argument - one that the anarchists took the time to
refute. To try and incorporate the same argument into anarchism
today is to make nonsense of the term anarchism.
For some reason there is a very
strong tendency in the USA for the emergence of ideologies which
use the label anarchist but which are in reality at odds with
anarchism. There have been at least three such streams in the last
two decades, 'anarcho'-capitalism, post-leftism and ‘anarcho’-primitivism.
All three have used a similar methodology of trying to re-label
anarchism as 'left anarchism' (or sometimes 'red anarchism'). All
three have shared the same ideological anti-communist 'rugged
individualism' by which all forms of collective mass organisation
can only be authoritarian.
It is hard not to write this off as
simply a radical reflections of the state ideology of the USA. In
the case of primitivism it also accepts George Bush's claims that
USA society has to have the car culture. For Bush this means
the USA has to sacrifice the environment in order to maintain its
current standard of living. Primitivism accepts the first claim
but unlike Bush rejects the price as too great to carry. So
primitivism seeks the end of civilization itself. Like Bush it
also seems unwilling to admit that elsewhere on the planet people
already organise their lives in ways that have a much lower energy
demand. Even Western Europe which has a similar standard of living
to the USA has per person a use of energy half that of the USA.
Technology
The technology question causes a
huge amount of confusion with primitivists mixing up a particular
form or consequence of technology with the technology itself. I
had tried to deal with this in the original essay using the
example of motorised transport. Yet some replies were from people
in the USA who couldn't get their heads around the idea of the
technology of motorised transport being used in any other way than
the way it is used in the USA. There it is perhaps more reasonable
for someone to believe that “car culture could not be likely
eliminated without destroying civilisation” (14). US
culture and urban geography means that right now there are huge
areas of the country where owning a car is pretty essential to
survival.
But this isn't typical of the rest
of the world, not even of parts of the US. If you lived in
Manhattan for instance, for day-to-day life a car is more of a
problem then a requirement. People across huge areas of the planet
have a very low percentage of car ownership - in the most part
because people are too poor to afford individual cars. Yet those
with money still have access to mass transportation. If you go
anywhere in North Africa you can travel long distances rapidly and
at ease, reaching even quite small towns because the lack of
individual car ownership has created a market for an incredibly
sophisticated network of collective taxis. They leave from fixed
points in each town whenever a vehicle is full. Really busy routes
also have trains and buses. The point is that even under
capitalism alternative ways of dealing with the need for
transportation already exist - there is nothing inevitable about
the 'car culture' that is a feature of how the technology of the
internal combustion engine has been used in the USA.
Some of the replies focused on my
treatment of technology and in particular the contention that the
only way out of the population crisis is both more technology and
more access to technology. Unsurprisingly, as I used the peak oil
theory in the original essay this resulted in discussion on some
of the sites dedicated to discussing Peak Oil. Omar for instance
thought this means I "argue technology as the saviour"
(15) - others even thought this meant I was in favour of atomic
weapons!
| These
misunderstandings are probably my fault for stating the case
too crudely in the original. It is worth deepening the
discussion. My position it that the combination of modern
capitalism and the way it uses technology has given us an
unstable and unsustainable economic system that only even
attempts to address the interests of a small minority of the
planets population. And although I may not believe 'the end
is nigh' I do accept that things cannot go on as they are
without major problems.
Of course being an anarchist
I already want to overthrow capitalism and see the economy
restructured from top to bottom. So saying things cannot
continue as they are presents me with no difficulties.
However unlike some Peak Oil enthusiasts and all
primitivists I am not willing to argue that we need to 'go
back' to some simpler time when less energy inputs were
required because that would involve accepting the removal of
billions of people from the planet. |

|
A social revolution that not only
introduces new technology but re-models what already exists is the
only logical way forward. In that context technology is what we do
with it. In the general sense it is neither liberatory nor
repressive. Particular applications of technology may be either -
a rifle in the hands of a US marine is different in that sense
from a rifle in the hands of a Zapatista. The birth control pill
certainly plays a part in giving women choices about reproduction
that were previously hard to come by safely. It also allows
here to control her fertility without the co-operation of her
partner. On the other hand it is impossible to think of a positive
use of the electric chair or a nuclear bomb.
It is also true that the
development of technology made it possible to have a society where
there was a division into workers and bosses. Once you can store
surplus food for instance you can have accumulation of meaningful
wealth and so the ability to pay the soldier, the policeman and
the executioner. So the question comes down to whether it’s
possible to have a free technological society - and anarchism
insists it is - or whether the choice is between a primitive
'freedom' and an oppressive technological society.
The vast majority of political
theories, perhaps all except anarchism, do indeed claim you cannot
have a free technological society. I think it is worth hoping they
are wrong even if we have never as yet had such a society.
That a free technological society is possible is - as I have
argued - the central point of anarchism.
Some of the odder stuff
The replies also included areas
that in my view are of much lesser importance (16). Amongst
those are responses from some who attempt to blend primitivism
into vegetarianism or even veganism (17). This really only serves
to underline how some primitivists have not really given any
serious thought to what they advocate at all - very few ecosystems
could support vegan humans attempting to live off the land without
agriculture. As far as I'm aware all 'primitive' societies that
exist today on the planet carry out hunting as well as gathering.
In this context I am indeed a "damn
speciesist" who doesn't have a problem with humans "exploiting
the land for you own good (taking away vital habitat and feeding
ground)". Ecological diversity should be preserved
because it is in our ability to do so and doing so will be good
for us rather than because we prefer trees to people or because
otherwise the earth will be upset. All actually existing
'primitive' peoples are "speciesist" - they hunt
animals. The luxury of some people choosing not to eat meat at all
is a feature of civilization.
Abstract or symbolic - who
cares?
I’ll also deal with the remainder
of Zerzan's reply to my original essay here as he is the the
leading light of 'anarcho' primitivism and I’d hate people to
think I was avoiding part of his argument.. The remainder of his
reply reads;
"Flood probably knows
that nowhere have I rejected "abstract thought" but it
better serves his weak assault on "primitivism" to say
otherwise. Some of our ancestors were cooking with fire 2
million years ago, travelling on the open seas 800,000 years ago.
And yet the evidence for symbolic culture hardly goes back
40,000 years. Thus, it would seem, there was intelligence that
preceded what we think of as symbolic. Possibly a more direct
kind in keeping with a more direct connection with the natural
world. Well, this is a long topic that I won't try to rehash
here. One that doesn't quite fit Flood's sound byte
characterization..."(1)
This section appears to be a reply
to where I was explaining my methodology in choosing 'agriculture'
as representing the start of civilization. I'd actually mentioned
Zerzan only twice in the original article. Why might I have
thought Zerzan rejected 'abstract thought'? Well partly because I
had presumed "symbolic thought" and "abstract
thought" pretty much amounted to the same thing. But in any
case Zerzan has also appeared to specifically attack "abstract
thought". In his essay on "Number: Its Origin and
Evolution" (18) he writes, "Math is the
paradigm of abstract thought" and then "Mathematics is
reified, ritualized thought, the virtual abandonment of thinking".
To me this - and similar sentiments along the same lines elsewhere
in his essay - sound a lot like a rejection of abstract thought.
In his reply he also seems keen to
tell me you can have intelligence without "symbolic
culture". I can only agree - geese for instance manage
to migrate large distances but don't as far as I'm aware produce
any art. But he may be wrong that evidence for symbolic culture in
humans only goes back 40,000 years. Ian Watts of University
College London claims red ochre and other red pigments were being
used at least 100,000 and 120,000 years ago and that "new
findings in Zambia and the re-dating of the important Border Cave
site in South Africa push the date of the earliest use back
further still-perhaps to 170,000 years ago in Zambia.” (19)
Given that the "oldest fossil evidence for anatomically
modern humans is about 130,000 years old"(20) this would
suggest symbolic culture (or symbolic thought) is as old as homo
sapiens.
Anyway, to be honest, I'm all for
abstract thought. I like the ability to read a text, to think
about its contents and perhaps then to argue against it.
This ability is what is needed to create freedom, it has been at
the centre of all modern revolutionary processes. Even if we
could, why would we want to give up the ability to think
abstractly?
Class conflict?
Teapolitik and other commentators
take issue with me pointing out that even if a major environmental
crisis resulted in large-scale death and destruction this would
not necessarily mean the end of capitalism. Teapolitik asserts
that "A ‘tiny wealthy elite’ could not possibly
continue to control vast natural resources in the event of
collapse--when one elite can no longer hold a carrot in front of
thousands of poor, those poor will revolt." [11] This
assertion is wishful thinking for two reasons - not least that the
ruling class has seldom maintained power through dangling the
carrot alone.
Firstly it presumes that the crisis
will somehow creep up on the ruling class - that they will be
unable to react or prepare for it. Capitalism is very much more
adaptable than this. For example there has been a huge amount of
research on alternative energy sources over the last few years as
some capitalists anticipate making a substantial profit out of
peak oil. On flicking through a recent issue of the
'Economist' magazine - which is close to being a bible for many
CEO's - I noticed that 6 out of the dozen or so glossy full page
ads were to do with alternatives to oil or energy saving
technologies like hybrid cars. The transnational corporation
BP (British Petroleum) Amoco rebranded itself Beyond Petroleum
back in the year 2000. Although this was rightly seen as at
attempt to Greenwash it was also to manovure itself for the new
energy markets that would open up as oil declined.
On a more local scale the large
scale destruction from Hurricane Katrina is actually being used by
capitalism to restructure parts of the New Orleans economy in
their interests. Anarcho has written that Bush's plans for New
Orleans amount to a;
"blank sheet upon which
the far-right will unleash their plans for social engineering.
Children will go to school with vouchers. Wages will be lowered
and regulations waived to accommodate the bosses. The entire
area will become a free-enterprise zone. A flat tax will be
imposed. All under the guise of economic revival premised on the
belief that corporations freed from trades unions, workers
rights, environmental restrictions and taxes will reap huge
profits and those profits will grow the pie for everybody"(24).
This is the way capitalism works -
crisis are opportunities for new investment for those companies in
favour (e.g. Halliburton in Iraq) and excuses to impose cuts on
the working class (e.g. the introduction of the bin tax in
Dublin). Mass death and destruction have often been a central part
of the development of capitalism - not a threat to it. For
capitalism they can be opportunities to remove 'unproductive
people' from the land. (e.g. Irish famine of the 1840's). Much of
the original wealth on which capitalism was founded was part and
parcel of the process that almost entirely wiped out the
indigenous people of the America's. Today tens of millions of
people die every year from diseases that are easily preventable.
There is also nothing automatic
about poverty or a decline in living standards being met with mass
revolt. Capitalism, and the market in particular, is also an
inbuilt mechanism though which the population are encouraged to
accept the hoarding of scarce resources as natural. In the west
today this means the rich have access to fast cars, luxury homes
and private yachts - not that much of a hardship for the rest of
us. But elsewhere in the world the rich have access to these
things while the poor literally starve in the streets. If there
was to be a real crisis in world food production then this is what
would visit the working class in the USA and beyond. To a minor
extent this is what happened in depression era America and in post
war Europe. In neither case did it lead to significant revolts
never mind the collapse of civilisation.
| The second reason
why a major crisis would not automatically lead to the fall
of capitalism is more brutal. The need to spell it out
simply reflects the rather naive thinking of a lot of
primitivists when it comes to the ruthless nature of
capitalism. |

|
Jay Gould the US financier &
railroad businessman summed up this nature when he said, "I
can hire one half of the working class to kill the other
half." Outside of a recent brief period in Western
Europe and the USA capitalism has routinely deployed enormous
repressive forces to defeat rebellion.
In the 1970's it created military
dictatorships, which killed tens of thousands of people across
South America. In Central America in the 1980's it killed hundreds
of thousands.
There have been moments in history
when the ruling class was at least briefly defeated - the Russian
and Spanish revolutions being the most common examples. But this
was not a simple product of desperation - if desperation led to
revolution than revolution would have swept the African ruling
class away years ago. It was also a product of revolutionary
organisation stretching over decades and a set of revolutionary
ideas that could unite people in the struggle for a better world.
Large-scale crisis can indeed bring about large-scale upheavals
but without a positive revolutionary program that unites people
such upheavals always end up with a new faction of the ruling
class in the driving seat. In fact capitalism and the ruling class
are so flexible that they can undergo apparent defeat only to end
up back in control in a new form within years - as happened in
Russia after 1917.
So yes, unless we are organised on
a mass scale a "tiny wealthy elite" will indeed
"continue to control vast natural resources in the event
of collapse". They have hundreds of years of experience
of doing just that. And they won't just use the
much-depleted carrot to do so, they also have the stick and for
much of world history it is the stick rather than the carrot that
has had the lead role in keeping people in line. Technological
developments mean one man in a helicopter can provide the same
level of 'stick' that previously an army of hundreds was required
for. They can still hire one half of the working class to kill the
other half but in repression as with other areas these days they
are able to downsize.
| Hope for
the future
Primitivism offers no hope
and no program for a revolutionary change of society. It
includes some of the most reactionary and anti-human
writings this side of fascism – I’ve even read
primitivists writing off the death of the mass of the worlds
population on the grounds that “quite a few of those
5.9 billion are just empty shells”(22). But even the
best of the writings offer no more than some interesting
ideas to ponder over - ideas that have been around for the
last 200 years. |

|
There are real problems associated
with the growth of the human population and the wasteful nature of
capitalism. We are already seeing the emergence of long-term
environmental problems even if the end is not yet nigh. But bad as
the effects on the environment are, the real shame is that we live
on a planet where millions starve in order that a tiny ruling
class can live in absolute luxury.
Anarchism offers an alternative to
the capitalist system - an alternative that can provide a decent
life for everyone on the planet both in terms of material good and
control over their own lives. But achieving this alternative is
not a question of waiting for people to rise up - it is a question
of organising the vast majority of the planet against the tiny
elite who rule us.
Anarchist communism provides the
best hope for freedom and the best model for fighting for freedom.
It distils the lessons of hundreds of years of struggle - and of
all the successes and failing of these struggles. It does not have
'the answer'; that is something that can only be created by the
self-managed struggle of the mass of the population of this
planet. Our role is to help the emergence of this struggle.
Andrew Flood
December 2005
Written for Anarkismo.net
Footnotes
* - my original article can be
found at http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=1451
1 The first comment in reply to the
posting of the article on Anarchist News appears to be from Zerzan
(it's posted anonymously but refers to 'I' in disputing what
Zerzan has said and is signed JZ). Mind you it could be another
primitivist impersonating him - they do a fair bit of that. http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/200
2 At http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/200#comment-679
- in fact 'Aragon' may simply not understand what was said in the
original as the realistic alternative referred to was in relation
to current society and not social revolution i.e. "Facing
this challenge anarchists need to first look to see if primitivism
offers any sort of realistic alternative to the world as it
is."
3 Note that this is an optimistic
maximum - quite often I multiplied the real probable maximum by a
figure of ten to avoid pointless arguments as to whether Ireland
for instance could support 20,000 hunter gathers rather than the
7,000 my figures would calculate out. I mention this because the
folks over at Lib.Com.org didn't get what I was doing and 'corrected'
my error in the edited version they published at http://www.libcom.org/thought/approaches/primitivism/
4 By this I mean the persuasion
mechanism proposed assumes some form of global communication in
order to reach everyone on the planet - something that does not
yet exist and some form of near 100% reliable contraception that
everyone on the planet could have access to - something else that
does not yet exist!
5 What is it with academics and the
use of obscure Latin? See my remarks on this in my review of
'Empire' at http://www.struggle.ws/andrew/empirereview.html
6 Issue #6 of The 'A' Word
Magazine, this interview online at http://crow.riseup.net/theaword/issue_6/derrick_interview_1.html
7 Derrick Jensen, Ripping up
Asphalt and Planting Gardens, Oct 2005, online at http://www.raisethehammer.org/index.asp?id=180
8 It seems fair enough to describe
Jensen as a follower of Zerzan as Jensen has described Zerzan as "The
best anarchist thinker of our time", "the most important
anarchist thinker of our time" or more frankly "I
love all of Zerzan's books, but I think I love this one the
best." In his review of Zerzan’s 'Against Civilization:
Readings and Reflections" for Amazon.com
9 Derrick Jensen interviews John
Zerzan , Alternative Press Review, at http://www.altpr.org/apr12/zerzan.html
Given that the Wikipedia entry on 'anarcho' primitivism includes "in
the United States primitivism has been notably advocated by writer
John Zerzan and to a lesser extent author Derrick Jensen"
I find Zerzan's implied claim in his reply to me to have forgotten
Jensen and what he has to say incredible - but maybe they have
fallen out?
10 Globalisation and its apologists.
An abolitionist perspective, by John Zerzan, online at http://www.insurgentdesire.org.uk/globalization.htm
11 Teapolitik in the third comment
on the AnarchistNews posting and in some of the other places my
original essay was posted e.g. http://www.livejournal.com/community/anarchists/1254083.html
Teapolitik also says "I am not a primitivist"
in some versions of this reply. Joe Licentia who also says "I'm
not a primitivist" also questions my equating of
agriculture with civilisation in his 'Critique of
"Civilisation, Primitivism and anarchism" online at http://question-everything.mahost.org/2005/01/
12 Bakunin in Rousseau's Theory of
the State online at http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bakunin/rousseau.html
13 Anarchist Communism: Its Basis
and Principles by Peter Kropotkin online at http://www.zabalaza.net/texts/txt_anok_comm_pk.htm
14 E.g. Heretic posting on the
infoshop.org posting of the original essay - online at http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=200501271526
15 online at http://peakoil.com/fortopic4417.html
16 For instance I'm not terribly
interested in critiques like that of Heineken (at http://peakoil.com/article2267.html)
who worry about my "educational background and therefore
of the authoritativeness of your commentary". He asserts
that "many writers like Flood do not seem to have much
training in biology or ecology" as if this should
exclude anyone from commenting on such issues. They are just
another version of the sort of anonymous comment left on Anarchist
News that asserted "who by now, doesn't know that andrew
flood is an idiot? .. try not to innundate this board with such
obviously superceded nonsense as just about everything written by
flood and his cretinous supporters."
17 Vegan Hobo - http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=1451&;comment_id=1432
18 Number: Its Origin and Evolution
at http://www.primitivism.com/number.htm
19 Painted Ladies, New Scientist
Oct 2001, online at http://homepages.uel.ac.uk/C.Knight/painted_ladies_text.htm
20 http://www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/sap.htm
21 The real looting of New Orleans
begins online at http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=1432
22 Anon in the debate about Jensen
at http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/237
PDF version
by Andrew Flood Thursday, Dec 1 2005, 12:09pm
I hope to be able to make available
in the next month or so a PDF pamphlet that combines the original
essay, this essay and a 'Weird things primitivists claim' FAQ.
Updates to
footnotes
by Andrew Thursday, Dec 1 2005, 1:37pm
I'm going through the links in the
footnotes and a couple have changed. Here are the new URLS
No 11 - the 2nd URL is now at http://question-everything.mahost.org/2005/01/critique-of-civilisation-primitivism.html
No 14 - (infoshop) has moved to http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=2005012715260752
|