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Illegalism
"
a mighty,
reckless, shameless, conscienceless, proud, CRIME, does it not rumble
in distant thunder
" -Max Stimer, The Ego and its Own
Crime: an act in
violation of the law. Whether the act is a conscious defiance of morals
and authority, or the realization of frustrated desires, the criminal
rejects the acceptable roles offered him or her in favor of creating a
new self-defined one. Though this doesn't always lead to a rejection of
the dominant forces of the society involved, rampant and blatant disregard
of the law is a sign of a society in deterioration and usually leads to
a complete breakdown of the social order. When a society is dependent
upon the exploitation and subjugation of its citizens, the subversion
of the social order by the defiant actions of those same people against
the forces of law and order offers them their purely symbolic civil disobedience
nor black market sub-economies threatened the status quo. Civil disobedience
merely reinforces the roles of rulers and ruled, while black markets need
the continued existence of the state to limit competition and provide
the infrastructure which supports both above and underground economics
- mainly currency. Rather than military conflict with the nation/states
or rampant terroristic campaigns against the "enemy" population,
people who wish to create a revolutionary situation according to the realization
of an expansive libratory existence would take into consideration the
example of the illegalists.
French Illegalists
Pre-WWI France was the setting for the only documented anarchist revolutionary
movement to embrace all illegal activity as revolutionary practice. Pick-pocketing,
theft from the workplace, robbery, confidence scams, desertion from the
armed forces, you name it, illegalist activity was praised as a justifiable
and necessary aspect of class struggle. Some of the most widely circulated
French anarchist newspapers and journals urged their readers to commit
crime, including papers published and edited by Russian expatriate Victor
Serge, and Elisee Recluse. Indeed, it seems that Mr. Recluse's unrelenting
support of illegal activity has cost him widespread translation and influence
in the non-French speaking nations. One of his biographers referred to
his "flaws in judgment" without discussing his unapologetic
stance on illegalism. Recluse was the only major anarchist theorist who
never recanted his public support of illegalism, even after the vilification
of the Bonnot "Gang" and police repression which followed (see
Richard Parry's book The Bonnot Gang for a detailed account).
In France, and elsewhere
since, the suppression of anarchist working class papers and organization
was given a "tsk-tsk" by the liberal utopians, those who wish
to transform society through gradual, peaceful methods (such as education
and establishing co-operatives). This anarcho-aristocratic attitude still
exists and is one reason why anarchy and anarchists continue to be marginalized
and all but irrelevant as a revolutionary movement.
Someone might get
in TROUBLE!
The risk of being caught, hurt and even killed is present in all illegal
actions. To the poor and working classes, this is not a deterrent to criminal
activity, merely part of the equation: "Is the goal worth the risk?"
After pondering the pros and cons of the situation, the criminal gives
up or carries on and if caught, well, that's how it goes, and better luck
next time.
It is here that class
distinctions enter the picture. To some poor people, life in jail is not
so much worse than life on the streets. Instead, to many poor people in
the "underdeveloped" world, life in a U.S. jail would be an
almost incalculable improvement over the conditions of their current status.
When insurgents take to illegal activity: using underground illegal squats,
carrying out armed robberies to support themselves, etc., among their
most vocal critics are the liberals and activists who, if they were to
be too closely associated with the illegal actions of their comrades,
could stand to lose their student financing, jobs, or, gasp, trust funds.
With so much depending on their reputations, the liberals will sometimes
even go so far as to co-operate with the state in apprehension, denunciation
and incarceration of those who they feel have gone too far. And recently
endangered other people's careers.
The Uncontrollables
For better or worse, anarchist revolutionary movements have always attracted
people who adamantly refuse to follow orders or obey rules, even those
presented by anarchist organizations. Branded as uncontrollables, these
loose cannons bring discredit to anarchist ideals-or so the high minded
utopians and scholars would have us believe. However, these same utopians
never fail to have a hand out to accept the plunder shared by these "bandits
and adventurers" in order to finance their publications, free schools
and union activities.
From the period after
the repression of the Paris Commune through the Spanish Revolution and
up to the round-up of anarchists in Italy this decade, bombers such as
Ravachol, gun men like Ourruti and bank robbers like those alleged to
have operated in Tialy have inspired loathing by respectable voices of
anarchism while winning admiration and emulation of the working classes
of their countries. The UK say its own uprising of uncontrollables, The
Angry Brigade, a group which not only did not exist, but carried out hundred
of bombings, expropriations, pranks and stunts. Once the media-generated
hysteria surrounding their fabricated "terrorist" group began,
people across the land joined in. the resulting turmoil infuriated the
scholars and self-appointed leaders of the anarcho-liberal mainstream,
some of whom had, in their eyes, the dubious honor of having to stand
trial for ???? [word cut off]
That's Revolting!
When social change groups and movements keep to their place, as ineffective,
impotent, cathartic activism, their leaders and spokespersons are awarded
accolades and treats. They become scholars, historians, voices of the
alleged repression. But once they step beyond the social acceptable realm
of whining and gnashing their teeth and truly challenge the authority
of their overlords, they are branded as criminally terrorists and kooks.
This is only appropriate, as the powerful are not in the least interested
in losing their power and privileges. The leaders and spokespersons of
the loyal opposition are often at the forefront of this effort, lest they
lose their social goodies in the repression of the insurgent uncontrollables.
Throughout the history
of anarchist revolutionary movements, those who did the front line fighting
(and suffered the consequences), seldom took the time to write down their
thoughts, acknowledge their inspiration or record their actions. To be
sure, such records could have been used by the state to prosecute their
comrades and loved ones. So, the overwhelming majority of anarchist histories
and other scholarship has been written by those who pooh-poohed the daring
and bravery of the insurgents from the comfort and safety of their studies.
However, the final
acts of uncontrollable revolutionary fury have not yet happened. Until
the world, in part or entirely, has been freed from the yoke of capitalism
and all other forms of privilege and authority, more people will revolt
and with increasing urgency. Even now, in the midst of an ever-expanding
economy, everyday people are coming ot the realization that west civilization
has reached a dead end and it's time to do something different. More and
more people, especially those under social pressure to find their vocational
niche and get to work, are turning to illegal means to create an imaginative
existence of expansive potentialities. They've already weighed the possible
consequences of their actions and have concluded that it is worth the
risk. Because
We have the World
to Win and Nothing to Lose!
Under the current order, our lives are only nominally our own. Our governments,
our employers, banks and insurance companies have more say about how we
dress, look, think and what we imbibe then we do. If every facet of our
lives is measured, timed, bought and sold, then can we be said to be alive,
or have we become animated machinery?
To turn away from
this horrifying existence is to become an outcast, to drift off into marginalization
and cross the boundary into illegality.
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