"Submission to domination is enforced not solely, nor even most significantly, through blatant repression, but rather through subtle manipulations worked into the fabric of everyday social relationships. These manipulations — ingrained in the social fabric not because domination is everywhere and nowhere, but because the institutions of domination create rules, laws, mores and customs that enforce such manipulations — create a logic of submission, an often unconscious tendency to justify resignation and subservience in one's everyday relations in the world. For this reason, it is necessary for those who are serious about developing an anarchist insurrectional project to confront this tendency wherever it appears — in their lives, their relationships and the ideas and practices of the struggles in which they participate. Such a confrontation is not a matter of therapy, which itself partakes of the logic of submission, but of defiant refusal."
From Episode 81 of Isaac Meyer's History of Japan Podcast
http://isaacmeyer.net/
In 1910, an anarchist plot to assassinate the Meiji Emperor was
uncovered. Seizing the opportunity, conservatives in the government
pounced in to arrest 26 anarchists. The background of this confrontation
between the government and the radical left, the trials themselves, and
their modern legacy are our topics
I've become something of a podcast junky thanks to my work schedules, and I've slowly been working my way through Isaac Meyer's History of Japan podcast. Meyer has spent several years in several cities across Japan, has a PHD on the nations history and can speak the language to a degree so he's quite the expert. This episode 81, caught my interest as its about the history of Japan's anarchist movement, an often overlooked subject despite the roots anarchism was able to spread within Japan. In the 1910s-30s Japanese and Korean and Chinese anarchists were a major thorn in the increasingly militaristic and imperialist governments side. And as such they were singled out for repression.
Unfortunately there is not much material about or by these early Japanese rebels in English though speakers of Japanese, Russian and Esperanto have a wider selection thanks to the popularity of those languages amongst the group. And books covering Japanese feminism do have some information on female anarchists from this period like Kanno Sugako and Ito Noe. Here's what I've been able to find in English.
CIRA-Nippon An anarchist group active in the seventies that occasionally included historical sketches on this period.
Added Transcript.
The Great Treason
Incident
Anarchism in Japan
Isaac Meyer December 6th 2014
Hello and welcome to the History of Japan Podcast, episode
81 the Great Treason Incident. Picture the setting, a small room in Nagano Prefecture
in 1910, home to one Miyashita Takichi a lumber mill employee. The date is May
20th and outside the police are lining up to prepare to raid the
place, they break in and begin to search, only to find exactly what they feared
would be there, parts to produce a bomb. This confirms their worst fears, it’s
exactly as they suspected, someone is plotting to kill the Meiji Emperor.
The raid on Miyashita’s home was the climax of an
investigation which came at one of the most unsettled point’s in Japans national
history. Only five years early crowds had rejoiced in the streets of victory
over Russia, but that rejoicing had been short-lived. The military had done an
excellent job of keeping a lid on just how hard things had been going in
Manchuria and as a result the majority of Japanese were simply not aware of how
much they had sacrificed for victory. In particular they had no good
explanation for the fact that their country’s debt was not being wiped out with
a massive war indemnity- the Japanese had in fact decided their position was
not good enough to demand one from Russia- for the fact that their country was
not annexing everything up to the Amur river in northern Manchuria -same
reason- and for the fact that rice prices were spiking inexplicably.
Military requisitioning was driving up the prices, but most
people assumed it was just war profiteering. The result was riots that started
in the Hibiya district of Tokyo but spread across Japan’s big urban centres and
in which over 1 million people participated. For the Meiji leadership this was
some of their worst nightmares. They were dangerously close it seemed to losing
control of the masses. You see perhaps because some of their first experiences
abroad really coincided with the high water marks of the European left, the
Paris Commune for example or the steady rise of the German Socialist Party, or
the early days of the British Labour party. The leaders of Meiji Japan were
always very worried about the threat of leftist ideologies Marxism, Anarchism
or Socialism.
They worried that Japanese industrialisation would naturally
bring these same problems to Japanese shores. In part that fear actually
spurred these leaders to be more progressive than they otherwise would have
been. Borrowing from the playbook of Otto Von Bismarck, did the exact same
thing in Imperial Germany. The Meiji leadership lead by Ito Hirobumi, Yamagata
Aritomo and the fiscal expert of the bunch Matsukata Masayoshi decided to
implement several reforms to pre-empt a lot of the issues socialists
traditionally drew support from.
In particular they arranged for the passage of factory acts
regulating working conditions and hours in the 1880s, at which point Japan had
less than 50 factories across the entire country. The idea basically being, `We’ll
need these laws eventually, so we might as well have them now`. This kind of
system is referred to as a Social Monarchy. In essence the Monarchy provides
reforms normally associated with socialist parties, in a sort of paternalistic
way designed to attach the people more directly to their ruler. [Sarcastically] Who cares clearly, so
deeply for their well being [/sarcastically].
Despite their best attempts to keep a lid on things however,
the radical left began to gain strength in the early 20th century and
that scared the hell out of the Meiji leadership. It’s kind of hard for those
of us born at the tail end of the Cold War to really grasp, because we tend to
think of ideologies like Anarchism or socialism as `that thing your slightly
stoned friend from college won’t shut up about` but at the time these were
really potent ideologies that scared a lot of establishment people because of
their potential for forcing radical change.
This was particularly true of Anarchism, which as an
ideology had motivated a wave of assassinations in Europe and America during
the latter half of the 19th century. Tsar Alexander II in Russia in
1881, President of the Republic of France Marie François Sadi Carnot in 1894,
Empress Elizabeth of Austria-Hungary in 1898 -incidentally her corset was laced
so tight that after she was stabbed she didn’t start to bleed seriously until
it was taken off- and President William McKinley of the United States in 1901.
And those are just the highest profile ones, there were plenty more.
Thus the Meiji oligarchs decided to complement the old
velvet glove with a little bit of the old iron fist. If playing nice didn’t
work, well how about a little good old repression. The first targets of their
wrath were organisations like the Japan Socialist Party, which was first formed
in 1901 and then shut down by police within and I’m not kidding; three hours of
its formation. Also in the crosshairs was an organisation called the
Heimin-Sha, the Commoner’s Association which produced a newspaper called the Heimin
Shimbun the Commoner’s Newspaper.Its
editor a young intellectual named Kōtoku Shūsui had produced in that paper
among other things the first partial Japanese language translation of the
Communist Manifesto as well as the works of Russian Anarchist Peter Kropotkin.
The Heimin Shimbun was also shutdown in 1905. Kōtoku by the way is both a fascinating person and
central to the story, so we should talk about him for a little bit.
He was the descendant of a rather well-to-do samurai family
`because no the stereotype about rich kids embracing Marxism or Anarchism is
not a new thing`.From what would have
been Tosa domain and what was now Kochi Prefecture, in Shikoku in 1871. In his
20s he fell under the influence of Katayama Sen a prominent Christian Socialist.
Kōtoku embraced socialism and was one of the founding members with Katayama of
the aforementioned socialist party. Like everyone else he was arrested within a
few hours of its formation.
However technically speaking there wasn’t anything they
could be charged with so while the party was shutdown they were released.
Katayama and Kōtoku however ended up splitting. Katayama moved away from
Christian Socialism which was a big thing in the 19th century but
not so much in the 20th, towards communism. He would eventually join
the Communist International, helped found the Japan Communist Party in 1922 and
spend the remainder of his life in exile in the Soviet Union.
Kōtoku meanwhile began moving towards Anarchism. He left
Japan in 1905 for the United States, where in the age old tradition of Hippies
everywhere -again not making this up- he moved to San Francisco and joined a
commune, because some things never change. His rationale for leaving was his
desire to openly critique the Emperor and the Imperial family, whom he saw as
the legitimising force of the evils of Japanese capitalism.He returned to Japan a year later, after
incidentally having lived through and helping rebuild from the great San
Francisco earthquake in 1906. A very different man from the one who had left
for the U.S. Now he was a committed Anarchist and among other things he
abandoned some of the more moderate goals of socialism, including universal
voting rights, in favour of a more radical position of direct action against
oppressive structures of government.
Direct action of course makes the authorities think of the
fates of all those world leaders who had been killed by Anarchists. Because
what’s more direct than a bomb throwing or a stabbing? In fact reading his
writings its more likely Kōtoku was calling for general strikes than
assassination.
Now its worth stopping here to note because if I don’t, any
Anarchist who listens to the show will likely flood my e-mail with messages
reminding me that most Anarchists, then and now did not advocate violence. Just
as with a great many ideologies over the course of human history it was only a
small lunatic fringe that did. But of course as a general rule the lunatic
fringe out there is always better getting noticed than the down to earth
people.
Anyway between his previous past as a socialist and his
current one as an Anarchist Kōtoku was now definitely a person of interest for
the government. They were watching him very carefully, this despite the fact
that after his return most of his public energy seems to have been expended on
that great pastime on the left-leaning, internal structures between
functionally identical factions. In particular the Japanese left was split
between Anarchist, Christian Socialist and Marxist socialist camps. With a smattering
of other folks thrown in to keep things exciting.
It’s all very Byzantine and vaguely reminiscent of the whole
People’s Front of Judea versus the Judean Peoples Front bit from Monty Python’s
Life of Brian. However the fact that Kōtoku and his allies descended into
squabbling that would be incomprehensible to most people, didn’t seem to change
the pictures much for the authorities. He and his friends were dangerous.
This impression was confirmed in 1908 by what was known as
the Akahata Jiken or the Red Banner Incident. On June 22nd of that
year a prominent anarchist named Yamaguchi Koken was released from jail after
serving out his term. He was greeted by a giant Anarchist rally. Several
hundred Anarchists waving banners with slogans like “Revolution” and “Anarchy
and Communism” greeted Yamaguchi and the police terrified of this human mass
decided that something had to be done. They went in and started beating and
arresting whoever they could get their hands on, to disperse the rally.
In the wake of the incident the new Prime Minister Katsura
Tarō, -who had taken over a few weeks earlier from our old buddy Saionji
Kinmochi, future Japanese delegate to Versailles and tutor of Konoe Fumimaro,-
decided that he would crackdown on the troublemakers. He began to push for even
more police power to be deployed against Socialists and Anarchists. And that
leads us to where we started, on Katsura’s orders the police began digging and
through their infiltration of Anarchist cells -sometimes I really wonder how many
of these cells were actually Anarchists and how many were all just police
informants snitching on each other- they came across a plot.
Someone had talked about killing the Emperor and apparently
one of the people they’d spoken to was Kōtoku Shūsui. So the investigation
continued given more urgency by the assassination of Ito Hirobumi, since his
assassin An Jung-geun was often incorrectly described as an Anarchist, a label
he is sometimes still given today though he was not, he was very much a
Nationalist. The plot the authorities had come across was very real though only
five people were involved in it. One of them by the way is someone we’ve talked
about before, Kanno Sugako.
She was one of Japan’s leading Feminists and like Kōtoku
Shūsui had started out a Christian Socialist and moved towards Anarchism over
time. Kanno had also been in a relationship with Kōtoku Shūsui though by 1910
they’d broken things off. Her life story is absolutely fascinating, she was
born in Osaka to a family of merchants in 1881 and became involved in socialism
because at the time it was one of the few ideologies out there unquestioningly
dedicated to the idea of women’s liberation. She became a social critic and a
journalist, but over time more committed to direct action.
Unlike in the case of Kōtoku who was definitely not involved
in this assassination plot against the Emperor, she definitely was. Someone
talked though and the police pounced. In addition to grabbing the five people
actually involved in the plot Kanno Sugako, Miyashita Takichi -the guy with the
bomb components in his home- and three others. They also took the time to round
up 21 other suspected Anarchists. Prime Minister Katsura decided that now that
he had the excuse it was time to crack down hard.
Kōtoku Shūsui was one of them, he was arrested at an onsen
while recovering from a bout of respiratory illness. [sarcasm]Because obviously
when you’re plotting high treason you have to take care of your
lungs[/sarcasm]. Ironically enough there were a bunch of other Anarchist
leaders the government wanted to arrest as well but couldn’t. People like the
Anarchist and labour leader Arahata Kanson. They were in jail as a result of
the Red Banner Incident back in 1908 and thus even by the loosely defined
standards of evidence which surrounded the whole affair, they couldn’t really
be said to be involved.
Now the trial these people were given, well if you described
it as a farce it would be a grave insult to the farcical arts. The 26
defendants were brought up on charges from articles 73 to 76 of the Penal Code;
which allowed death sentences for those who harmed or attempted to harm the
Imperial family and hard labour for those who “disrespected” the family. Which
could for example include destroying or damaging a Shinto Shrine. The Chief
Prosecutor was a man named Hiranuma Kiichirō, who had gotten his start in the
Justice Ministry and was generally considered to be a star prosecutor. He was
also very much of the `Tough on crime school` and pressed for the death penalty
in every case, even those only guilty by association.
Incidentally he’s come up in our story before but later on
in his career as one of the prime ministers of the 1930s. I’d said we’d be only
dealing with him one more time on the show but it turns out I was wrong, I
actually didn’t know he was involved with this case until I started writing
this episode. He’ll come back next August when we turn to the events of 1945
and you probably won’t like him much then either.
Very recently, in
fact only a few years ago, a letter from Kanno Sugako to a journalist at the
Asahi Shimbun named Sugimura Jyuou, dated directly before the trial came to
light. It has shed some light on what was going on in her head during the lead
up to the sentencing. The way she wrote it was actually very ingenious, she
used a needle to poke characters into a piece of paper so that it looked blank
but the writing was visible when you held it up to a light. The letter itself
flatly states that Kōtoku Shūsui knew nothing about
the plot and implores Sugimura to find a lawyer for Kōtoku. It also correctly
predicted the sentencing.
The chief judge [can’t understand name] apparently decided
that this was no time to look soft on treason because he went with Hiranuma and
sentenced 24 of the 26 defendants to death. The remaining two were given
varying terms of imprisonment. Things were getting out of hand, a message had
to be sent. This provided an opening for the Imperial House to show its
benevolence, the Emperor who at this point was already ailing and would die of
natural causes two years later, personally intervened to commute the death
sentences of thirteen of the defendants. However neither Kanno nor Kōtoku were
among them.
Kōtoku and Kanno spent their remaining months in prison.
Kōtoku#s own mother actually died when she came down to Tokyo to visit him and
Kanno Sugako, whom she was extremely fond of, and then caught pneumonia. Kanno
who was quite the writer left a testament of her reflections during the lead-up
to the final carrying out of the execution. It’s very moving and deeply
depressing, she describes the outcome of the trial quote “ my poor friends, my
poor comrades, more than half of them were innocent bystanders who had been
implicated by the actions of five or six of us. Just because they were
associated with us they now are to be sacrificed in this monstrous fashion
simply because they are Anarchists, they are to be thrown over the cliffs to
their deaths. We had sailed into the vast ocean ahead of the worlds current of
thought, and the general tides of events. Unfortunately we were shipwrecked,
but this sacrifice had to be made to get things started. New routes are opened
up only after many shipwrecks and voyages. This is how the other shore of one’s
ideals is reached. After the sage of Nazareth, Jesus that is, was born, many
sacrifices had to be made before Christianity became a world religion. In light
of this I feel our sacrifice is miniscule.”End quote.
The majority of executions including Kōtoku’s were carried
out on January 24th 1911, Kanno Sugako was executed the next day.
Her execution was particularly politically explosive since she was the first
woman ever executed by the Meiji government. The story has a sad postscript,
after his death Kōtoku Shūsui became a martyr to the Japanese left, both
because of his intellectual presence before his death and because of his show
trial leading up to it.
The trials rather than undercutting the Japanese left
actually galvanized it to a degree. In fact in 1923 someone tried to avenge
him. As then Crown Prince Hirohito was riding to the Diet to open a new session
he passed Toranomon an area between the Imperial palace at Akasaka and the Diet
building in Nagatachō. A gunshot rang out, the shot missed the Crown Prince,
though it did hit a chamberlain in the entourage. The perpetrator was tackled
shortly after and reveled to be one Namba Daisuke.
Namba Daisuke was actually the son of a prominent Diet
member representative. Who had started his life fairly nationalist, he actually
considered joining the army but was converted to radical leftist politics.
Among other things he said that he planned to assassinate Hirohito in revenge
for the death of Kōtoku Shūsui. Unsurprisingly Namba Daisuke was convicted of
high treason in short order and hanged. But now the fear was back. The radical
left had not been forced underground by the trials and now someone had yet
again tried to assassinate a member of the Imperial family.
To make matters worse the hard left was even more entrenched
than it had been before. Like we covered earlier the Japan Communist Party had
been founded a year earlier in 1922 and while the Socialists had gone under the
Anarchists had not. The Communists if anything were growing far beyond anything
the other two had ever managed. They were even openly getting into academia in
the form of Marxist economists like Kawakami Hajime. Clearly the crackdown
initiated by Katasura was not working – he by the way had been forced out of
office shortly there after by a scandal covered in another episode, basically
he proved unable to control the army- something even harsher was necessary.
The result was the Peace Preservation law of 1925, easily
the harshest and most authoritarian law in Japanese history. And used to
justify the vast majority of the oppression that would happen in the 1930s and
1940s. The law was written by the Home Minister who was -wait for it- no one
other than our old friend Hironuma Kiichirō, the prosecutor from the treason
trial. The first two articles read quote “ Anyone who organises a group for the
purposes of changing the national polity or of denying the private property
system or anyone who knowingly participates in said group shall be sentenced to
penal servitude or imprisonment not exceeding ten years. An offence not
actually carried out shall also be subject to punishment. Anyone who consults
with another person on matters relating to the implementation of these
objectives described in Clause one of the preceding article shall be sentenced
to penal servitude or imprisonment not exceeding seven years.”
The remainder of the law went on to specify that inciting
others to these activities was also punishable by penal servitude, that
financially supporting anyone found guilty of these crimes was illegal and
incredibly that you were still guilty even if you broke the law outside of
Japanese Jurisdiction. A Japanese citizen writing an editorial in the United
States about changing the Constitution would be arrested upon returning to
Japan. When a Dietman questioning the utility of the new law attempted to
undercut Hironuma by pointing out that the way the law was currently worded a
legislator could be arrested for suggesting an amendment to the Constitution
Hironuma responded that that Dietman was absolutely correct, it says right in
the Meiji Constitution that only the Emperor can propose amendments, so anyone
else doing so is a violation of the peace preservation law.
This draconian bit of law making would become emblematic of
Totalitarian Japan and incidentally it would also be one of the first laws
repealed under the US occupation government. The Peace Preservation law really
is the ultimate legacy of the Great Treason Incident. The fear with which the
Japanese elite looked at the radical left prompted them to put into place a
Totalitarian system of repression that was then seized by the military and
turned on the society it was supposed to defend from radicalism.
Kanno Sugako and her four compatriots thought they were
attacking the lynchpin of an oppressive system. In reality they never had much
of a chance of getting their plan off the ground and all they did was provide
an excuse for a crackdown.
Kōtoku Shūsui and all the other innocent Anarchists
meanwhile became sacrifices in the name of abstract notions of social stability
and national security. They were among the first, but they would not be the
last. In a final sad note, after the war the families of the victims tried one
last time to get justice. They requested a retrial of the case since legally
speaking the original verdicts were still on the books. Even after the war
Kōtoku Shūsui was still legally a traitor, their request for a retrial was
denied by the Supreme Court of Japan in 1969.
Prior to his execution Kōtoku Shūsui etched the following
onto the wall of his cell “how has it come about that I have committed this
grave crime? Today my trial is hidden from outside observers and I have even
less liberty than previously to speak about these events. Perhaps in 100 years
someone will speak out about them on my behalf. “
Well I guess I’m three years late and I’m not the first to
bring this up, but for what its worth Kōtoku you were right. That’s all this
week.
A favourite publication of mine that's still going on is Organise! produced by UK's Anarchist Federation. Currently it comes out twice a year, fortunately all its issues are available for free online here. Issue 90 the Summer 2018 edition that was published online in time for May day, though issues with the printers delayed the physical distribution a bit. I just got my copy in the post today. I've been waiting for it for awhile and not just because I'm in it.
Shortly after writing Listen Gamer! I was contacted by a member who was on its publishing committee asking if they could print it in their next issue as it was supposed to have a theme about depictions of socialism and anarchism in the media. I was quick to agree, aside from being really flattered I've really enjoyed the magazine and so the thought of being in it was pretty overwhelming.
Though if you look at the cover and the issues table of contents, the theme seems to have taken a bit of a back seat to other issues. I don't mind to be honest I think its better that the magazine tackles important issues as they're developing.
To quote the opening of the Editorial "We Fear Change"
The paradigms and assumptions we've cemented into our zeitgeist as a society are often all too comforting and reliable and even for the fearless (and reckless), ready to build the new world, the way forward can seem impossible, the suffocating fear of change, of transition permeates every thread of our community, suppressing and restricting progressive development at every juncture. In this edition of Organise! We dip our toes into two very differant forms of transition, the personal and the Social and we look at how the fear of new ideas and change is having an impact.
Oh, if you're not aware at the time the collective was gathering articles for publication there had been an increase in activity by a group of anti Trans feminists in London. I actually don't have any connections to London aside visiting it, so I'm pretty much out of the loop concerning what goes on down there, but apparently a group with some connection to the Green party (a couple were Green party parliamentary candidates) has been confronting public spaces in London to spread propaganda opposing the Gender Recognition Act. One of the places they turned up at was the London Anarchist Book fair (never been myself) it caused quite a stir as some of the participants were long time activists and campaigners. To cut the story short its lead to some fallouts and splits, there's a thread on libcom about it here. It has a lot more information, but it also has a lot of ugly language and some deliberate misinformation so read with caution.
Anyway, I've been working through the issue and its very interesting. I also really like the design and the layouts of the articles, its a lot more distinct and attention grabbing then most political magazines and journals.
Hello, this is Audio Anarchy Radio, we’re starting off with
a series that introduces a few different concepts from anarchist perspectives.
And today we’re going to be talking about technology. The idea isn’t to give
you a line about what is right and what is wrong, but to explore some of the
aspects and critiques of technology that might not be regularly discussed. We
have Javier here, who is going to talk over some of the things that he has been
thinking about.
So, Javier, let me start by asking how you define
technology. “Well a dictionary definition of technology is the general term for
processes that which human beings fashion tools and machines to increase their
control and understanding of the material environment. The term comes from the
Greek words techne which refers to an
art or craft and lochia meaning an
area of study. So it means the study or science of crafting. For me I use it to
refer to all the tools and machines that humans use to shape, modify, or
understand their environment.”
And do you make a
distinction between certain types of technologies, or consider technology to be
socially neutral?
“Well I think each technology, each tool, or each machine
should be considered separately. I think each individual technology has
different social consequences, that I definitely don’t think they should be
considered neutral for society. But I also don’t make too many distinctions or
aggrupation’s in like, oh good technology, bad technology or things like that.
I just think that we should take into consideration each technology
individually, notice what characteristics it has, and how it shapes the social
institutions and deal with those questions. “
And what do you think some of the most prevalent popular or
interesting analyses of technology have been throughout history?
“yeah well, the one that comes to mind first of all is Marx.
He uses the term `means of production` vaguely to what I would refer to as
technology. And it’s a very central concern for him, however his analysis of
the way in which technology affects social institutions is limited to who
controls the technologies, or the means of production. And he does a class analysis
based on this where the bourgeoisie control the technologyor means of production then you have a class
society. If the Proletariat controls the means of productions there will be a
classless society. Stuff like that, I think that Marxists -most Marxists-
follow this analysis, I also think a lot of other people do.
Anarcho-syndicalists are very influenced by this kind of thought, but others
have been a lot more sceptical about this kind of simplistic view of
technology. There’s been for example the appropriate technology movement, and
more drastically the anarcho-primitivists, definitely think that there’s a lot
more to technologies than just who controls it.”
And what do you think
are popular perceptions or critiques of technology today?
“Ok, well I think today, some environmentalists do have
certain critiques of technology which is you know they question technologies
themselves and who controls it. Their critique or analysis is based purely on
environmental aspects and not social that much and those I think in general
today people take technology kind of for granted. And they refuse to question
it because they think it’s kind of like a natural thing for humans to have.
Theirs I think a couple of myths that really kind of inhibit our analysis of technology.
For example I would say the myth of progress is a very basic myth, well it
basically states that humans have never lived in a better situation than today.
And that throughout history continually progressing towards a better state,
things are pretty much getting better. It also demonstrates that progress is
inevitable and we can never go back because of where we try to do something
like that and we will eventually advance again, back to the way we are now.
This myth is really annoying to me because it kind of served the purpose of
justifying our current institutions and makes it kind of impossible to
criticise technology or a lot of other things that are considered progressive.
I can’t say there isn’t some truth to that, but whether progress has made
things better or not is just a matter of personal preference. I think of an
important thing to point out though is that humanity did not get to its present
state of technological or social development by a process of you know continual
progress. It was not a process of like consensus, democracy or any other kind
of libertarian philosophy or any you know practice that really respected
individual freedom. I mean a great amount of cultures were forced to accept
specific kinds of agriculture. You know through imperialism they were forced to
for example massively harvest coffee or other products for Europeans. And even
some cultures were forced to take on agriculture when they were
hunter-gatherers. Other than in the Industrial revolution people were taken off
their lands and in a lot of cases chained to machines in order to have the
industrial revolution really work. So these things that are usually seen as
advancements were not so much a product of human ingenuity but in a lot of ways
a product of tyranny and oppression. To say that humans naturally developed
industrialism and that we can never, that we would always inevitably develop it
again if we go back, if we abolish industrialism is to say that authoritarian
institutions are a part of our nature, I think.
Another myth that a lot of people take it as truth is that
progress and technological progress has a consequence that we have more
leisure. Most anthropologists agree that almost every society that has less
advanced technology has more leisure time. So even hunting and gathering
provides for more leisure time than farming. However its easy to see why some
people think that more or more advanced technology leads to more leisure. I
mean a superficial analysis would conclude that you know pushing a button is
easier than doing manual labour. The problem with this analysis is that it
doesn’t take two things into consideration; what goes into building the machine
that allows for you to just push the button so the machine does the work for
you. For example its less intensive, less labour intensive to drive a car than
to walk, but if you take into consideration the labour involved in
manufacturing the car from extracting the raw materials, extracting the oil for
it to run, to run the factories that build it, extracting the metals to build
the car, rubber to build the tires etc, you know that’s a lot more labour
intensive than just walking. The thing is that traditionally I think the
distribution of leisure and labour has you know favoured the ruling classes. It
hasn’t really been distributed equally. Some people have to do a lot of labour
and pretty much finance the leisure of the ruling class. That’s why some people
have to work really hard and don’t have any cars and some people just go to an
office building and have the most luxurious cars. So you know that way you can
see that it doesn’t provide for more leisure to have more technology, at least
not necessarily.”
And so, what are some
of your thoughts about technology and how it affects the environment today?
“Well definitely I
think this is perhaps the most, or these are the most obvious consequences and
people you know talk about it continually how cars pollute and stuff like that.
I think its useful however to try to find some general characteristics of technologies
that tend to intensify the environmental impact. I’ll try to mention a few that
I think are not as commonly discussed. One of them, one of these general
observations, I would say that technologies that are labour intensive are
usually more or have a bigger impact on the environment. This is because
changing the environment is something that requires labour, so the greater
impact usually is because there’s more labour involved and required to do it.
Also centralisation is something that generally increases environmental impact,
and this is because it concentrates the impact in a small area, making it
harder for natural mechanisms to repair the damage. I mean most
environmentalists are aware of this. The environment can modify itself to make
impact not as damaging if its done in a scattered way and not concentrated in
one place. Also technologies that require homogeneous persistent human activity
increases the impact because they make it harder for nature to slowly adapt, so
I mean for example assembly lines come to mind where you know what is done is
continually done it’s like massively done, and this doesn’t allow for the
environment to adapt to allow to small changes.
So, an important thing to notice about all these
implications is that these kinds of activities and technologies are almost
exclusively found in authoritarian societies. You know the observations that I
made that recognises that are labour intensive, centralised and homogenised
human activity. You know people when they are free from many authoritarian
institutions they tend to preform tasks that involve the least amount of labour
to achieve, they make decisions in a pretty sporadic manner, and decentralise
and also they like usually to engage in a variety of diverse activities.
There’s only one coherens where people engage in dangerous and unpleasant
labour intensive activities like mining, these activities are the ones that
have such a great environmental impact. So I think realising this, leads to a
very different approach to a problem of environmental destruction than the one
I think most people argue for right now. I think most people now argue for more
centralised control, you know the government regulating factories, regulating
emissions, you know more rules or you know everything that we do because we
can’t seem to manage ourselves without causing environmental problems. But this
analysis actually states kind of to the contrary; it states that humans when
free of authoritarian institutions produced the least amount of environmental impact.
So I think, I mean as an Anarchist I think this is the
analysis that you know that’s more useful, from my perspective. Yeah, another
useful thing to notice is that advanced technologies tend to have a high
environmental impact. What I mean by this is that when I use the term advanced
technology I mean that technology that depends on previous technologies to
function, so therefore its total impact becomes not only the impact that the
specific technology has but the added impact of all the technologies that are
required for the specific technology. You know like the examples are I think
pretty easy to see like you know electrical appliances need energy supply or
power supply and so the power supply has I mean you know like maybe a little
electrical appliance doesn’t have that much environmental impact but the whole
electrical infrastructure that is needed to power it does. And you know
different technologies like that, I think what this analysis leads to is that
it doesn’t make much sense to make more advanced technology that is supposedly
going to be more environmentally friendly.”
So, what are some of
your thoughts about the social implications about technology throughout history
and today?
“Okay, and this I think is something that is not usually
talked about, so I think its important to consider. Okay, so technology claims
to provide society with the tools to achieve its goals. Society however is not
like a monolithic entity formed of homogeneous individuals with identical
goals. Different individuals in society have different goals and the
technologies used will inevitably provide society with the tools to achieve the
goals of some and not all members. And it also, I mean also technologies not
spread like equally amongst all members of society. It will provide some
members of society something while maybe refusing something else to others. So,
taking this in mind that considers some of the implications of technology in
society. First of all, organisation, different technologies require for their
application different social settings, in terms of centralisation or spreading
social activity, technologies can have several implications. If a technology
requires for its use many individuals, social activity is centralised around
the technology. If the technology allows for only one or a small number of
individuals it promotes decentralisation. So centralisation implies that a form
of decision making where a single consensus has to be reached by the group, not
allowing for individuals to reach different decisions and be autonomous. In big
groups this phenomenon usually leads to representation or other forms of
mediation for the individual to make his or her decisions. So there are you
know an individuals ability to make their decision is taken further and further
away from them. To put an example, a factory can be well it can be owned by a
single boss that has authority over many individuals who work there, or it can
be cooperatively owned by the workers. In any case each individual will have to
adapt his or her schedule to the factories, they will have to preform the job
that the factory assigns and they will have to receive from their work what the
factory decides. They will have to produce what the factory decides when it
decides and how it decides. Obviously cooperative ownership offers the
individual worker more of a say in the decisions of the factory than the owner
model, but the individuals will never be able to reach a decision that’s
different from the one assigned by the factory. The individual is alienated
from the decision-making process, in the case of the capitalist process the
alienation is pretty complete, like you don’t have absolutely any input into
the decision making; in the case of the worker run factory this alienation is
mediated by a process that can be you know in different ways it can range from
consensus to some kind of representative democracy. Or you know the level of
let’s say authoritarianism that you can have is can vary, but autonomous
decision making is pretty impossible in the context of a factory. Whereas other
technologies allow for individuals to make their own decisions.
Okay another interesting aspect is the distribution of
technology. Proportionately to the energy and labour required for its
production technology becomes a scarcity. The more labour is used to produce a
machine the less the number of machines society can produce. In class societies
this usually implies that the members of the ruling class have access to the
technology and the others don’t. This causes a widening in the power gap
between the classes, the ruling classes are provided with more tools to control
their environment and society and the rest loses control in the same measure.
Another aspect is the shaping of human resources. It’s
obvious that technology has a profound impact on the educational system of a
society, you know whether the goal of the educational system is to modify the
individual so that he can better serve society. Or just to provide him and her
with the knowledge and skills needed to preform the social roles, to provide
for themselves, it would always take into consideration that society uses. If
the technology is very complex and complicated the educational process will be
long. If the technology requires monotonous centrally organised work, skills
like discipline and obedience will be encouraged in the educational process. A
point may be reached where the society needs for its survival to produce a
certain kind of individual, this will very likely tend to make its educational
institutions coercive rather than voluntary.
Another point is specialisation. Certain technologies demand
that the division of labour in society that tend to produce specialisations.
This means that certain individuals are required preform a socioeconomic role
and others are obliged to preform these tasks through this class of specialised
individuals. So individuals cannot perform or individuals that are not
specialists cannot preform these tasks by themselves. Our current society has
many examples; individuals need lawyers to legally defend themselves, cops to
physically protect themselves, media to be aware of things that influence our
lives, architects to build houses etc. It is important to know how
specialisation is not simply an individual having an extraordinary ability, it
is the assigning of an individual or individuals to perform a social role and
excluding others from performing it. To put an example of a specialist which is
I think a useful example and perhaps the oldest example is the priest. In
certain societies it is assumed that the only person or class of persons that
can communicate with the deities is a priest. Other individuals are forced to
perform only through the priests. In this way the class of priests effectively
control the spiritual aspect of the society, and often this is used to also
control other aspects like the moral standards and other taboos and customs of
the society. So that obviously has like enormous power of consequences on the
power relationships of the society. There’s different ways in which specialised
roles are imposed or assigned for some you know to perform certain things you
need a diploma, a certificate or some kind of authorisation from an appropriate
authority to perform it. Technology works in a different way to assign these roles
increasing in complexity, technologies become impossible to be wholly
understood by an individual and individuals have to specialise in a particular
aspect of the technology and depend on others to specialise in the rest and you
know when this happens everybody loses their autonomy and their ability to
perform jobs by themselves.
Another important consequence- social consequence of
technology is the creation of environments. Every technology as we have said
before is essentially a modification of the environment, from an environmental
point of view the implications you know have obvious consequences, but its also
very relevant from a social point of view. Some relevant questions are you know
who gets to modify the environment for others or whose environment do they
modify? And how do these modifications impact the lives of the individuals who
live there? To me the issue of empowering versus disempowering environments is
noteworthy. Certain environments provide each individual with the means for his
or her subsistence in a quite egalitarian way. If each individual is able to
access the resources they need to survive in an autonomous way then this is an
empowering environment. But other environments do quite the opposite, for
example modern urban environments pretty much eliminate all of the resources
from our environment and the ability to access the resources that we need to
survive is pretty much denied. So you know the modern urban environment pretty
much puts the resources in the hands of the few people and then all the rest of
the people has to acquire these resources through monetary exchanges. The
individual is forced to participate in socioeconomic and political institutions
set before her to be able to have access to the resources needed to survive.
With the impossibility of directly accessing resources one has to acquire money
which is the modern socially imposed means to access resources in order to
survive. And then those who control the money; have most of it, effectively
control both resources and the individuals who want access to those resources.
In Ivanovitch’s words “modernised poverty deprives those affected by it of
their freedom and power to act autonomously, to live creatively. It confines
them to a survival through being plugged into market relations, the opportunity
to experience political and social satisfaction outside the market is thus
destroyed. I am poor for instance, when the use value of my feet is lost
because I live in Los Angeles or live in the 35th floor .”
Mediation and autonomy. Direct action is a commonly used
word in radical circles, it is usually considered an anarchist value. The
reasoning goes that if to achieve our goals we must go through others then
we’re not in direct control of our lives, we’re not in direct control of the
consequences of our actions. And so mediated action is the opposite of direct
action, autonomy increases as mediation decreases. Technology is always a
medium through which we interact with our environment, a medium through which
we accomplish our goals and access our resources. So the same reasoning applies
here, to increase autonomy we must decrease mediation. This is especially true
when technology also implies a social mediation, when the technologies we use
and the technology we needto preform
our activities are controlled by others. Then our actions are not only mediated
by material objects but they’re also mediated by social institutions, which we
might not like and which in effect can become quite controlling of our actions.
So as a conclusion I would say that the implications of
technology has, goes well beyond its stated purposes. By this I mean that you
know like if a technology says that it will just transport people like cars for
example, well yes the consequences are that it transports cars but also that we
need streets, that it also implies that not everybody’s going to have access to
cars because they are very labour intensive and so therefore a class of people
can own cars will exist and one that doesn’t have access to cars is etc. an
important thing to note is that all the implications that I found are inherent
in the technology itself and do not depend on who controls or uses the
technology. Only by being aware of all the implications the technologies have
will we be able to make those decisions that will help us to achieve the
society we desire".
That’s it for todays
introduction to a critique of technology. Check out Audio Anarchy on the web
audioanarchy.org