Beyond
Workerism Beyond Syndicalism
The end of syndicalism corresponds to the end of
workerism For us it is also the end of the quantitive illusion
of the party and the specific organisation of synthesis The
revolt of tomorrow must look for new roads
Trade unionism is in its decline. In good as in evil with this
structural form of struggle an era is disappearing, a model and a
future world seen in terms of an improved and corrected
reproduction of the old one.
We are moving towards new and profound transformations. In the
productive structure, in the social structure.
Methods of struggle, perspectives, even short term projects
are also transforming.
In an expanding industrial society the trade union moves
from instrument of struggle to instrument supporting the
productive structure itself.
Revolutionary syndicalism has also played its part: pushing
the most combative workers forward but, at the same time, pushing
them backwards in terms of capacity to see the future society or
the creative needs of the revolution. Everything remained
parcelled up within the factory dimension. Workerism is not just
common to authoritarian communism. Singling out privileged areas
of the class clash is still today one of the most deep-rooted
habits that it is difficult to lose.
The end of trade-unionism therefore. We have been saying so
for fifteen years now. At one time this caused criticism and
amazement, especially when we included anarchco-syndicalism in
our critique. We are more easily accepted today. Basically, who
does not criticise the trade unions today? No one, or almost no
one.
But the connection is overlooked. Our criticism of trade
unionism was also criticism of the "quantitive" method
that has all the characteristics of the party in embryo. It was
also a critique of the specific organisations of synthesis. It
was also a critique of class respectability borrowed from the
bourgeoisie and filtered through the cliches of so-called
proletarian morals. All that cannot be ignored.
If many comrades agree with us today in our now traditional
critique of trade-unionism those who share a view of all the
consequences that it gives rise to are but a few.
We can only intervene in the world of production using means
that do not place themselves in the quantitive perspective. They
cannot therefore claim to have specific anarchist organisations
behind them working on the hypothesis of revolutionary synthesis.
This leads us to a different method of intervention, that
of building factory "nucleii" or zonal "nucleii"
which limit themselves to keeping in contact with a specific
anarchist structure, and are exclusively based on affinity.
It is from the relationship between the base nucleus and specific
anarchist structure that a new model of revolutionary struggle
emerges to attack the structures of capital and the State through
recourse to insurrectional methods.
This allows for a better following of the profound
transformations that are taking place in the productive
structures. The factory is about to disappear, new productive
organisations are taking its place, based mainly on automation.
The workers of yesterday will become partially integrated into a
supporting situation or simply into a situation of social
security in the short-term, survival in the long one. New forms
of work will appear on the horizon. Already the classical
workers' front no longer exists. Like-wise the trade union as is
obvious. At least it no longer exists in the form in which we
have known until now. It has become a firm like any other.
A network of increasingly different relations, all under
the banner of participation, pluralism, democracy, etc, will
spread over society bridling almost all the forces of subversion.
The extreme aspects of the revolutionary project will be
systematically criminalised.
But the struggle will take new roads, will filter towards a
thousand new subterranean channels emerging in a hundred thousand
explosions of rage and destruction with new and incomprehensible
symbology.
As anarchists we must be careful, we are carriers of an often
heavy mortgage from the past, not to remain distanced from a
phenomenon that we end up not understanding and whose violence
could one fine day even scare us, And in the first case we must
be careful to develop our analysis in full.
a.m.b.
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