07.06.2014 Views

Holloway - Crack Capitalism.pdf - Libcom

Holloway - Crack Capitalism.pdf - Libcom

Holloway - Crack Capitalism.pdf - Libcom

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

has happened, for example, with the piquetem moy '111 '111', th '<br />

movement of the unemployed workers in Ar)' neina, wh 'r ' SO 111 '<br />

groups (such as the MTD de Solano)? moy d radi ally fronl<br />

demanding employment to saying that thcy did 110r w;1I11 I'()<br />

be employed, that they did not want to be exploit 'ti, tI t1I they<br />

wanted to devote their lives to meaningful activity hos 'll by<br />

them. A similar shift can be seen on a smaller sea I ' wi I' h 1 h '<br />

German Gliickliche Arbeitslose (happy unemployed) moy 'Ill '1l1, H<br />

The example already mentioned of EI Alto is another iml orCnll1'<br />

case: the structures of mutual support developed to d < I wi 1 h<br />

grinding poverty and government neglect (not remnants of I'll I'll I<br />

communities but developed to meet the demands of city lif .)'1<br />

were turned around to become the basis of one of th most<br />

important movements of rebellion in recent years. Something<br />

similar has happened with the black, the gay and the indigenous<br />

movements: that which was previously seen as a mark of sha mc<br />

suddenly becomes turned around into a badge of pride. In all<br />

of these cases, there is an exclusion from the mainstream which<br />

is reversed when those who are excluded declare that they do<br />

not want to be included, that they prefer to go their own way.<br />

Exclusion becomes refusal, and the patterns of alternative social<br />

relations constructed to deal with the exclusion become real<br />

cracks, powerful spaces of refusal-and-creation. The world is<br />

turned upside down.<br />

Certainly there are differences between the cracks created by<br />

a conscious opting out (such as a group of friends who decide<br />

to form a social centre) and those that arise from the turning<br />

around of an exclusion (as in the case of the piquetero groups).<br />

However, the differences should not be exaggerated. It is often<br />

difficult to distinguish choice from necessity: a decision by<br />

computer programmers not to work for the arms industry but<br />

to devote their time to the creation of software to be shared<br />

freely may well be a response to what they experience as an<br />

existential necessity. What is important is not to draw dividing<br />

lines but to see the lines of continuity. The enormously SLiC ssful<br />

anti-poll tax campaign in Britain in the early 1990s was bllilt<br />

around the slogan 'can't pay, won't pay', indicating th l l ilily<br />

of those who could not pay the tax and those who chos not 1'0<br />

pay a tax they considered HtlJst lr:J,..th sa e way, W' should

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!