Before this pandemic started its jog across the globe, the world was awash with revolt. Most countries had some sort of mass protests on their streets, people were, more or less "pissed off" with the way the world was heading, they were alive to its inequality, corruption, injustice, human made ecological disaster, and violent destructive wars, they wanted a complete change of direction. In some of the countries the protests became open rebellion, an insurrection, Chile being one of those countries, I have been interested in seeing what the pandemic and the governments actions have done to this insurrection, Has it quelled the desire for revolution, has it subdued the rebellion to acquiescence, or has it strengthened their resolve to use this as an opportunity to continue their struggle for a free and fair society? I like their idea of the quarantine being seen as a general strike, obviously it won't end with the pandemic.
On a particularly chaotic Friday afternoon, Piñera inaugurated the
nationwide chain reaction to the pandemic. Since the beginning of March,
fear of the virus has slowly entered the conversation: between the
agitated return to classes that seeks to be a replica (like an
earthquake) of the October Revolt, the massive feminist demonstrations,
the radicalization of the reactionary sectors and the imminence of the
plebiscite, it is taking on more and more importance.
The international situation is no less complex. Last year saw the
beginning of a new worldwide wave of revolts against capitalist
normality, and the much manipulated “institutionality” seems to be
collapsing from all sides, leaving room not only for insurgent
creativity but also (and never so easily differentiated) for populism
and fascism of all kinds.
The economy has been losing speed for some time, but the trade war
between two declining powers, the manufactured rise in the price of oil,
and the paralysis caused by the coronavirus, built the perfect storm to
leave the stock market and its tangle of speculative fictions in free
fall.
It is in this context that the disease arrives in our territory, with
the state of exception still fresh in our memories. It starts in the
upper classes, and we almost rejoice before remembering that they will
not be the only ones to suffer its consequences. The government, always
late, announces its measures. Clearly they are not enough, and their
only objective is to ensure the free movement of capital. Some (the ones
who see conspiracies at every corner) whisper that it is a strategy to
cancel the plebiscite, that is apparently so dangerous. But we are clear
that the intelligent fascist votes to approve, and that the
government’s incompetence requires no more justification than its own
class interests.
However, we have also seen how the situation has developed in other
countries with a more advanced stage of infection. Simulations of
insurrection, urban warfare and absolute states of emergency have been
deployed on the streets of China, Italy and other parts of the world,
with varying degrees of success. The Chinese state, famous for its
repressive capacity, concentrated all its efforts on the containment of
ground zero but, juggling to keep its economy afloat, left its regional
governments free both to resume production and to sustain the
quarantine. Beyond this it has been by far the country whose quarantine
has been most efficient and effective (we won’t mention the United
States, whose public policy is reduced to covering its ears and shouting
loudly).
The Italian case is notable, more than anything else, for its
resistance to quarantine measures and “social distancing”, a nefarious
euphemism that refers to self-isolation, forced precarization disguised
as “tele-working”, hoarding of essential goods, and the denial of any
form of community. When the prisoners (who have always been overcrowded
and immuno-compromised) were banned from receiving visits, the biggest
prison revolt of this century began: 27 prisons were taken over, many
people were killed, police and prison officers were kidnapped and
hundreds of prisoners escaped.
In Chilean territory, the situation is uncertain. Pharmacies and
supermarkets that were recently looted will soon be out of stock due to
widespread panic. Public transport, a permanent battleground since the
beginning of the revolt, will soon be avoided like the plague. The
government has already banned gatherings of more than 500 people, but by
now anyone who is listening to the government is listening. The
military, who we assume have refused to leave again to keep what little
legitimacy they have left and to be able to preserve their privileges in
a new constitution, will not have so much shame if they can disguise
their actions as public health. Real public health, on the other hand,
weighs less than a packet of cabritas (translation note: a popular popcorn snack). And we have no idea what will happen with the plebiscite.
If elsewhere the pandemic was a trial of insurrection, here the
insurrection seems to have been a trial of pandemic and economic crisis.
Let’s keep the flame of revolt alive, and organize to survive.
We will now outline some measures that we consider worthy of generalization, more of an inspiration than a programme:
- Looting and organized redistribution of basic goods
- The use of student occupations as collection centres, shelters for homeless people and, of course, street fighters.
- The boycott of any form of distance work or study, so that the quarantine becomes a general strike.
- The immediate release of all prisoners as a central demand.
- Mass evasion in private clinics, free medical care for all.
- Rent strike, taking over empty houses.
The hood is the best mask!
Evade the isolation of capital!
Deny immunity as a police device!
The crisis is an opportunity, raise your fist and attack!
Visit ann arky's home at
https://radicalglasgow.me.uk