The Modest Manifesto - A Better World is Possible (1.2)
"Neither Slave nor Master" - Camus
We need to start our manifesto with epistemology. Not just as homage to the Age of Information but because working knowledge starts with understanding how we know what we know. Hubris indicates excessive naivete about epistemology, because:
* Knowledge is limited.
* Knowledge is situated.
* Knowledge is deeply empirical and relentlessly discursive.
* Heteroglossia is better than genius.
* Praxis is the process.
* Trust the process.
* Freedom is a process.
* The best answers are beyond binaries, even beyond dialectics.
* Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis, Prosthesis, and again.
* Idealism over reality.
* Reality is beyond materialism vs. idealism.
* Reality over ideology.
* Reality is infinitely complex, not pure.
* Reality is improbable, not random.
* To be whole is to be part.
Understandings-
* The personal is political; the political is personal.
* Bodies are personal.
* Technologies are embodied.
* Technologies have politics.
* Politics is about bodies.
* Bodies are sources of power.
* Knowledge is power; grace is power.
A better world will be based on commons, not just of nature and resources but of knowledge. Commons assume community.
A better world will be based on liberatory practices:
Strategic
* Nonviolent Direct Action for political change.
* Prefiguration in Art, Action, and Life.
* Resistance: personal self-defense, non-cooperation, to property as violence.
* Mutual Aid.
* Reclamation: of nature, of politics ("Throw them all out!"), of community, of morality.
* Effective theory and total education.
* Liberatory Information: open source, shareware, anti-commodification. We want information so we can be free.
Tactical
* Detournement, Irony, Reversion, Subversion, Seduction, Inspiration, Sacrifice,Communication, Coordination, humor, wit, to listen.
A better world is based on principles, not prescriptions:
* Solidarity
* Tolerance
* Autonomy - community
* Commons - land and knowledge
* Nature - bioregions, sustainable, active
* Cultures - autonomous, sustainable, actants
* Markets - controlled by individuals, families, and syndicates
* "Thin" government - many democratic institutions at many levels. (The more governments, the less government.)
* Property - individual, family, syndicate, NOT corporate.
* Syndicates - affinity groups, unions, alliances, NOT corporations.
* Families - Based on complexity, life, choice, and tolerance, not nuclear ideology.
* Work - Those who do the work, decide.
* Labor - If it is alienated, it is oppression.
* Economics - Profit is not policy, efficiency, or "natural".
"The Future is not yet written." - Sara O'Connor, The Terminator
The Syndicate for Initiative
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