ACCELERATE MANIFESTO for an Accelerationist Politics
ACCELERATE
MANIFESTO for an Accelerationist Politics
By: Alex Williams and Nick
Srnicek
Taken from: Critical Legal Thinking
01. INTRODUCTION:
On the Conjuncture
1. At the
beginning of the second decade of the Twenty-First Century, global civilization
faces a new breed of cataclysm. These coming apocalypses ridicule the norms and
organisational structures of the politics which were forged in the birth of the
nation-state, the rise of capitalism, and a Twentieth Century of unprecedented
wars.
2. Most
significant is the breakdown of the planetary climatic system. In time, this
threatens the continued existence of the present global human population.
Though this is the most critical of the threats which face humanity, a series
of lesser but potentially equally destabilising problems exist alongside and
intersect with it. Terminal resource depletion, especially in water and energy
reserves, offers the prospect of mass starvation, collapsing economic
paradigms, and new hot and cold wars. Continued financial crisis has led
governments to embrace the paralyzing death spiral policies of austerity,
privatisation of social welfare services, mass unemployment, and stagnating wages.
Increasing automation in production processes including ‘intellectual labour’
is evidence of the secular crisis of capitalism, soon to render it incapable of
maintaining current standards of living for even the former middle classes of
the global north.
3. In contrast to
these ever-accelerating catastrophes, today’s politics is beset by an inability
to generate the new ideas and modes of organisation necessary to transform our
societies to confront and resolve the coming annihilations. While crisis gathers
force and speed, politics withers and retreats. In this paralysis of the
political imaginary, the future has been cancelled.
4. Since 1979, the
hegemonic global political ideology has been neoliberalism, found in some
variant throughout the leading economic powers. In spite of the deep structural
challenges the new global problems present to it, most immediately the credit,
financial, and fiscal crises since 2007–8, neoliberal programmes have only
evolved in the sense of deepening. This continuation of the neoliberal project,
or neoliberalism 2.0, has begun to apply another round of structural
adjustments, most significantly in the form of encouraging new and aggressive
incursions by the private sector into what remains of social democratic
institutions and services. This is in spite of the immediately negative
economic and social effects of such policies, and the longer term fundamental
barriers posed by the new global crises.
5. That the forces
of right wing governmental, non-governmental, and corporate power have been
able to press forth with neoliberalisation is at least in part a result of the
continued paralysis and ineffectual nature of much what remains of the left.
Thirty years of neoliberalism have rendered most left-leaning political parties
bereft of radical thought, hollowed out, and without a popular mandate. At best
they have responded to our present crises with calls for a return to a
Keynesian economics, in spite of the evidence that the very conditions which
enabled post-war social democracy to occur no longer exist. We cannot return to
mass industrial-Fordist labour by fiat, if at all. Even the neosocialist
regimes of South America’s Bolivarian Revolution, whilst heartening in their
ability to resist the dogmas of contemporary capitalism, remain disappointingly
unable to advance an alternative beyond mid-Twentieth Century socialism.
Organised labour, being systematically weakened by the changes wrought in the
neoliberal project, is sclerotic at an institutional level and — at best —
capable only of mildly mitigating the new structural adjustments. But with no
systematic approach to building a new economy, or the structural solidarity to
push such changes through, for now labour remains relatively impotent. The new
social movements which emerged since the end of the Cold War, experiencing a
resurgence in the years after 2008, have been similarly unable to devise a new
political ideological vision. Instead they expend considerable energy on
internal direct-democratic process and affective self-valorisation over
strategic efficacy, and frequently propound a variant of neo-primitivist
localism, as if to oppose the abstract violence of globalised capital with the
flimsy and ephemeral “authenticity” of communal immediacy.
6. In the absence
of a radically new social, political, organisational, and economic vision the
hegemonic powers of the right will continue to be able to push forward their
narrow-minded imaginary, in the face of any and all evidence. At best, the left
may be able for a time to partially resist some of the worst incursions. But
this is to be Canute against an ultimately irresistible tide. To generate a new
left global hegemony entails a recovery of lost possible futures, and indeed
the recovery of the future as such.
02. INTEREGNUM: On
Accelerationisms
1. If any system
has been associated with ideas of acceleration it is capitalism. The essential
metabolism of capitalism demands economic growth, with competition between
individual capitalist entities setting in motion increasing technological
developments in an attempt to achieve competitive advantage, all accompanied by
increasing social dislocation. In its neoliberal form, its ideological
self-presentation is one of liberating the forces of creative destruction,
setting free ever-accelerating technological and social innovations.
2. The philosopher
Nick Land captured this most acutely, with a myopic yet hypnotising belief that
capitalist speed alone could generate a global transition towards unparalleled
technological singularity. In this visioning of capital, the human can
eventually be discarded as mere drag to an abstract planetary intelligence
rapidly constructing itself from the bricolaged fragments of former
civilisations. However Landian neoliberalism confuses speed with acceleration.
We may be moving fast, but only within a strictly defined set of capitalist
parameters that themselves never waver. We experience only the increasing speed
of a local horizon, a simple brain-dead onrush rather than an acceleration
which is also navigational, an experimental process of discovery within a
universal space of possibility. It is the latter mode of acceleration which we
hold as essential.
3. Even worse, as
Deleuze and Guattari recognized, from the very beginning what capitalist speed
deterritorializes with one hand, it reterritorializes with the other. Progress
becomes constrained within a framework of surplus value, a reserve army of
labour, and free-floating capital. Modernity is reduced to statistical measures
of economic growth and social innovation becomes encrusted with kitsch
remainders from our communal past. Thatcherite-Reaganite deregulation sits
comfortably alongside Victorian ‘back-to-basics’ family and religious values.
4. A deeper
tension within neoliberalism is in terms of its self-image as the vehicle of
modernity, as literally synonymous with modernisation, whilst promising a
future that it is constitutively incapable of providing. Indeed, as neoliberalism
has progressed, rather than enabling individual creativity, it has tended
towards eliminating cognitive inventiveness in favour of an affective
production line of scripted interactions, coupled to global supply chains and a
neo-Fordist Eastern production zone. A vanishingly small cognitariat of elite
intellectual workers shrinks with each passing year — and increasingly so as
algorithmic automation winds its way through the spheres of affective and
intellectual labour. Neoliberalism, though positing itself as a necessary
historical development, was in fact a merely contingent means to ward off the
crisis of value that emerged in the 1970s. Inevitably this was a sublimation of
the crisis rather than its ultimate overcoming.
5. It is Marx,
along with Land, who remains the paradigmatic accelerationist thinker. Contrary
to the all-too familiar critique, and even the behaviour of some contemporary
Marxians, we must remember that Marx himself used the most advanced theoretical
tools and empirical data available in an attempt to fully understand and
transform his world. He was not a thinker who resisted modernity, but rather
one who sought to analyse and intervene within it, understanding that for all
its exploitation and corruption, capitalism remained the most advanced economic
system to date. Its gains were not to be reversed, but accelerated beyond the
constraints the capitalist value form.
6. Indeed, as even
Lenin wrote in the 1918 text “Left Wing” Childishness:
Socialism is inconceivable without
large-scale capitalist engineering based on the latest discoveries of modern
science. It is inconceivable without planned state organisation which keeps
tens of millions of people to the strictest observance of a unified standard in
production and distribution. We Marxists have always spoken of this, and it is
not worth while wasting two seconds talking to people who do not understand
even this (anarchists and a good half of the Left Socialist- Revolutionaries).
7. As Marx was
aware, capitalism cannot be identified as the agent of true acceleration.
Similarly, the assessment of left politics as antithetical to technosocial
acceleration is also, at least in part, a severe misrepresentation. Indeed, if
the political left is to have a future it must be one in which it maximally
embraces this suppressed accelerationist tendency.
03. MANIFEST: On
the Future
1. We believe the
most important division in today’s left is between those that hold to a folk
politics of localism, direct action, and relentless horizontalism, and those
that outline what must become called an accelerationist politics at ease with a
modernity of abstraction, complexity, globality, and technology. The former
remains content with establishing small and temporary spaces of non-capitalist social
relations, eschewing the real problems entailed in facing foes which are
intrinsically non-local, abstract, and rooted deep in our everyday
infrastructure. The failure of such politics has been built-in from the very
beginning. By contrast, an accelerationist politics seeks to preserve the gains
of late capitalism while going further than its value system, governance
structures, and mass pathologies will allow.
2. All of us want
to work less. It is an intriguing question as to why it was that the world’s
leading economist of the post-war era believed that an enlightened capitalism
inevitably progressed towards a radical reduction of working hours. In The
Economic Prospects for Our Grandchildren (written in 1930), Keynes forecast a
capitalist future where individuals would have their work reduced to three
hours a day. What has instead occurred is the progressive elimination of the
work-life distinction, with work coming to permeate every aspect of the
emerging social factory.
3. Capitalism has
begun to constrain the productive forces of technology, or at least, direct
them towards needlessly narrow ends. Patent wars and idea monopolisation are
contemporary phenomena that point to both capital’s need to move beyond
competition, and capital’s increasingly retrograde approach to technology. The
properly accelerative gains of neoliberalism have not led to less work or less
stress. And rather than a world of space travel, future shock, and
revolutionary technological potential, we exist in a time where the only thing
which develops is marginally better consumer gadgetry. Relentless iterations of
the same basic product sustain marginal consumer demand at the expense of human
acceleration.
4. We do not want
to return to Fordism. There can be no return to Fordism. The capitalist “golden
era” was premised on the production paradigm of the orderly factory
environment, where (male) workers received security and a basic standard of
living in return for a lifetime of stultifying boredom and social repression.
Such a system relied upon an international hierarchy of colonies, empires, and
an underdeveloped periphery; a national hierarchy of racism and sexism; and a
rigid family hierarchy of female subjugation. For all the nostalgia many may
feel, this regime is both undesirable and practically impossible to return to.
5.
Accelerationists want to unleash latent productive forces. In this project, the
material platform of neoliberalism does not need to be destroyed. It needs to
be repurposed towards common ends. The existing infrastructure is not a
capitalist stage to be smashed, but a springboard to launch towards
post-capitalism.
6. Given the
enslavement of technoscience to capitalist objectives (especially since the
late 1970s) we surely do not yet know what a modern technosocial body can do.
Who amongst us fully recognizes what untapped potentials await in the
technology which has already been developed? Our wager is that the true
transformative potentials of much of our technological and scientific research
remain unexploited, filled with presently redundant features (or
pre-adaptations) that, following a shift beyond the short-sighted capitalist
socius, can become decisive.
7. We want to
accelerate the process of technological evolution. But what we are arguing for
is not techno-utopianism. Never believe that technology will be sufficient to
save us. Necessary, yes, but never sufficient without socio-political action.
Technology and the social are intimately bound up with one another, and changes
in either potentiate and reinforce changes in the other. Whereas the techno-utopians
argue for acceleration on the basis that it will automatically overcome social
conflict, our position is that technology should be accelerated precisely
because it is needed in order to win social conflicts.
8. We believe that
any post-capitalism will require post-capitalist planning. The faith placed in
the idea that, after a revolution, the people will spontaneously constitute a
novel socioeconomic system that isn’t simply a return to capitalism is naïve at
best, and ignorant at worst. To further this, we must develop both a cognitive
map of the existing system and a speculative image of the future economic
system.
9. To do so, the
left must take advantage of every technological and scientific advance made
possible by capitalist society. We declare that quantification is not an evil
to be eliminated, but a tool to be used in the most effective manner possible.
Economic modelling is — simply put — a necessity for making intelligible a
complex world. The 2008 financial crisis reveals the risks of blindly accepting
mathematical models on faith, yet this is a problem of illegitimate authority
not of mathematics itself. The tools to be found in social network analysis,
agent-based modelling, big data analytics, and non-equilibrium economic models,
are necessary cognitive mediators for understanding complex systems like the
modern economy. The accelerationist left must become literate in these
technical fields.
10. Any
transformation of society must involve economic and social experimentation. The
Chilean Project Cybersyn is emblematic of this experimental attitude — fusing
advanced cybernetic technologies, with sophisticated economic modelling, and a
democratic platform instantiated in the technological infrastructure itself.
Similar experiments were conducted in 1950s–1960s Soviet economics as well,
employing cybernetics and linear programming in an attempt to overcome the new
problems faced by the first communist economy. That both of these were
ultimately unsuccessful can be traced to the political and technological
constraints these early cyberneticians operated under.
11. The left must
develop sociotechnical hegemony: both in the sphere of ideas, and in the sphere
of material platforms. Platforms are the infrastructure of global society. They
establish the basic parameters of what is possible, both behaviourally and
ideologically. In this sense, they embody the material transcendental of
society: they are what make possible particular sets of actions, relationships,
and powers. While much of the current global platform is biased towards
capitalist social relations, this is not an inevitable necessity. These
material platforms of production, finance, logistics, and consumption can and
will be reprogrammed and reformatted towards post-capitalist ends.
12. We do not
believe that direct action is sufficient to achieve any of this. The habitual
tactics of marching, holding signs, and establishing temporary autonomous zones
risk becoming comforting substitutes for effective success. “At least we have
done something” is the rallying cry of those who privilege self-esteem rather
than effective action. The only criterion of a good tactic is whether it
enables significant success or not. We must be done with fetishising particular
modes of action. Politics must be treated as a set of dynamic systems, riven
with conflict, adaptations and counter-adaptations, and strategic arms races.
This means that each individual type of political action becomes blunted and
ineffective over time as the other sides adapt. No given mode of political
action is historically inviolable. Indeed, over time, there is an increasing
need to discard familiar tactics as the forces and entities they are marshalled
against learn to defend and counter-attack them effectively. It is in part the
contemporary left’s inability to do so which lies close to the heart of the
contemporary malaise.
13. The
overwhelming privileging of democracy-as-process needs to be left behind. The
fetishisation of openness, horizontality, and inclusion of much of today’s
‘radical’ left set the stage for ineffectiveness. Secrecy, verticality, and
exclusion all have their place as well in effective political action (though
not, of course, an exclusive one).
14. Democracy
cannot be defined simply by its means — not via voting, discussion, or general
assemblies. Real democracy must be defined by its goal — collective
self-mastery. This is a project which must align politics with the legacy of
the Enlightenment, to the extent that it is only through harnessing our ability
to understand ourselves and our world better (our social, technical, economic,
psychological world) that we can come to rule ourselves. We need to posit a
collectively controlled legitimate vertical authority in addition to
distributed horizontal forms of sociality, to avoid becoming the slaves of
either a tyrannical totalitarian centralism or a capricious emergent order
beyond our control. The command of The Plan must be married to the improvised
order of The Network.
15. We do not
present any particular organisation as the ideal means to embody these vectors.
What is needed — what has always been needed — is an ecology of organisations,
a pluralism of forces, resonating and feeding back on their comparative
strengths. Sectarianism is the death knell of the left as much as
centralization is, and in this regard we continue to welcome experimentation
with different tactics (even those we disagree with).
16. We have three
medium term concrete goals. First, we need to build an intellectual
infrastructure. Mimicking the Mont Pelerin Society of the neoliberal
revolution, this is to be tasked with creating a new ideology, economic and
social models, and a vision of the good to replace and surpass the emaciated
ideals that rule our world today. This is an infrastructure in the sense of
requiring the construction not just of ideas, but institutions and material
paths to inculcate, embody and spread them.
17. We need to
construct wide-scale media reform. In spite of the seeming democratisation
offered by the internet and social media, traditional media outlets remain
crucial in the selection and framing of narratives, along with possessing the
funds to prosecute investigative journalism. Bringing these bodies as close as
possible to popular control is crucial to undoing the current presentation of
the state of things.
18. Finally, we
need to reconstitute various forms of class power. Such a reconstitution must
move beyond the notion that an organically generated global proletariat already
exists. Instead it must seek to knit together a disparate array of partial
proletarian identities, often embodied in post-Fordist forms of precarious
labour.
19. Groups and
individuals are already at work on each of these, but each is on their own
insufficient. What is required is all three feeding back into one another, with
each modifying the contemporary conjunction in such a way that the others
become more and more effective. A positive feedback loop of infrastructural,
ideological, social and economic transformation, generating a new complex
hegemony, a new post-capitalist technosocial platform. History demonstrates it
has always been a broad assemblage of tactics and organisations which has
brought about systematic change; these lessons must be learned.
20. To achieve
each of these goals, on the most practical level we hold that the
accelerationist left must think more seriously about the flows of resources and
money required to build an effective new political infrastructure. Beyond the
‘people power’ of bodies in the street, we require funding, whether from
governments, institutions, think tanks, unions, or individual benefactors. We
consider the location and conduction of such funding flows essential to begin
reconstructing an ecology of effective accelerationist left organizations.
21. We declare
that only a Promethean politics of maximal mastery over society and its
environment is capable of either dealing with global problems or achieving
victory over capital. This mastery must be distinguished from that beloved of
thinkers of the original Enlightenment. The clockwork universe of Laplace, so
easily mastered given sufficient information, is long gone from the agenda of
serious scientific understanding. But this is not to align ourselves with the
tired residue of postmodernity, decrying mastery as proto-fascistic or
authority as innately illegitimate. Instead we propose that the problems
besetting our planet and our species oblige us to refurbish mastery in a newly
complex guise; whilst we cannot predict the precise result of our actions, we
can determine probabilistically likely ranges of outcomes. What must be coupled
to such complex systems analysis is a new form of action: improvisatory and
capable of executing a design through a practice which works with the
contingencies it discovers only in the course of its acting, in a politics of
geosocial artistry and cunning rationality. A form of abductive experimentation
that seeks the best means to act in a complex world.
22. We need to
revive the argument that was traditionally made for post-capitalism: not only
is capitalism an unjust and perverted system, but it is also a system that
holds back progress. Our technological development is being suppressed by
capitalism, as much as it has been unleashed. Accelerationism is the basic
belief that these capacities can and should be let loose by moving beyond the
limitations imposed by capitalist society. The movement towards a surpassing of
our current constraints must include more than simply a struggle for a more
rational global society. We believe it must also include recovering the dreams
which transfixed many from the middle of the Nineteenth Century until the dawn
of the neoliberal era, of the quest of Homo Sapiens towards expansion beyond
the limitations of the earth and our immediate bodily forms. These visions are
today viewed as relics of a more innocent moment. Yet they both diagnose the
staggering lack of imagination in our own time, and offer the promise of a
future that is affectively invigorating, as well as intellectually energising.
After all, it is only a post-capitalist society, made possible by an
accelerationist politics, which will ever be capable of delivering on the
promissory note of the mid-Twentieth Century’s space programmes, to shift
beyond a world of minimal technical upgrades towards all-encompassing change.
Towards a time of collective self-mastery, and the properly alien future that entails
and enables. Towards a completion of the Enlightenment project of
self-criticism and self-mastery, rather than its elimination.
23. The choice
facing us is severe: either a globalised post-capitalism or a slow
fragmentation towards primitivism, perpetual crisis, and planetary ecological
collapse.
24. The future
needs to be constructed. It has been demolished by neoliberal capitalism and
reduced to a cut-price promise of greater inequality, conflict, and chaos. This
collapse in the idea of the future is symptomatic of the regressive historical
status of our age, rather than, as cynics across the political spectrum would
have us believe, a sign of sceptical maturity. What accelerationism pushes
towards is a future that is more modern — an alternative modernity that
neoliberalism is inherently unable to generate. The future must be cracked open
once again, unfastening our horizons towards the universal possibilities of the
Outside.
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