I have just begun my third David Graeber book, The Democracy Project,
a
more-or-less
history
of the
Occupy
Wall
Street
movement,
his
roles
in
that
event
and
the
anarchist
foundations
of the
endeavor.
I’ve
also
plowed
through Debt: The First 5,000 Years,
a book
which
I
firmly
believe
physically
made
my
brain
stronger
because
of the
synaptic
work
it had
to do
following
his
brilliant
arguments
about
debt,
money
and
obligation
and
the
violence
that
binds
them
together.
(I’m
now
doing
a
re-read.)
I am
also
re-reading The
Utopia
of
Rules:
On
Technology,
Stupidity,
and
the
Secret
Joys
of
Bureaucracy,
where
he
links
economics,
bureaucracy
and
violence
into a
plausible
explanation
of the
state
of our
state.
He
died
on
September
2,
2020,
from
necrotic
pancreatitis
while
on
holiday
in
Venice.
And I
miss
him.
While
I’m
only
at the
beginning
of
working
through
Graeber’s
work,
what
draws
me to
him is
the
way he
grounds
his
anarchist
sensibilities
in the
scut
work
of
anthropology,
quarrying
human
history
and
nature
to
understand
why
things
are
the
way
they
are
and
how
humans
can
redirect
that
“why”
on a
bearing
toward
a
post-capitalist
commonwealth.
Graeber
is
given
credit
for
creating
the
phrase
“We
are
the
99%”
for
Occupy,
though
he
argues,
in
typical
fashion,
that
it was
a
collective
effort,
but it
captures
a
crucial
element
of his
work
and
worldview.
Voices
like
his,
like
the
thousands
who
took
up the
Occupy
banner,
like
all
the
others
working
to get
capitalist
societies
to
render
more
justice
and
less
suffering,
are
completely
banned
from
becoming
part
of
approved
political
discussion
in the
United
States.
Graeber
acknowledges
this
when
says
that
“there
is
such a
straitjacket
on
acceptable
political
discourse,
[on]
what a
politician
or
media
pundit
can
say
without
being
written
off as
a
member
of the
lunatic
fringe,”
with
the
result
that
“the
views
of
very
large
segments
of the
American
public
simply
are
never
voiced
at
all.”
This
why an
Occupy
happens
and
why,
at the
same
time,
no one
takes
it
seriously.
(Well,
that’s
not
entirely
true.
Graeber
noted
that
the
powers
confronted
by
Occupy’s
actions
knew
very
well
the
threat
it
posed
and,
with
complete
seriousness,
sic’d
the
police
on it
to
crush
it.)
So,
because
most
Americans
bothered
by the
way
things
are
going
don’t
have a
broad
lexicon
to use
in
concocting
alternate
futures
for
their
democracy,
they’re
forced
to
construct
visions
out of
the
crabbed
and
low-grade
ideas
offered
by
American
culture,
like
our
republican
version
of
democracy
itself
and
hyperindividualism
and
pulled-up
bootstraps
and a
milquetoast
vision
of
diversity.
The
people
assaulting
the
Capitol
on
January
6 and
those
assaulting
social
injustice
all
draw
from
the
same
crimped
menu
of
concepts
and
vocabularies,
a menu
that
has
been
crafted
by
certain
powers
and
principalities
to
foreclose
on
anything
getting
loosed
into
the
wild
that
endangers
their
control.
This
is why
the
oft-called-for
conversation
Americans
should
be
having
to
find
common
ground
and
neutralize
partisanship
will
never
result
in
anything
but
stalemate:
they
literally
have
nothing
to say
to one
another
despite
their
desperate
desires
to
speak
out
and
act
upon
what
they’ve
spoken.
Graeber,
though,
has
another
point
to add
to
this.
There
is a
common
ground
for
each
to
stand
on,
and
the
clue
about
its
location
is
found
in
right-wing
populism:
action
motivated
by an
indignation
over
“the
very
idea
that
self-interest
is all
that
politics
could
ever
be
about.”
He
goes
on to
say:
The
rhetoric
of
austerity,
of
“shared
sacrifice”
to
save
one’s
children
from
the
terrible
consequences
of
government
debt,
might
be a
cynical
lie,
just
a way
of
distributing
even
more
wealth
to
the 1
percent,
but
such
rhetoric
at
least
gives
ordinary
people
a
certain
credit
for
nobility….The
moment
we
realize
that
most
Americans
are
not
cynics,
the
appeal
of
right-wing
populism
becomes
much
easier
to
understand.
It
comes,
often
enough,
surrounded
by
the
most
vile
sorts
of
racism,
sexism,
homophobia.
But
what
lies
behind
it is
a
genuine
indignation
at
being
cut
off
from
the
means
for
doing
good.
He
then
proposed
anarchism
as a
way to
unknot
the
toxic
bind
of
right-wing
populism
and
give
its
indignation
a
vocabulary
and a
means
worthy
of its
impulse
and
desires.
This
is why
Graeber
was
important,
at
least
to me:
his
ideas
and
proposals
opened
up
windows
in a
room
full
of
suffocation.
But
more
than
that,
he
challenged
people
to
toss
aside
the
cherished
principles
and
conclusions
that
had
(mis)guided
them
through
world
and
take
the
risk
of
reimagining
what
it is
possible
for
people
to
accomplish
when
given
the
option
of
guiding
their
own
destinies.
Having
said
this,
how
can
people
manifest
this
change
in
their
lives?
One
can
always
tinker
with
the
system
that
one
has,
the
way
Garett
Jones,
an
economist
and
former
Senate
staffer,
argues
in 10%
Less
Democracy:
Why
You
Should
Trust
Elites
A
Little
More
and
The
Masses
a
Little
Less.
Or you
can,
as
Graeber
suggests,
understand
that
American
democracy,
at
least
on the
national
level,
is
simply
a
system
of
institutionalized
bribery
with a
police
force
at its
beck
and
call
and go
for
something
completely
different,
a
horizontal
anarchism
that
that
tries
to
avoid
the
dark
forces
that
often
tag
along
with
populism
while
creating
operations
that
allow
people
to
give
voice
to
their
voices
and
from
that
extract
a way
of
living
that
is
dignified,
nutritional
and
liberated.
Or we
could
do
nothing
at all
and
let
things
stumble
until
they
crumble,
let
Joe
Manchin’s
ego
decide
the
fate
of
millions
and
continue
to
pretend
that
the
power
to
govern
comes
from
the
consent
of the
governed
when
we
really
know
it’s
the
truncheon
and
the
servitude
of
debt
that
shapes
the
republic.
“Which
side
are
you
on?”
sang
Florence
Reece
in
1931.
Still
a
pretty
good
question
to ask
and
answer,
and I
very,
very
much
like
the
answer
that
David
Graeber
helps
me
make.
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