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29/12/02
The Virtues of a Disorganized
Resistance
Stephen DeVoy
Break
Your Chains
American opposition movements have always
focused on the notion of organization. It has always been their goal to organize
the people. Their hope has been to wield the collective power of the
disaffected, downtrodden, and exploited as a single unit against the
concentrated power of the ruling class. While their hope has been noble, their
methods have been foolish. Organized resistance has many drawbacks. These
drawbacks have seldom been discussed by the opposition. We believe that the only
effective resistance is a completely disorganized, decentralized, and leaderless
opposition.
While, on the face of it, this claim may
impress you as absurd. Of course it seems absurd! It is counterintuitive. Never
the less, it is the ONLY method of resistance that will work within American
society. We will explain why organized resistance has never worked in the United
States. In addition, we will promulgate a new formula for effective resistance.
Why has organized resistance failed in the
United States?
There are many reasons for the failure of organized resistance.
The two primary causes of failure are intimately connected to the culture of the
United States and the political system laid down by our nation's founding
fathers.
The Cultural Cause
Americans, culturally, are
anarchists. Few Americans realize this. Most Americans have a false
understanding of the term "anarchism." However, upon examining the
beliefs of your average American, you will find that most Americans: do not trust leaders, do not trust government,
wish to be left alone, value their privacy, think of themselves as independent
from society, do not believe that there is a systemic solution to their problems,
believe that others should be free to do what they choose, provided they do so
in private and do not harm others
While it is undeniable that political culture
in the United States often speaks to the opposite of the above list, it is also
undeniable that most Americans register as neither Democrat or Republican and
most Americans do not vote. Thus, despite the political culture, most Americans
choose not to participate in it. This is not only due to their belief that the
American political system is hopeless, but also is due to the cultural clash
between the wider culture and the political culture.
Any attempt to organize large numbers of
Americans into a single political movement will fail. Any attempt to create an
organization led by a strong group of leaders will fail. Americans reject
submersion into the collective. In a sense, Americans are anti-collectivists.
The Political Cause
American political culture
is not ideological. Politicians attempt to draw ideological distinctions between
the two major parties, but these distinctions are a matter of splitting hairs.
The only significant difference between the two political parties is the degree
of compassion represented by the rhetoric of the two parties. Compassion is not
a political concept. Compassion is an attitude. Thus, the two parties differ,
primarily, in attitude and not ideology.
Despite this, there remain two political
parties. One is prompted to ask "why?" If each party is basically the
same, with respect to ideology, why do they not merge into one party? The answer
to this question is best found in viewing each political party according to its
true nature. American political parties are, for all intents and purposes,
organized crime units. American political parties have more in common with the
Mafia than they have with their counterparts in more democratic societies. Like
Mafia, each political party competes for control of territory in order to
maximize the benefit to their business constituency. Like Mafia, the political
parties attempt to mold the system to maintain their positions and access to
resources. Like Mafia, the political parties force the average citizen to pay
"protection" under the threat of violence (taxes). Like Mafia each
political party uses the "protection" money collected for its own
advantage.
By defining our political system in terms of
the "majority" and the "opposition," our Constitution
enshrines this two mafia system into law. Each Mafia passes laws to exclude new
comers from the game while focusing the rest of its energy in destroying the
other Mafia.
Thus, any resistance movement that chooses to
become an organization is in competition with these Mafiosi. The deck is stacked
and the power of the state, wielded by these organized crime units known as the
Democratic and Republican parties, will waste the time and resources of any
newcomer. A newcomer can only succeed by rejecting the political system,
draining its resources, and undermining the rule of the state.
How is disorganized resistance superior?
In
some societies, dissidents become heroes. In American society dissidents are
systematically slandered, libeled, harassed, and villainized. If they become
successful, they are murdered (e.g. Martin Luther King, Malcolm X). In the
American experience, movements that look to leaders are decapitated. Leaders are
a liability, not an asset. Organizations can be (and are) infiltrated.
Organizations can be taxed. Organizations have legal responsibility.
Organizations have membership lists and lists are wonderful tools for the
oppressor. Organizations take on a life of their own. They struggle to exist and
their continued existence takes priority over their mission. Organizations
attract opportunists, power mongers, and attention seekers. Organizations tend
to exploit their rank and file for the benefit of their inner circle.
Disorganizations share none of these defects.
Bureaucracy cannot comprehend disorganization.
Disorganization is invisible. The asymmetry of the relationship between
organization and disorganization favors disorganization. Organization depends
upon planning. Planning requires predictability. Disorganization cannot be
predicted. This leaves organization at a disadvantage.
Organization requires a supply chain. Supply
chains can be disrupted. Disorganization depends only upon the resources of its
members. Supply chains that do not exist cannot be eliminated.
Disorganized movements rely upon swarming.
Swarms are difficult to defend against. If you cut a swarm in half, you have two
swarms. If you eliminate one of the resulting swarms, you still have a swarm.
Disorganization breeds. Organization grows. The many and dispersed are a more
difficult target than the large and concentrated.
Organizations takes their steps by design. If
the design is flawed, the organization fails. Disorganization relies not upon
design but upon evolution. The motivating notions of disorganization are memes.
Memes evolve and memes compete. This process improves the motivating notions of
disorganization. This process produces multiple courses of action. While some
may fail, others are likely to succeed. Taken as a whole, disorganization is
more likely to succeed.
The important thing to remember is that it is
easier to destroy than to create that which is designed. Thus, the cost to those
who lose the manifestation of their design outweighs by leaps and bounds the
cost it takes to destroy it. That which evolves is cheap and when an effort is
created to destroy the evolved entity, it merely mutates and evolves again,
adjusting to the new conditions. As a process that fosters evolution, a movement
based on disorganization will continue to survive, evolve, and expand without
cost. The resource constraints placed upon the designed (e.g. government and
corporate) and those absent from the evolved (a decentralized and disorganized
opposition movement), favor the later.
The limits of disorganization
We do not
propose a complete absence of organization. Instead we propose a disorganization
of units. Units can be as small as a single individual, or as complex as cell of
individuals working together. Cells may be internally organized, but they should
not be statically organized cell to cell. The movement should have no commander.
It should have no central committee or governing body. No global plans should be
made. The modus operandi of each unit should be to think globally and act
locally. Ideas, strategies, and tactics should float freely and compete as memes
within the medium of the collective conscious.
Conclusions
We need to construct a
disorganized movement. You need not apply to join. In fact, it might be better
if you did not contact anyone except those with whom you wish to form a unit.
Your ideas, strategies, tactics, and lessons learned should be spread
anonymously or by word of mouth. When you act, should you decide to act in
resistance, attribute your actions to "the Resistance." The growing
din of disorganized disruption will be felt as an earthquake. There will be
trembles. There will be pre-shocks. The tension will mount and, in time, there
will be an earthquake. When that earthquake strikes, the organized edifice of
the oppressor will fall like a house of cards.
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