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dinsdag 21 juni 2022

#WORLD #WORLDWIDE #UK #ANARCHISM #News #Journal #Update - (en) UK, AFED, organise magazine: MUTUAL AID: A SHORT PRIMER - THEORY AND ANALYSIS (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

 Perhaps one of the most fundamental parts of anarchist practice, and certainly

one of the most popular terms associated with the subject, mutual aid is also oneof the most thoroughly misrepresented concepts in the radical lexicon. For anyonewith any experience with the sociopolitical landscape of radicalism, the factthat this is true demonstrates the enormity of the problem: people manage tomisunderstand or misinterpret so much that for something to take the top positionit must truly be mired in serious trouble. ---- While much ink has been spilledon the subject and much time has been spent debating and discussing, for manypeople the basic concept of mutual aid itself is confusing. Despite popularclaims, the internet is not always your friend and trying to educate oneselfwithout knowing where to start has created a series of problems that can bedifficult to escape. The purpose, then, of this primer is simple. Firstly, itshall discuss where the term mutual aid comes from and its original usage. Then,some examples will be discussed both in the historical and contemporary contexts.This will be followed by a short discussion of what mutual aid is not, as well asan exigesis of the liberal misrepresentations and the muddling the onlinediscourse has had on the term. Far from a complete analysis of the topic - whichcould take hundreds of pages at the least - this short primer should clear up anumber of issues and give a basic set of definitions and concepts that anyoneinterested in learning more can use.So What Is It?Simply put, mutual aid is the method of organising - often spontaneous andinformal - in which people or collectives provide aid to one another withouttransactional elements, and often outside of the world of formal economics. Theterm itself was popularised by that most famous of anarchist names, PeterKropotkin, and is mostly associated with his 1902 work Mutual Aid: A Factor ofEvolution, one of several works that grounded Kropotkin's reputation not only asa political figure but also an individual of some scientific renown.Recommended with glowing praise from names as mainstream as Stephen Jay Gould,Kropotkin's writing outlines the existence of naturally occuring cooperationbetween groups and species. This came in stark opposition to the competitiveportrait of evolution that had been drawn by most prior. Far from a ‘pitilessinner war for life within each species', Kropotkin observed that many animalsrelied upon support - for which there was no remuneration - between themselves inorder to resist the dangers of the world and provide for themselves. Nor wasthis, for Kropotkin, a case of some sentimental emotional attachment betweenanimals; ‘it is not out of love, and not even sympathy, which induces a herd ofruminants or of horses to form a ring in order to resist an attack of wolves' -rather, it is an instinct of cooperation without which the animals simply wouldnot have survived.Humans, too, Kropotkin asserts, engage in such behaviour. Without it, he claims,an animal as physically unimpressive as the human being would never have foundits way to all regions of the Earth; not only surviving, but thriving and growingin number and in a diversity of cultural manifestations. In between falling intosome horrifically dated and offensive language, Kropotkin describes the naturalinclination towards sharing shown in most tribal societies, as well as the almostuniversal levels of social responsibility shown across vast distances; whether inAfrica, America, or Australia, people simply tend towards caring for one another.This is not to diminish conflicts between indigenous peoples or to dream ofprelapsarian utopia, but simply to acknowledge that there are certain fundamentalbehaviours without which community cannot form. These behaviours of care,support, are the anthropological basis for mutual aid as a concept.This is all very well, one might say, but how does this go beyond the vagueconcepts of care and consideration and become a politically actionable project?How does mutual aid become Mutual Aid; how does a descriptive anthropologicalconcept morph into a prescriptive outline for actions and behaviours?Kropotkin, again, gives examples. Dated as they are now, it is not hard to seefrom Kropotkin's descriptions of these instances that mutual aid does not have tobe complex or elevated from everyday experience. It can on the interpersonallevel or the societal level; between friends or strangers, from one group toanother, without difficulty. The power of mutual aid, beyond its ease ofunderstanding, is the flexibility it provides. Not all projects must involve amillion people or vast infrastructure - sometimes it is enough to help someone.Evidently, from these descriptions, it is clear that mutual aid is not a conceptwhich was invented, in the traditional sense of the word, nor is it an idea withorigins in Europe and spread out to the rest of the world. The proliferation ofmutual aid as a practice and concept is powerful precisely because it is notcolonial, it is not imposed, and it is not enforced with threat of punishment ifdisobeyed. It is powerful because it is something to which people find themselvesinclined, either by inner urges or practicality, and it is infinitely plastic inmanifestation; that is to say, there's almost always something that somebody cando which might meet the definition of mutual aid. This is particularly vital inan atomised and alienated society of the kind which flourish under hierarchicalmodes of organisation; mutual aid, by virtue of being mutual and unexpecting ofrecompense, abhors a hierarchy.Contemporary ExamplesDiluted as it may be - and this will be discussed later in this piece - mutualaid still finds its way into the lives of many, radical or not. Some of thesethings a reader may already know about and just not realise that they are, infact, examples of mutual aid. Others might be unknown but clarify the concept. Ineither case, here are a few examples of mutual aid in the modern world and whythey meet this definition.Detailed in the text ‘In the Navajo Nation, Anarchism has Indigenous Roots' byCecilia Howell, the COVID-19 pandemic has sparked a wave of modern mutual aidactivity. While in many areas such as the United Kingdom this proliferation maycome as something as a surprise in both breadth and number, the spreading ofcommunity organising to fill a need is far less surprising among indigenouspeoples. Based in the Navajo lands around what is referred to as the U.S.government as the New Mexico-Arizona border, the K'é infoshop provides medicineand food to those in need simply by virtue of care and the desire to help others.As Brandon Benallie, a Navajo/Hopi anarchist whose words constitute the core ofHowell's writing, says ‘every time capitalism fails, we land on socialism, weland on anarchism, to take care of us.' To this, Benallie adds the point; at thetime ‘we didn't know it as mutual aid, that was just k'é' - k'é being oftendescribed in anthropological literature as the Navajo kinship system, though thisis a reductionist description for reasons too detailed for the limits of this text.As mentioned prior, these mutual aid groups also arose outside of indigenouscommunities. In the United Kingdom, thousands of mutual aid groups were born outof the ashes of a largely torched social structure. Atomised, individualised,Britain today is often represented by a huge number of culturally dominant peoplewho can be most politely described as loathsome. Their unique flavour of archnoble superiority mixed with the kind of fatuous idiocy that can only be obtainedthrough British public schooling, a kind of dribbling venom that permeates theirevery word, it would be easy to look at these people and their continued successin public life and conclude that the United Kingdom has been totally consumed bya kind of self-hating wrath. After all, how could any population see someone likeBoris Johnson or Jacob Rees-Mogg elected to popular power year on year withoutclearly being the victim of some sort of spiritual malnourishment?Yet, despite the concession of the point that there are rather a large number ofunpleasant individuals in the United Kingdom, the reality is that most averagepeople are simply that - average. It is therefore less surprising than you maythink that, when lockdowns were introduced and activity monitoring installed,fines for gatherings and limits to leaving the house, mutual aid groups rose innumber to fill the gaps. The sick, the elderly, or the simply inconvenienced,suddenly found groups - often small groups, a dozen people or fewer, all fromtheir local area - which were willing to do small jobs, to deliver and distributefood, to transport those in need, to deliver COVID-19 tests, et cetera. All ofthis was done without the expectation of payment in anything but thanks, andwhile certainly apocryphal, there are a number of stories to support the idea ofstrong bonds being built in this manner.As the pandemic marched on with indefatigable legs, many of the people involvedin this mutual aid found themselves either exhausted by the pace or required togive up their activity in order to return to work; here we find some of theprimary dangers of mutual aid in modern society. We simply do not live in a worldwhich facilitates it, and to engage in it is often a challenge. People must beaware of this before jumping into any endeavour, and the vibrant mutual aidsocieties that raced across the country in the wake of the pandemic are all thebrighter for their emergence under this circumstance, even if many of them wereshort lived. This is not a reason to reject the model - it is a reason to rejectthe world.Other examples of mutual aid, less immediate and less dramatic in scale, existthe world over. Communal libraries - a personal favourite of mine - representboth the definancialised aspect of mutual aid while also creating hubs ofpotential community and support for those in need. Organised around a centralprinciple which is at once enriching to a community and often liberatory, theexistence of such things allows for the growth of other support structures. Inmany ways, mutual aid emerges from shared time and interests, rendering theinitial form that introduced the people little more than an intriguing vestigiallimb. This is not a sign of the weakening of the original principle, but insteada sign of its strength; to give rise to a group engaging in mutual support is abenefit rather than a detraction, even if it subsumes the primacy of the originalconcept.What Isn't Mutual Aid?Given all of the previous writing, it may seem somewhat unnecessary to tell areader what does not qualify as mutual aid. Yet, any time spent listening toonline discourse - something I strongly advise against - reveals that even amongso-called anarchists, the most inane or frankly ridiculous statements can befound. Anything, if you are willing to spend the time, can be called mutual aidthese days by someone. So many things, in fact, that it would be impossible torefute them all. However, there is time to provide a few general guidelines thatcan easily be used by a discerning reader as a shorthand when deciding whether toinvestigate a given mutual aid claim or dismiss it out of hand.With that said, here goes.It has become somewhat popular among anarcho-adjacent socialists and socialdemocrats to claim that if mutual is just support without a profit motive, thensurely the welfare state itself is just mutual aid writ large! This could not bemore absurd. Simply put, something cannot be mutual aid if, in order for it toexist, it requires the existence of an oppressive apparatus which makes lifefundamentally worse for everyone. Therefore anything which requires the state asa prerequisite to its execution cannot be mutual aid. It is neither mutual nortruly aid, and it demands suffering as a condition of its possibility.Another popular concept, again bandied by the same groups, is that charity isperhaps preferable to mutual aid in at least some circumstances. If a readerattempts to humour this idea, they will quickly find that the word ‘some' in thisphrase is purely decorative, and far from suggesting a balance between charityin ‘some' circumstances and mutual aid in others, the proponent of this idea willslide very rapidly into suggesting charity as sufficient in all circumstances.However, charity cannot be mutual aid for a number of reasons - not least that itis not, by definition, mutual. Charity is the act of one group or individual,usually in possession of greater material resources than another, doling out someof that resource at their discretion. This is not a mutual process so much as itis a process of benefaction at most and - as anarchists and Marxists have longpointed out - insidious bribery at worst. As Oscar Wilde once wrote, charity isoften accompanied by an attempt by the giver to insert themselves into theprivate lives of the recipient as supervisor; and, as Engels wrote, it is also anexcuse from an individual in a position of power they should not have to removethemselves from scrutiny. ‘How dare you demand social change which may harm me,'cries the charity's leading donor - ‘have you not seen how much I have done foryou? I gave you the money, now go away!'.In summary, while it is clear that mutual aid is a topic surrounded by muchconfusion, there are a few rules of thumb which can be applied to decide whetherany given thing is at least likely to qualify as mutual aid or not. Firstly, isit mutual? Secondly, does it rely on the existence of something inherentlyharmful for its existence? Thirdly, does it come with the imposition ofbehavioural restrictions or the expectation of financial reward? When confrontedwith any claims of mutual aid, simply running through these basic questionsshould be enough in all cases to decide whether or not something can even trulybegin to meet the definition.Jay FraserJay is an anarchist and writer from Lincolnshire. He has written for Organise!Magazine several times in the past, and has poetry and critical writing publishedin Lumpen, Strukturiss, SINK, and many other journals. His most recent workincludes a chapter in Bodies, Power, and Noise, an essay collection on industrialmusic via Palgrave MacMillan. You can find him on Twitter @JayFraser1 if you want.https://organisemagazine.org.uk/2022/06/07/mutual-aid-a-short-primer-theory-and-analysis/_________________________________________A - I N F O S  N E W S  S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca

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