The Big Ideas of 2012

Michael Hardt & Antonio Negri

What to expect in 2012.

Michael Hardt & Antonio Negri

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Some of the most inspiring social struggles of 2011 have placed democracy at the top of the agenda.

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Although they emerge from very different conditions, these movements – from the insurrections of the Arab Spring to the union battles in Wisconsin, from the student protests in Chile to those in the US and Europe, from the UK riots to the occupations of the Spanish indignados and the Greeks in Syntagma Square, and from Occupy Wall Street to the innumerable local forms of refusal across the world – share, first of all, a negative demand: Enough with the structures of neoliberalism! This common cry is not only an economic protest but also immediately a political one, against the false claims of representation. Neither Mubarak and Ben Ali nor Wall Street bankers, neither media elites nor even presidents, governors, members of parliament, and other elected officials – none of them represent us. The extraordinary force of refusal is very important, of course, but we should be careful not to lose track in the din of the demonstrations and conflicts of a central element that goes beyond protest and resistance. These movements also share the aspiration for a new kind of democracy, expressed in tentative and uncertain voices in some cases but explicitly and forcefully in others. The development of this aspiration is one of the threads we are most anxious to follow in 2012.

One source of antagonism that all of these movements will have to confront, even those that have just toppled dictators, is the insufficiency of modern democratic constitutions, particularly their regimes of labor, property, and representation. In these constitutions, first of all, waged labor is key to having access to income and the basic rights of citizenship, a relationship that has long functioned poorly for those outside the regular labor market, including the poor, the unemployed, unwaged female workers, immigrants, and others, but today all forms of labor are ever more precarious and insecure. Labor continues to be the source of wealth in capitalist society, of course, but increasingly outside the relationship with capital and often outside the stable wage relation. As a result, our social constitution continues to require waged labor for full rights and access in a society where such labor is less and less available.

Private property is a second fundamental pillar of the democratic constitutions, and social movements today contest not only national and global regimes of neoliberal governance but also the rule of property more generally. Property not only maintains social divisions and hierarchies but also generates some of the most powerful bonds (often perverse connections) that we share with each other and our societies. And yet contemporary social and economic production has an increasingly common character, which defies and exceeds the bounds of property. Capital's ability to generate profit is declining since it is losing its entrepreneurial capacity and its power to administer social discipline and cooperation. Instead capital increasingly accumulates wealth primarily via forms of rent, most often organized through financial instruments, through which it captures value that is produced socially and relatively independent of its power. But every instance of private accumulation reduces the power and productivity of the common. Private property is thus becoming ever more not only a parasite but also an obstacle to social production and social welfare.

Finally, a third pillar of democratic constitutions, and object of increasing antagonism, as we said earlier, rests on the systems of representation and their false claims to establish democratic governance. Putting an end to the power of professional political representatives is one of the few slogans from the socialist tradition that we can affirm wholeheartedly in our contemporary condition. Professional politicians, along with corporate leaders and the media elite, operate only the weakest sort of representative function. The problem is not so much that politicians are corrupt (although in many cases this is also true) but rather that the constitutional structure isolates the mechanisms of political decision-making from the powers and desires of the multitude. Any real process of democratization in our societies has to attack the lack of representation and the false pretenses of representation at the core of the constitution.

Recognizing the rationality and necessity of revolt along these three axes and many others, which animate many struggles today, is, however, really only the first step, the point of departure. The heat of indignation and the spontaneity of revolt have to be organized in order to last over time and to construct new forms of life, alternative social formations.

The secrets to this next step are as rare as they are precious.

On the economic terrain we need to discover new social technologies for freely producing in common and for equitably distributing shared wealth. How can our productive energies and desires be engaged and increased in an economy not founded on private property? How can welfare and basic social resources be provided to all in a social structure not regulated and dominated by state property? We must construct the relations of production and exchange as well as the structures of social welfare that are composed of and adequate to the common.

The challenges on the political terrain are equally thorny. Some of the most inspiring and innovative events and revolts in the last decade have radicalized democratic thinking and practice by occupying and organizing a space, such as a public square, with open, participatory structures or assemblies, maintaining these new democratic forms for weeks or months. Indeed the internal organization of the movements themselves has been constantly subjected to processes of democratization, striving to create horizontal participatory network structures. The revolts against the dominant political system, its professional politicians, and its illegitimate structures of representation are thus not aimed at restoring some imagined legitimate representational system of the past but rather at experimenting with new democratic forms of expression: democracia real ya. How can we transform indignation and rebellion into a lasting constituent process? How can experiments in democracy become a constituent power, not only democratizing a public square or a neighborhood but also inventing an alternative society that is really democratic?

To confront these issues, we, along with many others, have proposed possible initial steps, such as establishing a guaranteed income, the right to global citizenship, and a process of the democratic reappropriation of the common. But we are under no illusion that we have all the answers. Instead we are encouraged by the fact that we are not alone asking the questions. We are confident, in fact, that those who are dissatisfied with the life offered by our contemporary neoliberal society, indignant about its injustices, rebellious against its powers of command and exploitation, and yearning for an alternative democratic form of life based on the common wealth we share – they, by posing these questions and pursuing their desires, will invent new solutions we cannot yet even imagine. Those are some of our best wishes for 2012.

Michael Hardt is an American political philosopher and literary theorist. Antonio Negri is an Italian Marxist philosopher. In the late 1970s Negri was accused of being the mastermind behind the left-wing terrorist group the Red Brigades. Negri emigrated to France where he taught in Paris along with Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze. Hardt and Negri have published four important critiques of late capitalism and globalization: Labor of Dionysus: A Critique of the State-Form (1994), Empire (2000), Multitude (2004) and Commonwealth (2009). These four works have been highly praised by contemporary activists. Empire, for example, has been hailed as “nothing less than a rewriting of The Communist Manifesto for our time” by the Lacanian philosopher Slavoj Žižek.

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I translated it and now it's

by romashkack on December 31 2011, @10:24 pm

I translated it and now it's available in Russian
http://liva.com.ua/hardt-negri.html

We, the

by chantlaca on December 16 2011, @02:06 am

We, the Peoples.......
http://cdb-tonatierra.blogspot.com/2011/12/editorial-tupac-enrique-acost...

On Thursday, speaking at the

by Anonymous on December 10 2011, @07:36 am

On Thursday, speaking at the Iowa State Campus in Ames, Iowa – Ron Paul claimed that Bush administration was happy after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

“Think of what happened after 9/11, the minute before there was any assessment, there was glee in the administration because now we can invade Iraq and so the war drum beat. That’s exactly what they’re doing with Iran“.

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/12/10/ron-paul-bush-boys-were-happy-af...

TWINKLES UP BABY I'M BACK!!

by Anonymous on December 10 2011, @10:40 pm

TWINKLES UP BABY I'M BACK!! I apologize, I have not been able to post anything for several weeks, I have been very busy working ( I know most of you aren't familiar with the term) I just wanted to let you malcontents know I've been by your little protest on Jackson and LaSalle in Chicago and its really picked up some steam. Your six protesters seem to really be changing some minds out there. Just one quick question, how much longer will it be before you dirtbags sell out to the democrats and become foot soldiers for Barack Obama's re election campaign? After all, it's getting cold out there and I'm sure many of you won't want to remain in our public parks, you know, the parks taxpayers pay to maintain and keep clean. Just out of curiosity, I wonder how many of you in the movement would have found jobs by now had you been looking for employment instead of harassing hard working Americans. Probably not too many since most of you want someone else to provide you with a living. Well, I have to go, I've got a very busy week ahead, peace out dirtbags. MIKE CHECK YOUR A BUNCH OF LOSERS!!

Bragging about being "busy

by Ron Paul? on December 14 2011, @05:08 am

Bragging about being "busy working" is like bragging about how you are the hardest working slave on the farm, so the rest of us should stop trying to escape all the time. Stop. Using. Your. Job. As. An. Excuse. To. Do. Nothing. You don't have a job because you care about your country - you work to buy junk for yourself, not to "provide [Americans] with a living". There is absolutely nothing you have to be proud of. So you go to work. You want a fxcking cookie? Nobody gives a shxt you have a job. Nobody at all. Nobody except for you and your boss. Other than your paycheck you get NOTHING. You get NOTHING. Not even acknowledgement that you're some outstanding person. You need a job to survive. You get a paycheck for it. Not... honor. You don't get honor being a slave. You are a slave because you have to be and you should be thankful you get paid at all. We all know you get a paycheck, so you don't get anything else. You don't get respect, you don't get honor, you don't get bragging rights. You get paid and that's where the "thanks for having a job" ends.

A nice rant - but the

by Anonymous on December 12 2011, @07:23 am

A nice rant - but the protesters are trying to recover some of the job and money taken from them by the Wall Street fatcats - many of whom stash their loot in Israeli banks like Madoff and blackmail American politicians to wage new wars in the world for the security of Israel.

All this have bankrupted US economy and have made America a laughing stock in the world. People have no other choice but to recover their country from the 1% corrupt minority.

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/11/12/ows-%e2%80%98clash-of-financial-...

What a joke. NONE OF YOU

by Anonymous on December 12 2011, @10:40 am

What a joke. NONE OF YOU WORK! How can Wall Street bankers take something from you losers when you have nothing unless it belongs to your parents. Your idiotic protests are not fooling anyone except the recipient class on the left. At the end of the day, after all your ranting and raving it all boils down to one thing, you want someone other than yourselves to provide you with a living. If you want change in this country, go find someone to run for office, that's how we do it here. Whining and crying and stomping your feet for attention doesn't cut it. Big Twinkles down for you, man!

how in frig do you know

by Anonymous on December 14 2011, @05:25 pm

how in frig do you know whether someone on a message board works or not? Your entire polemic is based on this assumption thus rendering it meaningless. If you're smart, learn to argue properly, if not, FOD.

You know what's meaningless?

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @07:37 am

You know what's meaningless? Your movement. Maybe you can answer this question for me genius, how is someone working if their hanging out in front of an office building day and night, annoying hard working people. What do they have night jobs? I'm not here to debate with people who don't have a leg to stand on, as I posted before, you want someone else to provide you with a living because you found out when you got in the big bad business world that no one gives a crap about your industrial psychology degree or whatever other moronic field of study you went into. Stop whining and complaining and grow up. People who work and provide for their families are sick and tired of hearing your it's all about me bullshit. Loser

Hello!!! Hello!!! (herm

by Anonymous on December 13 2011, @07:47 am

Hello!!! Hello!!! (herm edwards style) There's nothing to own!! Wake the fuck up!!! The government bails out the banks who got us in this mess in the first place. The people who are occupying realize that the structure of America is built on corruption and deception. Its a ponzi scheme were the elite create a crisis and then offer a solution to increase capital. People are so naive to think their government operates to the benefit of the citizen. Open up a history book and you will find a government of any era that was corrupt. Our government is so good a manipulating it's citizens that most of us our blind to all this.

Ultimately you have to run

by craigpurcell on December 10 2011, @02:55 am

Ultimately you have to run for office, get elected and not be corrupted in the process for things to change. So go do it and stop blathering on about all this other stuff.

Practice what you preach and

by Ron Paul? on December 14 2011, @05:12 am

Practice what you preach and stop blathering on about all this other stuff. Or you could stop being a hypocrite and kill your stupid idea that people should "stop blathering" and "run for office". You could try and adopt this idea: People are free to blather about whatever they want to, but it costs a lot of money to "run for office, get elected and not be corrupted in the process for things to change". How did you not look over what you wrote and see how contradictory it read?

How can an honest and

by Anonymous on December 10 2011, @03:51 pm

How can an honest and patriotic person can be elected to governing bodies by going through the current corrupt and dual citizen controlled the political aka democratic system?

Look in the United States - one has to be a fatcat or working for some fatcats or lobby groups to get elected to Congress, Senate or the White House. That's the reason, all politician make sure they visit Israel and have relations with Zionist Lobby.

Barack Obama is a typical example....

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/08/06/obama-totally-defeated-by-israel...

When is it okay to Shoot

by Anonymous on December 10 2011, @02:13 am

When is it okay to Shoot Cops? Shooting Cops by Larken Rose http://freedividual.com/2011/12/10/shooting-cops-by-larken-rose/ 

Have you guys checked out

by Timm E on December 09 2011, @06:23 pm

Have you guys checked out www.debtcock.com yet?
Its a bit rude, but hilarious LOL! Check out Berlusconi's treatment in the Wall of Shame.

Weren't you convicted of

by Anonymous on December 09 2011, @08:06 am

Weren't you convicted of murder, Mr. Negri?

And he was completely

by spaceboy_psy on December 10 2011, @05:12 am

And he was completely exonerated of the kidnap and murder of Aldo Moro.

He was convicted of convicted

by Anonymous on December 09 2011, @09:58 am

He was convicted of convicted of 'crimes of association and insurrection against the state'.

http://www.agoravox.fr/actual

by Montagnais on December 09 2011, @03:47 am

http://www.agoravox.fr/actualites/international/article/ows-organisation...

A modest french contribution.

stay strong OWS , in the USA

by sjdzc68 on December 08 2011, @10:21 pm

stay strong OWS , in the USA ( in China , Europe . Asia ...Etc ...), mashinery of death , capitalism of sellf destruction
AMERICA ? .. please ?
stay strong
that is our last chance , no joke ...
big awakening
last chance ,.. last ...that is the end ..for change ..
OWS !!!

You may wonder how the

by Anonymous on December 08 2011, @07:28 pm

You may wonder how the ‘bailout’ money is being spent by the ‘Capitalist parasites’? Matt Apuzo of Associated Press explains how the cat is skinned!

“With US$30 billion per year, world hunger (923 million including 10.5 million Americans) could be eliminated,” – Director General, UN Food & Agriculture Organization, Report, June 2008. In other word’s Bush Zionist-administration’s initial US$700 billion to Wall Street’s Zionist parasites would have ended world hunger for 23 years.

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2008/12/28/capitalism-parasites-golden-calf/

One world against the global

by One world against the global corporatocracy on December 08 2011, @05:47 pm

One world against the global corporatocracy.

It seems it is the people of Earth against the business state.

We need a world where business and business interests are last and never again first.

We need to end capitalism.

As Voltaire said, when the last banker is strung up by the entrails of the corporate ceo.

The writer forgot to mention

by Anonymous on December 08 2011, @12:26 pm

The writer forgot to mention the mass 'Tent' protests in over 15 Israeli cities. They were also condemned by the government, MPs, rabbis, media and country's 11 billionaires.

However, the difference between Israeli protesters and the Arab protests and the OWS movement, is - Israelis were demanding their fair share in housing projects being build on stolen properties of native muslims and Christians.

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/07/30/israel-and-the-jewish-spring/