Dear Brian, all,

Slowly recovering from the immediate shock of the turmoil across the Canal 
(writing from Mokum, Holland), the sense of bewilderment by the string of 
events unfolding is hard to put into words - nettime helps a bit to find, and 
come to, terms to begin dealing with the situation - something that the 
plethora of news messages from the main-streamers barely helps with…

I was struck in particular by this early remark of Brian in the discussion - 
essentially the question bow to reinvent a truly progressive politics and 
effect it:

> On 24 Jun 2016, at 18:54, Brian Holmes <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> We on the Left have our identity too - the multirace, multigender solidarity 
> of experimentalists. Can we use it to create an ecological developmentalism 
> for divided and desperately inegalitarian societies? We need to look outside 
> the network of urban centralities and see how entire territories could be 
> recreated in a new image. That image cannot simply be the old wild dream of 
> the post-68 era, which was forged in universities and urban cores. Remain was 
> lost by the City. Leaving the narrow pathways of financially directed 
> development is what we must do.
> 
> It's about time, Brian

There’s one thing that almost escapes attention in the preoccupation with 
Brexit fallout, and that is the results of the elections held in Spain today. 
It would seem on the basis of what is known so far that the election will 
produce a nearly identical result to the previous one half a year ago, which 
was unable to produce a viable (coalition) government for Spain - It would seem 
then that with an identical result the problem also remains the same, and most 
likely will result in the formation of a non-viable government coalition that 
will then fail quite soon and in the meantime be primarily dysfunctional - 
leading to new (snap) elections, etc…

One might begin to wonder if it is not the failure and slow break-down of 
electoral politics and representational democracy that we are witnessing (at an 
now accelerated pace), rather than a reaction to a specific set of political 
issues? 
(migration, EU bureaucracy, rising national-chauvinism, globalisation blues, 
austerity, etc..)

The question of how to reimagine and then reconstitute progressive politics, 
something which I would describe as an act of ‘political design’, might then 
start to mean that this must be reimagined and reconstituted outside of the 
arena of representational democracy / electoral politics. That would be a very 
risky move, as we need to be able to organise collectively to build enough of a 
countervailing force to global markets that are increasingly organised as 
oligopolies, and sometimes dominated by monopolistic players flat out.

The British referendum has lead to a complete political meltdown, not just of 
the governing party (“Where is Boris?”), but also the opposition (open revolt 
against ‘Gandalf the Grey’), and most likely will lead to the break-up of the 
kingdom, while at the same time the European project of the formal union is 
fundamentally called into question, even by its main protagonists (see the 
initiatives of Germany and France over the weekend), but on top of that Podemos 
and the alliance with civic networks across the country in Spain is failing to 
break through on the national level (after previously taking Madrid, Barcelona, 
Valencia and more…).

It is remarkable then, how the Guardian newspaper (admittedly by and large a 
mouth piece of Labour, a kind of British version of the good old Pravda) is 
still discussing the ‘future of left politics’ 
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jun/26/the-guardian-view-on-post-brexit-politics-perilous-times-for-progressives>
 exclusively in terms of how to move forwards with and within the Labour party 
- nothing else even seems possible to imagine, or is seen to exist, in this 
‘guarded’ universe… To me that is truly amazing!

Brian’s call to 'create an ecological developmentalism for divided and 
desperately inegalitarian societies’ needs to be imagined and constituted then 
outside of these accustomed political systems, also outside and beyond 
political edifices such as Podemos and Syriza, who had their part to play but 
already seem redundant or past their sell-by date right now. I’m not advocating 
accelerationism here, far from it, but I am calling for a kind of 
‘post-governmental’ form of political design.

It seems we cannot expect to get out of the mess within the crumbling walls of 
our cherished democracies, for all of the reasons highlighted in the discussion 
so far. I somehow hope this view is wrong, but I fear…

bests,
Eric

p.s. - there are of course a whole set of building blocks that can be used to 
start creating Brian’s ecological developmentalism, but that’s the big 
discussion that’s on non-stop and unending, right now we need to make sense of 
the current situation and dynamics - we don’t know yet where this is going to 
end.      



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