*Biosecurity and Politics (Giorgio Agamben)*

*A translation of Agamben’s blog, 11 May 2020. The original is **here*
<https://www.quodlibet.it/giorgio-agamben-biosicurezza>

https://medium.com/@ddean3000/biosecurity-and-politics-giorgio-agamben-396f9ab3b6f4

What is striking about the reactions to the apparatuses of exception that
have been put in place in our country (and not only in this one) is the
inability to observe them beyond the immediate context in which they seem
to operate. Rare are those who attempt to interpret them as symptoms and
signs of a broader experiment — as any serious political analysis would
require — in which what is at stake is a new paradigm for the governance of
men and things. Already in a book published seven years ago, now worth
rereading carefully (*Tempêtes microbiennes*, Gallimard 2013), Patrick
Zylberman described the process by which health security, hitherto on the
margins of political calculations, was becoming an essential part of state
and international political strategies. At issue is nothing less than the
creation of a sort of “health terror” as an instrument for governing what
are called “worst case scenarios.” It is according to this logic of the
worst that already in 2005 the World Health Organization announced “2 to
150 million deaths from bird flu approaching,” suggesting a political
strategy that states were not yet ready to accept at the time. Zylberman
shows that the apparatus being suggested was articulated in three points:
1) the construction, on the basis of a possible risk, of a fictitious
scenario in which data are presented in such a way as to promote behaviors
that allow for governing an extreme situation; 2) the adoption of the logic
of the worst as a regime of political rationality; 3) the total
organization of the body of citizens in a way that strengthens maximum
adherence to institutions of government, producing a sort of superlative
good citizenship in which imposed obligations are presented as evidence of
altruism and the citizen no longer has a right to health (health safety)
but becomes juridically obliged to health (biosecurity).

What Zylberman described in 2013 has now been duly confirmed. It is evident
that, apart from the emergency situation, linked to a certain virus that
may in the future be replaced by another, at issue is the design of a
paradigm of governance whose efficacy will exceed that of all forms of
government known thus far in the political history of the West. If already,
in the progressive decline of ideologies and political beliefs, security
reasons allowed citizens to accept limitations on their liberty that they
previously were unwilling to accept, biosecurity has shown itself capable
of presenting the absolute cessation of all political activity and all
social relations as the maximum form of civic participation. Thus it was
possible to see the paradox of organizations of the left, traditionally in
the habit of claiming rights and denouncing violations of the constitution,
accepting limitations on liberty made by ministerial decree devoid of any
legal basis and which even fascism couldn’t dream of imposing.

It is evident — and government authorities themselves do not cease to
remind us of it — that so-called “social distancing” will become the model
of politics that awaits us, and that (as representatives of a so-called
“task force” announced, whose members are in an obvious conflict of
interest with the role that they are expected to exercise) advantage will
be taken of this distancing to substitute digital technological apparatuses
everywhere in place of human physicality, which as such becomes suspect of
contagion (political contagion, let it be understood). University lessons,
as MIUR has already recommended, will be stably online from next year; you
will no longer recognize yourself by looking at your face, which might be
covered with a mask, but through digital devices that recognize bio-data
which is compulsorily collected; and any “crowd,” whether formed for
political reasons or simply for friendship, will continue to be prohibited.

At issue is an entire conception of the destinies of human society from a
perspective that, in many ways, seems to have adopted the apocalyptic idea
of the end of the world from religions which are now in their sunset.
Having replaced politics with the economy, now in order to secure
governance even this must be integrated with the new paradigm of
biosecurity, to which all other exigencies will have to be sacrificed. *It
is legitimate to ask whether such a society can still be defined as human
or whether the loss of sensible relations, of the face, of friendship, of
love can be truly compensated for by an abstract and presumably completely
fictitious health security.*

May 11, 2020
Giorgio Agamben

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