The Criminal Justice Act is a new law in the UK that
massively enlarges the state’s power to deal with a
diverse range of threats. From pornographers to
travellers, ravers to hunt saboteurs, ramblers to the
everyday criminalised, the state is preparing for a panic
induced crackdown on all forms of resistance to the law
of property and the reign of ‘decency’. Having already
seen several large scale riots at demonstrations against
the Act, the UK looks set for a widespread period of
disturbance which many believe will, at least, end the
fifteen years of Tory rule in the same way that
resistance to the Poll Tax knocked Thatcher out of
government. Politics has vastly changed here. New
generations are completely disenfranchised by that of
the mainstream, while the so-called revolutionaries
continue their backward march to whatever theoretical
year zero they’re hallucinating. Meanwhile, new
methods of conceiving and realising the organisation of
people and materials are being made: at one fractal
level, by the very people this bill looks set to attack, and
at another, as a wider global range of developments
including the changing position of women; new forms of
synthetic life; the migration of economic density and the
concomitant impotence of ‘Euroman’; an understanding
of self-organising systems in all previously discrete
areas of science…
One self-declared “ex-human” pulling all these areas
together into bundles of words is Sadie Plant whose
writing forms, not some cataleptic pondering of these
important times, but itself generates a torrential flood of
deregulation. Here, sensual wordplay mixes with a
CCRU- Intelligence Is No Longer On The Side Of Power
Texts/Essays/CCRU- Intelligence Is No Longer On The Side Of Power.pdf
synapse wrenching depth of thought that, in the right
place, does to control what salt does to a slug.
Matthew:
Okay, so what’s going on in the UK today with the
Criminal Justice Act and so on?
Sadie:
Well, on the one hand, total regrouping of reactionary
forces summed up by the phrase Back to Basics and
that basically is a panic reaction against a lot of
bottom-up self-organising activity. The whole rave
scene or the post rave scene has really changed
Britain actually. I think it’s changed the way people
think, not in a post-hippy sort of way which is often
said to be the case but I think people, for example I
see it with students who are no longer content to stick
with one discipline; history or literature, they want to
do biology economics, literature and multimedia art all
at the same time. And again that’s a question of
making lateral connections between what were once
well established and separate disciplines. In terms of
the art scene as well obviously that same move’s
happening with multimedia – you’re no longer just a
visual artist or a writer or whatever. Most people who
are doing anything interesting in those fields are
converging again with people who are working in
other areas and other media. So in all those areas I
think there is this basic pattern of a move away from
this hierarchical, top-down, control of knowledge to a
much more lateral, bottom-up, connectionist sort of
approach and again I think this is converging with
discoveries in biology and new work in economics and
even work that’s developing understanding of how the
brain works. It turns out that it too is a lateral
processing system, not the top down, hierarchical
organ that it was once thought to be.
Matthew:
In a recent paper you have asked, “is this what it
means to get out of the meat, not simply to leave the
body, but to go further than the organism?” How does
this relate to the evolutionary ideas of William
Burroughs, trust fund baby, and the man who wrote
‘Here to Go’? How does his anti-body, brain
thing/spacecraft, relate to what you’re on about?
Sadie:
Basically the two positions that are established at the
minute are either that you talk about disembodiment
or you talk about embodiment. Either you’re out of the
body in some stratospheric zone or you’re in the
organism. I think that neither of those are correct.
When people talk about getting out of the body they
are still assuming that there is some kind of great
transcendent space like heaven for the soul, or
something non-material at any rate, to occupy. And
as far as I’m concerned that isn’t there. The universe
isn’t like that, it’s a material process not some sort of
idealist construction. So you can’t get out of matter,
that’s the crucial thing. But you can get out of the
confining organisation of matter which is shaped into
things and of course, organisms. The organism is
literally organised around its organs, the vocabulary
says it all really.
Matthew:
So what are some of the escape routes that you think
people are using at the moment?
Sadie:
Well obviously there the whole dance thing for
example, and all of the experiments with virtual reality
(on a really pragmatic level). But more than that it’s
not what people try to do, or what they think they’re
doing. It actually is happening to us anyway. The
organism, it seems to me, is mutating whether we
mean it to or not.
Matthew:
In what kind of way?
Sadie:
For example, even if you just think of multimedia.
Before you have multimedia you have separated
media and they are all based on existing human
organs like the eye and so on and I would say by
extension that the whole sense of knowledge is based
around the phallic organ, so they’re all based on
specific organs, eras, eyes and so on. But you start to
talk about multimedia it just doesn’t make sense to
talk about separate media, or of course to talk about
separate organs. The body becomes a processing
system for what we can only still think of as separate
organs, separate senses, separate media but once
you get to the point where they start converging then
you’re not really talking about the body as a collection
of organs anymore. It becomes a point of
coalescence for all sorts of material flows and again
people realise that they are not separated individuals.
Not just because you can have a new set of ideas
about collectivity or whatever but because people
begin to understand things like hormonal
communication – all sorts of communications going
on between people and between people and the rest
of the material world. So the old idea about the
individual as separated from nature or from the rest of
world is going, and all systems of domination, it
seems to me, have been based on that sort of
separation.
Matthew:
Yes! Okay, so how else does this pan out?
Sadie:
LSD and MDMA are the two drugs that have had the
sort of impact. But also, the whole drugs trade is
fascinating. You can just think of it again as a whole
global, out of control Black Economy. It poses an
incredible threat to the whole nation state
organisation of the world. Hence the War on Drugs.
Hence also the impossibility of legalising drugs, and
the impossibility of keeping going on the current
policies almost sums up the crisis. And it really is a
big crisis.
Matthew:
Porn is currently been seen as something good by
many feminists again. What’s the reason for this,
what’s the porn that turns you on, and, is porn
healthy?
Sadie:
Is it healthy? No it is not healthy! It’s absolutely sick!
And that’s why everybody likes it. Because health,
cleanliness and so on are all out of the window. What
sort of porn turns me on? Well actually there’s a
whole crew of people in Birmingham writing sort of
half lesbian half sort of machine porn, and yeah, I like
that sort of thing. Post-human porn is the thing.
Because again most porn is about tits and bums and
organs. And what needs to happen is something that
gets beyond that. Bacterial sex for example is full of
potential – bacterial pornography!
Matthew:
…Just open your refrigerator. So, to get back to
basics. What is a woman. What is a drug. And, what’s
a computer?
Sadie:
What’s interesting about cybernetics and computers
is that it almost goes without saying, but they were
originally intended just to reinforce the stablished
strucures and maintain the status quo. And also,
technically, the first computers were serial machines
and they were organised around central processing
units so they too were very top down systems and
they tended to perpetuate a top down world. But once
you start to develop machine intelligence or artificial
intelligence even in the most basic sense (just think of
a computer as a proto-intelligent machine) then
obviously the point about intelligence is that it will
learn and it will learn its own stuff and it won’t
necessarily learn what the experts feed into it and that
shift has now really happened in AI with a real shift
away from top down expertise to bottom-up learning
processes and that again feeds into the challenge
against education because teaching goes out of the
window and it all becomes a matter of learning
instead.
So that’s actually changed the internal composition of
the computer, but it has also fed into its actual effects
in the world as well. If you just take the example of
the situation of women in the world, obviously there’s
steps forward and steps backward but there is
nevertheless a general tendency for more freedom for
women and that is very much to do with the inhuman,
(they are literally inhuman) processes of economic
and technical change that do sweep away, as Marx
said, the old structures of the family, the state,
education, trade unions, all of the old social
constraints.
Inevitably the fallout from that is a new freedom for
women, and the irony of this is that feminism on the
whole has been going in exactly the opposite
direction – it’s wanted to have a political solution in a
sense which is always a top down solution. (It’s a
question of ‘let’s organise women’, or ‘let’s make such
and such happen’). But what’s interesting about the
present situation is that the changes that people
hoped for are happening but they aren’t happening
because of – they’re almost happening in spite of –
the attempts to make them happen. Like this whole
thing about girls doing better at school for instance.
That’s happened totally under the noses, but also
behind the backs of the whole equal opportunities
lobby. It hasn’t happened because people have tried
to get girls to do better. There is, it seems to me a
whole shift across the board. And if you think of the
position of women in the past; really women have
almost been used like computers – as machines, to
keep patriarchy going, to reproduce the generations
and so on and again that too is another case of things
that have been used as means to ends, patriarchal
and power structure ends produce results that
become self-organising and get their acts together
without being means to ends. It’s true with the media
as well, and also with trade routes and commodities
even, that women really themselves have functioned
as commodities in western cultures.
And commodities you could really say are ‘getting
smart’. You know, the computer is ‘the first smart
commodity’ but obviously women are smart
commodities too and the organising humans who still
think that the world revolves around them they are the
bracket or the section that really looses out. And also,
because of the situation of women in the past they too
have never been able to have a strong sense of
identity and that’s always been a real problem: hence
women getting locked up for being schizophrenics
and hysterics and so on and so forth. But again, that
strong sense of identity now becomes a terrible
disadvantage and everybody that’s grown up with
that, is and will, in the near future really suffer as a
consequence of it.
Matthew:
So while everything’s plummeting crazily out of
control there are still people like Wired or whatever –
the people they champion – who still think that they
can make vast amounts of fast bucks out of the
process…
Sadie:
Well that’s true, but what they think they’re doing… I
mean to be honest, making money out of it isn’t
necessarily my problem. Them having control over it
is a problem. Obviously it used to be the case that
ownership and control went hand in hand but I’m not
convinced that it’s quite that simple any more. And
say intellectual property is a classic case. You can
jump up and down to your heart’s content and say
‘that’s mine’ but the fact is, whether you like it or not,
it isn’t any more.
There are scientists around for instance who really do
see themselves as ‘Scientists in this again governing,
top-down sort of role who do think that they are
creating our future. Fortunately they are just naive. So
it seems to me that it is increasingly possible to look
at the emergence of intelligence far in excess of the
province of the old white male, and again, people in
that sort of position, they may think that they’re
running the whole show but they’re just again tiny
components subject to the same sort of molecular
engineerings that the rest of us are and what they
think they are doing, when you put it in the context of
emergent planetary intelligence, is irrelevant to what
they actually are doing. So there’s a big split all the
way through this between intentions and effects. All
the intentions that have fed into the present situation
have universally been bad and have always been
about maintaining existing structures of control but
the effects are increasingly run-away effects and
that’s what cybernetics is about almost.
Matthew:
How do self-organising systems differ from cultures or
subcultures such as punk, hacking, grass-roots
feminism, wildcat working class organisation. Is it the
same thing or is it a different thing?
Sadie:
I think that it’s a new and better way of thinking the
same thing actually. I think that retrospectively you
look back and think ‘Oh yeah, well of course people
have always been doing it’. But I think that the people
who can really take advantage of it are the once who
can really see themselves doing it. Because for
example a lot of say, grass roots feminist organisation
if you take the pornography issue for example, they
may have organised themselves and so on, but if
they’d thought of themselves as self-organising
processes would have a very different attitude to
pornography and they wouldn’t have wanted to be in
this position of legislating and controlling the culture.
So the more people actually do self-organisation and
see themselves doing that, then that ratchets itself up
one further level.
Matthew:
So what is the difference between autoproduction
(autoproduzione) and what you are talking about?
Sadie:
Well, it’s that I think that even though autoproduction
and any notions like that have got the potential to hit
what I’m talking about, or come very close, largely
because its all influenced… you know Negri and
others are influenced by Deleuze and Guattari, and
Foucault and such characters, and so am I… so they
come out of similar roots. But autoproduction as they
have characterised it is still very much about ‘the self’
with a much older, bourgeoisie conception of
self-identity and collective identity or social identity.
And what I’m talking about is something that does
pass through that, and makes all of that possible, but
goes beyond it. It undoes ‘the self’ just as much as it
undoes the state, corporations or any other
institutions etc.
Matthew:
So does this obviously doesn’t present yet another
set of key principles through which to work?
Sadie:
No, we need no principles. But cultural viruses I think
is a really good clue, and this notion of engineering.
You can’t hope to, and people shouldn’t want to, take
political control or to organise other people. It’s a
matter of looking really coolly and calmly at where
you are at the time, whatever situation you’re in and
what you can engineer within that situation: not
getting too over inflated about taking control of it or
making something happen in a sort of dogmatic
fashion but just going for a bit of tinkering here and
there which can have amazing sort of unexpected
effects. If you want to change the atmosphere of
somewhere you don’t do it by just walking in and
taking over. You can do a lot more subtle bottom-up
sort of tinkering. And in terms of spreading ideas and
so on this whole idea of cultural viruses is really
fascinating and very useful. You can see how they get
on to your head so you can easily see how to use
them.
Matthew:
How does your version of cultural viruses compare to
that of Richard Dworkins for instance?
Sadie:
Well Dworkins is still very much a scientist. He talks
very happily about cultural viruses and very
interestingly up to a point but he doesn’t think that he
himself is a viral contagion he still think that he is the
scientist. If he’d gone one step further and could see
how integral he to is to that process and he wasn’t
running it again in this old version of what a scientist
is then yeah, I think he’d probably be quite interesting
as well.
Matthew:
Right! So: cultural viruses…
Sadie:
Drugs are obviously one. MDMA is a fascinating
case because after all it had been around for years.
people had even used it in the sixties and it just
obviously wasn’t the right moment. The point about a
cultural virus is that it can lie dormant for a long time
and them something can trigger it or it can trigger
something else and again, the crucial thing is not to
talk about this sort of thing metaphorically because
otherwise you just leave the old world intact. This isn’t
a new way of thinking about it. It is that, but only
because of material necessity, not because of ‘hey,
let’s have new set of ideas’. It’s just simply that the
old set of ideas is totally obsolete. And thinking itself
is a material process and that too is part of it. There
isn’t this separation between ideas and whatever else
Matthew:
It’s a question of where you situate it.
Sadie:
Yeah, I do think that Britain, much as I spend most of
my time hating it, I do increasingly think that it is quite
an interesting place to be. Partly because it has got
such a sort of load of remnants of the aristocracy
dotted around and that does tend to do something
positive on the underside. So it has got this amazing
underground culture and it seems to me that the
authorities haven’t quite got the stranglehold that they
have even in other European countries. And it’s also
interestingly positioned, not only between Europe and
America, because I don’t think it is European and it’s
obviously not American. But by the same token it’s
positioned strangely between north Europe,
Scandinavia and the south of Europe as well. It is a
funny sort of experimental zone I think, the UK.
Matthew:
And that was sponsored by the British Tourist Board
there.
Sadie:
I know, it’s terrible isn’t it but I can see the point of
being here sometimes.
Matthew:
So, what do you expect will happen in Britain after the
Criminal Justice Bill comes into force in all its glory?
Sadie:
Well, I think two things actually. You might disagree
with this… On the one hand people by necessity will
increasingly ignore the law. You know, that nicely
exacerbates the whole situation. Because there’s no
way that people are just going to stop, and can’t stop,
and anyway wouldn’t want to. And then I think that
there will be more and more polarised confrontation
between the old world and the new, basically, I think
it’s almost as simple as that, and the more that does
polarise, in a way, the better it is because I think that
the Right, or the authorities, are behaving incredibly
short-sightedly and are just feeding into the hands of
the bottom up tendencies. It’s really true though! God
they are asking for fucking trouble aren’t they!
Matthew:
Yeah, it’s like no-one can work it out.
Sadie:
Well they’re thick. You see the point is that it’s where
intelligence is. Intelligence is no longer on the side of
power. That’s the point.
Matthew:
Well that’s a good slogan to end on.
Sadie:
No, but they’re not intelligent! They haven’t a clue
what is happening in the world! And that’s good! The
whole social structure in the past has been devoted to
getting all the intelligent people, not just intelligent
people because it goes way beyond that – it’s about
intelligent processes – on to the side of power. That’s
no longer the only place for people to go. And this
again is again why markets are interesting because
the difference between for example writing a book for
a university press and the open market is the
difference between total constraint and total freedom.
Matthew:
Though there is a difference between markets per se
and the actual forces which work through markets.
Perhaps you could make a distinction between those.
Sadie:
Well again, rather as with women who have if you like
been the means of communication between men,
structurally and obviously trade routes and
commodities have been just simply means of
perpetuating the corporation and the state or any of
the big, powerful structures. But increasingly, it’s
pretty obvious now that the state is being eroded by
its own markets and that they are no longer just
serving it as means to its ends. They’ve accelerated
beyond that. The West for example just cannot stop
the Pacific Rim booming. There’s nothing that a
government could do. That human level of power has
no sort of control over it at all.
So the danger is that instead of states you get
corporations. Which is obviously no help at all. But
corporations, and even smaller companies and firms
are finding exactly the same problem because they’re
in exactly the same structural relation to markets as
the state is and they too are being taken over by their
own markets. I mean the classic case is obviously
IBM. Corporations now if they are going to survive
have to start behaving a lot less like the old
mega-multi-national. I mean they can be as
multinational as they want but they can’t necessarily
exercise the same control which is again the key
thing.
But, markets are a very different thing to capitalism.
Markets are just the structured form of market activity.
If you go somewhere like Mexico there is an
incredible grass-roots trading economy, even through
the years of so-called central planning. People just
trade everything and that is the grass-roots mode of
life there. Everybody just pays each other a couple of
cents or whatever for everything but that circulation
gives everybody the opportunity to crawl off the
ground. And all this is very urgent because the
welfare state for example is over and people have to
find, and will find, and do find, new ways of getting
themselves together. It really is the end of both the
advantages and disadvantages of a dependency
culture. It’s not a question of actually promoting that.
It just is happening.
Matthew:
How do we accelerate it?
Sadie:
Anybody who asks the state for anything is almost
already fucked. So it’s a matter of creating a real
anarchism that actually would destroy the state.
Which is of course, quite happily destroying itself at
the moment. So that’s the process that can be
encouraged.