Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 15 – Many argue
that in post-industrial societies, Internet communities rather than labor
collectives play the key role, communities not based on the workplace but being
more politicized, Aleksandr Skobov says. But Belarus today represents a return
to the traditions of protests in industrialized societies, and this may be a
bellwether for the future.
“Since the time of the Polish
revolution,” the Russian commentator says, “democratic protest movements” have
not based themselves on large labor collectives but rather on Internet
communities. That has been welcomed by many even though it has allowed autocrats
to present their opponents as small and marginal (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5F37AC8B3EE9E).
Indeed, he continues, “after Perestroika,
the process … of atomization has dominated society. Right-wing liberals and
libertarians have welcomed this process, viewing it as the freeing of the autonomous
personality from dependence on all kinds of large and small groups and the dawn
of a new world of horizontal self-organization of autonomous individuals.”
But things have not gone quite as
their supporters planned. Online communities haven’t assumed the role outlined
for them, and “in the majority of cases, they have been suppressed and marginalized
by ‘the new autocrats’” who have been able to present groups based online
rather than in the workplace as elitist and small, even if they are not.
That looked like it might happen in
Belarus as well, Skobov continues; but when Alyaksandr Lukashenka began his
crackdown, “and when the people awoke, they weren’t able to offer any
organization, leaders or simply coordinators” until “suddenly corporative
structures which had seemed hopelessly dead came alive.”
The actions of workers in specific
plants and industries in Belarus is “clear evidence that the liberation movement
against the dictatorship has acquired an all-national character.” That raises the question as to whether this
is a uniquely Belarusian event, given Lukashenka’s freezing of his country in
the past, or something more widespread that could occur elsewhere.
No comments:
Post a Comment