Austerity and its discontents
A group blog On Europe edited by Daniel TrillingRSS
Essay: beneath its populist surface, the Five Star Movement represents more of the same.
By Wu Ming Foundation Published 08 March 2013 13:48
Beppe Grillo, at a pre-election rally in Rome on 22 February. (Photo: Getty.)
Marriage is a bond between a man and a woman. How can you institute marriage between two persons of the same sex? Why not marriage between three persons then? Why not marriage between you and your animal? Some people have a strong relationship with their animal, would you allow them to marry it?
(Francesco Perra, 5 Star Movement candidate at the recent national election, 8 June 2012 )
There is much confusion in other countries about what
has been taking place in Italy in the past five years – the era of Late
Berlusconism – and what is going on after the latest national election.
At the time of writing, nobody knows what government Italy will have.
No stable government can be formed without the vote of confidence of the
Five Star Movement, the political organisation led by former stand-up
comedian Beppe Grillo and web marketing guru Gianroberto Casaleggio.
The Five Star Movement (5SM), which stood for national election for the
first time, gained 25.5 per cent of votes for the Chamber of Deputies
and 23.8 per cent for the Senate.
Several Left-wing and progressive commentators tend
to look with a certain sympathy to the Five Star Movement. They heard
that even Dario Fo, a famously leftist Nobel Prize Winner, endorsed Grillo during the campaign. They think that Grillo's fiery, pied-piperesque speeches are just a bit of theatre – he used to be a comedian after all.
Indeed, news from Italy is baffling as usual, but in
the end, many have the impression that the 5SM is a populist movement
oscillating between the progressive and radical quarters of the
political spectrum. A movement having features in common with other
anti-austerity movements and mobilisations across southern Europe
(Portugal, Greece, Spain, Slovenia).
People who make that assumption should – literally – know better.
Trouble is, many Italians should know better too.
Simone Di Stefano: "Are you an antifascist?"
Beppe Grillo: "This question doesn’t concern me. 5SM is an ecumenical movement."
(Conversation between Grillo and one of the top leaders of neofascist party CasaPound, 11 January 2013 )
Some of you may have Italian friends who used to
place themselves to the Left and recently chose to vote for the 5SM, or
even become 5SM activists. We bet they didn’t tell you about the more
right-wing aspects of the movement, because you’d certainly ask them: "I
beg your pardon? You’re doing political work side by side with
fascists? You’ve joined a movement that rejects the very notion of
antifascism? A movement that wants to abolish trade unions?! You voted
for a guy who praises Ron Paul and US-style ‘libertarianism’? Mate,
what’s wrong with you?", and they’d have to scramble for
self-justifications.
Before it degenerated, fascism had a sense of national community (which it took directly from socialism), the highest respect for the state and a will to protect the [institution of] family.
(Roberta Lombardi, 5SM member of Parliament, 21 January 2013)
Your friends are probably aware of those aspects, but
either underestimate them or instantly remove them, because they’re too
disquieting. Such is the disgust toward "the old political system" that
criticising a "new" movement is deemed as a manifestation of pedantry
and intellectual luxury: "First of all, let’s give a shoulder push to
the rotten political establishment, then we’ll talk about Grillo’s
faults. We can’t afford that now!"
To us, this is a very dangerous approach.
1. How rancour towards "The Caste" helped prevent social conflict
Many factors can explain Grillo’s success. The Zero
years were a decade of social devastation, in which social movements
encountered thundering defeats, while Late Berlusconism was fostering
cultural and moral bankruptcy with the complicity of the
long-discredited "centre-left".
Then, at the beginning of the new decade, the Euro crisis hit us between the eyes.
During the summer of 2011, the capitalist class and
the European Central Bank decided that Berlusconi’s government was
completely dysfunctional and unfit to enforce the "necessary" austerity
measures. Despite a vast majority in both branches of Parliament, with a
sort of legal coup the "centre-right" government was replaced with a
"technical" government led by Mario Monti, a neoliberal economist long associated with Goldman Sachs and the Trilateral Commission.
Monti’s government was supported, albeit grudgingly,
by both the centre-right and the centre-left. To tell the truth, the
centre-left gave the impression of supporting Monti less
grudgingly than the centre-right. In the end, the Democratic Party
appeared more responsible than Berlusconi for the aggressive austerity
measures which worsened the condition of the working class and the lower
middle class in 2012. Something similar happened in Greece, where
Papandreou’s Socialist Party was more strictly associated with cuts than
the right-wing party New Democracy was.
The difference is that Greece witnessed mass
demonstrations and general strikes against austerity, the IMF, the
European Central Bank and so on, whereas in Italy social discontent was
channelled toward a different target: the so-called "Caste".
"The Caste vs. the Honest People" is the most powerful conceptual frame in today’s Italy.
The Caste: How Italian politicians became untouchable is the title of a best-selling book written by two journalists, Gian Antonio Stella and Sergio Rizzo. It was published in 2007 and covered the ways in which national and local politicians used taxpayers’ money to become parasitic oligarchs. The book’s title provided the perfect metaphor to frame the debate on politics into a new version of a classic right-wing dichotomy: "ordinary people" are "clean", whereas "politicians" are "dirty". Indeed, they are not only dirty, they’re the biggest problem in the country. Let’s get rid of politicians, and everything will be ok!The fact that politicians are in office precisely because the good ordinary people repeatedly voted for them is rarely mentioned.
"The Caste vs. the Honest People" proved to be the
perfect diversionary narrative. Anger and frustration were channelled
toward members of parliament, their salaries, public funding to
political parties etc., all of which are real but lesser problems of the
system. Meanwhile, austerity measures and eurocratic neoliberal
policies were ravaging society, encountering no opposition. Unlike in
Greece, Spain and Portugual, there was no mass movement fighting back.
It goes without saying that the real "caste" – the
caste of millionaires, top CEOs, financial speculators and the likes –
didn’t pay any price for the situation they had created. We even heard
such tycoons as Flavio Briatore making anti-Caste statements, slagging off politicians and so on.
To name but one concrete consequence of the "Caste
vs. the People" frame, this depoliticising narrative made the idea of a
"technical" government acceptable, indeed, even desirable. Public
opinion was brought to believe that a government with no politicians
would be better than any traditional government. That’s why Mario Monti
took advantage of an extended "honeymoon period" and was able to pass
draconian acts that impoverished the majority of the population.
The "Caste vs. People" frame was activated in the
political debate slightly before the 5SM came into existence, and paved
the highway for it.
What Grillo and Casaleggio did on their own was extending the concept of "Caste" to include almost all civil servants,
whom the 5SM rhetoric turns into mere parasites. In one of his most
infamous blog posts, Grillo demanded that "tens of thousand of public
employees [be] laid off". As Rossana Dettori – a leader of CGIL trade union – correctly pointed out,
behind the phrases that Grillo uses in an abstract way (eg "public
employees") there are hospitals and emergency rooms, firefighters,
schools and kindergartens, social services for the elderly and the
gravely ill, "as well as democratic institutions which ensure that such
services keep working."
Truth is, Italy’s public sector has the highest rate of union enrollment and activity. 78.79% of public employees
take part to the election of their workplace union representatives
(RSU). Therefore, the real targets of Grillo’s invective against public
employees are trade unions. He called for the utter "elimination" of trade unions more than once.
2. Mock "anti-austerity", mock radicalism
Not that Grillo doesn’t mention capitalism, the
faults of bankers etc. He does it. However, there’s no peculiarity in
that part of his discourse, he simply revives all the cliches of
European right-wing populisms. The issue is framed in a simplistic
neo-nationalist way: "real" capitalism (ie productive capitalism) is
described as good because it is rooted in the territory, whereas
financial economy is degenerate because it’s in the hands of evil
transnational cliques and lobbie groups. Since the Euro is the main
cause of the present crisis, if Italy leaves the Eurozone and gets rid of politicians and kicks
"tens of thousands" of (unionised) employees out of the public sector,
then we’ll have the conditions for entering a new golden age.
We all know that there’s often an antisemitic streak
underlying this kind of talk about "nationless" enemies. Is it a
coincidence that antisemitic tirades and insults are frequent in the below-the-line section of Grillo’s blog? In November 2012 a guest-blogger on beppegrillo.it attacked Gad Lerner, a Jewish journalist who dared criticise Grillo, by calling him "Gad Vermer". Verme is italian for "worm", a classic insult in the antisemitic repertoire.
Whenever a conservative populist movement is voted in
office or takes over, their "anticapitalist", anti-finance rhetoric
evaporates very soon and they end up administering the present state of
things, financial capitalism included.
Maybe that’s why Jim O’Neill, the retiring chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, recently wrote:
I find the [Italian Election] outcome quite exciting because it seems to me for a country whose GDP has basically not changed since EMU started in 1999, something big needs to change. Maybe this election outcome and the peculiar mass appeal of the Five Star movement could signal the start of something new?
Did we say "Goldman Sachs"? A few days ago, Grillo
stated that the 5SM parliamentary groups were willing to vote for a new
"technical" government including no politicians, because they would
never vote confidence in any political government. They were even
willing to support a "Monti Bis", a second Monti government, albeit with
a limited mandate and strictly controlled by the new parliament. After
months spent calling the premier "Rigor Montis", Grillo implicitly said
that the former international advisor for Goldman Sachs is the "lesser
evil" compared to political parties.
It was just a fleeting glimpse of naked truth, then
the former comedian changed position one more time. Now he’s saying that
he wants to conquer "100% of parliament" so "citizens become the state" and the movement "will no longer need to exist", which of course doesn’t mean anything but is good for causing a sensation.
[N.B. The last political leader to conquer 100 per cent of the
Italian parliament and overlap his movement with the state ended up
hanging upside down in a Milan square. It happened twenty-six years too
late, but nowadays things happen faster, you know, there's the Internet
and so on. Jokes apart, Grillo should study the history of his country
before making such statements, they aren't known to bring good luck.]
In case you still cling to your prior impression that
Grillo’s movement is anti-austerity and radical, or at least a force
for concrete change, why not take a look at what 5SM has been doing in
the towns and cities they administer? For example, let’s look at what
mayor Federico Pizzarotti did in Parma.
The key point of Pizzarotti’s campaign was opposition
to the construction of a big incinerator whose impact on the
environment and the health of citizens was considered catastrophic. In
June 2012 Grillo himself stated:
"They will never build that incinerator, if they want to build it they
will have to step on the mayor’s dead body!". When the journalist Marco Travaglio asked Grillo about the penalties the city would have to pay to contractors and subcontractors, he gave this answer: "Let’s not be silly: If paying the penalties is obligatory, we’ll find a way to pay them." Well, the incinerator was turned on on 3 March 2013. The city couldn’t pay the penalties. Nobody had to step on Pizzarotti’s corpse.
During his campaign, Pizzarotti also promised that he
wouldn’t raise the house tax and the boarding charge for public
kindergartens. After he was elected, he raised both and explained: "We
couldn’t do anything else". Like any other politician.
Now he’s planning to cut the salaries of city employees.
3. Right-wing influences on the Five Star Movement
Grillo’s rhetoric is chock-full of elements that can
be traced back to different right-wing traditions, which he and
Casaleggio combine into a toxic jumble.
The most recognisable tradition is that of European conservative populism. In France this approach is known as poujadisme, after its main 20th century promoter Pierre Poujade. In Italy, we usually call it qualunquismo [which we could translate as "anyoneism"], after a mass petty bourgeiois movement founded by playwright Guglielmo Giannini in 1946.
Another tradition is US "libertarianism" / "anarcho-capitalism": Ayn Rand, Ron Paul,
that kind of stuff. This influence is detectable in several parts of
the 5SM programme. One of the movement’s best-known representatives, Vittorio Bertola, explicitly stated "I like Ron Paul".
Of course, in Grillo’s rants we can also find the
usual set of Thatcherite tropes and cliches which have become
commonplace all over the West.
All these traditions have some basic features in
common, one of which is the hatred for trade unions and, generally, for
the workers’ collective organisation and conquests, like national
contracts etc. This hatred permeates all Grillo’s speeches.
The reason why it is such an ungrateful task to
expose the right-wing elements of Grillo’s rhetoric, is that
confusionism is an intentional strategy. Grillo repeatedly screams that
"there are no Left and Right any more!". Meanwhile, he and Casaleggio
skillfully intersperse the right-wing elements with left-wing ones,
reproposing buzzwords, concepts and claims they hijacked from the
previous social movements. These concepts are reprocessed, they receive a
treatment that strips all articulations and leaves them void of all
content. The most striking example is "direct democracy".
4. Direct democracy, Führerprinzip and character assassination
Despite all the talk about direct democracy or online
liquid feedback, the 5SM is a top-down organisation with no
intermediate bodies between Grillo and Casaleggio and the populace of
fans/activists. Every major decision is taken by those two wealthy
sixty-somethings, and "direct democracy" only amounts to calling on the
base to approve it in a tele-plebiscitarian way.
In the 2011-2012 period, the 5SM of Emilia-Romagna (the region whose capital is Bologna, the city in which we live) was stormed by a wave of expulsions. "Dissidents" like Giovanni Favia, Valentino Tavolazzi, Federica Salsi and many others dared question the absence of internal democracy. As a consequence, they were kicked out and exposed to angry online mobs. Expulsions were decided by Grillo and Casaleggio and communicated to the world by short posts on beppegrillo.it.Local activists expressed solidarity with the expelled and organised meetings in which the majority voted in favour of readmission, but their vote was completely overruled by the two bosses.
The final step was the use of the Internet to slander the expelled in all possible ways. "Loyal" grillini devoted their time and efforts to disrupting all online conversations in which anyone defended the "traitors" and criticised Grillo and Casaleggio for their clearly autocratic behaviour.
5SM local leaders seem to have no hesitation in using "lynching" as a positive concept. On 2 March 2013 Andrea Defranceschi, 5SM representative at the Emilia-Romagna council, stated: "If some of us betray the movement, the Internet will lynch them."
By "lynching", of course, Defranceschi means the character assassination of dissidents. If anyone dares disagree with Grillo and Casaleggio, their reputation must be destroyed, and this destruction shall continue long after the expulsion. These people cannot be simply left alone, their blog or Facebook page must be bombarded with derogatory comments every day. In a matter of few months, local councillor Giovanni Favia shifted from being revered as the very incarnation of 5SM values to being described as the vilest traitor. And if the dissident is a woman, sexist insults will rain on her: "whore", "bitch" and the rest of the repertoire. That’s what happened to Federica Salsi.
This is a clear manifestation of cult mentality and,
in fact, the 5SM is often described as a cult. It is often compared to
Scientology. Scientology rejected the comparison.
You may ask: how can Grillo and Casaleggio get away with all that?
Well, it’s all written in the movement’s «Non-Statute».
The "Non-Statute" is a very short text which, for
years, has been the only written document regulating the movement’s
internal life. It mainly says that the 5SM’s name and logo are the sole property of Beppe Grillo and that the movement’s "headquarters" are located on Grillo’s weblog, beppegrillo.it.
If you already think that the 5SM notion of "online
direct democracy" is bizarre to say the least, well, wait, you haven’t
seen anything yet! We suggest you to watch a sort of video-manifesto
which Casaleggio authored and produced in 2007. It’s entitled Gaia: The Future of Politics. "Creepy" is the right adjective for the anarcho-capitalist future Casaleggio enthusiastically envisions.
How do pro-Grillo leftists or former leftists react when someone points out these serious problems?
5. Fascists in Grillo’s (and Berlusconi’s) Fatherland
Before answering that question, it is necessary to make clear that the vast majority of both 5SM activists and sympathisers do not
come from the radical Left. Most of them are quite young and have no
previous political experience (or even position); others come from the
right and even the radical right.
In several areas of the country, the backbone of
consent for the 5SM is formed by people who previously supported
Berlusconi, the xenophobic Northern League,
and in some cases utterly neofascist parties such as New Force and
Tricolour Flame. In 2012, when the 5SM won the election in Parma and
managed to elect Federico Pizzarotti as mayor of the city, the biggest
chunk of votes (25.9 per cent) came from people who had previously
chosen the Northern League (NL).
After all, Grillo’s and the 5SM position on
immigration and minorities is very close to that of the NL. We quote
from one of his blog posts , its title was "The Desacred Borders" and was published on beppegrillo.it in october 2007:
A country cannot PASS THE BUCK TO ITS CITIZENS in dealing with the problems caused by tens of thousands of Roma gypsies coming to Italy from Romania. Prodi’s objection is always the same: Romania is in Europe. But what does "Europe" mean? SAVAGE MIGRATION of jobless persons from one country to another? Without knowing the language, with nowhere to put them up? Every day I receive hundreds of letters on Roma gypsies, it’s a volcano, A TIME BOMB, and it must be defused . . . What is a government that doesn’t guarantee the safety of its citizens good for? . . . The borders of the fatherland used to be sacred, politicians have desacred them.
Last but not least, Casaleggio himself is a former sympathiser of the Northern League.
According to attorney Vincenzo Forte -
an ex-leader of the neofascist Italian Social Movement and now a
supporter of Grillo – three of the new 5SM MPs and one 5SM senator (all
four elected in Lombardy) have a radical neofascist background. Forte
didn’t reveal their names but added:
These are not isolated cases, it’s a much more vast, deep-rooted phenonemon, a carefully organised strategy to penetrate Grillo’s movement. This strategy is being carried out with maximum discretion by local neofascist groups.
The 5SM has no ethical or theoretical defence against
this, because Grillo and Casaleggio have staunchly refused to adopt
antifascism as a differentiating value. Grillo wants the movement to be
"ecumenical" and antifascism "doesn’t concern him".
It is far from incomprehensible that many fascists, berluscones and leghisti
are now looking to Grillo. Not only they like many of the things he
says, but he also embodies their ideal type of the Strong Man mesmering
enthusiastic crowds. To these people, Berlusconi and Bossi were no
longer strong/fascinating enough, for they became too compromised with
«old politics« and «the Caste». That’s why these angry petty bourgeois
are making an emotional investment on someone they see as a new leader.
Moreover, there are deep similarities between
Berlusconi and Grillo. They are both living testimonies of how the 1980s
entertainment and television industry reshaped Italy’s national life.
Journalist Giuliano Santoro wrote a very interesting book about this, it is entitled Un Grillo qualunque: Il populismo digitale nella crisi dei partiti italiani [A Grillo whatsoever: Digital populism in the crisis of Italian parties].
As a matter of fact, one cannot fully understand Grillo if s/he didn’t understand Berlusconi. Three years ago, in a piece for the London Review of Books, we easily predicted that after the fall of Berlusconi there would be a Berlusconism-without-Berlusconi. Nowadays things are even worse, because Berlusconi "fell" but is still around and 29.1 per cent of voters have chosen him for the umpteenth time. As a result, we have both old, classic berlusconism-with-Berlusconi, and a new kind of berlusconism without him. Giuliano Santoro wrote that "Grillo is the continuation of Berlusconi by other means."
6. TINA, TITA and the 5SM’s "neitherism"
Now let’s focus on those leftists and ex-leftists who
are – critically or uncritically – giving their trust to 5SM. We want
to focus on them for two reasons:
First, it is important to understand what
consequences the Left’s absence or bankruptcy can have during a crisis
like the current one.
Secondly, we have noticed that the representation of
Grillo’s movement among radicals and progressives abroad is more or less
a synthesis of the two typical discourses uttered by Italian pro-Grillo
radicals – only with much less information available.
We call these discourses "5SM TINA" and "5SM TITA".
These days, each time we talk with veterans of
yesterday’s struggles who voted for the 5SM, and try to reason with
them, the most likely words we manage to extract from their mouths is:
Yes, I do know it’s an ambiguous movement. I’m not at ease with everything they say and do. Yeees, yes, their agenda is partly neoliberal. Their statements on migrants are unacceptable. I don’t like the blend of populism and corporate jargon either. I’m suspicious of the personality cult surrounding Grillo, and the role played by Casaleggio isn’t clear. I agree with you, there’s more than a little bit of fanaticism within the movement. I did see pro-5SM trolls in action on the Internet. I agree with you, those mass expulsions make me think of 1937 stalinist purges. Do you think I’m blind? Of course I see that fascists are also joining… And yet some of the 5SM claims and proposals are exactly the same that we’ve been making for years! Their program includes the "citizens’ income", the defence of commons, ecology… I know many decent people who’ve become 5SM activists. Maybe we can tactically use the 5SM in order to smash the old political system, they’re doing that, aren’t they? Nobody managed to do that before. Why not try and see what happens after the shoulder push? There Is No Alternative anyway. The left is dead.
This is what we call the Five-Starred Leftist "There
Is No Alternative" (TINA) Discourse. It is based on a classical Yes/But
device: people say they agree on all the critical issues, which are
many, then they say something like "but" or "and yet", and even if the
adverse is sustained only by wishful thinking, it wipes out everything
they just acknowledged.
In short: they understand that the 5SM is a
confusionist movement with a dominant right-wing approach to many key
issues, but the movement’s success and the fact that some proposals have
Left-wing origins make them hope this is a good opportunity to "do
something".
To us, "doing something" is not necessarily a good
line of conduct. It depends on what you do. Sometimes it’s better not to
do anything than doing something stupid. Mistaking a right-wing
movement for a left-leaning one is definitely stupid.
Other former leftists are buying whatever story
Grillo and the 5SM tell them. They utter another discourse, the
Five-Starred Ex-Leftist "This Is The Alternative" (TITA) Discourse:
What you’re saying is false. You believed the vicious lies that the Caste spreads around. There are certainly some racists, because the movement is open to everyone, but they’re minorities. The majority are people like you and me who want to fight the system. We’ll keep racists in check. Those who were kicked out of the movement were opportunists and infiltrators sent by the old parties. They violated the Non-Statute. Grillo is not a leader, he’s nothing other than a megaphone. The fact that he legally owns the movement’s name and logo is only a guarantee that local sections will respect the Non-Statute. I trust him. When the movement is strong enough, Grillo will step aside. Casaleggio only suggests communication strategies, there’s nothing dark or ambiguous about that. This Is The Alternative, at last! I’ve been waiting for something like this for years, don’t ruin everything with your usual criticism!
Notice the classic faith in a "two-stage" process: in
the current situation Grillo has necessarily to play a major role;
later on, he will surely step aside.
In the history of communist movements, all personality cults were invariably described as merely "transitional".
In 1958 Mao Zedong famously argued
that there is nothing wrong in personality cult in and of itself. It
depends whether that personality represents revolutionary truth or not.
Eighty-seven year old Dario Fo, to mention but one name, was very close to maoism during the 1970s.
This mindset facilitated the conversion of former
communists to Grillismo. In this way, we think they ended up on the
opposite side of the political spectrum.
When did such a thing happen last time?
It happened in the early Twenties.
The 5SM’s catch-all programme cannot but remind us of
early fascism’s Programme of San Sepolcro (1919). In those days,
fascism was still a "neitherist" movement ("neither left nor right")
launching "revolutionary" slogans in every direction.
In 2011, when we started citing that historical precedent, many people sneered at us. Then, on 5 March 2013, Roberta Lombardi – fresh president of the 5SM group at the Chamber of Deputies – made an explicitly positive reference
to the Programme of San Sepolcro in order to explain the unacceptable
statement we used as one of the epigraphs of this article.
Are we arguing that, when all is said and done, the 5SM is a fascist movement?
The answer is: no.
For sure there are fascists in there, and certainly
the right-wing elements of the programme are more relevant than the
left-wing ones. However, the 5SM is indebted with different right-wing
traditions, a part of its constituency is still on the left, and
labelling the movement as merely fascist would be too simplistic.
What we’re trying to say is that, especially in
Italy, confusionist "neitherism" always thrives on economic and
political crisis, and a part of the Left is tempted to listen to that
siren song. Those who don’t resist the temptation invariably end up on
the Right, be they aware of it or not.
7. Now what?
Why aren’t foreign correspondents living in Italy
saying these things? They write about Grillo every day, but they rarely
provide insights on the movement’s inner contradictions. Maybe these
contradictions are less visibile if one doesn’t have a deep knowledge of
our national history? And yet racist, homophobic or Ayn Rand-esque
statements should be recognisable in all contexts. We don’t have a clear
answer for such questions.
What’s going to happen now?
As far as "change" (that empty word) is concerned,
probably much less than everyone expects. As we tried to demonstrate
above, the 5SM is far from being a radical force and its programme is
full of "solutions" that are actually part of the problem.
Even on the
very day of the election, while many commentators were jumping on
Grillo’s bandwagon, we wrote that, despite its incendiary slogans, the
5SM acts as a diversionary movement and prevents social conflict from
erupting. Grillo says that himself, although of course he calls conflict
"violence": "If violence doesn’t start here, it’s because of the
movement."
As often happens with populist movements, Grillo’s
movement will apparently destabilise national politics, but it will only
ripple the surface, and in doing so it will stabilise the system.
That’s why pro-Grillo excitement can be found in such an unlikely place
as Goldman Sachs.
We hope that progressives and radicals who joined the
5SM, or sympathise with 5SM, or at least voted for it, understand that
the tiresome "neither left nor right" stance can no longer hide all the
contradictions we highlighted.
We recently wrote that "we’ll side with rebellion inside the 5SM". What does that mean?
It means that we expect these contradictions to get
ever sharper, to intensify until they explode. The movement’s "Left"
must overcome TINA and TITA, manifest itself in a clear way and reject
both the agenda of the "Right" and Grillo’s blank, confusionist
rhetoric. Internal conflict is not an implausible outcome of this phase.
We must look at that process with great attention, and be there when
some of the energies that Grillo and Casaleggio captured will manage to
get free from that grip. Those energies can be invested into a more
consistent, unambiguous, radical movement.
That’s why we tifiamo rivolta , we "cheer for a riot" inside the 5SM.
Wu Ming is a collective of authors based in
Bologna, Italy. Among their group novels translated into English are Q
(under the old name "Luther Blissett"), 54 and Manituana. Their latest
novel Altai will be published by Verso Books in May 2013. Their blog Giap is one of the most visited and influential in Italy.
This essay is a cross-post from www.wumingfoundation.comhttp://www.newstatesman.com/austerity-and-its-discontents/2013/03/beppe-grillo-leads-yet-another-right-wing-cult-italy