MUST THE MOLECULES FEAR AS THE ENGINE DIES?
               NOTES ON THE WALL STREET ``MELTDOWN''

Dear Midnight Notes Friends,

The breakdown of the Wall Street financial machine makes the task
that we outlined in our June meeting more urgent. In June we planned
to rethink Midnight Notes in view of the restructuring of the
accumulation process and class relations carried out through the
neoliberal turn and Structural Adjustment. We can now define this
project more precisely: what do the current crisis and restructuring
of the financial system imply for us as we join the rest of the
world in the dog house of structural adjustment in the twilight of
the American empire?

In response to these questions, it is important, first, that we
realize that the so-called Wall Street ``meltdown'' is certainly the
end, but also the completion of the neoliberal program. Let us be
clear about it. To think otherwise is to ignore the lesson taught to
us by the event that opened the present capitalist era: the 1973
coup again the Chilean working class experiment with socialism, that
led to the victory of strong state backed market economy. Karl
Polanyi's theory that the single most important cause of the rise of
fascism and Nazism in Europe was the inability to control the
financial market after the 1929 crash also resonates here. In other
words, we should not read the restructuring taking place as a turn
to socialism/Keynesianism, to the extent at least that Keynesianism
was an intervention by the state into the economy aimed at
increasing the state's investment in social reproduction, starting
with the reproduction of the working class, in exchange for an
increase in the social productivity of labor.  Despite the adoption
of regulatory mechanisms, the operation presently conducted by the
US government bears little resemblance to the Keynesian program
launched with the New Deal.

Behind the $700 billion bail-out and the many others that will
follow---some already ``in the pipeline'' is a massive transfer of
funds from the US working class to capital, inevitably leading to an
assault on the last remaining entitlements (like Medicare, Social
Security) and a general program of austerity the like of which we
have not seen yet in a long time. The fact that there is no
organized response to this assault makes us fear the worst. For
things would never have reached this point if over the last decade
the US workers had responded to the repeated thefts of their money
and benefits, through the Enron scandal and the many other
``crises'' that have followed it.  That despite the ``instability''
of the market, despite its usage as a means to expropriate thousands
of small/working class investors, US workers continued to trust
their livelihoods and future to it is certainly a key factor in what
we are presently witnessing and Washington/Wall Street confidence in
launching the new austerity program. It is our argument that in the
same way as September 11 served the US government to shed the last
remains of ``democracy'' and move to a model of government where
militarization is always around the corner (apparently
Representatives were threatened with the proclamation of martial law
if they did not pass the bailout bill), so the Wall Street crash
will serve to shed the last remaining elements of working class
``socialism'' in the US political economy, starting with Social
Security, Medicare, a thorn in capital's flesh, but so far
demonstrating a great resilience, the last shore for working class
struggle in the nation.

2. Lessons from the Debt Crisis.

There is a important parallel here, not sufficiently noted, between
the present crash and bail-out and the ``debt crisis'' of the 1980s,
which engulfed most Third World nations (except for China) and was
the start of the globalization process. Both have been engineered in
the same fashion.

The ``debt crisis'' was the outcome of a financial campaign
conducted by Washington and Wall Street, to practically force Third
World nations to take cheap development loans ``liberally dished out
at the lowest interest rates'' at a time when capital was refusing
to invest in Europe and North America in the face of the most
successful working class attack on its profit-rate since the 1920s,
and a new generation of Africans, Asians etc. were organizing to
demand a global redistribution of wealth and a program of
reparations, that is, in the language of the Bucharest Conference of
1974: A NEW WORLD ORDER.

Through the lending mechanism, the massive flow of petrodollars that
had been amassed in the aftermath of the 1974 embargo (the first
attack on US wages, organized through a stiff inflationary wave) was
redirected to the coffers of Third World nations, which, attracted
by the bait of cheap loans, were soon hooked to the global economy,
all dreams of an independent path to development foregone.

In other words, loans at the lowest interest rates were key to the
creation of a global debt and the process of primitive accumulation
(through structural adjustment) that was imposed on most of the
workers of the world.

As we know, within less than a decade, the rise of the interest
rates in the US, turned manageable debts into a long-term process of
economic and political subordination. Debt became the hook for a
massive restructuring of Africa's, Asia's & Latin America's
political economies, re-establishing a colonial dependency that for
three decades has served to promote a massive transfer of funds from
the Third to the First World and defeat the organizational efforts
of TW nations for an independent road to development.

Under the guise of the ``debt crisis,'' portrayed as a case of
``mismanagement'' by backward countries, requiring First World-style
financial responsibility, countries across the world were forced to
open their books to Washington---via the IMF and World Bank---and
accept any terms of repayment imposed on them. They were forced to
freeze wages, terminate all social spending, open their markets to
foreign investors and products, devalue their currencies and so
forth. The consequences of these policies are well known. While
Washington and NY built forests of skyscrapers, sucking on the blood
of Africans, Asians, Latin Americans, Caribbean people, such levels
of impoverishment and expropriation were imposed on the people of
the world that millions took the road out of their countries, unable
to survive in them, while those remaining witnessed epidemics,
elimination of schools, famines, wars, the loss of ancestral lands,
waters and forests, brutal wars of privatization, all directly
related to the debt.

This is history now, though the politics of SAP have set back for
decades the project initiated by the anti-colonial struggle,
reformulated and reasserted, as I mentioned, at the Bucharest
Conference of 1974, where TW nations emboldened by the defeat of the
US in Vietnam, demanded a NEW WORLD ORDER, i.e.  the redistribution,
return of the wealth that Europe and the US have robbed from the
colonial world.

With the debt crisis, international capital obtained three major
objectives.

i) It disciplined the working class in Europe and the US, by
dismantling its manufacturing structure and refusing for years to
engage in any serious investment in these regions [remember ``zero
growth''?]

ii) It destroyed the attempt of the former colonial world to escape
a dependent/subordinate position, as demanded by the new generation
of Africans, Asians, etc., who, infused of the spirit of Fanon, were
keen on import substitution schemes, were pressing for REPARATIONS,
and pushing for some form of socialism (in Angola and Mozambique).

iii) In addition to defeating revolution in First and Third World,
the ``debt crisis'' built the infrastructure for the new global
economy. It forged the mechanisms by which industries and offices
could be relocated, companies could run around the globe, the work
process could be computerized and streamlined and the working class
thereby could be flexibilized and re-divided.

Against this background, we must note some basic similarities
between the engineering of the debt crisis and the engineering of
the Wall Street crash and must assume these similarities will extend
to the social consequences of the crash. The housing bubble was the
result of loans made at very low though adjustable credit rates,
redirecting the influx of capital coming from abroad (China and
other countries) toward the US market.

Is it possible that investment banks, credit rating agencies, the
head of the Federal Reserve all FAILED to realize what would be the
inevitable result of an ``easy credit,'' lending policy that
reversed decades of regulatory principles and rules? Unless we want
to revel in the nonsensical tale of a blinding surge in human greed,
the answer must be a negative one. Thus, we must stop using the
concept of ``failure'' to describe the absence of regulations and
the reasons for the crash. We must rule out that the architects of
the housing/mortgage crisis did not know it would end in a financial
disaster and cascade of foreclosures for the home owners, in the
same way as banks are partly responsible for the debt of the US
working class ($45.000 on average per capita).

Continuing with the parallel, we have to conclude that with this 700
billion dollar ``bail-out,'' coming straight out of our pockets and
hides, the ``structural adjustment'' that since the 1980s has been
imposed on countries across the world, is going to be extended to
the US territory and the US working class. This time (after many
beginnings and many deferrals) we too are being ``adjusted.'' I will
discuss later what adjustment will mean at this time for us. For the
moment we only want to stress that we are witnessing not only a
financial meltdown, but also a great robbery, a macro-process of
expropriation, an immense transfer of labor, this time siphoning
funds to the US banking system not only from the Third World, as in
the Debt Crisis of the 1980s, but from our households, through the
classic maneuver of increasing the national debt. What we are
witnessing is a capitalist coup, an example of capital's historic
readiness to destroy itself in order to regain the initiative and
defeat resistance to its discipline.

3. Where does this resistance come from? How is the collapse of the
financial systems a response to it?

We cannot understand the Wall Street crisis unless we read it in
class term as a means to negotiate a different class deal and
response to class struggle and resistance. However, in dealing with
these questions, I also want to distinguish this approach and the
growing tendency to view every development in capitalist planning as
a realization of working class struggle and demands, the Negrian
perspective on capital's response to class movements.

This perspective is dangerous, because besides turning even defeat
into a victory (such as: we wanted globalization, we wanted
flexibilization, etc), it ignores the fact that a capitalist
response must use working class demands against themselves, use them
to drive part of the working class out of the struggle, turn it
against or away from the other half, use them in such a way as to
spark off forms of development that decompose the class.

Let us look now at the crisis as a disciplinary tools and strategy.
There are at least three areas of resistance to the neoliberal
accumulation project that the Wall Street collapse has to respond
to.  I will list them without an attempt to establish an order.

First, the crash and the bail-out must defeat the attempt of the US
working class to circumvent class discipline by using financial
markets, rather than struggle, sweat and labor, to increase their
wages. While strikes and struggles have died out over the last two
decades, workers have tried to increase their income in three ways:
investing in the stock market, buying on credit, now even for
everyday expenses, getting equity money through housing, and
defaulting student loans. These tactics have clearly failed and now
millions of workers are now to pay twice for them, in terms of their
individual losses and in terms of the losses that will be inflicted
on the US proletariat as a class through the bailouts. If
successful, these bail-outs will in fact be conducive to a new
regime of low wages and zero entitlements the like of which we have
not seen since the last part of the 19th century.

The new regime will not be the end of market fundamentalism. It will
be a revitalization of market investment through the injection of
our social security money, and it will be a revitalization of some
parts of American industry now presumably taking advantage of the
fact that workers are desperate enough to accept any conditions just
to have a job and a roof over their heads.  A large part of capital
has for a long time been lusting to bring back America to the
situation before the New Deal, when employers had the upper hand.
The ``crisis'' is giving them a chance to return to that era.

That this time Social Security is at stake is due to various
factors.  First, Social Security is the last pot of money available
to re-launch the US market, in a context in which workers have no
savings and monetary flows from the outside are drying out. It is
also the last ``scandal'' on the list of US capitalists who have
relentlessly for years now told us it must go. Most important of
all, Social Security affects primarily the old, the retired, and it
is therefore an easier target than entitlements affecting the whole
working class.

So far workers in the US have resisted the privatization of Social
Security despite many governmental attempts. But cuts in pensions
have already gone a long way in the private sector, where employers
have given stocks of their companies to workers, or stopped putting
any money in their pension funds. The present crisis will extend
that to government backed pensions. And the road to it has been
cleared by years of false statements to the effect that Social
Security is unsustainable. Though it is a colossal lie, younger
generations have, however, accepted it. By cutting Social Security,
capital undoubtedly hopes to pit the young against the old, who (as
in Africa today) are being pictured as a crew of selfish
gerontocrats sucking up the funds the young need to build their
future.

The second target of the attack is the global resistance to
capital's appropriation of natural resources beginning with oil and
gas extraction. The defeat in Iraq is the peak of it. To this day,
despite an immense expenditure in war funding, the US has not been
able to put its hands on Iraqi oil.  Resistance to international
capital control over global energy resources has also come from
Venezuela, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Many more countries are also
refusing the neoliberal packet, especially in Latin America. These
refusals, not peak oil, are the true limits to capital's energy
plans.

There have also been bottlenecks in the exploitation of forests,
waters, minerals, and lands which structural adjustment was to
remove. A new ``rurban'' peasant movement has been growing that is
fighting independently of unions, parties, ``civil society'' and
NGOs, using direct action tactics, to re-appropriate the lands and
resources of which it has been robbed ``poaching, harvesting timber
or produce in commercial plantations, mining diamonds and gold
``illegally,'' or farming in the very lands from which they have
been ``legally'' excluded. When they move to the cities they squat
on urban land and take over land not used, private or public to farm
it for their needs. It is a vast re-appropriation movement that is
redefining the fundamentals of social reproduction globally. It has
put globalizers and adjusters out of government, it has forced the
nationalization of local resources, and has redistributed wealth and
political power, putting the World Bank and IMF almost out of
business in Latin America. It has defeated the attempt to completely
liberalize the economies of the TW through the rule of the World
Trade organization.  Though not sitting at the table, the specter of
the rural/urban peasants of the world has guided the refusal of TW
representative to comply.

Third, global migration has developed in ways that make it difficult
for governments to use it as a regulatory mechanism for the labor
market. Far from being an easy device for driving wages down,
migration is now an autonomous uncontrollable phenomenon, with a
logic of its own that is not reducible to the needs of the labor
market. It is important however to stress (against the idealization
of the migrant and of Exit, Exodus, Flight as the highest form of
struggle) that the struggle of the migrants is not superior to the
struggle of those who remain. In fact, migration can lead to the
dissolution of local organizations, it can create new divisions
among the locals, separating those benefiting from remittances and
those deprived of them, it can boost the cost of living in the area
of origin by the influx of new money and hook local economies more
strongly to the international monetary system, fostering the
expansion of monetary relations. These, of course, are not
inevitable results.  Actually, migrants have been able to use the
wage against the wage, to refuse impoverishment, to create
transnational networks, to move from country to country seeking a
better deal and nullifying national boundaries and borders.

The attacks on immigrants of recent months, which have seen the most
massive factory raids and deportations ever in the US, are responses
to this autonomy.  They are part of the attempt to create a
population of rightless workers, to function as a safety valve for
the labor market. Only if they have no rights can immigrants
function as regulatory mechanism for the labor market (in the same
way as mass incarceration and expansion of unpaid labor do). The
redefinition of immigrant workers as outlaws and the criminalization
of the working class---historically a key strategy to devalue labor
power---will continue to be a tool of the world order we will see
emerging from the crisis. But the crash will intensify the divisions
between ``natives'' and migrants, attack the organizational strength
of migrant organizations, unless there is strong opposition to this
strategy.

The Politics of the Financial Crisis and Our Response.

Crises are always a threat and an opportunity as they break down
business as usual, and reveal something of the inner workings and
nastiness of capitalism.  This one is not an exception and we can be
sure that what will come out of it will be greatly a result of what
people do in response to it. If the Great Depression is an
indication, it took more than ten years for capital to organize a
different social order. Much can happen in such a period.

The problem for us today is that workers are only organized around
electoral politics at best. And many still place more hope in a
racist and imperialist stance than in working class solidarity. We
certainly don't have a communist or an anarchist movement organizing
rallies of the unemployed, fight against evictions, or organize
``penny auctions'' of farms as they did during the Great Depression.
Nor do we have an anti-capitalist alternative as the Soviet Union
was in the eyes of many. We also do not have the kind of solidarity
that in the Great Depression led to invention of new commons, like
the hobo movement and the creation of ``jungle cities.''

Where to start then? This is what we need to work on in the coming
months and years. There is no clear path to this kind of
mobilization. But we need to start somewhere. On two things we can
get people to agree with us: First, we better find alternatives,
because, as things stand presently, we are so incestually connected
with capitalism that its demise threats our own existence. Second,
unless we organize to resist government planning, what lies ahead
for us, after a cut of more than a trillion dollars of our
``entitlements,'' looks much more like some variant of fascism than
socialism.

With warm greetings,

Silvia and George