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Open Letter to the Tokyo
Libertaire Group
Near the end of our meeting a couple weeks ago, Mr. Miura asked me to get in touch with
you when I came to Tokyo again. In a moment of unthinking mere politeness I said that I
would. I would therefore like to clarify my position. In fact when I come to Tokyo again I
will not contact you because our one meeting, brief as it was, was enough: I have no
interest in your group.
Contrary to your suggestion that while other anarchists perhaps had many of the faults
that I criticized, you Japanese anarchists were somehow different, I must say
that you are unfortunately quite typical, in no way different from anarchists in other
countries. You rummage among the corpses of Proudhon, the male-chauvinist ideologue of
small cooperative capitalism; of our Bakunin, the proto-bolshevik; of World
War I supporter Kropotkin; of the state-collaborating Spanish CNT (now once again trying
to bureaucratically organize the struggles of the radical Spanish
proletariat); and of various old oriental imitators thereof. You want to construct a
mythical history for yourselves because you dont know how to make real history now.
Vaguely aware of your own impotence, you hope that it will go away if you join your
individual impotencies together. What actually happens is that what little creative energy
you do possess is frittered away in the endless discussion and pursuit of such pointless,
spectacular projects as a revived Anarchist Federation.
Like most anarchists, you have developed a truly ludicrous collective unconsciousness
as a defense against any challenge to your complacency. Confronted with a practical
critique, you never heard of it, or forgot it, or are too
busy for it. Only one of you even knew about my letter and the Society of the Spectacle
theses in CIRAs Anarchism #4. Are Japanese anarchists writings so
boring that you dont even bother to read each others publications?
I cannot yet read the Japanese in Libertaire magazine, but the incoherent
ramblings in the English sections are pitiful enough. But perhaps that is only the
responsibility of the two editors. Perhaps the rest of you have no role in the
magazine. (Or only a subordinate one?) When I thus asked you what other projects
you had, some of you spoke vaguely of support for the Sanrizuka struggle but
were unable to give any concrete details of what this support consisted of, or
in what long-range strategical perspective you participated in it. Another simply said
that he was a worker, implying apparently that this excused him from doing any
other activity because he was too busy. What then is the purpose of his belonging to your
group? What in fact is the purpose of your group?
It may be that I have judged you too much on the basis of the two or three people who
talked most. It may be that one or two of you are more serious. If so, it is up to you to
begin from the critiques you recognize, define your projects (however small but concrete),
and act. This is just what it is impossible for you to do in Libertaire. The
collective toleration of endless bullshit neutralizes any concrete individual effort in a
stew of contradictory, consequenceless opinions. Your group is nothing but an
obstacle to your real possibilities.
Down with the state! Down with musty anarchism!
KEN KNABB
Fujinomiya, 5 November 1977
English and Japanese versions of this open letter were sent to several dozen anarchist
groups in Japan. Reprinted in Public Secrets: Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb.
No copyright.
[Russian
translation of this text]
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