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Trouble Is My Business
Letter From Afar (Denevert)
Remarks on Remarks
Some Clarifications
Papal Bull
First Things First
Easily Foreseeable Refusals
The Bureau in Japan
Bureau News
. . . But there are not only personal obstacles, there are
also obstacles linked to the conditions of the present moment of this era
conditions that inevitably influence our activity, giving rise to discouragement,
hesitations, perplexity. In a very unwarranted but undeniable manner, we are so far only a
very small minority to have on our shoulders almost all the responsibility,
not, of course, for the situationist project itself, in which many people today feel more
or less confusedly concerned, but for its theoretical politics, neglected by
everyone else or envisioned from the perspective of classical revolutionary
ideologies. . . .
In general, most revolutionaries still understand too poorly what should be done or
what is worth doing, and how to do it. We may be more interested in and capable of doing
one type of project, but most of the time we are pressured into some other task, requiring
more abstract effort, because it seems more urgent and strategic. For example, you have
made your way to the front lines of the global struggle for a theoretico-practice, but you
have done so in a zone of the world where the most elementary banalities and above
all how to make good use of them are still almost unknown. You thus find yourself
confronted with this contradiction: In order to make yourself understood and to further
your project, you have to continue to give priority to conveying the basic
banalities until such point that the spreading awareness of those banalities has developed
an irreversible momentum of its own (this qualitative point will have to be
determined considering the specific conditions of the US) before being able to speak
exclusively at the better level you can and want to. One of the difficulties in this task
is that you cant go about it as if you were still in the Europe of 1960-67 (as do
Point-Blank and Diversion in different ways), but neither can you go about it as if you
were in the Europe of 1974. You have to accomplish an enormous work of classical
propaganda in addition to your more current tasks. But it would be totally
unacceptable to do all this in two different manners (for example: a simplistic language
aimed at the masses and a more sophisticated one intended for more advanced
revolutionaries). You therefore have to find a style of expression and action
that effectively reconciles these two poles of your practice.
. . . There are at least thirty essential books lacking today,
that is to say some thirty fundamental themes that have yet to be developed by anyone. And
there are at least that many hypotheses worth being seriously explored. To note only the
former, there are a dozen quite judicious perspectives and projects to be found in the
SIs Orientation Debate which have had no follow-up. (If no one does anything about
them, Ill enjoy enumerating them publicly one of these days.) All these pages for
theory that remain blank thats the scandal of revolutionaries
activity to which I refer in Misery of Theory. . . .
My main accomplishment so far has been to develop for myself and to some extent
publicly a sort of theory of theory. . . . In this theory
of theory nothing is formally, much less definitively, fixed; I see it only as a
sort of platform enabling us to confront the uncertainty of our enterprise and to reduce
as well as possible the arbitrary element there is in each of our
choices. . . .
(Later on, on the basis of these developments, we will be able to apply ourselves more
resolutely to what is called a strategy of agitations. But if a politics of
agitation would be impossible or ridiculous if we wanted to organize it from the point
where we are now, nevertheless even a slight public awareness of our present activity
already constitutes in itself an agitation.)
As is often lost sight of, the critique of everyday life is not solely a
critique of what the present social organization sets up positively or traces negatively
in the everyday life of individuals; it is also the critique of everything else that
assures the functioning of this society, as well as a clarification of everything to which
the everyday life of individuals cant begin to accede short of a revolution. It is
forgotten, for example, that if Marxs thought is really a critique of everyday
life, in order to make such a statement it is completely irrelevant to know the
relative richness or poorness of the life of the individual Marx. Its richness
is sufficiently demonstrated by the fact that he was able to accomplish what he did.
Marxs thought is already a critique of everyday life by the simple fact
that he was able to speak about class society in an anti-ideological manner,
breaking with the methods and representations by which this society presents itself. I
should say that I find myself in total theoretical and practical opposition to that entire
situationist current which holds as revolutionary only what brings an
immediate enrichment to ones own everyday life and which,
setting out from such a standpoint, obviously never enriches
anything. . . .
I envisage putting out a sort of periodic Remarks in order to settle all my
accounts in one place, so as to avoid scattered decisions and clarifications, which are
tedious to implement and less effective because more often than not they are only known of
separately by the people directly concerned, and not understood as forming part
of a unitary practice, part of a precise strategy. . . .
Concerning the publication in Paris of the Orientation Debate:
It is desirable that the heritage of the SI and by this mediation the heritage
of past revolutionary theory and of the old workers movement as a whole belong more
and more to the entire era. It is especially desirable that it find as rapidly as possible
as many competent inheritors as possible. And we ourselves rarely know where
such inheritors are to be found. The publication of the Débat has the advantage
of confronting these potential inheritors with the raw truth of an organization,
and no longer only with a carefully calculated interpretation of this truth (La
Véritable Scission), however correct that interpretation may be, a reading of which,
without the concrete evidence of the Débat, is inevitably abstract and exterior.
With the Débat readers now find themselves concretely faced with the
hesitations, the weaknesses, the unanswered questions; along, of course, with many
valuable qualities and perspectives that they can use in their own activities.
. . .This publication contributes toward reabsorbing the myth of the SI and its
aftermath back into concrete practical questions. . . .
An objection that will inevitably be made . . . is that by publishing the Débat
we are, precisely because of the glorious names attached to these texts, fostering a still
more stupid use of them. We are obviously not unaware of the imbecilic use that will be
made of them; but by intentionally nourishing this imbecilic use we are dialectically
creating the possibility of a better use; that is, we are going to force certain people to
impose a better use of these texts to counteract the stupid one. . . .
By publicly compromising this aspect of the truth of the SI, we have
compromised the public a little more with the truth of the SI.
The choice of the title Débat dOrientation de lex-Internationale
Situationniste, which was adopted on my proposal, partakes of my theoretical tactic
developed in Misery of Theory to consider the SI and its
theoretico-practice in the past tense. It is desirable that, losing all
encouraging external reference, each revolutionary feel alone before his task, that is,
that he feel that he has to take on his own responsibilities, without even the comfort of
a label to identify with (which is the first step toward autonomy and the possibility of
revolutionary associations without militants). In doing this, I am really only
continuing what Debord began in smashing the SI. If Debord was in a good position to smash
the SI from the inside against its unworthy members, he was in return in a rather poor
position to destroy the myth of the SI at the exterior without thereby transfering the
drawbacks of that myth onto himself. As has already been noted by various revolutionaries,
the myth of the SI could be definitively smashed only from the outside.
In losing the SI as a frame of reference, this revolutionary era now finds itself alone
with itself (which is the conclusion of the Theses on the SI and Its
Time). . . .
Regarding possible contacts with other revolutionaries: In order to limit the risks of
engaging in false dialogues and of getting embroiled in spectacular political relations;
in order not to feed the delirium of spectators of things revolutionary; in order to avoid
wasting time; and in order to avoid direct or indirect contact with personal enemies, I am
refusing from now on to meet or correspond with anyone who has not already openly
implicated himself in some activity. For me, it is no longer a matter of finding
out whether would-be dialoguers are sincere or dishonest, brave or cowardly,
intelligent or not, or whether they are liberated enough for our taste, or what they think
of themselves, what they think of me, or what they think, period; but of judging, before
even having to verify all that, up to what point of practico-theoretical
experimentation they have conducted their own life, that is to say, up to what point
they are implicated in the revolution as I am. . . .
(Daniel Denevert to Ken Knabb, February 1974)
[original French text of this letter]
The responses to my pamphlet Remarks on
Contradiction and Its Failure (March 1973) were invested with clarity, well expressing
the complacency, the impotence, the lack of imagination, the stubborn clinging to
illusions in a word, the ostrichism of the milieu I criticized
therein.
A Point-Blank emissary in Paris announced that I was an imbecile, an asshole and
Point-Blanks number-one enemy, and that if he ever ran into me he would
smash my face. Others, less directly criticized, were nonetheless disconcerted that I had
the nerve (they would say the stupidity) to criticize my own mistakes. Faced with an act
so inconsistent with prevalent situationist bravado, they could only see there some weird
sort of exhibitionistic masochism. The British group Piranha came up with the model of
this genre: So Knabb himself announces in his Remarks that he is still a
pro-situ! What a futile exercise! He seems determined to drown in his own shit. The
members of Piranha, of course, have no pro-situ taint. Oh, maybe they did a few years ago,
but after reading Real Split they decided that they didnt anymore; or at
least if they had any lingering doubts, they certainly werent going to
announce them. This element of Remarks was in fact precisely
calculated to undermine this sort of complacency, particularly among the naïve Americans
previously more inclined to dismiss the whole business as some bizarre French affair, but
now puzzling anxiously over critiques of the pro-situ to figure out just what this is all
about and whether by chance it should happen to have something to do with them. They know
that to be a pro-situ is a bad thing and so they are prepared to incorporate
it into the ranks of their ideological no-nos along with ideology, for
example. But first they must find out what it means! Gone, alas, are the days when all you
had to do to become a situationist was to declare yourself one.
Some thought that what I wrote was perhaps true, but wondered why I would circulate a
pamphlet on such a specialized subject to so many people. The blank
incomprehension with which Remarks would mainly be received was not lost on me as
I mailed it out to Contradictions entire mailing list. But the critical,
non-narrative form of the text that makes it relatively inaccessible to the passive makes
it correspondingly more useful to those confronting similar problems in their own
practice. Remarks and others of its genre that have begun to appear will be read
more as the activities they discuss become less specialized.
Others, in contrast, found many of the points discussed in Remarks trivial or
banal. Well, many a promising project has smashed up on the ignorance of such
trivialities. I know of no radical group, including the SI, that has not made almost every
mistake noted apropos of Contradiction (assuming the group is radical enough to even
confront problems at this level).
The criticism of a text for its having left out something except in
the cases where this effectively constitutes a lie by omission is the
indication par excellence of the failure to grasp the process of the negative.
Thus Remarks has been criticized for not presenting a balanced overall
perspective on the movement; but that was not its purpose. It was primarily a critique, a
correction of Contradictions orientation toward the movement (and first of
all of its very notion of such a unified movement), of the way we went about a
certain task. Others worried that it wasnt padded with a bunch of stuff about
history, the proletariat, etc.
But if some found it not situationist enough, others found it too much so. A certain
sector of old soldiers (including some ex-members of Contradiction), shell-shocked from
the exigencies of situationist practice, wants to repress the whole traumatic affair. This
tendency, usually to be found rummaging around in the less taxing world of ultra-leftism,
is disturbed that while I lay into things situationist, I dont throw out the method
with the ideology. Just as some people see revolution as an unfortunate, accidental
disturbance of an otherwise well-running society by outside agitators, these
people see in polemical debates and splits an unfortunate, accidental disturbance of an
otherwise nicely progressing revolutionary movement.
Others want to invoke the epoch as the final explanation for the pure and
simple failure of all the situationist groups. If they manifested themselves publicly in
the past, they now denounce this past (including whatever meritorious elements there may
have been) in toto; while others who in that period didnt manifest
themselves at all now emerge, records spotless because blank, to spit contemptuously on
all the rest. This is the key to the rage against my dirty-judaical activity.
How dare I confront this experience! How dare I search out the points of choice.
Whats the point of stating the failures of the past period? says one, as
if once one has noted one important error, all related moments in that necessarily very
mixed and confused terrain which is that of present revolutionary experimentation can be
dismissed as equally wrong or worthless. A diminishing force of cognition marks those who
fail to concretely confront their failures. Even if still capable of partially perceptive
formulations, their stubborn maintenance of a blind spot or an undialectical position
ineluctably cripples any subsequent theoretical effort.
Following the appearance of Remarks and the Reich: How To Use
translation, certain people have naïvely fantasized me conducting
character-smashing sessions. But if the composition of Remarks was
aided by a simultaneous personal experimentation, I have in many places explicitly refused
to present such individual breakthroughs as being in themselves revolutionary. (In its
December 1974 reprinting, I pointed out the one phrase in Remarks susceptible to
being misconstrued in this way.) Theres only one real character-smashing session:
revolution. Remarks was an attempt not to come to terms with myself
psychologically, but to seize a moment of history and reverse it.
Certain people have wondered why I and others take the risk of conducting our activity
so openly, under our own names. We obviously recognize the appropriateness of
clandestinity in the Stalinist and fascist countries, or elsewhere to the extent that
ones activities involve a significant element of illegality. But the particular
theoretico-practical tasks we set ourselves while benefiting considerably from the
public continuity that enables the correction of misunderstandings or
falsifications, the exposure of the coherent context of our activity, of concrete
applications, etc. entail a relatively small risk. While we are little known we
will be ignored as harmless (the spectacle is to a large extent a victim of its own image
of its opposition); to the extent that some of us become better known which will
simply be an incidental effect of the advance of the revolution our suppression
would also be known and would merely draw more attention to our theses without at all
stopping their work. If some of our theses remain to an extent occult it is
because of their intrinsic nature rendered temporarily inaccessible to many by
socially enforced ignorance not because they are held secret by us in preparation
for a coup détat. In contrast to the leaders of a terrorist or neo-bolshevik group,
we are not at all indispensable to our movement. The State cant control
the revolution through anything it would do to us or get us to do, because the revolution
is right where we want it: out of our control.
* * *
The situationists breaks and exclusions have often been sarcastically identified
with Stalinist purges. In fact the two cases could hardly be more dissimilar. In the
Stalinist bureaucracies the Party disposes of all social life, whereas revolutionaries
as with the proletariat in general do not even dispose fully of their own
lives. Thus, to be purged from the Party is to be deprived of participation (however
narrow it might be) in the ruling machine and in the material advantages such a position
brings with it (not to mention the possibility of prison, torture, execution, exile,
etc.); whereas to be excluded from a revolutionary group is to be deprived of nothing
except perhaps a bit of stupid prestige. In the West, the same confusionist freedom
of expression that makes open polarizations possible makes them necessary. There is
no right to participate in an activity that conveys no privileges. The
question of possible injustices or contested decisions resolves itself very
simply: one who has something to say will make his presence felt beyond all attempts to
ignore or denigrate him. It is obvious that a rebuffed or excluded individual who
isnt able to engage in an autonomous activity thereby confirms the appropriateness
of his separation from a collective activity supposedly arising from autonomous
participants. Not to mention those whose ulterior activity takes a different direction.
* * *
The reader will not find the totality in this journal, but simply a certain number of
formulations whose relation to the totality is calculated. Those who present everything
each time assume a reader who is ignorant of everything else and incapable or undesirous
of exploring more for himself, and this spectacular tactic is the best means of making
sure that he stays that way. Although I and some others have devoted a particular
attention to examining the process of modern revolutionary activity and
first of all have drawn attention to the very importance of this process, so scandalously
neglected by everyone else an element of the narrowness for which I
have been reproached is merely the result of my beginning from where I find myself. The
particular topics dealt with here are somewhat arbitrary and dont necessarily imply
any lack of importance to those I havent dealt with. Nothing is outside our project;
but many truths are not worth saying because it wouldnt make any difference if they
werent true. I rarely make mistakes, having never concealed that I have
nothing to say on the numerous subjects in which I am ignorant, and habitually keeping in
mind several contradictory hypotheses on the possible development of events where I
dont yet discern the qualitative leap (Guy Debord, in the Orientation
Debate).
In a pamphlet mainly directed against Daniel Denevert (see Un Anti-Denevert
in the Chronique des Secrets Publics), Point-Blank mentions me as a would-be
pope of a sub-situ milieu. Deneverts latest ally, Ken Knabb, has
built a career on his organizational failure and on his commercial association with the
statistician of the SI, Jean-Pierre Voyer. Among popes, usually noted rather for
their infallibility and organizational cunning, I am undoubtedly the first to have built a
career on the exposure of my organizational failure. This sort of spiteful
paranoia can only see in any activity that contradicts its own the result of
opportunistic, behind-the-scenes deals and intrigues.*
Jean-Pierre Voyer had in fact nothing to do, least of all economically, with the
American publication of his pamphlet Reich: How To Use,
which was financed by two friends and me, which commercial association has
netted us a loss of about $200. (All the other publications Ive been involved in
have also been losses, with one exception; a printshop worker liked Vaneigems Treatise
so well that he printed Contradictions now out-of-print edition of Part I at less
than cost.) My actual relation with Voyer hardly bears out Point-Blanks attempt to
characterize me as one of his followers. Shortly before the completion of my
translation of his text, I first wrote to him regarding some questions about it. I
published Reich: How To Use in June 1973, along with a comic poster announcing
it, and reprinted excerpts of one of his letters under the title Discretion
Is the Better Part of Value. Voyer proved, however, when I met him that fall, quite
oblivious to the possible development or concrete application of many of his earlier
theses, and I told him that his megalomaniac disengagement as a pure theorist
from the real movement precluded any substantive relation between us. Voyers
Encyclopedia has since been published under the title Introduction à la
Science de la Publicité (Champ Libre, 1975), which, although it contains
incidentally several partially useful points, is scarred by a fetishism of its central
concept and of Hegel, whose philosophy is not really detourned because not sufficiently
devalorized.
As for Daniel Denevert, I have maintained a particularly close
correspondence and collaboration with him over the last two years, resulting in a better
geographical coordination of our activities and above all a valuable exchange of ideas and
experiences. But my relations with him and the other members of the CRQS have never been
formalized and are conducted in the framework described in the Notice
Concerning the Reigning Society and Those Who Contest It put out in November 1974 by
my Bay Area comrades and me. Although I have on occasion used the editorial
we, the Bureau of Public Secrets has always consisted only of me. If a certain
degree of accord is manifested between some others and me, it stems not from fiat but from
reality. The majority of the publications put out by the various Notice signers
over the last three years, for example, have been completed before being shown to the
others; and I did not even know of several of the projects most strikingly confirmative of
my work until after they were published.

It is obviously not influence which may be simply the influence of the truth or
of an exemplary activity that makes a hierarch, but its being exerted to reinforce
its unilaterality or the image of its absence. It is a strange pope who
continually throws people onto their own responsibility. In the final analysis, whatever
one may say about the merit of one or another demystifying or educative tactic, it is the
underdog who must take the principal initiative in suppressing his
hierarchical dependence. Those who put the onus on the leaders only want
better ones. Our movement does not depend on the good fortune of the cleverly
self-negating leaders of Leninist and anarchist mythology; people have to use their heads
and demystify themselves of notions of the godlike qualities of revolutionary
theorists, or of the converse mystification of considering them as just
theorists who dont do anything but only write. Those who
accuse us of arrogance and manipulation havent thought about
what theyre saying; turning people off with arrogance is the last thing
the manipulators ever do. It is invariably those people who tell us that they can
understand us but that the masses arent ready yet who call us
elitists. We treat others as if they were autonomous just in case they
are, and to make sure in any case that they are at least so from us.
Various individuals, wishing to have the best of both worlds, approach us, letting us
know privately how they agree with us and of the critiques they have of the
various dubious milieus from which they come. It is invariably these people the
most worthless who have the strange idea that they are the most valuable, that we
should feel grateful for their interest because, after all, If you
cant talk to us, who can you talk to? They suppose that they can find
an interesting encounter, or even a place here, without rocking their own boat. Having
compromised themselves in nothing, they are free, once, as is usual, they are rebuffed, to
return none the worse to their previous milieu, where they can blather on about their
relation with the situationists while maintaining an image of autonomy: we
werent able to convince them to join us, etc. An ex-member
of the Venceremos Brigade (peace corps to Russias neo-colony in the Caribbean), for
example, approached Contradiction and explained to me how they had agreed to suppress
various embarrassing details of life in Cuba in their glowing reports on it. Yet so far as
I know he never expressed these interesting revelations publicly, apparently being too
busy searching for some radical project to do.
The Bureau therefore automatically rejects anyone who approaches it without openly
defending the theses he claims to agree with or without having settled accounts with his
own situation in the case of the more compromised milieus, denouncing and taking
leave of them with the maximum of noise and clarity.
In addition to the routine rebuffing of diverse would-be dialoguers, from Peoples
Churches and crypto-Maoists to a rather wide range of media-freak nihilists, the following
are among the concrete proposals I have refused with all the rudeness they merited:
to establish contact with the Italian Reichian
organization;
to contribute material for publication in the magazine Guerrilla Art;
to provide information on the Bureau for a professional writer doing an article
on the current neo-Reichian movement for the magazine Human Behavior.
In March 1974 Tommy Haruki addressed a letter to various anarchist or libertarian
groups around the world, proposing to introduce them to comrades in Japan by way of the
journal of CIRA-NIPPON (Center of International Research of Anarchism) and
adding, Your expression of todays problems on anarchism would be very much
desired also. I received a copy, to which I responded, in part, as follows:
. . . We think that anarchism remains an abstract opponent of
the system because of its failure to seriously attempt to comprehend modern society or to
develop a coherent revolutionary theory. For the most part, all that anarchists possess is
a pathetic faith in the label Anarchy. They are allergic to rigor: most of
them make a virtue of parading their confusion and their inability to accomplish the
smallest practical task. They justify the most stupid failures to take concrete sanctions
against enemies, or to effect decisions in order to clarify and advance their own
practice (e.g. to rebuff passive followers and spectators), by appealing to an abstract
anti-authoritarianism. So they end up with nothing but their frustrated good
intentions.
I enclose a copy of some theses relating to
anarchism from Guy Debords book The Society of the Spectacle [see §§91-94] . . . which you may find useful.
We certainly agree with you that what we
need here and now is not an anthology of millenarian doctrines or revolutionary works in
the past and that an interchange of todays information, inter-criticism,
interaction of todays experiences is essential: not with an eclectic aim of
bringing together a mass of ideologies, but as a step to precision, to lucidity,
to the development of a more and more coherent theoretico-practice in the new
revolutionary movement.
In this context, the present dialogue initiated
by the Center of International Research of Anarchism is extremely minimal.
Ultimately, for example, it would be of more interest to us to be in contact with one
Japanese comrade who was in conscious practical accord with the Bureaus activities
than with a hundred libertarians with whom all we had in common were a few
vague sympathies. But it is natural that the first internationalist efforts of
the new movement will begin from relatively confused bases, and necessarily pass through
some rather banal mediations. . . .
Haruki saw to it that the Debord theses and most of my letter were published in the
CIRA journal (Anarchism #4, August 1974, translated by H. Komizo), observing that
the critiques applied perfectly to the Japanese anarchist milieu: In this sense, an
appearance of your criticism in their report . . . will be some bitter pill for
them and all other libertarians of their ilk.
Harukis address is: Manno Public Apartment No. 147, 2999 Manno-Hara-Shinden,
Fujinomiya, Shizuoka, Japan. [Now obsolete. Harukis current address is Agora, Tommy
Haruki, Nishi-machi 9-3, Fujinomiya, Shizuoka 418-0056, Japan.]
Two of my pamphlets were published by the CRQS in 1974, Remarques sur le groupe
Contradiction et son échec, translated by Daniel Denevert (April), and Double-Réflexion,
translated by Joël Cornuault (November), both with my collaboration. The Chronique
des Secrets Publics reprinted an extract of a letter from me to Cornuault,
Remarques sur le style de Double-Reflection. On our side, Robert Cooperstein,
Dan Hammer and I published in September 1974 a translation of Deneverts Theory of Misery, Misery of Theory. In the same pamphlet we also
included the Declaration Concerning the CRQS and a section from
Deneverts earlier pamphlet, For the Intelligence of Some
Aspects of the Moment.
* * *
In November 1974 Double-Reflection was reprinted in England by Spontaneous
Combustion (Box LBD, 197 Kings Cross Road, London WC1). [Address now obsolete.]
* * *
Extracts of a letter of mine of October 1973 to Jean-Pierre Voyer and others have been
reprinted in Isaac Cronins and Chris Shutess recent journal, Implications.
* * *
Most of the BPS publications including the present journal have been
published in editions of 2000 copies.
* * *
Publications of the BPS are on file at:
- Berkeley Public Library (Boss Files, Reference Room), Shattuck and
Kittredge, Berkeley.
- Tamiment Library, Bobst Library Building, 70 Washington Square South, New York City.
- The Public Library, 197 Kings Cross Road, London.
- International Institute of Social History, Herengracht 262-266, Amsterdam. [Now
Cruquiusweg 31, Amsterdam.]
The Bureau collection also includes as its Prehistory
most of the publications of the CEM, 1044 and Contradiction. I have also
distributed separately a number of copies of my Introduction to the
Prehistory Section of the Bureau Collection (July 1973).
* * *
Addresses of Notice comrades: [All these addresses are now
obsolete.]
Tita Carrión, Robert Cooperstein: P.O. Box 950, Berkeley, CA 94701
Isaac Cronin, Dan Hammer: P.O. Box 14221, San Francisco, CA 94114
Gina Rosenberg, Chris Shutes: P.O. Box 4502, Berkeley, CA 94704
New address of the CRQS:
Centre de Recherche sur la Question Sociale, B.P. 218, 75865 Paris cedex 18, France
[Now obsolete.]
[NOTE]
* In the pamphlet At Disk: The Situationist Movement in Historical
Perspective which appeared just before this journal was going to press
two ex-members of the now dissolved Point-Blank devote a large section to a critique of
the Knabbists. Their polemic against us maintains their old tradition of
specious, infantile critiques, including the attribution to us of numerous positions and
motives we have never expressed or had.
From the journal Bureau of Public Secrets #1 (January 1976). Reprinted in Public
Secrets: Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb. The translation of the Letter From
Afar has been slightly modified.
No copyright.
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