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Copyright’s Discontents

How should Meta’s cynical use of Library Genesis inform political praxis?


29/01/2025

Two fairly annoying events have heralded in the New Year. The first of these is that the Library Genesis project, an online repository of copies of books and academic articles, has been seeing major downtime, amidst rumours that they may shut down permanently. The second is the news that Meta, in training their Llama language model, had been using LibGen as a training corpus: a decision apparently approved by Zuckerberg himself. The idea of one of the wealthiest corporations in the world accessing literary, academic and scientific works for free, to feed into a sphere of technology that is already very divisive, has understandably upset a lot of people. What are we to make of this?


I shall begin by describing a phenomenon that has characterised the world economy since 2008—that of economic crisis. There are many theories of crisis within the broad spectrum of Marxian thought, as well as many intersections between them. For instance, some Marxists view the present crisis as a consequence of the tendency in the rate of profit to fall — which posits that as human labour comes to be replaced with machinery, a crisis of surplus value (and therefore profit) begins to emerge. Others disagree, viewing the lowered rate of profit as a symptom of overproduction, rather than the direct cause. Through this reading, the contradictions between the capitalist imperatives to produce commodities and to keep the costs of labour down end up cementing in a dynamic where production grows faster than consumption, leading to the production of commodities that cannot find buyers. These debates are as academically tedious as they are extensive; and some theorists, even when disagreeing about cause and effect, seem to agree about the visibility of multiple modes of crisis today. 

What does any of this have to do with generative AI? Regardless of what theory of crisis one subscribes to, our present reality is at least somewhat easier to characterise — capital today is simply unable (or unwilling) to find productive and profitable outlets for investment. The US and the EU, responding to the crisis of 2008 by opting for quantitative easing as monetary policy, have been begging capitalists to reverse this, to find some way out of crisis. Consequently, both venture capital and Big Tech have benefited immensely from the free money released into the financial system. They have put this money to good use by pumping it into tech platforms that act as unproductive, perennially loss-making middlemen; into outright scams like NFTs; and into the latest such iteration, generative AI. 

The abysmal profitability of many of these investment avenues has made it particularly urgent for capitalists to modify legislation, in order to cheapen the labour and resources that drive accumulation. Labour is thus rendered more “flexible” through being thrust out of the formal wage relationship; nature is transformed into fuel for production; social interaction is torn apart and reconstituted in ways that best suit the accumulation of data. Nowhere has this been more true than with generative AI, with its reliance on the Internet as a cheap source of mass training data for generative models; on low-wage annotators to align said models; and on immense amounts of energy, required both to train and deploy these models. 

Enter LibGen, or Library Genesis. LibGen, an online archive of literary and academic works—photocopied, scanned, manually transcribed—has been a source of much comfort and utility to the millions of users that frequent it for material. LibGen, as  this excellent history points out, emerged from a very particular milieu that existed in the Soviet Union. Driven by the desire for culture to be as accessible as possible, to enable “the cultural development of the masses”, books and literary works were kept very cheap; copyrights were often not recognised, particularly when authorising translations. At the same time, the Soviet bureaucracy’s widespread censorship of literary material led to the emergence of underground libraries, where readers would share, proliferate, and collect censored material. The obsession with collection, with hoarding, with the hungry archival of knowledge, all emerged from the knowledge that the state could render entire bodies of literature inaccessible. 

Given that the Internet has made LibGen a shade more accessible than Xerox-driven archiving in dingy Moscow cellars, it has seen multiple attacks over the years, including multiple lawsuits from publishers, academic or otherwise. But the Internet is rather hard to regulate; it isn’t hard to host mirrors for LibGen’s database, which isn’t even obscenely large—at around 30 terabytes, given a rough storage cost of €15/TB, the entire database would cost less than €500 to store. Based in Russia, LibGen is also rather good at hiding the individuals who run it, making individual retribution unlikely. This hasn’t stopped publishers from trying, and lawsuits and outages have been frequent; but the website continues to thrive, with frequent updates with new books, new URLs, and active peer-to-peer sharing.


Projects like LibGen tend to be somewhat controversial, especially amongst those of us who are (or who have friends who are) struggling writers or artists or musicians. In a world where this sort of piracy was the norm, the argument goes, there would be no way for these workers to ever make a living. We should be paying writers for their work; not doing so is theft, and what Meta are resorting to right now is precisely this—theft on a grand scale. How do we protect writers from this theft? The best method we have under the current system: copyright law. 

This argument is however rather defeatist, as well as detached from actually-existing copyright law. First, getting the obvious out of the way—piracy cannot be stopped, not without deeply authoritarian internet firewalls. Duplicating and sharing digital material is trivial, and attempts to slap on increasingly complex DRM instead end up becoming a nuisance to paying customers. With that out of the way, it is important to remember that capitalism is rather successful at creating schisms between workers. Copyright law achieves precisely this, by claiming to act as the last line of defence against the impoverishment of writers who are thrust into a dependence upon the invisible hand of the free market. It reifies writers and artists as property owners, and reifies their material interests as directly opposed to the cultural interests of the masses. This process has only grown stronger in the neoliberal period, which promises both greater immiseration and potentially greater payoffs, relying upon its ideological trappings to try and convince writers and artists that they are all temporarily embarrassed millionaires, rather than workers who deserve a living wage. We should be clear, however, that this is far from the only feasible way to ensure the reproduction of writers. Alternative models that work for both readers and writers are not impossible to imagine or achieve, even under capitalism. The academic model of state-guaranteed wages for open-access literary output, for instance, is one such actually-existing, semi-functional alternative.

Relying on copyright law, as it turns out, ends up being actively detrimental not just to consumers, but also to writers. As Cory Doctorow lucidly points out, by reinforcing the position of writers as businesses rather than as workers, we atomise them, giving them rights that can later trivially be bargained away from them. The function of publishing houses, the prime beneficiaries of this arrangement, has traditionally been to provide the fixed capital necessary for book printing, marketing, distribution, etc. In doing so, they have successfully cemented their position as mediators, giving them immense power over writers in a system that writers have little choice but to buy into. Publishers thus gain the ability to squeeze writers’ wages below their domestic minimum wage, or to outright ask writers to pay to publish. Nowhere has this parasitic tendency been more visible than in academia, where academics see nary a cent of the vast amounts of money that flow into the academic publishing houses that build enclosures around vast stores of knowledge that they played no role in creating. Above all, the construction and reinforcement of this regime of property rights serves only to enable the stunting of the cultural and material development of the masses—transforming the act of piracy into genuine political praxis

The birth of generative AI has highlighted the incredibly precarious nature of intellectual property rights, and how they have always served the accumulation of capital—with the interests of writers and academics themselves remaining an inconvenient afterthought. The law giveth and the law taketh away; and what we are witnessing today is precisely the law taking away, as these established relations see renegotiation in search of profit. Publishers, record labels, film studios and their ilk have been champing at the bit to sell their vast stores of media to generative AI firms (or, potentially, to train their own models). Meta’s turn to LibGen is rather amusing in this context. Had the countless petty lawsuits against LibGen actually succeeded at shutting it down, Meta could simply have paid publishing houses (and maybe an indirect pittance to writers), and achieved much the same result anyway. But they are fully aware that today, when capital is firmly fixated upon generative AI as the harbinger of a renewed capitalism, they needn’t even bother negotiating with yesterday’s capitalists. They will face at most a slap on their wrist for these very publicly acknowledged copyright violations. 


People’s annoyances with generative AI aren’t hard to understand. It is one of the most striking examples of the deskilling of labour in recent history, affecting hitherto well-compensated workers. The milieu in which it has emerged—the painfully cringe, Revenge of the Nerds-esque Leitkultur that permeates Silicon Valley—only rubs salt into this wound. But the substitution of writers with AI-generated slop is yet another step in the long history of the global devastation of skilled labour, and must be engaged with as such, rather than by getting lost in futile battles over property. Very few institutions are as deeply mutually imbricated with the capitalist mode of production as property rights are; they exist to serve the accumulation of capital, and can see rapid renegotiation when the site of accumulation shifts. This is precisely what is happening now, allowing Big Tech to ride roughshod over the interests of both writers and publishers. 

We must also remember that our concerns with these models lie not in how they are trained, but in how they are deployed. Academics have been working with human language data for decades. This is a good thing; the open availability of a myriad genres of language data have contributed immensely to research into linguistics, cognitive science, sociology, and so on. The open availability of literary and scientific works to the general public is also a good thing, unless we actively desire that the masses remain culturally, scientifically, and intellectually stunted.The use of machinery to deskill, discipline, and beat down labour is precisely that—an issue with how machinery is used. This process is fundamental to the capitalist mode of production, and must be framed as the assault on labour that it is, rather than relying on appeals to property rights. The use of generative AI to shed workers en masse must be fought through a principled Luddism; through an opposition to capital’s use of machinery to discipline and replace workers; and through building solidarities both with other workers and with the consumers of written text. More importantly, we must reject the cynical fiction that property rights are a necessary evil—and what better moment than now, when the Faustian bargain between artists and publishers has revealed itself to be entirely one-sided?

Against the Weaponisation of Antisemitism in Education 

Statement by several campaigning groups


28/01/2025

Deutsche Version folgt / German version follows

We, the cosigned groups, fully support the open letter by students and academics “Against the Weaponisation of Antisemitism to Impose Censorship in Education.”

We must stand united against censorship, state infringement on academic freedom, police violence on campuses, and racist discrimination in institutes of education. A new Bundestag resolution, which will be voted upon on January 29th, aims to enact and legitimize these policies in German schools and universities.

Over the last 15 months, attacks on freedom of expression, assembly, art, and academia have increased exponentially in Germany. They have been executed by the ruling political parties and prompted and applauded by the far right. Like the resolution passed in November, which similarly instrumentalizes antisemitism, this resolution is the work of SPD, Grüne, FDP and CDU parties, but will mostly profit the AfD.

Now these parties are once again set to vote together with the AfD to pass this new resolution. We hold every politician who votes “yes” accountable for their collaboration on the renewed rise to power of fascism in Germany.

The freedom to think differently must be protected at all costs. Education must be free from police interference and state doctrine. As a site of debate, learning, and questioning, universities have often been at the forefront of progressive politics. Education, just like culture, has become a target in the government’s efforts to control the narrative around Palestine/Israel. The resolution is another attempt to silence critical discourse around what UN agencies, all major human rights organisations, and hundreds of experts have acknowledged as genocide.

As we write this, the full text of the resolution is still not public. The very fact that these policies are being developed and passed through state protocols without civil society oversight is a sign of a slide into authoritarian politics. The resolution must be seen for its precise function: to create a political framework in which surveillance, repression and violence based on political opinion are made acceptable in institutions of education.

We call upon civil society and institutions to do everything in their power to protect academic freedom and freedom of expression.

  • Arts and Culture Alliance Berlin,
  • Students for Palestine Germany,
  • Jewish Solidarity Collective,
  • Eye4Palestine,
  • Jüdische Stimme,
  • Grieving Doves,
  • Jewish Bund,
  • Nakba 1948, 
  • Familien für Palästina,
  • Besetzung gegen Besatzung
  • JID Leipzig
  • The Left Berlin

Open Letter from Students and Educators


Gegen die Instrumentalisierung von Antisemitismus in der Bildung

Wir, die unterzeichnenden Gruppen, unterstützen den offenen Brief von Studierenden und Lehrenden gegen den Resolutionsentwurf  „​​​​​​​Antisemitismus und Israelfeindlichkeit an Schulen und Hochschulen entschlossen entgegentreten sowie den freien Diskursraum sichern“​​​​​​​.

Wir stehen gemeinsam gegen Zensur, staatliche Einschränkungen von Wissenschaftsfreiheit, Polizeigewalt auf dem Campus, und rassistischer Diskriminierung in Bildungseinrichtungen. Die neue Bundestagsresolution, über welche am 29. Januar abgestimmt werden soll, soll diese Vorgänge in deutschen Schulen und Universitäten durchsetzen und legitimieren. 

In den letzten 15 Monaten sind Angriffe auf Meinungs-, Versammlungs-, Kunst- und Wissenschaftsfreiheit in Deutschland exponentiell angestiegen. Sie wurden von den regierenden Parteien durchgeführt und von Rechtsaußen angestoßen und begrüßt. Genau wie die im November verabschiedete Resolution, die Antisemitismus für politische Zwecke instrumentalisiert, ist auch diese Resolution das Werk von SPD, Grüne, FDP und CDU, doch sie dient vor allem der AfD.

Nun werden die bürgerlichen Parteien wohl wieder gemeinsam mit der AfD für die neue Resolution stimmen. Wir machen jede*n Politiker*in, die/der mit Ja​​​​​​​​​​​​ stimmt, für die eigene Mitwirkung am erneuten Aufstieg des Faschismus in Deutschland verantwortlich.

Die Freiheit, anders zu denken, muss unbedingt beschützt werden. Bildung muss frei von polizeilicher Überwachung und Staatsdoktrin sein. Als Ort der Debatte, des Lernens, und des kritischen Hinterfragens waren Universitäten oft an der Speerspitze progressiver Politik. Bildung ist wie Kultur zu einer Zielscheibe der Regierung geworden, im Bemühen, das Narrativ um Palästina/Israel zu kontrollieren. Alle großen Menschenrechtsorganisationen, UN-Vertreter*innen sowie hunderte Expert*innen haben Israels Vorgehen in Gaza einen Genozid genannt – doch die deutsche Regierung versucht durch die Resolution, kritischen Diskurs darum zum Schweigen zu bringen.

Während wir dieses Statement verfassen, ist der aktuelle Text der Resolution immer noch nicht öffentlich. Die Tatsache, dass solche politischen Instrumente ohne zivilgesellschaftliche Kontrolle oder Transparenz entwickelt und beschlossen werden ist an sich ein klares Zeichen autoritärer Tendenzen. Die Resolution muss in ihrer spezifischen Funktion betrachtet werden: Sie soll eine politische Lage schaffen, in der Überwachung, Repression und Gewalt auf Basis politischer Überzeugungen in Bildungseinrichtungen gesellschaftlich akzeptabel werden.

Wir fordern die Zivilgesellschaft sowie Institutionen auf, alles in ihrer Macht stehende zu tun, um Wissenschafts- und Meinungsfreiheit zu schützen.

  • Arts and Culture Alliance Berlin,
  • Students for Palestine Germany,
  • Jewish Solidarity Collective,
  • Eye4Palestine,
  • Jüdische Stimme,
  • Grieving Doves,
  • Jewish Bund,
  • Nakba 1948, 
  • Familien für Palästina,
  • Besetzung gegen Besatzung
  • JID Leipzig
  • The Left Berlin

Offener Brief von Studierenden und Lehrenden

Gegen den Resolutionsentwurf “Antisemitismus und Israelfeindlichkeit an Schulen und Hochschulen entschlossen entgegentreten…”

Offener Brief von Studierenden und Lehrenden

This is the German version of an Open Letter which you can read here.

Wir, Studierende, Lehrende und Mitarbeitende an deutschen Hochschulen, sind alarmiert über die Resolution „Antisemitismus und Israelfeindlichkeit an Schulen und Hochschulen entschlossen entgegentreten sowie den freien Diskursraum sichern“. Vorgeblich der Antisemitismusbekämpfung gewidmet, stellt diese vielmehr eine Bedrohung für die Sicherheit von Schüler:innen und Student:innen dar und ruft zur Untergrabung der Wissenschaftsfreiheit und Hochschulautonomie auf. Wir schließen uns der Kritik von Wissenschaftler:innen, Antisemitismusforscher:innen aus Deutschland und internationaler Fachgesellschaften an und treten der Resolution mit ihren absehbaren und gravierenden Folgen für Wissenschaftsfreiheit und Perspektivenvielfalt entschieden entgegen. Auch mehreren Jurist:innen zufolge wirft die Resolution zahlreiche schwerwiegende verfassungsrechtliche Bedenken auf. 

Am 7. November 2024 hat der Deutsche Bundestag eine erste Resolution unter dem Titel „Nie wieder ist jetzt: Jüdisches Leben in Deutschland schützen, bewahren und stärken“ trotz heftiger Kritik, mit mehrheitlicher Zustimmung aus nahezu allen Parteien, inklusive der AfD, verabschiedet. Nun wurde eine weitere Resolution vorgelegt, die sich gegen Antisemitismus richtet – an Schulen und Hochschulen in Deutschland. Sie wird voraussichtlich Anfang Dezember zur Abstimmung eingereicht. 

Die Resolution nährt eine verzerrte Darstellung, die palästinasolidarischen Aktivismus verunglimpft, und untergräbt die Rolle der Universität als Ort des offenen Austauschs und der politischen Debatte1. Sie fordert den „Austausch zwischen Hochschulen und Sicherheitsbehörden […] in Intensität und Regelmäßigkeit“ (III.2), die Ausweitung rechtlicher Maßnahmen und repressiver Instrumente, die Verstärkung von Sicherheitsmaßnahmen und den Ausschluss von Studierenden, die unerwünschte Ansichten äußern. Laut der Resolution dürfen Unterstützer:innen “der ‘Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions’-Bewegung (abgekürzt BDS) sowie ähnlich gesinnte Bewegungen […] in deutschen Bildungs- und Wissenschaftseinrichtungen keinen Platz haben“ (III.10). Die Verwendung einer so unpräzisen Sprache, um festzulegen, wer von deutschen Universitäten ausgeschlossen werden soll, ist alarmierend und erweitert das Ausmaß staatlicher Repression weit über die pro-palästinensische Studierendenbewegung hinaus. Zudem isoliert die Resolution deutsche Universitäten von internationalen Partnerinstitutionen, setzt sie in Widerspruch zum internationalen Völkerrecht, untergräbt ihre Glaubwürdigkeit und riskiert weltweite Gegenreaktionen. 

In Gaza wurden alle Schulen und Universitäten seit Oktober 2023 durch Israel bombardiert und buchstäblich  zerstört. Israel ist für die Tötung unzähliger Studierender, Forschender, Künstler:innen, Ärzt:innen und Journalist:innen im Gazastreifen verantwortlich, was einem Scholastizid des palästinensischen Bildungswesens gleichkommt. Einem Sonderausschuss der Vereinten Nationen nach, entspricht das Vorgehen Israels in Gaza einem Völkermord, an dem sich Deutschland unter anderem mit Waffenlieferungen beteiligt. Auf internationaler Ebene wurde Deutschland deshalb bereits Mitschuld am Völkermord vorgeworfen und verteidigt Israel dennoch weiterhin gegen entsprechende Klagen vor dem Internationalen Gerichtshof. 

Auf nationaler Ebene setzen der Staat und Institutionen, im Namen eines vermeintlichen Schutzes jüdischen Lebens in Deutschland, immer mehr repressive Maßnahmen und Abschreckungstaktiken gegen palästinasolidarische Personen ein, zu denen auch viele jüdische Personen zählen, und untergraben so ihre Meinungsfreiheit und ihr Recht auf politische Meinungsäußerung. Die vorgelegte Resolution stärkt genau diese Instrumente, die zur Rechtfertigung polizeilicher Gewalt gegen Student:innen sowie Kündigungen von Künstler:innen, Dozent:innen, Redner:innen, Forschenden und anderen aufgrund ihrer politischen Ansichten benutzt wurden und werden2. 

Die Resolution untergräbt die wissenschaftsimmanenten meritokratischen Prozesse der Fördermittelvergabe, indem sie betont, dass „Fördermittel des Bundes ausschließlich nach dem Maßstab der wissenschaftlichen Exzellenz vergeben werden“ und „wissenschaftliche Exzellenz und Antisemitismus einander ausschließen“ (III.9). Sie beruft sich dabei allein auf die umstrittene Antisemitismusdefinition der International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), die Kritik an Israel mit Antisemitismus gleichsetzt. Substanzielle Kritik an der Ungenauigkeit und dem dokumentierten Missbrauch dieser Definition zur Diskriminierung von Personen aufgrund ihrer politischen Meinung wird ignoriert. Folglich wird die Freigabe von Bundesmitteln von den politischen Ansichten der Wissenschaftler:innen abhängig gemacht, was legitime Kritik an der israelischen Politik zum Schweigen bringen soll. Die Freiheit der Forschung ist unvereinbar mit der staatlichen Kontrolle von Forschungsmittelvergaben und der Überwachung privater und politischer Äußerungen und Betätigungen3. 

Die Resolution weitet die einseitige Lehre über Antisemitismus und den Staat Israel im Rahmen der Bildung über den Nahen Osten aus, während sie Palästina und Palästinenser:innen, die nur im Rahmen der Hamas erwähnt werden, als legitime Themen der Lehre und Forschung ausklammert. Der Beutelsbacher Konsens, der gegen die Indoktrination aus dem Dritten Reich entwickelt wurde, sieht vor, dass Lernende Zugang zu verschiedenen Perspektiven auf gesellschaftliche und politische Fragen bekommen und somit in die Lage versetzt werden, kritisch zu denken und sich eine eigene Meinung zu bilden. Die in der Resolution propagierte Einseitigkeit in Forschung und Lehre widerspricht der unabhängigen, kritischen und von politischer Indoktrination freien Bildung. 

Wir lehnen die Resolution aus diesen Gründen ab und fordern einen Ansatz, der unterschiedliche Perspektiven respektiert und die Wissenschaftsfreiheit wahrt.

FORDERUNGEN

Wir, die Unterzeichnenden, fordern Universitätsverwaltungen, Fakultätsleitungen, Studierendenvertreter:innen, Studierendeninitiativen und Universitätsmitarbeitende auf, eine prinzipientreue Haltung gegen die autoritäre Bedrohung durch die vorgeschlagene Resolution einzunehmen. 

Wir fordern, dass die oben genannten Parteien 

  1. eine klare öffentliche Haltung gegen die Untergrabung der Wissenschaftsfreiheit, der Meinungsfreiheit und die Verletzung der Hochschulautonomie durch die Resolution einnehmen.
  2. die Verwendung der IHRA-Definition als alleinige, offizielle und rechtliche Definition von Antisemitismus an Forschungs- und Bildungseinrichtungen ablehnen.
  3. die Forderung nach verstärkter Versicherheitlichung an Hochschulen durch „engen Austausch mit den Sicherheitsbehörden“ (III.12.e) und karzerale Logiken ablehnen, in dem sie u.a. eine Antirassismus- und Antidiskriminierungsstelle einrichten und unabhängige Protokolle für die Deeskalation von Konflikten ohne Polizeipräsenz etablieren.
  4. der antipalästinensischen Voreingenommenheit mit ausgewogenen Lehrplänen begegnen, die palästinensische Geschichte auf allen Ebenen der Bildung, palästinensische Wissensproduktion und Lehre über Palästinenser:innen, die über ihre Rolle als besetztes Volk hinausgeht, einbeziehen.
  5. „eintreten für Forschung und Lehre im Einklang mit dem Völkerrecht und für konsequentes Handeln bei Nichteinhaltung durch Universitäten, Forschungsinstitute und andere akademische Einrichtungen“ (Zitat aus den Arbeitsprinzipien der Allianz Kritische und Solidarische Wissenschaft).

Endnoten
1 In der Resolution werden selektiv Studien der Universität Konstanz zitiert, wobei wichtige Ergebnisse ausgelassen werden, die zeigen, dass der Antisemitismus unter Studierenden geringer ist als in der Allgemeinbevölkerung (Quelle). 

2 Das Projekt “Archive of Silence” dokumentiert Fälle von Kündigungen, Entladungen, und anderen Formen der Unterdrückung pro-palästinensischer – unter anderem jüdischer – Stimmen (Quelle) .

3 Im Frühjahr 2024 wurde beispielsweise ein Mädchentreff in Berlin aufgrund der politischen Einstellungen der Mitarbeitenden fristlos gekündigt (Quelle), gleichzeitig ließ das BMBF prüfen ob man Forscher:innen, die sich gegen die Kriminalisierung von propalästinensischen Studierenden geäußert hatten, die Fördermittel streichen könnte (Quelle). Das Vorgehen der zum Zeitpunkt des BMBF Skandals “Fördergate” amtierenden Ministerin wird im Resolutionsentwurf explizit begrüßt (I.), was alarmierend ist.

___________________________________________________________________________________

Erstunterzeichner:innen

Gruppen
Not In Our Name TU Berlin
Not In Our Name ASH Berlin
Not In Our Name UdK Berlin
Linksjugend [‘solid] Hessen
Linksjugend [‘solid] Fulda
DieLinke.SDS Fulda
DieLinke.SDS Marburg
Students for Palestine FU Berlin
Students for Palestine Hannover
Students for Palestine Würzburg
Students for Palestine Bonn
Students for Palestine Freiburg
Students for Palestine Halle
Students for Palestine Hamburg
Students for Palestine Münster
Students for Palestine Fulda
Students for Palestine Leipzig

Students for Palestine Darmstadt
Bündnis Palästinasolidarität Marburg
BAK Klassenkampf in der Linksjugend [‘solid]
Uni(te) for Pali, Bremen
Queer Liberational Action
Decolonize Charité Berlin

Decolonize HU
Ingolstadt Eichstätt for Palestine
Stand UP for Palestine
Kritische SKA, Leipzig
KIARA (Kritische Islamwissenschaftler*innen und Arabist*innen), Leipzig

Einzelpersonen (alphabetisch)
Enrica Audano, Universität Leipzig

Prof. Michael Barenboim, Barenboim-Said Akademie

Niklas Barth, Linke Frankfurt am Main

Prof. Dr. Christine Binzel, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg

Adam Broomberg, Künstler

Dr. Irene Brunotti, Universität Leipzig

Prof. Celine Condorelli

Dr. Mark Curran

Jasmin Daka

Prof. Dr. Dr. Donatella Della Porta, Scuola Normale Superiore

Anna Ehrenstein

Dr. Jannis Julien Grimm, Freie Universität Berlin

Hanna Hertel, Studentin, Mitglied GEW Berlin

Dr. Thomas Herzmark, Universität Göttingen

Dr. Angela Last

Lucilla Lepratti, Universität Leipzig

Dr. Lara Krause-Alzaidi, Universität Leipzig

Urs Kollhöfer, Mitglied im Landesvorstand der Linken Hessen

Urs Kroll, Student, Mitglied GEW Berlin

Dr. Nils Riecken, Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Matthias Riedl, Mitglied im Landesvorstand der Linken Hessen

Prof. Dr. Marc Siegel, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

Maxi Schulz, Student*in, Mitglied GEW Berlin

Prof. Dr. Hendrik Süß, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Margarita Tsomou, Kuratorin

Laura Oettel, Studentin, Mitglied GEW Berlin

Antonia Marquardt, Jugendpolitische Sprecherin der Linken Hessen

Prof. Dr. Agata Lisiak, Bard College Berlin

Prof. Dr. Olaf Zenker, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

Weitere Unterstützer:innen

  1. Prof. Dr. Schirin Amir-Moazami
  2. Elakoum Mounib 
  3. Prof. Dr. Michael Zander, Hochschule Magdeburg-Stendal 
  4. Nasrin Karimi Rechtsanwältin
  5. Amanda Pope
  6. Norbert Lang, Journalist
  7. John Lütten, Universität Hamburg
  8. Prof. Dr. Robin Celikates, Freie Universität Berlin
  9. Julia Vogel
  10. Prof. Dr. Susanne Leeb, Kunsthistorikerin, Berlin/Lüneburg
  11. Aino Korvensyrjä, Freie Universität Berlin
  12. Dr. Carmen Becker
  13. Prof.Dr. Sabine Broeck, Universität Bremen
  14. Maher Ben Abdessalem
  15. PD Dr. Julia Vorhölter, Max Planck Institut für ethnologische Forschung
  16. Phillipp Slanina, Student
  17. Dr. Roy Karadag, Universität Bremen
  18. Prof. Dr. Manfred Liebel, Berlin/Potsdam
  19. Carla Schumann, Studentin, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
  20. Annefei Borgs-Uhlendorf
  21. Prof. Dr. Uli Beisel, Freie Universität Berlin
  22. Carolin Loysa, Freie Universität Berlin
  23. Jamal Sreiss
  24. Dr. Jeanne Féaux de la Croix
  25. Prof. Dr. Angela Harutyunyan, UdK Berlin
  26. Dr. Hanna Nieber, Max-Planck-Institut für ethnologische Forschung
  27. Kawthar El-Qasem, Düsseldorf
  28. Dr. Anne Menzel, Institut für Friedensforschung und Sicherheitspolitik an der Universität Hamburg
  29. Yuri Kwon
  30. Dr. Jannik Schritt, Universität Göttingen
  31. Prof. Dr. Anika König, Freie Universität Berlin
  32. Linda Beck, Universität Göttingen
  33. Wolfgang Lörcher, DIE LINKE Fulda
  34. Leonie Benker, Freie Universität Berlin
  35. Dr. Mathias Delori, CNRS-Forscher, Centre Marc Bloch
  36. Prof. Dr. Alice von Bieberstein, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
  37. Nick Bley, Senator Universität Kassel
  38. Thomas Götzelmann, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
  39. Aaron Miller, Universität Leipzig, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
  40. Raphaël Grisey, Filmmacher
  41. Marina Luna, Free University Berlin
  42. Christin Sander, FU Berlin
  43. Dr. Philipp Zehmisch, Universität Heidelberg
  44. Dr. Nicole Wolf, Universität London und freiberufliche Dozentin Berlin
  45. Dr. Benjamin Schütze, Arnold Bergstraesser Institut (ABI) Freiburg
  46. Prof. Dr. Martin Sökefeld, LMU Müchen
  47. Pia Berghoff, Freie Universität Berlin
  48. Daniel Shuminov, Goethe Universität
  49. Dr. Bettina Gräf, LMU München
  50. Prof. Dr. Wolfgang M. Schröder, Universität Würzburg
  51. Mithu Sanyal, Schriftstellerin und Kulturwissenschaftlerin
  52. Prof.Dr. Rupa Viswanath, Universität Göttingen
  53. Alma Kulha
  54. Aseela Haque, Freie Universität Berlin
  55. Susanne Schultz, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/Main
  56. Anil Shah, Universität Kassel
  57. Dr. Ximena Alba
  58. Marius Bickhardt (Centre Marc Bloch/Sciences Po Paris)
  59. Huan Chen, Universität Münster
  60. Prof. Dr. Dominik Mattes, Freie Universität Berlin
  61. Christian Strippel, Weizenbaum-Institut
  62. Anna Hofmann Fraktionsvorsitzende der Linken im Landkreis Marburg-Biedenkopf
  63. Laure Piguet, Centre Marc Bloch/Université de Fribourg
  64. Noémie Regnaut, Université Paris-Sorbonne Nouvelle – Centre Marc Bloch Berlin
  65. Anonym, Centre Marc Bloch/EHESS
  66. Dr. Déborah Brosteaux, Marc Bloch Zentrum (Berlin)
  67. Marianne Adam (Centre Marc Bloch/Université de Tours)
  68. Florian Muhl, Universität Hamburg
  69. Mareike Biesel, Universität Göttingen
  70. Karlotta Bahnsen, Freie Universität Berlin
  71. Layla Kiefel (Universität Konstanz, Centre Marc Bloch)
  72. Elfi Padovan Münchner Friedensbündnis
  73. Dr. Dörthe Engelcke, Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law
  74. Philipp Rauch, Student TU Darmstadt
  75. Rebeka Nasir, Studentin, Technische Universität Darmstadt
  76. Kaoutar H., Goethe Universität Frankfurt
  77. Leon Kianzad, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/Main
  78. Christos Kourris, TU Dresden
  79. Claire van Loon, Studentin
  80. Anna Müller
  81. Miriam Bartelmann, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut (ABI) Freiburg
  82. Luis Kliche Navas, Freie Universität Berlin
  83. Dr. Barbara Orth, IRS
  84. Dr. Tobias Schmitt, Universität Hamburg
  85. Ariane Alba Marquez, Bundesvorstand DieLinke.SDS, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/Main
  86. Prod. Dr. Aram Ziai, Universität Kassel
  87. Nicholas Sagberger – Uni Regensburg
  88. Dr. Alix Winter, Centre Marc Bloch
  89. Willi Hertelt, Kurt-Tucholsky-Oberschule Berlin
  90. Layla Kiefel (Universität Konstanz, Centre Marc Bloch)
  91. Qusay, TU Darmstadt
  92. Christoph Maier, Uni Leipzig
  93. Mira Schmitz, MLU Halle-Wittenberg
  94. Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Gabbert, Leibniz Universität Hannover
  95. Kim Lucht, FSU Jena
  96. Lea Berger
  97. Barbara Gamper, Künstlerin und Pädagogin
  98. Taosif Talukder, TU Darmstadt
  99. Dr. Christian Ambrosius, Freie Universität Berlin
  100. Jorinde Becker, Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
  101. Jared Cobain HGB Leipzig
  102. Anna Orinsky, European University Institute
  103. Prof. Dr. Johanna Schaffer,  Kunsthochschule Kassel
  104. Andreas Weiß, Köln
  105. Eliane Diur, Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
  106. Madlen Ernst, MERA25 Berlin
  107. Abdullah Rahhal – Die Linke Freiburg und Masterstudent Uni Freiburg
  108. Rana Brentjes
  109. Sonja Brentjes, Bergische Universität Wuppertall
  110. Mareike Biesel, Universität Göttingen
  111. Thomas Ruffmann, Kleve, Musiker, politischer Erwachsenenbildner
  112. Dr. Raquel Rojas, Freie Universität Berlin
  113. Tabea Knerner, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
  114. Sara Türen 
  115. Frank Madsen Journalist
  116. Prof Ramis Örlü, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Schweden
  117. Prof. Dr. Christin Bernhold, Universität Hamburg
  118. Jasmin Sarah Hahn, Freie Universität Berlin
  119. Anna-Lena Kutzki, HAW Hamburg
  120. Sonja Rohan, Freie Universität Berlin
  121. Janine Schneider
  122. Luise Dechow, Universität Hamburg
  123. Leyla Tewes
  124. Clemens Grünberger
  125. Samah Schmitt-Razzougui
  126. Verena Müllner
  127. Selim Heers, Universität Leipzig
  128. Hava Aras
  129. Ahmed Tarek Alahwal, Universität Freiburg
  130. Raina Ivanova
  131. Hiba Banat, Studentin
  132. Graciela Bach
  133. Candice Breitz
  134. Dagmar Kohlmeier, Masterstudentin, Universität Freiburg
  135. Felicia Schmidt, Berlin
  136. Bircan Sönmez, Mera25 NRW, Düsseldorf
  137. Guillaume Carpentier, Mera25
  138. Christian Suhr – About People Film Produktion
  139. Deniz Khalifé
  140. Adrian Khalifé
  141. Louay Khalifé
  142. Ilay Khalifé
  143. Isa Khalifé
  144. Ayesha Siddiqi-Sikora
  145. Nadia El-Ali, Freie Universität Berlin
  146. Peter Förster, AK Zivilklausel der Uni Köln, Student
  147. Luca Groß, SDS Frankfurt
  148. Franziska Hildebrandt, SDS Uni Hamburg
  149. Marlies Wehner, M.A., Fachstelle für interkulturelle Bildung und Beratung-FiBB e.V.
  150. Jasper Wittenburg 
  151. J. Kamo Anselm, UHH
  152. Emily Allegra Dreyfus, Filmuniversität Babelsberg
  153. Dr. David Jordan, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
  154. Prof. Dr. Claudius Zibrowius, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
  155. Artur Brückmann, Universität Hamburg
  156. Therese Friedemann
  157. Alp Kayserilioğlu, Universität Tübingen
  158. Peter Förster, AK Zivilklausel Uni Köln
  159. Eliaz Zeilmeir, Goethe Universität Frankfurt
  160. Rand Ashqar, Freiburg Universität
  161. Jean-Marie Yazbeck, Master Student University of Freiburg
  162. Anonym, Universität Freiburg
  163. Selma Härnqvist
  164. Muayad Chalabi, Technische Universität München
  165. Andrea Sittoni, LMU München
  166. Francisco Torres, Fraunhofer ISE
  167. Richard Lenerz, Universität Trier
  168. Lenna Fischer – Uni Hannover
  169. Jana Müller, Studentin
  170. Johannes Heißler, LMU München
  171. Lale Khoshnoud, Hochschule Hannover
  172. Eudy Mahlies, Universität Leipzig, Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS)
  173. Ingo Jäger, Bezirksratsherr Hannover Vahrenwald-List
  174. Marwan Abdelaal, Technische Universität München
  175. Michael Kreich
  176. Michelle Schinkel, Universität Konstanz
  177. Hanna Neghabian, SfP
  178. Gianluca Pagliaro, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics
  179. Miriam Bartelmann, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut (ABI), Freiburg
  180. Björn Pohl
  181. Leonie Hiller
  182. Jasper Martins, Leibniz Universität Hannover
  183. Amir Raza (Albert Einstein Institute Hannover)
  184. Franziska Bax, Rachel Carson Center LMU München
  185. Mariel Bernnat, Universität Freiburg
  186. Lucia Grimm (Albert Ludwigs Universität Freiburg)
  187. Prof. Dr. Tahani Nadim
  188. Cora Orlando, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
  189. Prof. Dr. Encarnacion Gutierrez Rodriguez, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt
  190. Sören Horn, Kritische-Min-Studierende (Uni Hamburg) 

Weitere unterstützende Gruppen

Bündnis Yousef Shaban

Estudantes por Justiça na Palestina (FCSH Nova, Portugal)

Students for Palestine Mainz

Sozialistisch-Demokratischer Studierendenverband (DieLinke.SDS)

Students for Palestine Frankfurt

Die Linke Hessen

Hochschule for Palestine Darmstadt

Studis gegen Rechts Leipzig

Fachschaftsrat Politikwissenschaft (Universität Leipzig)

Uni for Palestine Munich 

Linksjugend [‘solid] Leverkusen

Decolonise HU, Berlin

Dick Laurent is dead

Obituary: David Lynch (20 January 1946 – 15 January 2025)


27/01/2025

Born in Missoula, Montana, in 1946, Lynch was one of the most influential filmmakers of our time. Even people not familiar with his work can grasp what the ‘‘Lynchian’’ means—official proof he made it into the Zeitgeist.

Lost Highway, one of Lynch’s darkest works, begins and ends with the main character (played by Bill Pullman) saying to himself via intercom that “Dick Laurent is dead”. It is then implied that the story, like a Möbius strip, is destined to repeat itself forever. This scene came to mind as soon as I read in the news, “David Lynch is dead”. It sounded as surreal as most of its work. In this case, though, it is unlikely to repeat itself. Here, the loss is final—but his legacy will remain.

Filmography

Early Works and the Suburban Dark Side.

[Disclaimer: while discussing Lynch’s filmography I am basing my claims on what are the most popular analyses among film critics and fans alike, but in the words of Lynch, there can be several interpretations and they are all valid].

Lynch’s  first financial success with Elephant Man (1980) came after a series of experimental shorts and the very dark, surreal Eraserhead (1977) that found its way into being a cult movie for the midnight screening circuits. After Dune (1984), both a commercial failure and the only movie he repudiated, Lynch finally develops what later would be considered his niche: stories revolving mostly around trauma. More often than not, women are the protagonists, or at least fundamental characters, as victims of evil men (or forces), yet strong and empowered at the same time. The aesthetic is the golden era of Americana, as if time in Lynch’s movies was somehow stuck in the 50s (think about the opening scene of Blue Velvet, accompanied by the eponymous song or the Audrey Horne’s outfits in his most successful venture, Twin Peaks). 

This phase, which starts with Blue Velvet and encompasses Twin Peaks, Wild at Heart (with a more pulp take), Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (the prequel to the TV show), focuses on the dark underbelly of the American suburban dream; what horrible nightmares crawl beneath the surface of perfectly mowed lawns, white fences, diners with cherry pie and coffee? Apparently anything from rape, incest, violence, crime, cocaine and underage prostitution to evil spirits, entities that could easily be just projections of our darkest desires.

The ‘Unofficial’ Los Angeles Trilogy

Later, Lynch starts his “unofficial” trilogy (except the 1999 detour of A Straight Story, his most linear movie). Lost Highway (1997), Mulholland Drive (2001, considered by many one of his best movies and the best movie of the century according to BBC) and the utterly experimental (even by his standards) INLAND EMPIRE (2006).

Now, even if the unique stylistic markers of Lynch are still very recognizable, the focus shifts from suburbia to Los Angeles, to Hollywood, the furnace that produces cinema (and therefore, dreams) itself. However, as suburbia, and each one of us, has a shadow self, so does Los Angeles. Lost Highway sees its main character, a jazz player, allegedly killing his wife out of jealousy. The rest of the movie is generally interpreted as a psychogenic fugue. Mulholland Drive delves even deeper into the same concept. Diane Selwyn (Naomi Watts) wants to make it big in Hollywood. Instead, she ends up falling in love with movie star Camilla Rhosed (Laura Harring), . When her affection is not returned, Diane orders a serial killer to murder Camilla. Overwhelmed by guilt and horror after the fact, she has a long dream of how things could have worked out differently. 

The last film of the unofficial trilogy starts with a similar premise. We find ourselves in Hollywood, we are shooting a movie, there is a dark secret and a woman is in danger. This time, though, the psychogenic fugue turns into ego fragmentation in dozens of characters. Underlying are the themes of trauma, violence, and the doom to repeat the same mistakes over and over, even in different timelines. Most importantly, it’s a movie about abortion, which makes it particularly interesting as, to the author’s knowledge, Western media never really developed proper iconography on the subject. It’s worth noticing that here Lynch further develops a concept roughly sketched in Mulholland Drive; in L.A. not all that glitters is gold. In one of the most poignant scenes, when the character (or one of the many characters) of Laura Dern is about to die after having been stabbed in the belly, she is helped by three homeless people of color. Their discussion about apparently trivial subjects (how to get to Pomona by bus) reflects the awful disparity in the city between minority communities and the wealthy. Let’s also not forget that INLAND EMPIRE, while it can be interpreted as a kingdom of the mind, is also an area of California known for its significant working class presence.

25 Years Later

The latest (and unfortunately, the last) project of Lynch was the 18-hour limited series Twin Peaks: The Return. It plays with the fact that in the last episode of the 90s series Laura Palmer’s doppelgänger says to detective Dale Cooper, stuck in the Black Lodge, “I’ll see you in 25 years”. And 25 years later, indeed, what is considered the third season of Twin Peaks saw the light. Critically acclaimed, it was divisive for fans, as instead of giving them closure, the series left them with more questions, although it is undeniably a strong piece of art and still has some so-called “fan service” moments to keep the original audience happy.

Legacy, Politics, Allyship

As Lynch has been famously beloved on the Left, most of all by outcasts, queers, weirdos, or simply viewers curious about the depth and complexity of the human psyche, we cannot ignore that throughout the years his art cannot always be considered completely unproblematic.

In terms of work for the community, Lynch was a huge fan and advocate for Transcendental Meditation (TM), listing all sort of benefits, from boosting creativity to reducing stress to spreading peace, love, and understanding among people. His humanistic approach and deeply empathetic worldview have been confirmed by many who knew him, loved him, worked with him. However, TM has often been criticized for being elitist, due to its high cost. Despite Lynch’s great efforts in trying to make it more accessible (especially for students, communities at risk and war veterans with PTSD), he never really managed.

In American politics, with the exception of his support for Sanders, he was never overly involved. One could say that his humanistic views resonated more with “lefties” than with conservatives but not to the point of ever being explicit.

Important discussions have been had about several stylistic choices of Lynch through the years that, for today’s sensibility, might appear quite conservative. One for all, the “male gaze” is predominant in most of his movies, Kyle MacLachlan spying on Isabella Rossellini getting undressed in Blue Velvet, several female characters (Laura Palmer, Diane Selwyn) switching fluidly into homosexual sex in a way that is more reminiscent of lesbian scenes in porn movies catered toward men than authentic queerness. Speaking of queer, the elephant in the room is the absence of explicitly gay male characters in all his productions—except maybe the camp effeminacy of the villains in Blue Velvet, reflecting old Hollywood tropes where camp equals gay equals evil.

Where Lynch really took a stand though, is with the character of Denis/Denise in Twin Peaks. In the show’s second season of the 90s, during a time when Lynch was absent from set, the show writers chose to introduce a transgender character. David Duchovny’s character, once known as Denis, was now going as Denise and “crossdressing”. While even in the original series this was not done for laughs (and it’s remarkable, considering the times), it was at best done for “quirkiness”. However, when 25 years later Lynch took complete artistic control of the project in the Return, he decided to have Denis/Denise back in the story; Gordon Cole, head of the FBI, comments that certain colleagues are not OK with Denise’s new identity. He recounts that he told them to “go fix their hearts or die”. This was considered a great gesture of allyship by the LGBTQ community.

Conclusion

The outpouring of love online after Lynch’s passing has been incredible and (for a huge fan like this author), heartwarming, coming from his long-life collaborators (Kyle Maclachlan, Laura Dern, Naomi Watts, Sheryl Lee, Nicolas Cage, and others), to all people that worked with him in the industry, to people who got closer to him thanks to TM. Not to mention all the fans around the world who his stories, his views, his sensibility and his aesthetics resonated with, and who claim their lives would not have been the same without Lynch’s art.

David Lynch’s work transcended genres, challenging us to confront the darkness within ourselves and our world. He leaves behind a legacy that will haunt and inspire generations to come. As fires rage in Los Angeles—a city he so masterfully deconstructed—it’s hard not to wonder what Lynch might have made of this apocalyptic reality, a director who uncovered beauty and terror in equal measure.

Rest in Peace, David.

Fascism and the Far Right in Europe and the USA

Are Parties like the AfD the New Nazis?


25/01/2025

You know the meme: “everything I don’t like is woke”? Well, there’s a left wing version of this: “everything I don’t like is fascist”. So, Donald Trump is a fascist, Vladimir Putin is a fascist. . . my mum is a fascist if she asks me to clean up after me. The inflationary usage of the word fascism makes it a synonym for anything which is vaguely authoritarian. This makes it more difficult to identify the real fascists and what we specifically need to do to stop them.

In this article, I will look at some parties in Europe, and the USA, and ask how close they are to fascism. But before I do that, let me be clear what I mean by fascism. There are different definitions, but I find this quote, by Leon Trotsky, to provide a useful overview.

Traditionally, the core supporters of fascism are people who do not have trade unions or big capital to defend them. “Fascism unites and arms the scattered masses. Out of human dust, it organizes combat detachments. It thus gives the petty bourgeoisie the illusion of being an independent force.“ For this reason, fascism plays a particular emphasis on street mobilisations.

This raises a number of issues, I will answer some in this article and I hope to write more soon. For now it is important to say that fascism cannot be simply reduced to racism and authoritarianism. Its end goal is to overthrow the State, and to exterminate, not just people who do not conform to the fascists’ vision, but all opposition.

The US Republicans – A Party which tolerates Fascists in its ranks

While I do not agree with the claim that Donald Trump is a Fascist (yet), he has presided over a change in the Republican Party. In 2017, shortly after Trump was first sworn in as president, there was a “Unite the Right” demonstration in Charlottesville. This demonstration was dominated by Nazis, and demonstrators were filmed happily chanting “Jews will not replace us”.

In ‘How Charlottesville transformed the Republican Party’, Rafi Schwarz argues: “The Unite the Right attendees, a motley assortment of neo-Nazis, neo-Confederates, and out-and-out white nationalists, had thrived in scattered pockets around the country for decades. That they existed was itself nothing new. What was new, however, was the GOP’s [Republican party’s] recognition of the nascent era of Trumpian conservatism as an opportunity to both cement and capitalize on those shared interests.”

Trump called the demonstrators “very fine people”. According to Schwarz this had “no lasting political consequences.” Schwarz’s conclusion is that after Charlottesville, “the party became a vehicle for enterprising politicians who tacitly condoned the vitriol to advance their own political careers, actively casting its net into the murky waters that they’d once kept at arms distance.”

Under Trump, the Republicans offer a home for Nazis, but the party remains fundamentally a conservative electoral party. Their aim is taking power through elections, not by overthrowing the state. For this reason, it would be a mistake to call the Republicans a fascist party.

Reform UK – A potential Fascist Party

Reform UK is a new formation, whose fate is not yet sealed. Like its predecessors UKIP and the Brexit party, it was originally founded to contest elections, to demand and defend Britain’s exit from the EU, and to profit from the collapse of the Conservative Party.

4 million people voted for Reform UK in last year’s UK election. Growing disappointment with Kier Starmer’s Labour government means that they have the potential to win many more. Particularly worrying was the role of Reform UK in last year’s racist riots organised by Nazis against refugee homes. Party leader Nigel Farage released a video, in which he said the riots were “nothing to what could happen over the course of the next few weeks.” Of Reform UK voters 21% supported the riots.

At the moment, Reform UK remains primarily a racist electoral party attempting to replace the Conservatives in parliament. But they are already using “anti-capitalist” right wing demagogy and are building relations with fascists in France and Germany. If Nazis are successful at taking over the streets, Reform UK could become quickly an organisation which colludes with, and provides a centre for them.

The electoral victory and the riots show the 2 directions in which Reform UK could develop. Do they want to build a parliamentary opposition then become a government party? Will they concentrate on street actions? Or will they – like some other European fascist parties – look for a third way which tries to combine both strategies?

Rassemblement National – Nazis through and through

Rassemblement National (RN) in France under Marine Le Pen has cultivated an image of being “only” right wing extremists who no longer have any connections with actual Nazis. In his recent obituary of Fascist leader Jean Marie Le Pen, John Mullen describes this as: “a determined and generally successful campaign of ‘image detoxification’ … Nazi links were to be more comprehensively hidden, even organizing street demonstrations was to be avoided.” 

Le Pen “expelled her father from the organization (since he would not give up his sarcastic-toned antisemitism) as well as some other open nazis. She instructed MPs to concentrate on respectability, and was eventually to be seen at pro-Israel ‘marches against antisemitism’ in 2023. Marine Le Pen’s femininity was also used to reassure voters that the old fascist values, generally associated with virility and masculinity, were no longer at the centre of the RN’s politics.” 

But the politics of the Le Pen family and their party remain the same. At the moment, they are concentrating on winning elections. But this is part of a longer term strategy of building a mass party with a Nazi nucleus.

This is not a new plan. In John’s obituary, he remembers the 1970s strategy of Jean-Marie’s Front National: “Its Nazi core was to be hidden, and election campaigns, instead of street fighting, were to be the priority. Expressing antisemitism was shelved, while anti-Arab racism and islamophobia became almost the sole focus. Finally, traditional racism based on fake theories of biological hierarchy was left behind, the new discourse being based on ‘incompatible’ cultures and the ‘war between civilizations’. ”

As I wrote previously: “A recent report found that at least fifteen deputies from Le Pen’s National Rally party have been part of a racist Facebook group for the last 7 years. Posts in the group include: ‘Go back to your coconut tree, bamboula’ or ‘You call that a human being? Even my dog ​​behaves better. They are really harmful, these Blacks.’ RN also maintains close but discrete links with the identitarian organisation Génération Identitaire.”

Where does the AfD fit into all this?

The AfD is no longer what it was. When it was founded in 2013, it was led by neo-liberal Eurosceptics who were not unlike Nigel Farage. These people, like Bernd Lucke (lead candidate in the 2014 EU elections), Frauke Petry or Jörg Meuthen (both national spokespeople) have either left the party or been expelled. The party is now run by hardcore Nazis.

But fascism is not a great vote winner, especially in Germany. AfD leader Alice Weidel recognises this, as a recent article in the British Guardian by Thomas Vorrever notes: “(She) has recently been attempting to rebrand the party’s image in a Marine Le Pen-like fashion.” Like her French compatriot and fellow-thinker, Weidel expresses horror at the charge of Nazism. She points out that she is a lesbian with a partner from Sri Lanka. In a recent interview with Elon Musk, she said that Hitler was “a communist”, while she is a conservative.

This strategy depends more on image than content. Katja Hoyer reports from the AfD’s recent conference that “she demanded ‘large-scale repatriations’ of foreigners, the demolition of Germany’s ‘windmills of shame’, and an end to ‘queer-woke insanity’. Despite her personal relationship, she was happy for the AfD to limit its definition of family to ‘father, mother and children’. With Weidel at the helm, the party has reached its most hardline stance to date.”

While Weidel is restoring the party’s tarnished image, the party wing “der Flügel”, led by the unapologetic fascist Björn Höcke, is gaining ground. Already over 100 hardcore Nazis work for the AfD in parliament. Höcke was the lead candidate in the recent local elections in Thüringen, where the AfD topped the polls with 34.3% of the vote. 

Even in regions where the AfD is perceived as being more moderate, fascists are in the leadership. In Bavaria, party leader Stephan Protschka was a member of der Flügel and is now the lead candidate. In Baden-Württemberg, the party is led by Weidel, who has started to radicalise her rhetoric, as we saw in her recent speech in Magdeburg which was followed by random attacks on local migrants. 

Under these conditions, it would be a mistake to differentiate too much between the “real Nazi” Höcke and the “more moderate” Weidel. Both Höcke and Weidel use slightly different strategies to carry out the same politics.

The New Strategy of European Fascists

In the wake of Le Pen’s success, some European fascists have followed her strategy of hiding their links with hardcore Nazis, gaining political respectability, and entering parliament. Giorgia Meloni is Italian president, one of the most powerful politicians in the Netherlands is Geert Wilders, and it looks like Austria is about to get a fascist Chancellor who has often been compared with Björn Höcke.

This means that we must fight the new fascists on two fronts. On the one hand, their street terror is real. The AfD has been uniting with street fighting Nazis – from PEGIDA to the hooligans in Magdeburg. They also used the reactionary Corona street demonstrations to disseminate conspiracy theories and Nazi propaganda.

At the same time, fascists in office also pose a dangerous threat. The AfD election manifesto calls for a return to nuclear energy, more border controls, and an almost complete ban on abortion. Policies like this have effects and victims, and must be resisted.

In areas where the AfD is most successful electorally, right wing terror has caused liberal and social democratic mayors to resign. AfD mayors are supporting increased repression. The AfD may not (yet) be building street troops like Hitler’s SA, but they are already creating a climate of fear on which they can build.

So how do we stop the fascists?

There is a popular German slogan: “fascism is not an opinion, but a crime”. While we should try and build divisions between the hardcore Nazis and their frustrated voters, we should not waste time trying to change the fascists’ minds.

Hitler said that mass mobilisations, like the Nuremberg rallies resulted in their participants being transformed “from a little worm into part of a large dragon.” Elsewhere, he said: “Only one thing could have broken our movement – if the adversary had understood its principle and from the first day had smashed with extreme brutality the nucleus of our new movement.”

Just over 10 years ago, the largest fascist demonstration in Europe took place every year in Dresden. A broad alliance, Dresden Nazifrei, organised mass blockades in 2019, 2010, and 2011 which prevented the Nazis from marching. Their demonstration no longer takes place. Similarly, blockades at the AfD conferences in Essen and Riesa occupied spaces which fascists were trying to claim.

To stop the AfD, we need two things. The first is a broad movement. Street fights between small groups of fascists and lefties will not bring us much further. The successful Dresden blockades mobilised tens of thousands, including Bundestag President Wolfgang Thierse. At the same time, we must be prepared to confront the fascists, and to stop them being able to assemble.

The Left has a proud tradition of building broad anti-fascist movements under the slogan “They Shall Not Pass” – in Cable Street, in Lewisham, and in Dresden. On each of these occasions, other demonstrations took place at the other side of town under the argument that if you ignore the fascists, maybe they’ll go away. Especially in Germany, we should be aware of the fallacy of this sort of argument.

In Dresden we did manage to convince some people to visit the “popular” demos in the city centre and then join us on the barricades which stopped the Nazis from marching. We were friendly, but hard. Wherever the Nazis try to appear, we must be there first.

At the same time, fascists thrive on despair. One main reason for their growth is the collapse of the social democrats and Greens into supporting deportations and militarisation, and the inability of the parliamentary Left to effectively oppose this. Alongside denying the fascists any space, we must build credible alternatives for a better society. It’s time to organise.