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Burning Man and the Death of Paul Addis Part 2 (Firedoglake)

Posted in Life

Vermin Supreme (with a boot on his head & toothbrush) with a friend in a suit
Vermin Supreme at Occupy Wall Street.

I continued to transcribe my interview with KDVS about Burning Man and the death of Paul Addis on Firedoglake. In Part 2, Richard Estes and I discuss the effect both police and pranksters can have on countercultures or activist movements:

Kit O’Connell: At the very beginning, there are stories of people taking it into their own hands and telling people to leave or things like that. But police have been called out for specific incidents. It’s something where the Organization does make that call from time to time.

But I also think the police to some extent arrived on their own, just suddenly becoming aware that there was this huge gathering happening in their midst every year and it was an opportunity — obviously there were safety issues but of course also an opportunity for revenue generation as far as giving out things like speeding tickets to people driving around in the desert. So I think there was a need for order at some point but also there was this sort of encroachment of the police into this separate space much like in Occupy where they weren’t always invited but they appeared anyway and had to be negotiated with one way or another.

Speaking In Tongues:  One of the impressions I’m getting from hearing you describe what transpired with Addis in Burning Man, it draws my attention to what has been sort of a — I don’t know if conflict is the right word, but competing social perspectives within anti-authoritarian movements whether you want to call them anarchist or whatever — between those who see such movements as an opportunity for individualization and celebrating the individual with the least amount of social constrants possible, and those who see autonomous communities within the tradition of someone like Colin Ward, who celebrated communal forms of social organization within the United Kingdom that often took extremely mundane forms like house squatting or  organizing a sports league where people were acting nonhierarchically, and were working autonomously outside of a capitalist relationship. That’s the type of tension that I perceive when I hear about this situation with Addis within Burning Man.

Read more on Firedoglake.

Photo by Paul Stein released under a Creative Commons Share Alike license.

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