bwo Barbara Strebel, with thanks.

David Graeber: After the Pandemic, We Can’t Go Back to Sleep

(original to: 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/03/david-graeber-posthumous-essay-pandemic )

In an essay penned shortly before his death, David Graeber argued that 
post-pandemic, we can’t slip back into a reality where the way our society is 
organized — to serve every whim of a small handful of rich people while 
debasing and degrading the vast majority of us — is seen as sensible or 
reasonable.

Before he tragically died at the untimely age of fifty-one in September 2020, 
the anarchist, anthropologist, and organizer David Graeber wrote this essay on 
what life and politics could look like after the COVID-19 pandemic. Jacobin is 
proud to publish Graeber’s essay for the first time.
-----

After the Pandemic, We Can’t Go Back to Sleep

At some point in the next few months, the crisis will be declared over, and we 
will be able to return to our “nonessential” jobs. For many, this will be like 
waking from a dream.

The media and political classes will definitely encourage us to think of it 
this way. This is what happened after the 2008 financial crash. There was a 
brief moment of questioning. (What is “finance,” anyway? Isn’t it just other 
people’s debts? What is money? Is it just debt, too? What’s debt? Isn’t it just 
a promise? If money and debt are just a collection of promises we make to each 
other, then couldn’t we just as easily make different ones?) The window was 
almost instantly shut by those insisting we shut up, stop thinking, and get 
back to work, or at least start looking for it.

Last time, most of us fell for it. This time, it is critical that we do not.

Because, in reality, the crisis we just experienced was waking from a dream, a 
confrontation with the actual reality of human life, which is that we are a 
collection of fragile beings taking care of one another, and that those who do 
the lion’s share of this care work that keeps us alive are overtaxed, 
underpaid, and daily humiliated, and that a very large proportion of the 
population don’t do anything at all but spin fantasies, extract rents, and 
generally get in the way of those who are making, fixing, moving, and 
transporting things, or tending to the needs of other living beings. It is 
imperative that we not slip back into a reality where all this makes some sort 
of inexplicable sense, the way senseless things so often do in dreams.


How about this: Why don’t we stop treating it as entirely normal that the more 
obviously one’s work benefits others, the less one is likely to be paid for it; 
or insisting that financial markets are the best way to direct long-term 
investment even as they are propelling us to destroy most life on Earth?

Why not instead, once the current emergency is declared over, actually remember 
what we’ve learned: that if “the economy” means anything, it is the way we 
provide each other with what we need to be alive (in every sense of the term), 
that what we call “the market” is largely just a way of tabulating the 
aggregate desires of rich people, most of whom are at least slightly 
pathological, and the most powerful of whom were already completing the designs 
for the bunkers they plan to escape to if we continue to be foolish enough to 
believe their minions’ lectures that we were all, collectively, too lacking in 
basic common sense do anything about oncoming catastrophes.

This time around, can we please just ignore them?

Most of the work we’re currently doing is dream-work. It exists only for its 
own sake, or to make rich people feel good about themselves, or to make poor 
people feel bad about themselves. And if we simply stopped, it might be 
possible to make ourselves a much more reasonable set of promises: for 
instance, to create an “economy” that lets us actually take care of the people 
who are taking care of us.

-----
About the Author
David Graeber was an American anthropologist and anarchist activist.
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