After
The Transhumanist Wager, and
The Turner Diaries I
continued my reading to get ready for election year madness with
Abbie Hoffman's Steal This Book.
I didn't have to steal it, you can get if for free online, or
download a free pdf. It's almost as good as stealing.
This
is an oldie, from way back in the Nineteen Hundreds. I was in high
school when it came out. The world was downright dystopian back then,
America required all males over eighteen to sign up for a lottery,
and if you were selected, you got sent over to fight in a real war.
Abbie
Hoffman was part of a group called the Yippies that were protesting
the war and struggling for other things that kids take for granted
these days. He wrote Steal This Book in
prison.
It's not science fiction, but could
easily fit in on a shelf of New Wave sf (that's the way we wrote it back
then, standing for either science fiction or speculative fiction, in
lower case so people know you don't mean San Francisco). No plot. A
lot of lists. This instruction manual for a do-it-yourself utopia
kit, that takes the leap from nonfiction into spec fic in that it's
about setting up an alternative reality, a new Nation. He had earlier
tried to brand Woodstock Nation, but apparently some corporate
entities had the rights to Woodstock . . .
Oh, that's right, these days
corporations are people, too.
Hoffman
and the Yippies were an experiment in living your science fiction instead of
writing it. Or as artist Ron Cobb said, “Science fiction has always
been a verb to me.”
In
fiction, such things are the work of mad scientists, and it's
dangerous. Look at what happens to the mad scientists in all those
stories and movies. It's not surprising that Hoffman ended up in
prision.
As the
title indicated, the book is all about the virtues of stealing, and
even suggest that it should be stolen. Big time publishing was
repulsed. It had to be self-published.
As Hoffman said, “Sacred cows make the BEST hamburgers.”
And: “To
steal from a brother or sister is evil. To not steal from the
institutions that are the pillars of the Pig Empire is equally
immoral.”
I never tried to live this way. My parents taught me that thievery was low. And because of my skin color I was harrassed from an early age by security agents in the comsumer zones.
From the
book: “The first duity of a revolutionary is to get away with it.”
Some members of my generation tried to live according this book's
advice. This usually lasted until they had an encounter with law
enforcement. Also, running around, pulling scams takes a lot of time
and energy; getting a straight job can actually be easier.
When I
worked for Borders I found myself going mano a mano with later day
Yipsters who didn't remember Hoffman's advice about respecting
employees, and committed an error that isn't mentioned in the book:
Don't get greedy. You can do a quick, subtle grab or run a customer
service scam and get away with it now and then, but if you come back
and try it every week, somebody's going to figure it out and shut you
down. Of course, this makes it hard to pay your bills.
Borders
hired a couple who were trying this lifestyle, and I worked with
them. The male had blond dredlocks and mostly walked around with a
beatific expression, waiting for someone to tell him he looked like
Jesus. The female went on about how she was raised on dumpster diving,
and was regurgitating Steal This Book-isms.
They were attempting to work long enough to become eligible for
unemployment. A nice scam, but you shouldn't go around telling your
co-workers – and your boss . . .
They
were fired, called us all fascists, and said that they were running
off to Nicaragua because Bush was building concentration camps where
he was going to put anybody who was against the war.
I
wonder where they are now?
Technological
advancements, and the arms race between the rip-off and the sellers, have made a lot of the book obsolete. I now read about print media, pay
phones and coin-operated machines, and feel nostalgic. It would be an
excellent reference for writing about the period.
What makes it still worth reading is the manic energy devoted to a utopian
vision – we don't see much of that anymore.
Of
course, the whole Steal This Book/Free
Nation is totally dependent on an out-of-control, wasteful,
planet-raping consumer society spewing out goods and services all over
the polluted, overpopulated landscape. The Anti-Establishment needs
the Establishment in order to exist. It's the yin/yang merry-go-round
of doom.
It's
also full of a lot of crazy (and some not-so-crazy) ideas, another
alternate reality for sale – or maybe you should steal it – in
the 21st
century poitical marketplace. Want something other than what Hillary
Clinton and Donald Trump are selling? Do you know what you want? Or
have you just been conditioned that way?