To invent life that escapes the sacred/expendable binary is to rupture biopolitics at its root. The moment life can no longer be categorized as either to-be-protected (by the state, capital, or humanitarianism) or to-be-discarded (by the same forces), the entire machinery of control stutters.
How? Three Pathways Toward Uncapturable Life
1. Mutual Aid Beyond Legibility
Not the NGO-ized "safety net," but underground networks of sustenance that operate as if the state doesn’t exist.
Example: Rojava’s women’s communes, which distribute food, defense, and medicine without appealing to recognition.
When care is untrackable—no paperwork, no means-testing, no "deserving poor"—it becomes ungovernable.
2. Life That Cannot Be Isolated
Bare life is always individualized (a body, a gene, a refugee). But life that exists only in relation—symbiotic, collective, untaxonomizable—defies capture.
If power can’t isolate the "unit of life," it can’t decide who lives or dies.
3. Codes That Disintegrate Under Observation
Not manifestos, but emergent, shifting ways of being that evaporate when surveilled or commodified.
The Goal: A Life That Collapses the Machine Just by Existing
Not a demand. Not a protest. A form-of-life so alien to the sacred/expendable logic that it forces the whole apparatus to malfunction. Think of:
The virus (is it alive? does it "resist"? it doesn’t care—it just proliferates).
The mycelial network (no center, no hierarchy, just a silent takeover).
The ghost (ungraspable, yet undeniable).
The Challenge: Can We Even Imagine It?
We’re so colonized by biopolitics that the idea of life outside protection/expendability feels like mysticism. But it’s not. It’s the material exit—if we can unlearn the reflexes of begging or burning long enough to build it.
Deepseek