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View Full Version : UAF part of the 'militant tradition'



Holden Caulfield
13th June 2009, 15:42
The recent electoral gains by the British National Party have triggered debates over how best to oppose it. Unite Against Fascism (UAF) believes that the BNP is a fascist organisation, and as such it should not be treated with the respect one accords to democratic parties. The BNP should be physically confronted wherever it tries to organise. It should be not be accepted as a legitimate political organisation, or mollycoddled with interviews and airtime. It should driven out of our political life.

Some people say that these tactics are counterproductive and risk granting the BNP victim status. But we believe that the greater danger comes from letting the BNP pose as a legitimate and democratic political organisation. As with fascist parties in the past, the BNP stands in elections to secure a veneer of respectability. This acts as a cover for its real agenda: promoting vicious race hatred and thuggery on our streets.
It is therefore essential to deny the BNP the respectability it craves. That is why UAF supports the anti-fascists who successfully disrupted Nick Griffin’s press conference last week. Griffin chose to be filmed outside the Houses of Parliament to secure his credentials as part of the establishment. Instead he was humiliated and forced to deliver his “victory” speech the next day in a Manchester pub.

Politicians in Germany in the 1930s promised to oppose Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party, but went about it through peaceful and legal means. Far from preventing Hitler’s rise, the they ended up nurturing him and eventually handing power to him. Hitler used that power to smash every last vestige of democracy and to launch a disastrous and genocidal war.

In contrast, the militant tradition of anti-fascism has a track record of success. The National Front was defeated in the 1970s by a mass movement that rose up to confront it, led by the Anti-Nazi League.
Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists was defeated in a similar manner, most notably at the Battle of Cable Street in 1936.

This is the tradition that UAF stands in today. During the recent election campaign our activists distributed more than two million leaflets and newsheets urging people to vote against the BNP. We worked with our sister campaign Love Music Hate Racism to hold a 20,000-strong anti-racist music festival in Stoke-on-Trent. We need to combine all these tactics if we are serious about defeating the threat posed by the BNP.

Weyman Bennett is Joint Secretary of Unite Against Fascism

nuisance
13th June 2009, 20:54
Well, I for one am actually gobsmacked. I mean, UAF? Militant? You're having a laugh!

The Ungovernable Farce
13th June 2009, 22:05
Well, I for one am actually gobsmacked. I mean, UAF? Militant? You're having a laugh!
They have always tried to paint themselves as militant. Their speeches and rhetoric are always very tough, if totally unrelated to their actions. I'm sure they used Weyman Bennett and the handpicked group that they negotiated with the police being able to walk right up to the fence at RWB as proof of how hard and militant they are. :rolleyes:

welshboy
14th June 2009, 07:46
http://www.halolz.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/first-i-lold.jpg

UAF militant? Come off it Holden, I always thought you were more grounded than that! UAF is, and always will be, as liberal as its predecessor the ANL. The ANL did NOT lead the movement against the NF. In fact the ANL attempted to scupper the movement by turning on those who physically confronted the fash and beat them off the streets, condemning them as 'squaddists'. The same accusation that is flung about by SWP'ers today.
And as for the 'battle' of Cable street. Come on. It never even happened! There was a ruck with the cops and the fash were fucking miles away. It's true that Mosely got a pop on the head but there was no 'battle'. It's just lefty mythologising. Have a read of I Couln't Paint Golden Angels by Albert Meltzer for a first hand account.
Oh and organising a music festival is not militant. Nor is it difficult to get folk to go along to a gig to get mashed, this again is not militant.

welshboy
14th June 2009, 07:47
Oop, just spotted it's a repost from Weyland 'send 'em back' Bennett.

Sasha
14th June 2009, 19:12
In fact the ANL attempted to scupper the movement by turning on those who physically confronted the fash and beat them off the streets, condemning them as 'squaddists'. The same accusation that is flung about by SWP'ers today.

yeah, i was so proud when Sam_B called me an squaddist in an neg rep comment :cool:

Hit The North
15th June 2009, 02:15
So what brave and successful militant intervention did the hard men and women of antifa engage in during this recent period of high BNP activity?

Holden Caulfield
15th June 2009, 08:25
criticising others does not justify the actions of your own group and is on a par with Stalinists saying "how many revolutions have you had" and stuff like this.

That said, antifa have not been idle, even against massive odds and pressures.