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View Full Version : Debate over Occupy tactics: an invented controversy



KurtFF8
17th February 2012, 21:23
Source (http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/debate-over-occupy-tactics.html)


PSL editorial


February 16, 2012
http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/assets/images/content/move-in-day-cop-and-1.jpg Jan. 28, Oakland, Calif.
Photo: Krissana Limlamai




Chris Hedges' recent articles starting with “The Cancer in Occupy” (Truthdig, Feb. 6)have created quite a controversy among supporters of the Occupy movement.

The article came out in the aftermath of an incident in late January when Oakland police attacked protesters who were trying to occupy an abandoned building to use as a community center and new space for the movement. Police kettled and arrested 400 demonstrators, and at various times used tear gas and rubber bullets. During one standoff, members of Occupy Oakland defended themselves with makeshift shields and tossed tear gas back at the police.

Hedges calls the Black Bloc tactic the “cancer” of the movement and “a gift from heaven to the security and surveillance state.” The movement is tolerating wanton violence, according to Hedges, and in doing so is inviting repression and negative press attention, thereby failing to win over more people. His essay has touched off a wide-ranging debate about the philosophy of nonviolence and if violence has any potential legitimacy in the movement.

Making a non-issue

The problem is that this is largely a straw-man—it is inventing a controversy, and the Black Bloc tactic is far from the most pressing issue for Occupy. In fact, the Black Bloc tactic—in which groups of masked activists dress in black, and without announced plans, attempt to escalate marches, directly confront the police and destroy property, usually that of corporations—has been an extremely minor aspect of the Occupy movement as a whole.

What took place on Jan. 28 in Oakland was principally an act of collective self-defense against police repression. When protesters pulled down the fence surrounding the building they sought to occupy—or months earlier when New York marchers seized the orange nets the police used to box them in—these represented not purposeless and reckless Black Bloc violence but the maturation of street tactics. The same can be said in the instances in which groups of protesters, masked or not, have spontaneously intervened to pull those facing wrongful arrest out of the arms of the cops.

The rare use of the Black Bloc tactic in Occupy is not the cause of its problems, nor is it the main challenge. As Hedges admits, the “security and surveillance state” did just fine in repressing entirely nonviolent Occupy encampments from coast to coast.

This is not to say that the movement must now escalate towards violence—in fact, no one is arguing for this. But it shows that with or without Black Bloc tactics, the state will move aggressively to silence those who challenge its rule.

The same is true of the media, despite its initial coverage—and to some degree, promotion—of the Occupy movement. For Hedges, a properly nonviolent movement must “on some level embrace police brutality” because it makes for a better media clip to have people sustain injury instead of standing up for themselves.

While it is crucial that we seek and use positive media coverage whenever possible, the media in general belongs to the 1 percent. The media’s demonization of the movement is bound to increase as it becomes more anti-capitalist and more successful in challenging Wall Street.

To embrace police repression so that it leads to more outrage reduces these protests to a marketing campaign, in which participants are largely passive and defenseless. Our tactics become oriented towards being “media friendly,” as if the problem is how to conduct ourselves in front of the cameras, not the nature of the corporate-owned media itself. This tactical view reflects a broader strategy aimed at winning enough public sympathy until the government finally reforms.

The real issue: creating a strategy to move forward

Instead, it is better to view Occupy as part of a resurgent fight-back movement, which has the potential to inspire action and confrontation against capitalism on many different fronts, and ultimately aim for its overthrow. We are still a long way from there. That will require taking on the hard strategic questions: how to revive a fighting labor movement of organized and unorganized workers; how to build organization and leadership in the most oppressed communities; and how to take the “occupy” idea into the struggles at the workplace and against evictions and foreclosures, budget cuts and school closures.

In an article last year, Hedges told his readers to “not be afraid of the language of class warfare,” and called for people here to follow the Greek workers and youth who called a general strike and “shut down the city centers.”

Yes, but none of this happens without resistance. In fact, for such actions to take place, and this has been proven in Egypt, Greece and elsewhere, the people must also begin to lose their fear. That idea—that you can fight back and you do not have to run—might not always play perfectly for the cameras, but is a critical part of the process of building a revolutionary movement.

The Black Bloc tactic should be criticized when it is clearly being harmful to the Occupy movement. There is certainly room to critique it, especially when it is used offensively.

The action of a few is substituted for—or is even in direct confrontation with—the initiative and organization of the many. It can put people at risk who often have far more to lose from police repression. In its spontaneity, it is typically disconnected from a broader strategy. It often induces fear rather than confidence among those who are entering political life. It can provide an easy entry point for police provocateur activity—as we saw in March 2009, when several masked individuals posing as part of the Black Bloc helped disrupt an anti-war march on the Pentagon before discreetly walking behind police lines.

But all such actions—which, again, have not been seen broadly in the Occupy movement—must be distinguished clearly from self-defense, which is an inviolable right.

The debate about tactics should not revolve simplistically around interpreting the Civil Rights movement (often by omitting those who did ascribe to self-defense). While recognizing how the Occupy movement grew as a result of the heavy-handed police response to peaceful protest, the discussion should instead focus on when certain tactics are appropriate or not.

How do we plan protests that dramatize our cause, exert our rights to the streets and at the same time keep our participants safe? How do we occupy a site when there is a police fence in the way? How do we occupy an apartment building or a workplace when the landlords and capitalists call in the police to enforce their property rights? How do we do all these things in a way that take us forward, giving people more confidence to struggle?
Content may be reprinted with credit to LiberationNews.org.

The PSL's take on the Hedges article and the conversation

Thoughts?

Sinister Cultural Marxist
18th February 2012, 02:26
It's a good article in that it defends the black block by going beyond demonizing "liberals" and "pacifists." The problem stems from the fact that any kind of confrontational protest is viewed negatively in the USA, and we need to challenge this viewpoint instead of merely insulting anybody who holds it.

MarxSchmarx
18th February 2012, 02:55
YAWN.

I see where SCM may be getting at the point about confrontation, but I found this article to be lacking in much meaningful substance.

The article repeats Hedges' basic mistake - it is yet another example of the American left's death spiral knee-jerk position of "raising questions" at the expense of providing anything concrete or useful.

Aside from their vague assertion of a mystical "inviolable right" of self-defense, the article adds nothing of substance. But there are several issues at work - first, the article fails to explain how to deal with the corporate media that maligns movements - if neither through bourgeois "respectability" nor black block "recklessness", then what? Second, the equation of public sympathy with government "reforming itself" is a slight of hand - public sympathy can be built, but this approach is hardly restricted to a reformist strategy. Third, the article seems to premise that there is something durable to occupy. Okay, we all to some extent wish this were the case, but importantly the article never comes out and says what qualities of the occupy movement make it potentially useful for the broader struggle. Finally, claims like "the discussion should instead focus on when certain tactics are appropriate or not." invite the invariable reaction: well, no shit, Sherlock.

In all of these, the article is just asserting what is already well established and repeating cliches. Masquerading, I might add, as some kind of substantive insight. It was a good try, but it's utter lack of any substantively constructive approach ultimately means that it fails to serve as a useful counterbalance to Hedge's assertions.

Prometeo liberado
18th February 2012, 07:36
You kind of have to see it through the eye's of the writer. This is a PSL response piece, not a position paper or even an internal discussion piece. These kinds of articles are meant as a general discussion forum and to also let the public know that the PSL is on top of the controversy. A general explanation anyway. All in all it does exactly what it was intended to. Black Bloc is a straw man. The real issue is resistance and what it looks like up close and how to work within its' parameters.

KurtFF8
18th February 2012, 15:45
YAWN.

I see where SCM may be getting at the point about confrontation, but I found this article to be lacking in much meaningful substance.

The article repeats Hedges' basic mistake - it is yet another example of the American left's death spiral knee-jerk position of "raising questions" at the expense of providing anything concrete or useful.

Aside from their vague assertion of a mystical "inviolable right" of self-defense, the article adds nothing of substance. But there are several issues at work - first, the article fails to explain how to deal with the corporate media that maligns movements - if neither through bourgeois "respectability" nor black block "recklessness", then what? Second, the equation of public sympathy with government "reforming itself" is a slight of hand - public sympathy can be built, but this approach is hardly restricted to a reformist strategy. Third, the article seems to premise that there is something durable to occupy. Okay, we all to some extent wish this were the case, but importantly the article never comes out and says what qualities of the occupy movement make it potentially useful for the broader struggle. Finally, claims like "the discussion should instead focus on when certain tactics are appropriate or not." invite the invariable reaction: well, no shit, Sherlock.

In all of these, the article is just asserting what is already well established and repeating cliches. Masquerading, I might add, as some kind of substantive insight. It was a good try, but it's utter lack of any substantively constructive approach ultimately means that it fails to serve as a useful counterbalance to Hedge's assertions.

As jbeard points out, this is mostly a response piece: or the PSL "throwing its hat in" the overall conversation.

In terms of how the PSL views self defense: it makes that clear in pieces on the civil rights movement for example. I'm not sure what you mean by your "reformist strategy" line here.

And yes it does assume that Occupy is "durable" or useful. Not sure why an absence of this discussion is problematic for you here, especially considering the PSL has written on this in the past, nor is it what the topic is here.

Most of your "criticism" here doesn't really seem to apply to this article any way.

MarxSchmarx
19th February 2012, 03:41
You kind of have to see it through the eye's of the writer. This is a PSL response piece, not a position paper or even an internal discussion piece. These kinds of articles are meant as a general discussion forum and to also let the public know that the PSL is on top of the controversy. A general explanation anyway. All in all it does exactly what it was intended to. Black Bloc is a straw man. The real issue is resistance and what it looks like up close and how to work within its' parameters.

Good points, to be sure, I think their criticism of Hedges is fair. But I guess I was expecting more. Consider this: that the PSL in some sense is engaging this controversy (or "is on top of it") should be expected of any decent leftist organization. So it seems to me that the conclusion to draw is that they are merely not failing. And second, is their website from which this statement comes really a "general discussion forum"? revleft is a general discussion forum, but having a box that invites users to "tell us their thoughts" and an empty comments section makes me wonder how much of this is meant to spark discussion and whether an internal PSL-website is the best venue to do this.

It is basically a case of philosophers interpreting the world and scant on how to change it. I think a critique of Hedges' argument and a considered analysis of the black bloc should move beyond mere expose and have some prescriptive content.



In terms of how the PSL views self defense: it makes that clear in pieces on the civil rights movement for example. I'm not sure what you mean by your "reformist strategy" line here.


I was referring to this sentence:


This tactical view reflects a broader strategy aimed at winning enough public sympathy until the government finally reforms.

Which sounds like equating the garnering of public sympathy with reforms to capitalism. When in fact garnering public sympathy is also a prerequisite for radical change as well.



And yes it does assume that Occupy is "durable" or useful. Not sure why an absence of this discussion is problematic for you here, especially considering the PSL has written on this in the past, nor is it what the topic is here.


Maybe it's just me, but I don't read the PSL's communiques/website articles/blog posts whatever very frequently. I think if the PSL wants to make a claim to generate discussion among the broader left (and this may not be the case, I fully concede; it may indeed be for purposes of internal discussion), then it behooves them to minimize the assumptions required on the part of their readers. It's actually a problem hardly unique to the PSL, to be sure, I think much of the left assumes that people have read with a find toothed comb everything they've ever said.




Most of your "criticism" here doesn't really seem to apply to this article any way.

I guess I kind of agree. I can see this article be written about any rightwing critique of a leftist tactic, with the phrases changed through a search-and-replace operation. Article like Hedges were a dime a dozen during the build up to the Iraq war (but not about black blocks but about anti war protests generally) and a lot of the leftist press responded with similarly inane points that I read in this article -about how there were strawmen argument, about the delicate balance between protecting our own and being the target of outright state violence etc....

But that's kind of the problem. They could have been talking about just about any strategy in any struggle and it read as a compilation of boiler plates. So yeah, my problems with this article aren't specific to this article so much as to the general style of polemics that seems to dominate what passes for leftist statements.

KurtFF8
19th February 2012, 17:45
Which sounds like equating the garnering of public sympathy with reforms to capitalism. When in fact garnering public sympathy is also a prerequisite for radical change as well.

I don't think that the intention was to promote that idea, but explain it more. The PSL obviously isn't saying "we need to get people outraged so we can gain reforms!"


Maybe it's just me, but I don't read the PSL's communiques/website articles/blog posts whatever very frequently. I think if the PSL wants to make a claim to generate discussion among the broader left (and this may not be the case, I fully concede; it may indeed be for purposes of internal discussion), then it behooves them to minimize the assumptions required on the part of their readers. It's actually a problem hardly unique to the PSL, to be sure, I think much of the left assumes that people have read with a find toothed comb everything they've ever said.

A very fair point indeed. But the primary goal of this piece is to attempt to reframe the debate away from what Hedges is trying to do.