A Report On
Ideas in Action: Organizing and Liberation
A Public Forum Organized by the Anarchist Communist
By James Herod,
There were three panelists. I’ll take them in order.
Dave, from
Dave described his work organizing in
Diana, from
Diana’s talk focused on the importance of actually participating in social movements and ongoing social struggles, and of building up personal relationships in them. She said that she used to work a lot just as an anarchist but eventually decided that this was going nowhere. So she started participating in other things. She described a number of these activities, including calling meetings in
Shaun, from Philly (?)
Shaun talked about his work as a union organizer (but I didn’t catch which union he was working for). His talk was on a more general level, mostly recounting some of the things he had learned about effective organizing. Among the points he mentioned were:
** If you don’t actually ask someone to join the union they probably won’t.
** Although you may not like the idea (as an anarchist) it is important to recognize that there are leaders in every shop, persons others look up to. It is necessary to work with these people.
** Take baby steps. Focus on the immediate issues. Aim first just for solidarity with co-workers. Maybe later it will be possible to make public statements.
Shaun felt that he often needed to put his politics in the background and just deal with the issues on the floor. His aim was to help people to learn how to self-organize. Down the road a ways perhaps he would find opportunities to talk about his anarchist politics, he said.
Discussion Period
There was a lively discussion after the three talks. Right off the bat someone asked the panelists how the organizing they were doing related to their long-term revolutionary (anarchist) goals. They replied that it was a matter of building self-empowerment. The only way to build a cooperative society is for people to work together. People working together can drop a lot of bad habits, as they gain a voice, and shed nonproductive anger. People lose their fear of speaking up. Undocumented workers, for example, realize that they are being mistreated, and learn about their rights. They learn that the bosses, and the state, shouldn’t have power over them. Also, the panelists thought that issue-based organizing makes it easier to deal with race and gender issues because people have to cooperate to deal with the issue at hand.
Then someone asked what empowerment meant. One of the panelists replied that it was the distinction between ‘power to’ versus ‘power over.’ These kinds of organizing efforts helped people to gain control over their lives and communities. Someone asked Diana directly how she reconciled her anarchist beliefs with her work in a non-anarchist organization like
Then someone asked the question which I had thought might be the actual focus of the evening, or at least part of it, namely, what are the pros and cons of organizing specifically as anarchists? Someone said right off that, well, we have to do both – organize as anarchists and also participate in all these other movements. Various people reiterated their belief that it was important to work in issue-based (reformist?) campaigns, because they at least were “doing something.” (Doing what? Is the question.)
Comments
I am definitely the odd man out in discussions like this. The role I seem to have fallen into is that of the wet blanket thrower. I may get a name for myself if I’m not careful. I may already have gotten one. My second wet blanket of the evening (the first being to question the value of union organizing) was to make a distinction between anarchists organizing themselves as anarchists and the anarchist social forms that will be needed to establish an anarchist society. This blanket fell considerably short of getting fully deployed because I stopped short of really making my point. Virtually no work is going into setting up actual anarchist social forms, even by anarchists who are setting up anarchist organizations. More work goes into keeping the organization going than into creating anarchy. Of course we need anarchist organizations. The question is: What are they doing?
The newly created Northeast Anarchist Network so far has focused on three general areas: protest politics, identity politics, and IWW-type union organizing – three dead ends. The older Northeast Anarchist Communist Federation puts a lot of energy into union work. I think this is a complete waste of time. As for all the anarchists who are going over to a sort of popular front strategy (of ‘forming alliances’ – actually just working within an organization as an individual -- with single-issue, often quite reformist, campaigns), I think they are deluding themselves that a few anarchists in these organizations will ever radicalize them (that is, convert them to anarchism). They may win over an individual or two but the organizations themselves will in all probability continue working toward the goals their founders set them up to achieve.
We anarchists are so few in number. We should be working on campaigns that directly benefit the struggle for anarchy. I think part of the problem is that so few anarchists see anything revolutionary that they can do and so they settle for working in reformist projects. But there are plenty of projects we could be undertaking. I will just list here seven of the most obvious.
(1) Agitate for the establishment of assemblies (at work [by-passing unions], in households [expanded], and neighborhoods)
(2) Agitate to persuade small family businesses to convert to co-ops (worker-owned)
(3) Agitate to persuade NGOs to convert to direct democracy
(4) Agitate to persuade small towns to convert to direct democracy
(5) Agitate to establish extended households and co-housing
(6) Agitate to discredit representative government and foster direct democracy
(7) Agitate for solidarity and networking with existing worker-owned businesses