On The Far-Left, Effective Activism & Violence | Squat the Planet

On The Far-Left, Effective Activism & Violence

WildVirtue

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A lil essay I wrote exploring the ethics of controversial tactics and providing a general framework for thinking about leftist advocacy. Let me know what you think.

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calvin-hobbes-violence.jpg


Introduction to what it means to be on the far-left

So first off, as socialists & anarchists, we know we are far outside the Overton window. We know even if left-wing policy positions are more popular than right-wing, most people are still going to be biased to what they’ve grown up with and what’s familiar to them.

But, we also know we can shift the Overton window from the radical fringe: [1]

The most important thing about the Overton window, however, is that it can be shifted to the left or the right, with the once merely “acceptable” becoming “popular” or even imminent policy, and formerly “unthinkable” positions becoming the open position of a partisan base. The challenge for activists and advocates is to move the window in the direction of their preferred outcomes, so their desired outcome moves closer and closer to “common sense.”

There are two ways to do this: the long, hard way and the short, easy way. The long, hard way is to continue making your actual case persistently and persuasively until your position becomes more politically mainstream, whether it be due to the strength of your rhetoric or a long-term shift in societal values. By contrast, the short, easy way is to amplify and echo the voices of those who take a position a few notches more radical than what you really want.

For example, if what you actually want is a public health care option in the United States, coordinate with and promote those pushing for single-payer, universal health care. If the single-payer approach constitutes the “acceptable left” flank of the discourse, then the public option looks, by comparison, like the conservative option it was once considered back when it was first proposed by Orrin Hatch in 1994.

This is Negotiating 101.

So our hope is that our ideals and passion can be admired by some, like risking prison to sabotage the draft for Vietnam, so some peoples sons aren’t conscripted into fighting an evil war. [2] Then any moderate left policies might look reasonable in comparison which makes them the tried and tested policies of the future.

We should also openly acknowledge that the ideal future we would like to see is empirically extremely unlikely to come about in our own lifetimes in the west, as there are still so many hills to climb first in pressuring workplaces over to a more co-operative flattened hierarchy of workplace democracy.

To quickly summarise, the direction the far-left would like to head in, is going from; a two party system, to… a multi-party coalition through preferential voting, to… some local government positions being elected by sortition, to… the majority of society being so content with worker-co-ops and syndicalist unions that we transition from representative democracy to direct democracy. So, a chamber of ministers to federated spokes councils.

Now I might be the minority in the far-left on this, but I would want people to have the option of going back a step if people aren’t ready for that level of direct democracy, where the choice is disorganization and suffering or slightly less suffering under a repressive system of governance again. You could relate this to the position Rosa Luxemburg was in in lending support and hoping some good would come of the Spartacist uprising, whilst also wishing they could have been convinced to hold off until they were more prepared.

This is why it’s so important to build the governance model slowly enough to match expertise, so as not to falter with people pushing for ideals before having adequately put them to the test. So as not to cause a whiplash effect, where people desire a reactionary politics of conformity, under more rigid hierarchy of just the few.



As anarchists & socialists who desire a more directly democratic society, what tactics should we use if we want to be effective at moving society in that direction?

Electoral politics – We need to get really well educated on how even the baby step policies toward the left would be an improvement on where we are now, we need to learn the internal politicking of government and get good at having friendly arguments with comedy to appeal to friends and acquaintances basic intuitions.
The goal being that we can talk the latest news and (1) Win over conservatives to obvious empirically better policies on the left, and (2) Win over liberals when centre-left parties are in power to feel dismayed at the slow pace of change, and so acknowlege how much better it would be if there was a market socialist in the position willing to rally people to demonstrate and strike to push through bills.

Mutual aid – We should put the time into helping our neighbours and volunteering, for example on a food not bombs stall, to get people to see the positive benefits of a communalist caring society.

Theory – We should be educating ourselves and helping others know what work and rent union to join, what to keep a record of at work, how to defend yourself from rapists and fascists, how to crack a squat and how to write a press release, etc.

Campaigning – We should look for the easiest squeeze points to rack up small wins, like the picketing of a cafe to reclaim lost wages, so that word spreads and it creates a domino effect.



What tactics should we or shouldn’t we generally avoid in our political campaigns?


Civility as an end in itself

They’re not lies, they’re “falsehoods”; it’s not racism, it’s “racially charged comments”; it’s not torture, it’s “enhanced interrogation.” For years, U.S. media has prioritized, above all else, norms and civility.

Mean words or questioning motives are signs of declining civility and the subject of much lament from our media class. However, op-eds explicitly advocating war, invasion, sanctions, sabotage, bombing and occupation or cutting vital programs and lifelines for the poor are just the cost of doing business. What’s rhetorically out of bounds – and what isn’t – is far more a product of power than any objective sense of “civility” or “decency.”

Where did these so-called norms come from, who do they benefit, and why is their maintenance–-even in the face of overt white nationalism––still the highest priority for many liberals and centrists in U.S. media? [3]

This is so important to challenge, and yet incredibly nuanced. So, it is obviously a great success that the rate at which people would go around hurling racist insults looks to have dropped in favour of more political correctness.

It is also true that in pursuit of political correctness and an ethic of care, we can look for simplistic niceness, to the detriment of being able to identify systems of oppression. We need to be able to refuse the emotional labor of treating our bosses as friends when we have no desire to be friends with them. [4]

Similarly in our everyday interactions, we need to encourage our friends to accept us for who we are or not to accept us at all, so as to create deeper connections which builds stronger communities: [5]

It can be annoying or hurtful when others presume they know everything about you. But rather than assert their wrongness and make them defensive, you can acknowledge it as a common human failing and find creative ways to hold a mirror up to what life experiences they’ve had that lead them to jump to those conclusions.

One way is a kind of playful authenticity, telling a lie about a lie, to get back closer to the truth. So don’t outright challenge the idea, but don’t live up to it either, in fact live down to it. Playfully undermine the idea by failing to live up to the glamour of what it would mean to be that person, then find a way of revealing that it was a misunderstanding all along, so they needn’t worry about it applying to you.

Media Chasing – We shouldn’t chose our actions for the primary purpose of provoking conversations because it is insincere to ones own desires to materially affect change and it’s recognised as such by those who hear about it.

Transparency – We should be transparent with our supporters in all we hope to achieve and how successful we are being at achieving that task, so as not to attract funds for labor we haven’t and aren’t likely to be able to do.

Civil Disobedience – Whether it be breaking the law without causing any damage or economic sabotage and political violence which we’ll talk about later, anarchists hope to chose the right actions to provoke conversations and materially challenge unethical industries and actors, so as to push electoral politics towards direct democracy and eventually consolidate our gains in a revolution.

Fascists will also use tactics from civil disobedience to political violence, and tend toward violence against people for people holding ideas as the things they hate, rather than the lefts systemic critique of material conditions. All in the hopes of pushing society towards a more authoritarian constitutional republic, before seizing power in a palace coup and attempting to rule as a sequence of dictators for life.

It is up to the left to try and counter this violence by doxxing, making their rallies miserable, etc. And it is up to everyone to decide which government to vote in, to enact what degree of punishment to bring down on people breaking the law on either side.

Any direction the society goes in for either not controlling or bowing to which protesters demands is still the moral culpability of the government and those who participated in the party political process.

There simply is an obvious legal and moral difference between for example victimless civil disobedience on the left aimed at all people being treated equally in society like collecting salt from the sea or staying seated on the bus, to the type of violence you see on the right, like Israeli settlers throwing people off their land with arson attacks, stealing another country’s resources against international law.

But again, it is true that to whatever degree anarchists chose bad targets optically, we do to some degree bring the slow pace of change on ourselves or hand the right an advocacy win.

Graffiti & Culture Jamming – Whether it be an artistic masterpiece that no one asked for or altering a billboard to say something funny and political, instead of the advert that was there before pressuring you to consume more and more, most people can be won over by this as a good form of advocacy. Just don’t practice tagging your name a million times over every building in town.

Hacking – Obviously most people agree whistle-blowing war crimes is a yay. Selectively releasing documents to help conservatives win elections however, is a nay.

Sabotage –We should chose targets which have caused people the most amount of misery, for which people can sympathise most, like the sabotaging of draft cards I wrote about at the beginning. So causing economic damage to affect material conditions and make a statement.

We also need to carefully consider the difference between property which is personal, luxury, private, government owned and co-operatively worker owned.

So, it could be seen as ethical to chose material targets of evil actors in order to cause economic damage and make a statement, so long as in the case of personal property, the item has no sentimental value and can be replaced because the person is wealthy. Or is a luxury item that was paid for through the exploitation of others labor. Or is private property, meaning the means of production which should be owned collectively anyway.

It’s an expression of wanting to find an outlet for legitimate anger against that which causes us suffering. For example, if taking the risk to slash slaughterhouse trucks’ tires in the dead of night is how you develop stronger bonds with a group of people and gain the confidence to do amazing things like travel the world and learn from other liberation struggles.

Fighting – First off, I think propaganda by the deed, physically hurting people for the purpose of making a political statement is evil, as it runs counter to our philosophy on the left that material conditions create the person and so we should make every peaceful effort to rehabilitate people.

However, to the extent that some current institutions fail to rehabilitate people and the process of seeking justice through these institutions can cause more trauma, then personal violence to get to resolve feelings of helplessness in the face of evil acts can be an ethical act.

For example survivor-led vigilantism: [4]

I wanted revenge. I wanted to make him feel as out of control, scared and vulnerable as he had made me feel. There is no safety really after a sexual assault, but there can be consequences.” -Angustia Celeste, “Safety is an Illusion: Reflections on Accountability”

Two situations in which prominent anarchist men were confronted and attacked by groups of women in New York and Santa Cruz made waves in anarchist circles in 2010. The debates that unfolded across our scenes in response to the actions revealed a widespread sense of frustration with existing methods of addressing sexual assault in anarchist scenes. Physical confrontation isn’t a new strategy; it was one of the ways survivors responded to their abusers before community accountability discourse became widespread in anarchist circles. As accountability strategies developed, many rejected physical confrontation because it hadn’t worked to stop rape or keep people safe. The trend of survivor-led vigilantism accompanied by communiqués critiquing accountability process models reflects the powerlessness and desperation felt by survivors, who are searching for alternatives in the face of the futility of the other available options.

However, survivor-led vigilantism can be a valid response to sexual assault regardless of the existence of alternatives. One doesn’t need to feel powerless or sense the futility of other options to take decisive physical action against one’s abuser. This approach offers several advantages. For one, in stark contrast to many accountability processes, it sets realistic goals and succeeds at them. It can feel more empowering and fulfilling than a long, frequently triggering, overly abstract process. Women can use confrontations to build collective power towards other concerted anti-patriarchal action. Physical confrontation sends an unambiguous message that sexual assault is unacceptable. If sexual violence imprints patriarchy on the bodies of women, taking revenge embodies female resistance.

Other examples we can think of are personally desiring to fight fascists in the street to block them from marching through immigrant communities. To pushing your way through huntsman to save a fox from getting mauled to death by dogs.



Political killing

I’ll work through hypotheticals from circumstances relevant to the past, present and future, then talk through the ethics of each.

Past possibilities

Most people agree anyone who took it upon themselves to assassinate Hitler a day before the break out of WW2 would be seen as committing an ethical act, no matter who follows, because throwing a wrench into the cult of personality spell built around Hitler would be a significant set back for the fascist state’s grip over the people. And given all the evidence pointing to the inevitability of war, such an act could easily be seen as a necessary pre-emptive act.

Present possibilities

Most can sympathise with quick revolutions against dictatorships where the result is a freer society, like the Kurdish uprising in Northern Syria which took power from a regime who had rolled tanks on demonstrators and outlawed teaching of their native language.

But, even there, there are key foundations you need to work from, like the probability you won’t just give an excuse for the oppressor committing even worse horrors as was the case with the Rohingya militants who ambushed a police checkpoint, resulting in army & citizen campaign to burn down many villages, plus murder and rape those that couldn’t get away.

As well as a responsibility to put down arms after winning political freedoms and a majority are in favour of diplomacy through electoral politics, like in Northern Ireland today.
Under representative parliamentary systems, the sentiment of most is that even if it could be argued that a war of terror against the ruling class was the easiest route to produce a better society, that it would still be ethically wrong to be the person who takes another’s life just because it’s the easiest way. Since regardless of manufactured consent or anything else you still could have worked to build a coalition to overcome those obstacles and change the system slowly from within.

And I agree, it would be an act of self-harm to treat life with such disregard when you could have been that same deluded person shrouded in the justificatory trappings of society treating your behaviour normally. I don’t think the way we win today is treating a cold bureaucratic system with equally cold disregard in whose life we had the resources to be able to intimidate this week. Time on earth is the greatest gift people have, to make mistakes and learn from them.

So then, an easy statement to make on life under representative parliamentary systems is; outside of absurdly unrealistic hypotheticals, I could never condone purposefully killing others when campaigning against such monoliths as state and corporate repression today.

Breaking that down though; what do I mean by an unrealistic hypothetical? For example the philosophical thought experiment called the trolley problem, where you have a runaway trolley hurtling towards 5 people tied to a track, and you can pull a leaver so the train changes tracks and only kills 1 person tied to a track. Or you can change it to 7 billion to 1 even. Or 7 billion of your average citizens vs. 1 million unethical politicians, police and bosses, to make it political.

Now what do I mean by purposeful, well we can think of for example the most extreme cases of post-partum psychosis which has mothers killing their babies. But more nuanced than that, the rape victim who gets worn down by their abuser for years until they have a psychological break and kill.

That does still leave a lot of lee way for people knowingly taking risks with others lives, not intending to kill, but who are reckless in their actions, such as with some forms of economic sabotage. And I agree such a reckless act would bring up feelings of revulsion for all kinds of reasons like questioning whether the person was really doing it to help people or for their own ego-aggrandizement. All that can be hoped is a person makes a careful accounting of their ability for human error and weighs it against the outcomes of doing nothing.

Future possibilities

We can hypothesise the unrealistic case of 99% of society desiring a referendum on a shift from parliamentary representative system to a federated spokes council system and the MPs dragging their feet, the same way both parties gerrymander the boundaries to make it easier to win despite it being the one issue most everyone agrees is bad, and people needing to storm the halls of power to force a vote to happen.

More likely though, an opportunity for revolution might arise from such a confluence of events as climate refugees and worker gains forcing the state and corporations into trying to crack down on freedoms in order to preserve their power and enough people resisting that move, who are then able take power and usher in radical policy change, with either the army deciding to stand down or splitting into factions.


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References

1. Beautiful Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution – Use your radical fringe to shift the Overton window P. 215.
2. The Camden 28 – The Camden 28 were a group of Catholic left anti-Vietnam War activists who in 1971 planned and executed a raid on a Camden, New Jersey draft board. The raid resulted in a high-profile criminal trial of the activists that was seen by many as a referendum on the Vietnam War and as an example of jury nullification.
3. Citations Needed Podcast – Civility Politics
4. Slavoj Žižek: Political Correctness is a More Dangerous Form of Totalitarianism | Big Think
5. A Love Letter To Failing Upward
6. Accounting for OurselvesBreaking the Impasse Around Assault and Abuse in Anarchist Scenes.

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MFB

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I'll chime in! But only bc no one else has and I think such a thoughtful composition deserves some discussion.

You should know I am not from your planet. @Odin and I hitchhiked to Earth by way of Tralfamadore 40 earth years ago. I have some funny observations about your planets politics.

You did good. And this isnt about slamming you, but it reads like a pseudo-intellectual college lecture for netflix 1st worlders that want to play Ho Chi Minh for ego sake. Dumb people wont relate. Hence no replies. People on my planet dont have such big egos. We also realize that we are far to diverse and eclectic in our thoughts and needs and wants to ever have a Government that we wont argue so much, that we send our babies off to get slaughted for the things we think are right. Instead we rely on ourselves and those in close proximity.

Politics divide.We learned that 7,000 years ago. But I believe it would take a seismic shift in the nature of humans for them to learn that. You would have to learn how to be nice. Again with the egos. Anywhoo, we have soooo many bridges on my planet. Sometimes we dont even need one, we just build it bc we like to!

And for as much huff-a-puff there is about conservation and commoditization and gentrification and liberalization and some other "ations" too; humans seem all to happy to buy the gas and eat the animals and put their trash everywhere. And then play war over it! I cant imagine!

That's just an outsiders perspective. What do I know? What do you think? On my planet it's nice to talk about things bc we dont have those big ol' earthing egos.

@WildVirtue I really like you thinking and putting ideas out there. Thank you. <3
-On my planet you dont have to do the heart emogi, because love is implicit.
 
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WildVirtue

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No worries, there are a lot of hypotheticals because it's trying to offer some philosophical foundations people can have in the back of their mind in common arguments. Not that you would talk this way in casual conversation.

Basically the idea is you start with an ideal free society and acknowledge the practical reality of accepting comprimises to that freedom on the road to getting there in building a coalition. But that you should always be skeptical of those limits on freedom, like people not being able to retain the full value of their labor and invest what they like back in to the workplace with revenue sharing. Or access to nature, for your mental wellbeing, etc.

The section on challenging civility as an end in itself is I think the most important, and where comedians have the most value. Here's a great comedy song writer I've posted here before;

 
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MFB

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I'm really glad you took my comment in jest; as that was it's intention.
Alien characters aside;
I lived in Barnett for a year, and have buddied up with lots of brits on my travels bc of I'm not fluent in anything but english; I've always found it easier to chat politics with Brits and Aussies. Americans are so dang partisan it always ends in an argument with no value.

Basically the idea is you start with an ideal free society and acknowledge the practical reality of accepting comprimises to that freedom on the road to getting there in building a coalition.
Right, agreed. I dont think any government is good. But if we have to have them; I believe the best format is one with the least amount of restrictions for the most amount of gain. What is the closest scenario in which people can have the maximum amount of freedom to do as they please but still have infrastructure to get basic human necessities to those in need. But there will never be a format that we all agree on.

like people not being able to retain the full value of their labor and invest what they like back in to the workplace with revenue sharing.

This will be unpopular, but I agree with capitalism and see it as the best option. What ruins it is greed in the nature of man. If I put effort into building something, I should be free to employ people how I see fit without mandates. I veiw this as the closest thing to nature. That being said, if I am flush with cash I am happy to spread it around to those who need it. Once I donated 10 bucks to this site. Ha!
I think our countries have a skewed standard of living. Case in point, I have lived very comfortable and abundant life for under 15k a year mostly all my life. Most people consider that poor. My point is, the glass aint half full or empty, its two time the size it needs to be.

On another tangent. I was always a huge fan of passive resistance. Ghandi was a god to me when I was young. But I'm a hippy dip and tend to look at things from a universal perspective.

Good call on the place of comedy in politics. George Carlin was also a god.

Anyhow, nice to get the wheels turning in my old brain. Anyone who is genuinely interested in making things better is my cup of tea, Sir/Maam. ;)
 

Odin

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CouchPunx

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@MFB
You said capitalism is the best system in the same sentence that you said humans have ruined it. How is that a defense of capitalism? In what world other than the human world should capitalism be operating in?

@WildVirtue
This was very well-written and yes, deserves a response. I don't think it was too academic at all, at multiple points you asked very specific real-world questions and offered possibilities towards actionable points in our everyday lives, like forming tighter work unions, squatting, etc.

I agree with most of your points and where I disagree I think is minor enough to not be worth arguing about until we get somewhere closer to that point.
The one thing I think i disagree enough on is that we CAN see this shit in our lifetimes. We are a reaching a point of political and ecological catastrophe in the world that will have to come to a head sooner rather than later. It seems impossible now but in the history of these things when shit happens it happens fast.

So rather than slow slides left I'm personally in favor of just creating the world I want to see right the fuck now and when shit gets weird we'll be ready for it. Like the black panthers creating the infrastructure they were denied by capitalism, I want to see networks form against capitalism and nations right now so that we'll be able to take care of ourselves and other people when the time comes, and the time has already come.

US anarchists are woefully behind in this regard. I've seen much better mutual aid in immigrant communities and the hood (and usually without words like "mutual aid" connected to it), and I think the best anarchist organizing would connect with those places. I know they do a lot of times, but it's just not where it should be. In Greece, for instance, the anarchists in athens showed syrian refugees how to crack squats and hustle food instead of being stuck in state-run refugee camps, and so ended up actually doing a better job of providing housing than the government.

I think there are some huge opportunities for everything you are talking about, and I think it's all 100% necessary at this particular point in history.

And no offense but any traveler that has had their eyes open even a little bit and still manages to believe in capitalism can pretty much go fuck themselves.
 
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RACC00NHands

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I agree with most of your points and where I disagree I think is minor enough to not be worth arguing about until we get somewhere closer to that point.
The one thing I think i disagree enough on is that we CAN see this shit in our lifetimes. We are a reaching a point of political and ecological catastrophe in the world that will have to come to a head sooner rather than later. It seems impossible now but in the history of these things when shit happens it happens fast.

So rather than slow slides left I'm personally in favor of just creating the world I want to see right the fuck now and when shit gets weird we'll be ready for it. Like the black panthers creating the infrastructure they were denied by capitalism, I want to see networks form against capitalism and nations right now so that we'll be able to take care of ourselves and other people when the time comes, and the time has already come.
I mostly agree with this, but I want to add a bit. In many ways, waiting for the "revolution" has become like waiting for the rapture. It's not going to happen unless we do it. There won't be some call to arms, and there won't come a time when we are suddenly strong enough to fight and win or whatever. The call to arms is simply when you realize that you are what you've been waiting for.

Shit's already weird. At this point, there's no way to avoid the fact that the current systems simply don't work, and that the climate is probably beyond our help. If you want to see those networks form, do it. Start talking to the people around you and making those connections. engage wholeheartedly in mutual aid, and sabotage where you can. omething I often say is that at this point, we are all scavengers. We can only survive on the scraps and carcasses of the existing structures. Find life where you can in this mess. Eat from the dumpsters, and if they have locks, break them. Start Squats, grow gardens in empty lots, and set up free boxes. The time has come for sure, and all we can do is to take what we can and share it.
 
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