You Can't Beat Something With Nothing
When our little neighborhood Iraq Moratorium group started up in San Francisco last September, our handouts declared that the Moratorium would "be an escalating, monthly series of actions across the nation demanding an end to the war." Didn't work out that way, though.
Our group is still going, all right -- ten or fifteen of us have been out with our antiwar signs on several street corners on the third Friday of the month ever since, handing out flyers asking passers-by to call Congress or take some other action demanding an immediate end to the war. Unfortunately, however, it's been the war that has escalated over that time period and not the antiwar movement. They called it a "surge" this time, but however you describe it, the fact is that since we started there are more troops in Iraq and fewer demonstrators on the streets.
A cynic might say the country has forgotten there's a war going on at all, or at least wants to forget. Certainly you could get that impression from what's in the news or, more properly speaking, what's not in the news: The Project for Excellence in Journalism reports combined coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (remember that one?), which had accounted for 25 percent of total American news reporting last September had fallen to just 3 percent by this past May. And so far as antiwar activity goes, it's been so slim as to raise the question of whether it even merits being characterized as a "movement" these days.
So certainly we don't bounce out there each month thinking we're about to turn things around. It's more that we trudge out feeling that we have to do something. The reception we actually get on the street is fairly gratifying: drivers honking in support and a fair number of people even thanking us. There are a few who do tell us that we shouldn't be there, though, not because they disagree with us, but because they think we're ineffectual. One says we should be in some other state -- like Arkansas. Another suggests we need to go to Pacific Heights, a wealthier neighborhood where she probably reckons you might even find an occasional Republican. One just tells us, "You're preaching to the converted," as he turns the corner into the supermarket.
Now far be it from me to claim that our little protest has moved the end of this war forward even a nanosecond. And I don't mean to make too much of offhand comments of people on the street, yet they do seem to reflect a widespread if seldom articulated point of view -- that nothing we say or do about the war matters, so it's okay to say or do nothing. I once tried to interest a friend in Berkeley in a monthly antiwar protest but she argued that since she lived in the district of Representative Barbara Lee, arguably the most antiwar member of Congress, it would be pointless. She didn't suggest doing anything else, though, just as none of the people on the street indicated any intention to get on planes or even crosstown buses to protest more effectually than we were doing.
By this logic, the burden of opposing the war would seem to fall on those whose congressional representatives who aren't so good, say in Arkansas or Wyoming. We who have had the good sense to live in the antiwar regions can take rest of the war off. Conversely, I would imagine that the do-nothing argument in Idaho runs something like this: The people in Berkeley and San Francisco and New York and Boston aren't even making all that much noise about the war, so there can't be too much I can do in Boise.
During the Vietnam War, one antiwar group called itself Individuals Against the Crime of Silence, its name derived from the post-World War II understanding that 1930s Germany showed it was not okay to just quietly accept your government's policies. To raise that principle again in contemporary America is certainly not to suggest that our situation resembles that of Nazi-era Germany. On the contrary, while there was a good answer as to why the Germans didn't do more to protest their government's actions -- the ones who did were sent to concentration camps -- there is no such excuse in the U.S. For all the discussion of the erosion of civil liberties under the Bush Administration, the fact is the overwhelming majority of us face absolutely no negative consequences for protesting this war. And yet, somehow, with no draft and so much of the war privatized, silence doesn't seem so much of a crime this time around.
Now a lot of people may say that all of this little protest stuff doesn't amount to a hill of beans compared to the question of who wins the presidential election, and I won't necessarily argue with that. But just as it was a fallacy to think that voting in a Democratic House in 2006 would end the war when there weren't a sufficient number of antiwar votes in Congress to do it, it's also a mistake to think that merely defeating John McCain will do the trick either. Barack Obama may not speak of a hundred year occupation, as McCain does, but he has never pledged to withdraw all American troops by the end of his term in 2013 -- and he would face immense pressure from the other side even if he had.
It's far from clear exactly what things we need to do to end this war, but one thing is clear -- nothing is not one of them.
Tom Gallagher is a writer and activist living in San Francisco.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllWhen you're losing, change the rules.
So many comments seem to typically contain the hidden assumption that it takes some external force, person, situation, to change things, usually something despairingly powerless in the current state of affairs. I hear the despair.
I have become convinced that I have the power to transform the world into one that is free of domination. I believe that all it takes to transform the world is for me to transform myself into a more mature, responsible, and loving person. That's all I have to do, nothing more than that, nothing less than that, and nothing is more important than that transformation. When I change my inner world, my external behavior shifts to match, and I become a creative source of systemic change.
Moreover, if I can do it, with my history of dysfunction and wounding, certainly you can do it. The ripple effect from this transformation is immeasurable, and it has the power to stimulate the largest institutions of repressive domination to implode. This turns conventional thought on its head, and would appear to be insane to most people, a kind of megalomania, which it is not, it is the exact opposite of megalomania. It is acknowledging our critical participation in energetic systems far larger than ourselves.
I do not accept that I am the victim of the military-media-corporate-government conspiracy. I am 100% responsible for it, another apparently "insane" idea, and yet what I mean is that I am 100% able to respond to it. I have an answer. I have more than one answer. Having a better idea is far more effective for producing social transformation than recrimination and revolt. Very soon the world will be ready to hear hundreds of thousands of people who have transformed themselves internally to be the change, and not demand the change from some external source.
The wave of transformation is happening all around us if we are open to perceiving it, and it is time to paddle like hell to match speeds with the wave so that when it breaks we are moving forward and not left behind. Those who ascribe to the "Left Behind" series of fictions, those who cling to blaming others and feeling superior, who refuse to accept that we are all in this together, are in for a big surprise.
Mr. Gallagher's experience is similar to my own. We protest on a street corner every Friday night, numbering about 12 people or so.
The "payoff" from public antiwar demonstrations happens over the long term. In cases such as these, when it appears there's no immediate benefit, we're taught to abandon such activities. Please resist that feeling. Social movements do happen. Change comes slowly, and so it's important to be patient and keep at it.
Mr. Gallagher's group has already achieved some progress by getting support from passing motorists. In my experience, the scariest Americans are those who drive by protesters with no reaction at all. Even getting the middle finger from asshole Bush supporters is a good thing because you provoked someone to think about the wars - the first step toward change.
Mr. Gallagher rightly points to declining corporate media coverage of the wars. By any standards, covering protests would be a prime activity of the media. However, I've been in demonstrations with tens of thousands of people that didn't get covered by the local press. The press seems genuinely uninterested in what the U.S. public and antiwar movement think. The press' dysfunction in this respect reflects the toxic corporate atmosphere of the news business, I think. However, it's also a real problem for democracy when the press fails to act as "the fourth estate" watchdog that it's supposed to be.
The objective of our protests is to change public opinion. You've got to keep the faith about it. The TV set will never clue people into the fact that they've lost their democracy. It's not the rallying point. Being on the street matters much more than it may seem.
Besides, attending regular public demonstrations is the only way to maintain your sanity in these times. People pretend to live normal lives even as the Constitution gets shredded by its usurpers. I think the social compact has actually frayed to the near breaking point. Protests offer another direction that's positive and life affirming. Even mainstream, Obama-voting Democrats are just an incident or two away from becoming real activists, I believe.
So, forget Obama as some sort of exit from the nightmare. He's not going to rock the boat.
Nixon lived in fear of the many public protests, and that's where we want our elected officials to be too. It's another reason to vote third party. Tell them you won't be manipulated. Mean it.
It's impossible to predict when the breaking point will be reached. Public opinion united will clear out the fascists, although things may have to get real bad to wake up snoozing complacent Democrats. Signs seem to be pointing in that direction, however. The economy is going bust. Jobs are insecure. It's painful, but it's also a direct consequence of unchecked fascism. And it's been clear that the fascism has been enabled by the Democratic Party - not just Republicans, ugly as they are.
Keep the faith, and I'll see you on the streets. You don't have anything better to do.
I think most of the people who were protesting since '03 and the new ones who joined in around the time of the surge in January '07 feel collectively discouraged. The Democrats elected in 2006, we were told, would stop this. They sure were happy to have progressive grassroots energy (think Move On phone banking and other election efforts), but they dropped us as soon as they got into office. How many of the Democrats have actually done a done a damn thing to get us out of this war? A few have, but most haven't gone out on much of a limb or made any kind of significant effort.
Also, I want to point out a few fundamental problems that exist within our grassroots efforts. In my personal experience, I have found it very hard after graduating from college to actually find a group of people that does something not online, but actually out in the real world. I've emailed local Code Pink groups with no luck and actually approached some of them at a rally and wanted to join and wasn't given any info or a contact person. I spent a couple hours online looking up local peace groups and emailed a bunch of supposively existent ones in my major metropolitan area and only heard from one (Veterans for Peace). Then I joined some peace list serve in my state and was so inundated by email (hundreds everyday!) talking about nothing important (what color t shirts should we get for our next event?) that I finally got disgusted and dropped out of that since it wasn't helping me to do anything. I should have tried harder to work with the Veterans for Peace. They seem to be a great organization and perhaps better organized than most.
frank1569 June 13th, 2008 3:03 pm --- Your comments bear repeating because ALL Americans know in their gut: "The nail that stands up gets pounded down." We summed it up in one word: COINTELPRO.
"…the fact is the overwhelming majority of us face absolutely no negative consequences for protesting this war."
frank1569: "Wrong, and the wrong attitude. Besides getting arrested and then living with a felony record (no voting, tough to get housing, etc,) there's the IRS and the guarantee your landline will be bugged; your cell will be constantly tapped and GPSed by the FBI, NSA, etc; your employer will most likely be pressured to kick you; and, as things continue to deteroriate, you may even be attacked by the super-brainwashed cult members, many of whom have badges and Tazers…
All actions have consequences and it's naive to think Cheney/Bush wouldn't be as brutal and ruthless as possible, especially since they really, really enjoy being as brutal and ruthless as possible. Yes, we all must protest more and more, but be prepared for the aftermath."
Tell it straight: They go up against Master they are going to war. There will be casualties. Some of us don't come back.
frank1569, most of them'd rather take a Slave Chip up the ass. Progressives.
Tom:
As a San Franciscan I thank you for your efforts. I understand the frustration. Have you thought about joining forces with Cindy Sheehan?
Visit http://www.cindyforcongress.org
One of the ways we can end these wars, is by threatening the jobs, of the politicians who refuse to carry out the wishes of their constituents. If Pelosi gets a good scare, or Cindy is fortunate enough to win, the troops will come home from Iraq at least.
If Obama believes that he may lose the progressive vote to Nader, he might be forced to make a firm commitment, on withdrawal.
Because the population is apathetic to just about everything... until of course you raise the price of gas... then they're all up in arms. silly.
Rich Griffin June 13th, 2008 1:50 pm
"We who are truly anti-war"
Don't you think most of us are anti-war? Especially the soldiers fighting it?
"I hope the antiwar movement will educate people about the importance of the UN Charter."
The UN charter won't supercede US law and thats what GWB and the Lord of Darkness used to get us into this.
Opposing this war actively in public is essential to ending all US government wars. It is the sheer laziness of the typical Democratic Party voting liberal that is the real problem here. They simply don't want to do anything much other than mouth off and vote for their corporate created candidates. Meanwhile the whole world suffers due to the inaction and laziness of these Ugly Liberal Americans.
Opposing this war isn't enough because they'll come up with others. I hope the antiwar movement will educate people about the importance of the UN Charter.
While feet on the street may not appear to be effective, as Mr. Gallagher suggests, in shortening the 'war' in Iraq, I suspect such actions may be a useful adjunct to another approach.
I have reference here to the 'boring from within' strategy represented in part by the Pacific Green Party of Oregon's "peace slate" -- a group of four congressional candidates (Mike Beilstein, Michael Meo, Tristin Mock, and Alex Polikoff) nominated earlier this month, all of whom are on record as opposing the continued waste of men, women, and treasure represented by the occupation of Iraq.
Green parties in other states are also mounting peace slate efforts, and the successful election of just one of these candidates might shatter the complacency and torpor of the Democrats, who have proven singularly ineffectual since the 2006 election -- so ineffectual that they are, collectively, an intrinsic contributor to the problem Mr. Gallagher illuminates here.
"...the fact is the overwhelming majority of us face absolutely no negative consequences for protesting this war."
Wrong, and the wrong attitude. Besides getting arrested and then living with a felony record (no voting, tough to get housing, etc,) there's the IRS and the guarantee your landline will be bugged; your cell will be constantly tapped and GPSed by the FBI, NSA, etc; your employer will most likely be pressured to kick you; and, as things continue to deteroriate, you may even be attacked by the super-brainwashed cult members, many of whom have badges and Tazers...
All actions have consequences and it's naive to think Cheney/Bush wouldn't be as brutal and ruthless as possible, especially since they really, really enjoy being as brutal and ruthless as possible. Yes, we all must protest more and more, but be prepared for the aftermath.
We who are truly anti-war have to decide fully that we have to put into effect a fully thought out realistic reasonable PLAN and stick with it - and be willing to toe the line in a very disciplined manner. People are too opinionated and too unwilling to work TOGETHER in large enough numbers. It doesn't have to be this way, but it is.