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Occupy Draws Strength From the Powerless
There is a recipe for breaking popular movements. I watched it play out over five years in the war in El Salvador. I now see these familiar patterns in the assault against the Occupy movement. It goes like this. Physically eradicate the insurgents’ logistical base of operations to disrupt communication and organization. Dry up financial and material support. Create rival organizations—the group Stand for Oakland seems to be one of these attempts—to discredit and purge the rebel leadership. Infiltrate the movement to foster internal divisions and rivalries, a tactic carried out consciously, or perhaps unconsciously, by an anonymous West Coast group known as OLAASM—Occupy Los Angeles Anti Social Media. Provoke the movement—or front groups acting in the name of the movement—to carry out actions such as vandalism and physical confrontations with the police that alienate the wider populace from the insurgency. Invent atrocities and repugnant acts supposedly carried out by the movement and plant these stories in the media. Finally, offer up a political alternative. In the war in El Salvador it was Jose Napoleon Duarte. For the Occupy movement it is someone like Van Jones. And use this “reformist” to co-opt the language of the movement and promise to promote the movement’s core aims through the electoral process.
An Occupy demonstrator sprawls beside a police car in Urbandale, Iowa, during a protest last December outside Republican presidential campaign offices in the Des Moines suburb. (AP / Evan Vucci)
Counterinsurgency campaigns, although they involve arms and weapons, are primarily about, in the old cliché, hearts and minds. And the tactics employed by our intelligence operatives abroad are not dissimilar to those employed by our intelligence operatives at home. These operatives are, in fact, often the same people. The state has expended external resources to break the movement. It is reasonable to assume it has expended internal resources to break the movement.
The security and surveillance state has a vast arsenal and array of tools at its disposal. It operates in secret. It dissembles and lies. It hides behind phony organizations and individuals who use false histories and false names. It has millions of dollars to spend, the capacity to deny not only its activities but also its existence. Its physical assets honeycomb the country. It can wiretap, eavesdrop and monitor every form of communication. It can hire informants, send in clandestine agents, recruit members within the movement by offering legal immunity, churn out a steady stream of divisive propaganda and amass huge databases and clandestine operations centers. And it is authorized to use deadly force.
How do we fight back? We do not have the tools or the wealth of the state. We cannot beat it at its own game. We cannot ferret out infiltrators. The legal system is almost always on the state’s side. If we attempt to replicate the elaborate security apparatus of our oppressors, even on a small scale, we will unleash widespread paranoia and fracture the movement. If we retreat into anonymity, hiding behind masks, then we provide an opening for agents provocateurs who deny their identities while disrupting the movement. If we fight pitched battles in the streets we give authorities an excuse to fire their weapons.
All we have, as Vaclav Havel writes, is our own powerlessness. And that powerlessness is our strength. The survival of the movement depends on embracing this powerlessness. It depends on two of our most important assets—utter and complete transparency and a rigid adherence to nonviolence, including respect for private property. This permits us, as Havel puts it in his 1978 essay “The Power of the Powerless,” to live in truth. And by living in truth we expose a corrupt corporate state that perpetrates lies and lives in deceit.
Havel, who would later become the first president of the Czech Republic, in the essay writes a reflection on the mind of a greengrocer who, as instructed, puts up a poster “among the onions and carrots” that reads: “Workers of the World Unite!” The poster is displayed partly out of habit, partly because everyone else does it, and partly out of fear of the consequences for not following the rules. The greengrocer would not, Havel writes, display a poster saying: “I am afraid and therefore unquestioningly obedient.” And here is the difference between the terror of a Josef Stalin or an Adolf Hitler and the collective charade between the rulers and the ruled that by the 1970s had gripped Czechoslovakia.
“Imagine,” Havel writes, “that one day something in our greengrocer snaps and he stops putting up the slogans merely to ingratiate himself. He stops voting in elections he knows are a farce. He begins to say what he really thinks at political meetings. And he even finds the strength in himself to express solidarity with those whom his conscience commands him to support. In this revolt the greengrocer steps out of living within the lie. He rejects the ritual and breaks the rules of the game. He discovers once more his suppressed identity and dignity. He gives his freedom a concrete significance. His revolt is an attempt to live within the truth.”
This attempt to “live within the truth” brings with it ostracism and retribution. Punishment is imposed in bankrupt systems because of the necessity for compliance, not out of any real conviction. And the real crime committed is not the crime of speaking out or defying the rules, but the crime of exposing the charade.
“By breaking the rules of the game, he has disrupted the game as such, he has exposed it as a mere game,” Havel says of his greengrocer. “He has shattered the world of appearances, the fundamental pillar of the system. He has upset the power structure by tearing apart what holds it together. He has demonstrated that living a lie is living a lie. He has broken through the exalted façade of the system and exposed the real, base foundations of power. He has said that the emperor is naked. And because the emperor is in fact naked, something extremely dangerous has happened: by his action, the greengrocer has addressed the world. He has enabled everyone to peer behind the curtain. He has shown everyone that it is possible to live within the truth. Living within the lie can constitute the system only if it is universal. The principle must embrace and permeate everything. There are no terms whatsoever on which it can coexist with living within the truth, and therefore everyone who steps out of line denies it in principle and threatens it in its entirety.”
Those who do not carve out spaces separate from the state and its systems of power, those who cannot find room to become autonomous, or who do not “live in truth,” inevitably become compromised. In Havel’s words, they “are the system.” The Occupy movement, by naming corporate power and refusing to compromise with it, by forming alternative systems of community and society, embodies Havel’s call to “live in truth.” It does not appeal to the systems of control, and for this reason it is a genuine threat to the corporate state.
Movements that call on followers to “live in truth” do not always succeed. They failed in Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, triggering armed insurgencies and blood-drenched civil wars. They have failed so far in Iran, the Israeli-occupied territories and Syria. China has a movement modeled after Havel’s Charter 77 called Charter 08. But the Chinese opposition to the state has been effectively suppressed, even though its principal author, Liu Xiaobo, currently serving an 11-year prison term for “incitement of subversion of state power,” was awarded the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize. Power elites who stubbornly refuse to heed popular will and resort to harsher and harsher forms of state control can easily provoke counterviolence. The first Palestinian uprising, which lasted from 1987 to 1992, saw crowds of demonstrators throw rocks at Israeli soldiers, but it was largely a nonviolent movement. The second uprising, or intifada, which erupted in 2000 and endured for five years, with armed attacks on Israeli soldiers and civilians, was not. History is dotted with brutal fratricides spawned by calcified and repressive elites who ignored peaceful protest. And even when nonviolent movements do succeed, it is impossible to predict when they will spawn an uprising or how long the process will take. As Timothy Garton Ash noted about Eastern Europe’s revolutions of the late 20th century, in Poland the revolt took 10 years, in East Germany 10 weeks, in Czechoslovakia 10 days.
Occupy’s most powerful asset is that it articulates this truth. And this truth is understood by the mainstream, the 99 percent. If the movement is severed from the mainstream, which I expect is the primary goal of the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, it will be crippled and easily contained. Other, more militant groups may rise and even flourish, but if the Occupy movement is to retain the majority it will have to fight within self-imposed limitations of nonviolence.
I do not know if it will succeed. If it does not ,then I fear we will see the classical forms of violent protest that are used by an enraged and frustrated populace; for me such a turn to violence, while understandable, is always tragic. Violence is a poison, even when it is ingested in a supposedly just cause. It contaminates all who use it. I watched this poison work on repressors and the repressed from Latin America to the Middle East to the Balkans. I am not a pacifist. I know there are limits. But I desperately want to avoid going there.
“We would not have a movement if violence or property damage were used from the outset,” Kevin Zeese, one of the first activists to call for an Occupy movement, told me. “People are not drawn to violent movement. Such tactics will shrink rather than expand our base of support. Property damage justifies police violence to many Americans. There is a wide range of diversity of tactics within a nonviolent strategy. Disciplined nonviolence is often more difficult because anger and emotion lead people to want to strike back at the police when they are violent, but disciplined nonviolence is the tactic that is most effective against the violence of the state.”
The organizer Lisa Fithian is an author of one of the most concise arguments for nonviolence, “Open Letter to the Occupy Movement: Why We Need Agreements.” The essay points out that without agreements that enshrine nonviolence, “the young [are privileged] over the old, the loud voices over the soft, the fast over the slow, the able-bodied over those with disabilities, the citizen over the immigrant, white folks over people of color, those who can do damage and flee the scene over those who are left to face the consequences.”
“ ‘Diversity of tactics’ becomes an easy way to avoid wrestling with questions of strategy and accountability,” Fithian and two other authors write of the slogan used by the Black Bloc anarchists. “It lets us off the hook from doing the hard work of debating our positions and coming to agreements about how we want to act together. It becomes a code for ‘anything goes,’ and makes it impossible for our movements to hold anyone accountable for their actions.”
“The Occupy movement includes people from a broad diversity of backgrounds, life experiences and political philosophies,” the article goes on. “Some of us want to reform the system and some of us want to tear it down and replace it with something better. Our one great point of agreement is our call for transparency and accountability. We stand against the corrupt institutions that broker power behind closed doors. We call to account the financial manipulators that have bilked billions out of the poor and the middle classes.
“Just as we call for accountability and transparency, we ourselves must be accountable and transparent,” the authors write. “Some tactics are incompatible with those goals, even if in other situations they might be useful, honorable or appropriate. We can’t be transparent behind masks. We can’t be accountable for actions we run away from. We can’t maintain the security culture necessary for planning and carrying out attacks on property and also maintain the openness that can continue to invite in a true diversity of new people. We can’t make alliances with groups from impacted communities, such as immigrants, if we can’t make agreements about what tactics we will employ in any given action.”
We must assume we are targets. And we must fight back by relying on our strength, which in the great paradox of resistance movements is embodied in our weakness. This does not mean we will avoid being repressed or persecuted. It will not keep us safe from slander, lies or jail. But it does offer the capacity to create internal divisions in the apparatus of the oppressors rather than permit the oppressors to create internal divisions within the movement. Divided loyalties create paralysis. And it is our job to paralyze them, not allow them to paralyze us.
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203 Comments so far
Show All" Hedges' EXPOSURE of the likely infiltrated nature of Black Bloc"
He did nothing of the sort. He suggested in the last column precisely the opposite - that the anarchists (who he couldn't bother to interview - hey great journalism skills!) were doing the wrong things because of failed ideology.
I think he's read the backlash against his last awful column and now has written one suggesting that people who are "divisive" (which for some reason doesn't include him, the ONLY person who has called any OWS people a "cancer") might possibly kinda sorta sometimes be government agents.
What a crock!
While not quite as inflammatory, misinformed and divisive as last week's column, this piece relies on much of the very same spurious reasoning and dubious assumptions.
Hedges points to those who "carry out actions such as vandalism and physical confrontations with the police that alienate the wider populace from the insurgency" as guilty of undermining the Occupy movement. There might be some truth in the assumption that these types of actions diminish the support of certain members of the general public, but it is almost certainly not as universally true as Hedges asserts. Just as there are surely some people who are turned off by confrontational tactics, there are surely many others who are turned off by the passivity of demonstrators in the face of police violence.
People respect those who stand up for themselves, especially those who stand up to bullies. The rigid adherence to nonviolence (which I suspect has as much to do with general timidity as it does with any actual principles) does not do a lot to win respect from a large segment of the population, and those people are not going to join a movement that they don't respect. Sure, they might respond favorably to a pollster asking them their opinion on Occupy, but is that all we care about, poll numbers? What we need are actual people in the streets, preferably people who aren't afraid to defend themselves in the face of police repression.
"but it is almost certainly not as universally true as Hedges asserts. Just as there are surely some people who are turned off by confrontational tactics, there are surely many others who are turned off by the passivity of demonstrators in the face of police violence."
advertisers understand this very well, as they use revolutionary imagery to sell products (selling the idea of revolution). here's one example. 2 videos - the original levi's video and anarchists remake/montage of levi's videos from the same campaign video.
Levi's Go Forth "America"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uBsV8wAEhw
Go Forth and Revolt
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVc8auO1vuA
i believe if the masses agree w/ the critique of capitalism and empire, there are many amongst it's ranks who are willing to step forward.
...peace...
"there are surely many others who are turned off by the passivity of demonstrators in the face of police violence"
VERY TRUE.
Most Americans are very turned off by anyone who appears to be weak and losing. Occupy has been weak and losing. It runs against this culture to make a case for yourself by taking a beating.
It runs against biology to as well - the phrase is "fight or flight" but the billyclub absorbers do neither.
Beyond this the numbers of people who would love to take a shot at attacking the financial system is in the TENS OF MILLIONS at least. There'd be a tipping point at which a lot of average folks, if they saw the police greatly outnumbered, would love to rush in to take over the NYSE.
Not only are the police and the financial industry TERRIFIED of that, I think some gatekeeper liberals like Hedges are too.
As far as I am concerned, whether a movement is called "Occupy" or anything else, people must know they have the unqualified support of others in the movement.
It's pathetic and disgraceful to allow fellow protesters to be assaulted by thugs in uniform, couching that cowardice in the rhetoric of "Ghandian nonviolent pacifism" or whatever, and not only that, but disavowing and purging anyone from the movement who may be willing to engage in self defense.
I mean, violence is not something I advocate, but the rhetorical/ideological assault on the black bloc is just something I can not abide, and I never have. This has been going on for years, and while Chris Hedges may not realize it, he is making enemies among those whom with he should be making common cause.
Is it a problem with masculinity itself, that so far, the few mals who have posted take issue with Hedges for his code and approach of non-violence? How many of you have seen the wastes of war up close as he has, or been among the bodies of kids shot down in protests here or abroad? Or are you agents in out midst, trying to curry favor with any posters who might be inclined to use violence, so that like the FBI agents who set up stings, you can also justify your paychecks?
WTF?
You cast the argument as one between total pacifism and all out war. There are many shades of grey in between. For instance, the Flint sitdown strikes can be seen as violence against property and the strikers were ready to use force to defend their occupation.
The Stonewall riots and the White Night riots in SF are other examples of a violent response to police repression in the former and to rank injustice in the latter. All three of these actions were successful to a great degree, and were pivotal moments in the struggle for social justice.
I don't support the black bloc actions as I think they are destined to fail at this point in time. However my opposition is a tactical opposition, and is not based in an opposition to all tactics that might be interpreted as violent. I oppose some "violent" tactics (bombs, assasination etc) but support others depending on circumstances (militant picketing/blockading, physically resisting a police action, rioting).
I think that a nuanced approach is neccessary but lacking on both extremes: the bloc bloc and the "morality" based pacifists.
Occupy is a harbinger of the massive social unrest that wil occur if its message is not heeded. Unfortunately, the Left cannot truly claim to represent the masses, because for many reasons only a small part of the masses are affiliated with the Left. When mass unrest does occur, the Left and the ploice will be powerless to lead, direct or limit that violence, which I predict will take the form of extremely violent rioting, looting and attcks on whoever the rioters blame for their plight.
So the balc bloc is a minor issue compared to the issue of what stance will Occupy and other Left groups take towards the rioting when it occurs.
I like your analysis of the broader movement, Joe. You're a good strategic thinker.
Our nation is so fraught with violence that it's a damned shame we're here debating the primacy of its utilitarian applications! Were the nation not so evidently under Mars rules, with all manner of armed guards at every intersection, this entire conversation, thank the Goddess, would be moot. That's the world I am imagining... the world I believe is still possible. Who wants to be part of a society where whatever the premise, each group seizes upon the more atavistic use of raw force?
On the subject of violence: Do you consider a cat catching and eating a rat to be violent? The cat is, after all, doing what it must to procure the nourishment it needs to survive. But what if the rat fights back (as they so often do)? What if the rat wins? Is the rat being violent by wanting to do whatever it can to survive?
(Let it be known that I share my home with two cats, and have gone into serious debt to insure their health and safety. I also want it known I have great respect for rats, because they can survive damn near anything. Even humans)
Yes. It is violence. The rat eating seeds is the violent killing of plant life. This entire universe; the dark end of the Creation, is violent, where life-kills-life, to live (even the vegans). We kill bacteria & viruses so that WE may live. That's why this is a minor hell-world and NOT our true home. NO ONE can break this karmic chain, this "gordian knot", EXCEPT a mystic who comes "with a pardon" as it were, to escort back Home, whomever was given over to His/Her care, by the Creator. This is an on-going process, NOT a one-shot deal. For the Creation to be something different from the perfect Creator, it had to be imperfect: welcome to the Grand Imperfection of Creation...experience it, play the GAME, find the way out...your Mother is playing "hide-and-seek" with you.
Sorry for butting in. It had to be said though.
I agree that in a more humane and egalitarian society, we would not be having this discussion. I began my political activism as a pacifist, but experience and research changed my POV.
To me it becomes an argument about minimizing violence and brutality in all its forms. Billions living in crushing poverty and widespread environmental devastation are two aspects of the violence that permeates the interanational capitalist system. If it takes a small amount of more confrontational and forceful tactics to set us on a different path, then so be it.
No, I'm not an agent, and no, I haven't seen the wars that Hedges spent many years covering up close.
What I have seen is unprovoked police violence against demonstrators. I have seen police wail on demonstrators with batons, I have seen them pepper spray people in the face, and I have seen them surround hundreds of protesters with orange netting and engage in mass arrests. I have seen police grab people out of the crowd and despite the fact that protesters outnumber the police ten to one, I have seen protesters cower in fear of authority, refusing to do anything to rescue fellow protesters from false arrest.
The only people I have ever seen mount any kind of defense against police brutality are members of the black bloc. While the pacifists stand around shouting "shame" as police snatch protesters from the crowd, the black bloc will jump in to save fellow protesters from being thrown in jail, a tactic known as "unarresting." While some might find their black attire or their chants alienating, I find it highly inspiring to see them come to the aid of others. What I find alienating is the lack of solidarity and the timidity that allows police to attack demonstrators with impunity.
I unfortunately have seen the horrors of war and for many years had recurring dreams of the violent death of a particular child. I don't want violence because I have seen too much, but I know that we will see much more violence in the coming years coming from the 1% directed at the 99%. People must resist. Greece may show us the way.
Hedges has pointed out in the past about violent provocateurs infiltrating OWS and surely he is right about that, just like in Cointelpro. But I tend to agree with Ward Churchill that most calls for non-violence comes from white intellectuals in the 1% mostly unaffected by the miseries of our society.
The rich will destroy the planet if we don't stop them.
Hey great point, it's just men's fault.
Too bad we can't have Maggie Thatcher and Golda Meir and Hil Clinton and Condi Rice and Maddie Albright and Nancy Pelosi and Di Feinstein running everything. That'd put an end to war, no?
Try using a dictionary, but you just MIGHT learn something !
MEN (sex equipment) is not equivalent to masculine (socialized characteristics).
Besides, blame and fault is all about stirring up evermore FEAR-based survival reactivity, whereas love is the antidote to that.
See :
LJG100 Feb 13 2012 - 3:25pm
Homeostasis Feb 15 2012 - 5:43am
So "being masculine" is it fault, then? So half of humanity is just all wrong, all of the time?
Your side of this argument wants us to be like Gandhi and King, and you're posting in support of Chris Hedges. Those are three males. Apparently you agree with the Kennedy brothers that King was behaving "like a woman", which was to them an insult.
When you have to smear large segments of the population with identity politics smears we all see how you need to grasp at straws. In one of these other threads video was posted of an anarchist (female and very possibly with "feminine characteristics"; I don't pretend to know where to draw that line unlike you) reading a statement in support of diversity of tactics which very specifically debunked the notion that direct action or self-defense is for some reason the right or tendancy only of males or of the masculine.
he doesn't look at evidence, the point is to discredit all who disagree w/ a broad brush. it's called psyops.
here's the link w/ photos and interviews (women and men) explaining what happened in oakland from a first hand perspective.
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/02/10/18707014.php
...peace...
Stop exaggerating and putting words in my mouth.
The many centuries of abusive male authority hierarchy, hurts men as much as it hurts women -- and what we need is balance and true egalitarian partnership.
Our societies are deeply out of balance because of the suppression and too long undermining of sacred feminine perspectives (e.g. relationships, spirit, interdependency, context), whilst vastly over-indulgence in unsustainable materialistic (contents) consumptive and competitive perspectives and living within a subservient hierarchy of authoritarian control (despotic abusive cruel usurpatious hegemony).
In no way is this about "blaming men," as women are just as responsible from a spiritual perspective, and both sexes are sickly hollowed out, separately from what matters, and mostly running on habituated auto-pilot, and suffering miserably.
This is all about a paradigm shift and spiritual transformation of both men and women, are relationship to our Mother Earth, and being enlivened with mutually beneficial growth, reverence, dignity, and in service to all of life.
We all need each other, as we are not separate as much of our social culture presumes. What we do the least of us, we do to us all.
The human condition is like the parable of a bird that has a man for one wing, and a woman for the other wing -- that can only fly when the are both equally strong and balanced
No, it's not true that "being masculine" is it fault"
No, it's not true that "half of humanity is just all wrong, all of the time"
No, I do not believe that "that King was behaving "like a woman", which was to them an insult"
Stop with all of this "you have to smear large segments of the population," as clearly it is your lack of understanding that it doing so -- not me in the least.
More un-substantiateable nonsense, saying that you "don't pretend to know where to draw that line unlike [ I do ], that someone has " … debunked the notion that direct action or self-defense is for some reason the right or tendancy only of males or of the masculine"
Funny that you claim not to "pretend to know where to draw that line," but nonetheless you excessively continue to attempt to circumscribe what you fantasize is my point of view and/or place on this Earth. Each time being wrong, one might think that you would pick up on that futility -- but it appears you thrive in that slop.
Have you ever consider asking someone what they think and believe, instead of wasting so much time accusing them of what glimmers and dust you gin together ?
Of course I have doubts, of course both men and women have equal rights to defend themselves, of course the future in uncertain …
Interesting
“live in truth.” It does not appeal to the systems of control, and for this reason it is a genuine threat to the corporate state."
This seems like a valid statement to me and the reason we are witnessing a global shift in human consciousness.
Costas Lapavitsas in the following video has some interesting insights as well .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDl_wY8k_Wg
blackbird and rose? Agree that there are no easy solutions, no one gets out for free. We will need all levels of competent leadership. Of course there will be attacks to take down any march for truth at this time, in these times.
Mr. Hedges would certainly have my ear for ideas, as would others standing up for peace.
Everyone wants to know what things are going to look like. "We will need broad layers of people, ...we must hear the Democratic voice of people of civil society and organized labor..."
Perhaps this is over-simplified, but every protest movement will have a relatively small number of (usually mostly young white males) of violent ones. Whether these are genuine or agents provocateurs really does not matter, as it is almost inevitable.
The "violence" is almost always property damage and property damage ought to be treated separately from seriously injuring and killing people. The political powers usually have no problem employing state violence as (as Hedges notes) the law is always on the side of the state and monied interests. They have no problem blaming victims, telling lies and using more violence to protect the status quo. It is almost always the state who employs lethal violence. The media distorts this and focuses on the lies and "violence". Don't encourage the lies, ignore them it is a diversion. Hedges seems to get caught up in this diversion and exaggeration.
As many point out, Hedges qualifies many of the claims he maide last week, but I think an overall point is missed. The Occupy movement is only one segment of an angry and disillusioned public. The Occupy movement is only the beginning and should be seen as only a beginning. Instead of thousands engaging in civil disobedience, there will be millions. If the current trends continue we can expect more kleptocracy, wars, declining standards of living, increasing poverty, declining access to health care etc. etc. etc.
In short, as material conditions deteriorate, more people will find themelves with little to lose and we will then see millions participating in disobedience and protest.
In the past (like in the 30s, 40s for example) there were organized unions with their own newspapers and clubs. Unions were the center of organization for the majority of people interested in fighting back against corrupt oligarchy and injustice. Since the nation has been largely stripped of high value-added manufacturing (and even hi-tech) jobs, and unions have been decimated, it will be even more difficult to organize the masses and aggregate diverging opinions and interests. The unions that remain have, for the most part, been co-opted and almost toothless.
I wish I had an easy answer, but this is something to be working on in the coming months and years.
"The Occupy movement is only one segment of an angry and disillusioned public."
I think this is an important point and one that bears repeating. I might also add that "Occupy" is not a movement at all, but rather, a tactic. The movement is much bigger than the recent wave of occupying public spaces, and personally, I don't separate it from the wave of summit protests that kicked off with the 1999 WTO protests or the antiwar protests that swept the world in 2003.
In all of these waves of protest, the police have responded with violence and mass arrests against largely peaceful protesters. Yes, there have always been militant tendencies present, but in my personal experience with street protests it is always the police who instigate violence, and any "violence" on the part of the protesters largely falls under the category of self defense. The media of course always plays up this violence, and then the movement feels it must respond, usually by more firmly restating its avowed commitment to rigid nonviolence and purging itself of the only ones willing to physically resist. In my view, this only serves to facilitate government repression.
A lot of Mr. Hedges recent columns regarding Occupy/OWS and 'civil disobedience' in the face of Police brutality and Government oppression seem to be in the same vein as counseling a rape victim to lie still/comply and wait for it to be over.
Given his history as a seminary student, that may not be far from the truth...
Very well said. No where in Hedges universe, regarding his religious persecution of the BB, does the phrase "self-defense" come up.
If you listen to people on the ground in Oakland, where Hedges is clearly writing in response to, the overwhelming consensus was that the people were grateful for the protection provided by those with shields, and those willing to break down a fence in order to free people from being kettled and shot by the police. The same was true at the YMCA incident.
You lifted that analogy from my recent response to the imbeciles who pretend that climate change is no big deal, and/or that there's nothing we can do about it.
I'm not sure I even read that particular post/response, so it may be that I came up with a similar response to a similar argument.
But in each case, the Powers Whut Iz want the populace to 'lie back and take it', be it in response to environmental destruction or Police oppression. Mr. Hedges, as a paid member of the Fourth Estate, is a willing partner to the PWI, and goes about spreading the message 'If you are going to be raped, just lie back and try to enjoy it'.
Whoa, that seminary comment is way out of line. Disgusting. I can't believe you just wrote that.
Taking into consideration the documented history of the Catholic church, it is within the realm of possibility that Hedges was a victim, no?
Yes. I went to a Catholic boarding school and had the good genetic fortune of large size at an early age so the brothers didn't ask me to take a spanking with their big paddles with my pants down, but they did to all the little kids. My parents pulled me out after one semester.
A lot of people who are or were devout Christians have predictable issues with masochism. If that's what people want to do in the bedroom (or hey kitchen, wherever, it ain't my life...) that's fine but when we start using that as a basis for political tactics it's quite OK to mention as a counterargument.
Beyond the rape issues in the faith there are masochism issues. Some people seem to think they aren't doing the right thing unless it hurts. Not the best people to have next to you when the police charge...
NB: This began as a reply to iowablackbird's 1:55pm comment. But after the comment disappeared and reappeared like the Cheshire Cat within the space of a few minutes-- one of those "computer glitches", no doubt-- I decided to post it as an independent comment.
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Thanks for this thoughtful and informative response, iowablackbird.
• Speaking of "legitimate criticisms", check out Randall Amster's response to Hedges' previous article, "A Bustle in Hedges’ Row"* if you haven't seen it already.
Since CD is quick to publish Amster's innocuous "upbeat" pieces, it is disappointing that it didn't publish this cogent critique last week.
• I have generally been "pro-Hedges"; I was pleased when CD started publishing his pieces regularly after leaving him out in the cold for a long while.
But I do find one aspect of Hedges' recent Occupy commentaries disturbingly contradictory or paradoxical.
Hedges writes, "We cannot ferret out infiltrators. [...] If we attempt to replicate the elaborate security apparatus of our oppressors, even on a small scale, we will unleash widespread paranoia and fracture the movement."
The problem with Hedges' stance is that it's expressed as a meta-position above, or outside, the movement. That is, perhaps a lifetime of professional orientation as a journalist compels Hedges to always write as a (detached) observer.
But Hedges is explicitly and unabashedly a part of Occupy; he writes as an actor, a participant, even a spokesperson. Which is fine, in and of itself.
However, his emerging theme of persistently calling out and castigating what he considers illegitimate and inimical groups or tactics associated with the Occupy movement is itself an attempt to "discredit and purge" elements he deems unacceptable and pernicious. Regardless of how noble, well-intended, and even "right" Hedges may be, his articles also "foster internal divisions and rivalries" within the movement.
It's an impossible position. In a nutshell, Hedges' recent essays contain the subtext, "I'm 'part of the solution' calling out and denouncing elements that are 'part of the problem'." And I find myself reluctantly siding with sometimes-rabid critics who object to Hedges' tendency to exclusively arrogate the moral and pragmatic high ground. (Those with abiding animus towards Hedges would simply call it "hypocrisy"; I don't because I don't attribute the requisite self-conscious bad faith endemic to hypocrisy.)
As I predict this comments thread will itself reflect, Hedges' position seems like respectable, unimpeachable, and even admirable wisdom and common sense to those who share his distrust and antipathy towards "Black Bloc anarchists" and others who refuse to embrace absolute non-violence on principle. Presumably they won't acknowledge, or be bothered by, the conflict I'm trying to describe.
I myself have a hobbit-like aversion to violence and even interpersonal hostility, so I'm sympathetic to the philosophy of non-violence. But I appreciate that ideological anarchists and those who advocate, though not necessarily promote, violence do so in good faith-- and ought not be collectively condemned as either "bad apples" or "cancers" or unwitting tools of the oppressor.
So even to me, Hedges seems to be begging the question-- and, more to my point, sidestepping or denying the problem that his own fierce advocacy and proselytizing is just as potentially divisive, and for all its high-mindedness may be legitimately perceived as fractious destructive paranoia or scapegoating by those within the movement who legitimately disagree with him.
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* http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/08/a-bustle-in-hedges-row/
Thanks for the insightful comments, Obedient Servant. I hope Mr. Hedges, like our resident poet Phil Rockstroh, reads the comments here at CD. Like you and Amster, I admire Hedges and read everything he writes. Mr. Hedges, please remember that Lenin and Stalin also purged the less pure.
OS, You write: "So even to me, Hedges seems to be begging the question-- and, more to my point, sidestepping or denying the problem that his own fierce advocacy and proselytizing is just as potentially divisive, and for all its high-mindedness may be legitimately perceived as fractious destructive paranoia or scapegoating by those within the movement who legitimately disagree with him."
Very well put and to the point. Hedges seems "blinded by the light" and to have fallen into the trap all moralists finally encounter: the limits of their own knowledge and powers.
Having carved out the moral imperatives, Hedges' highly inaccurate remarks on the what he calls the "black block" "anarchist movement" fosters divisiveness and confusion instead of compassion and understanding. By intellectualizing and abstracting human suffering and frailty, Hedges places himself at a remove from the immediacy of the pain and humanity driving many who suffer injustice-- and then presumes to judge their ethical behavior. As a Christian Hedges surely knows the teaching: "Judge not lest ye be judged." A teaching that implicitly counsels humility along with self-awareness.
When the federal government sent soldiers to occupy towns and cities, along with gattling guns (US civil war era machine guns) loaded on flat bed train cars, to occupy towns and cities where impoverished laborers were striking during the first national strike in 1877 the message taken into the bones of the people, and the children and grandchildren of those laborers was this: "you are expendable." A message demonstrated by violence enacted against the powerless by the powerful countless times in US history right up to the present. Rendering this brutal and living reality into a moral abstraction by which to judge the morality of those who seek to redress this state of affairs is not a sign of the morality.
If Hedges is really afraid of violence, he should choose his words and images more carefully-- and most especially check his facts. Using his notoriety to spread falsehoods, fear-mongering among those most ardent to change an unjust system is not moral or wise .
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It's odd--you deplore what you characterize as Hedges's "moralism," yet your position, like that of the author of the CounterPunch article, is suffocatingly moralistic--as in "how dare Hedges judge those ardent young street toughs--condemn the sin but love the sinner, etc."
Is the substance of your position that Hedges is not empathetic or loving enough toward the Black Bloc types--even though you apparently share Hedges's aversion to violence and agree that aggressive provocations against armed police can be used to crush the movement in the bud?
And do you somehow think that the Black Bloc, by pushing confrontational tactics that run against the grain of the majority of Occupiers--including those like Hedges and Zeese who are militantly independent of the corporate duopoly--that these BB types, are somehow NOT being divisive?
So only those who advocate strategically suicidal forms of aggression are judged innocent of divisiveness, whereas those who correctly point out the foolishness of their orientation are somehow guilty of being divisive? And the BB types who refuse to conjure with the anti-provocation orientation of the majority of the movement are also absolved of lack of empathy?
You seem to be blowing great, dense, billows of fog and self-contradiction here--only because you find yourself, a person normally given to starchy denunciations of the follies of the status quo, suddenly choked with laryngitis when it comes to denouncing the follies of a section of the left.
Folly is folly, no matter what the source. Hope you get your voice back soon.
You are simply being difficult here. It's obvious you are not ready to accept a full-bodied critique of the entrenched attitude that you are lodging. You are stuck on something that is a limited argument... I would like to see knee-jerk commenters get off the BB issue and adapt to a lengthier vision that extends beyond Occupy or our currently 'mild' [for the most part] climate of protest.
I can't speak for anyone in particular, but perhaps some of these contrary views DO proceed from a position of experience and realistic application of ethics (or 'moralism')... it's possible that someone who feels differently from you can actually be talking sense, whether or not you can accept that...
Sorry, but your critique is itself billowy...
You say that my critique is "difficult"and "billowy," but you provide no examples or quotations to support your contention--a failure that would get you red-inked by a seventh-grade composition teacher.
The rest of your reply is equally lacking in specifics--so I have no idea what you're talking about, or even what your position is, other than you subjectively don't like what I wrote.
Your post is not an essay--it's a tantrum.
If you have something to say, please say it--in concrete, intelligible prose.
"I myself have a hobbit-like aversion to violence and even interpersonal hostility, so I'm sympathetic to the philosophy of non-violence"
In the Lord pof the Rings, the hobbits that were the main characters became very violent warriors as the triology progressed.
Very true.
"The Scouring of the Shire", which unfortunately was eliminated entirely from the film version, explicitly deals with the profound, crucial questions and implications of the merits or necessity of violence. It's arguably the culmination of a major theme of the epic story.
I meant it in the sense of sharing the normal or default hobbit aversion to violence.
FWIW, I always fully sympathized with Merry's exasperated admonition, "You won't rescue Lotho, or the Shire, just by being shocked and sad, my dear Frodo."
Obedient Servant
"The problem with Hedges' stance is that it's expressed as a meta-position above, or outside, the movement. That is, perhaps a lifetime of professional orientation as a journalist compels Hedges to always write as a (detached) observer.
But Hedges is explicitly and unabashedly a part of Occupy; he writes as an actor, a participant, even a spokesperson. Which is fine, in and of itself."
i believe your quote from tolkien buttresses the point you made above concerning hedges. is he a detached observer or a full on participant in social change ? amy goodman was surprised when she was arrested in st paul in 08, as she screamed - "i'm a journalist." i believe many goodhearted social critics may find themselves in a similar situation as our political situation deteriorates in the near future.
p.s. - thank you for the kind words and astute observations above.
...peace...
Think of everything Occupy is about. Anti-corporate, anti-war, for horizontalism, pro-environment, pro woman's rights, pro indigeneous rights, pro universal health care....
What is at the root of all things that are opposed- VIOLENCE. Whether state sponsored/instigated or not. It is all about violence. Violence to the environment, to the homeless, to woman, to innocent animals, to citizens of other countries, to dissenters, to the poor, to racial minorities...
To address these issues, a movement cannot emulate then oppressor and use the same tactics. Violence is not an option. Once it is used, the perpetrator becomes the very problem they sought to address.
Anyone who has ever been a true activist knows that one of the first steps towards freedom is rejecting the paradigms and assumptions that drive the madness in the world and that are traps for many. One of these is that humans are inherently violent, or that violence is necessary. Violence pervades every level of society. Yet, I do not believe this is inevitable or inherent in society or civilization. It is I believe a byproduct of thousands of years of faulty social and political structures whose mission has been to wipe out alternatives to a violent way of existence. It is time these structures be overthrown, using the tactic they most fear...the Truth.
it is difficult for some to accept that there is Truth. I would argue that a mother's love for a child,is the nearest to the notion of truth. I would also argue that a young child's openness and sensitivity is closer to the truth then most adult's common knowledge and generally accepted views. Why? Because a child's mind is not corrupted by anger, fear, dead social systems, prejudice, etc. They are blissfully free from the bounds of language,
Perfect comment, and the blinkered, violence-enamored, offended-by-Hedges neo-adolescent morons will never, ever understand it.
It's pretty sad really. It's amazing these people --in the rare instances they aren't paid agents provocateurs-- really think they can smash and bash and bomb and shoot their way past the most heavily armed government in the history of the world. Forget the immorality of killing people that have wives and kids and lives and families and friends, they can't understand that it won't work. It won't work. It won't work. Jackass, cretin IT WON'T WORK.
Morons, jackasses stand down. Violence won't work, not from the likes of you. And if you really think violence is the way, get the hell off these comment boards and atart talking to generals in the US military about America's oligarchy problem. You'll find they are about as eager to start a war with Iran as you are.
Didn't the third world Vietnamese defeat the powerful Americans. Didn't the Iraqi guerrillas defeat the US military. Didn't the Taliban defeat the US empire. Yes, they did in all those instances. The mighty trillion dollar US military has no answer to popular resistance because of numbers.
The relative Vietnamese losses were about 6% of the population, with something like 3,000,000 died in that process (out of 40-50 million).
For sobering up, try imagining 10 % dead Americans, which is about 32,000,000.
Imagine how Stalin would handle the situation, if he were running the USA …
The facts are that violence is insane and an outdated paradigm, and we're unable to solve the problems we face using the techniques and thinking that got us here (per Einstein).
Paradigm SHIFT is inevitable, how long that will take and how much violence will HAVE to be expended to learn of it's stupidity -- is hard to predict.
That's why faith (and consistent actions) in NON-VILENCE & TRUTH is essential, coupled to a conviction that the paradigm SHIFT is irrefutably inexorably inevitable.
I … I … I
If it's to BE
then it's up to ME
This is about an EVOLUTION (paradigm shift), not a revolution (violence, one new status quo replacing the old) -- those lacking the requisite consciousness -- can now go back to sleep.
This is a LONG term battle of
♡ _ L_O_V_E _♡
irrefutably inexorably inevitably
conquering
☠ _ F_E_A_R _ ☠.
Exactly how the __ ƒ ⊃ © k __ are MORE weapons, fear, and violence going to shift the context of most people's (fear-based) thinking towards that (heart/love-based) ?
More FEAR and VIOLENCE :
☠ _ only strengthens the EGO's survival reactivity and habituated responses,
☠ _ only strengthens the suppression of higher cognitive functions,
☠ _ only weakens our access to empathy, compassion, creativity, … excitement,
☠ _ only strengthens the innate fear induced infantilization that drives people crazily towards even more antiquated and authoritarian solutions.
As Eckhart Tolle informs us, we cannot eliminate the EGO's flawed chatter (negatively addictive), but we can quiet it by tuning our spiritual radios to more conscious and enlivened (positively addictive) thinking and BEINGNESS, that intrinsically will draw us through transformative evolutionary thinking (ego to heart).
Yes, an evolved and aware democracy is essential -- HOWEVER -- sleepy and half-dead (violent fear-based) thinking is essentially antediluvian (reptilian ego-based) and will eventually be seen as obsolete and useless, as starkly contrasted to mammalian empathy, love, forgiveness, compassion and spirit-based holistic HUMAN BEINGNESS (not HAVINGness, not DOINGness)
See also Feb 15 2012 - 7:17am
The right is using websites with news and opinions too. Does that mean CD should pack it in, since it's a tactic used by the right?
Should we stop speaking English because Fox News does?
Should we not hold up signs because the Tea Party does?
It occurs to me that a fantastic way to get your butt kicked - literally and figuritively - is to not only not engage in self-defense but to tell you opponents ahead of time that you won't, knowing full well they don't restrict themselves.
LJG----Brilliant post. You get it, where so few others do. Nonviolence activism is democracy in action. It is the only resemblance of democracy left in the U.S. Nonviolence activism needs to be mainstreamed on the level of the ideals of democracy and human rights.
Thankfully, consciousness is ever expanding as love surpasses fear and hate.
I agree we you that "LJG----Brilliant post"
I offer my own ruminations about avoiding the RUINation now confronting us, see
Feb 15 2012 - 5:43am
See also Feb 15 2012 - 7:17am
To LJG and Homeostasis: I wish to add: The purpose of nonviolent resistance is to expose the illegitimacy of those in power. It forces public reflection and awareness..........like suddenly seeing that "something is wrong with this picture". ....eventually questioning "who are really the bad guys?". This is spiritual discernment of the issues.
If you fight violence with violence, then who are the victims and the oppressors? The issues are clouded. Where is the evidence of truth? The violence to nonresistance exposes the truth.
I think I just saw Hedges shoot himself in the foot!
One of the tactics he claims the PTB use against populist uprisings, specifically to "Invent atrocities and repugnant acts supposedly carried out by the movement and plant these stories in the media."
Isn't that he did with his whole 'Black Bloc is a cancer in OWS' bit last week?
Mr. Chris 'Pot' Hedges, I would like you to meet a man named 'Kettle'... or rather an anarchist activist who was 'kettled'...
I've only had a chance to skim this article, but (sigh), although I haven't read the entire essay by Fithian, I think this statement is problematic because it's too general (or it sounds that way, from this article): "‘Diversity of tactics’ becomes an easy way to avoid wrestling with questions of strategy and accountability."
No. *Acting without strategizing* becomes an easy way to avoid wrestling with questions of strategy and accountability. *Diversity of tactic* can mean a multitude of things, including different strategies of waging non-violence, for example (as Zeese points out... and Occupy could certainly stand to expand - diversify - its nonviolent strategies/tactics). *Diversity of tactic* does NOT imply lack of forethought. Anyway, perhaps what the movement should do is take a few moments to define what actions constitute "nonviolent" and what actions constitute "violent"? And - another point - let us remember that at any moment, an action that Occupy deems "nonviolent" can (and will most likely) be misconstrued as "violent" by the corporate-run mainstream media.
Tangential to this discussion: let us keep in mind that "violence" - especially as practiced by our corporate-run government - can take on many forms.
Yes, transparency and accountability are incredibly important. So is trust. These are concepts that have been totally eroded and redefined by the 1%.
Anyway, I highly recommend everyone watch this film:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXQxyYllXnM
Pay particular attention to Stokely Carmichael's words. We, today, need to be asking similar questions and/or having similar thoughts/discussions.
Also, Hedges, himself, writes "Occupy’s most powerful asset is that it articulates this truth. And this truth is understood by the mainstream, the 99 percent." I suppose that the point of this statement is to insinuate that the 99% are somehow in line with or in agreement with the Occupy movement and that the Occupy movement will be supported by a majority of the 99%? Who are we kidding? I am pretty sure that this is not the case. The "99%" constitute a variety of people, including Teabaggers. I can not see Teabaggers as understanding any truth that Occupy articulates.