Before the Spanish call-out for a global day of action on October 15, a
few critical notes and words of encouragement from the Barcelona
neighborhood assemblies…
"Reflections for the US Occupy Movement"
2011-10-14 by PETER GELDERLOOS [http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/14/reflections-for-the-us-occupy-movement/]:
Peter
Gelderloos is the author of How Nonviolence Protects the State (South
End Press) and Anarchy Works (Ardent press). He currently resides in
Barcelona.
---
After the courageous revolts of the Arab
Spring, the next phenomenon of popular resistance to capture the world
media’s attention was the plaza occupation movement that spread across
Spain starting on the 15th of May (15M). Subsequently, attention turned
back to Greece, and now to the public occupations spreading across the
US, inspired by the Wall Street protests.
The function
of the media is to explain interruptions in the dominant narrative, not
to spread lessons useful to the social struggles that generate those
ruptures. As such, it is no surprise that they respond to the
strategically important moments before and after these mass gatherings
with a news blackout.
While the central plazas of the
cities of Spain are no longer occupied, in some places the momentum of
May continues with force. Particularly in Barcelona, a dynamic struggle
continues to evolve, including a heterogeneous and broad group of people
in weekly neighborhood assemblies, protests, hospital occupations, road
blockades, fights against mortgage evictions and housing repossessions,
and solidarity demonstrations against the inevitable repression.
The
neighborhood assemblies in particular form a strong backbone that holds
up all the ongoing struggles. In about twenty neighborhoods throughout
Barcelona, once a week, twenty to a hundred neighbors meet to discuss
their problems, propose actions, and share news. Each assembly has a
different structure, and members of each assembly gather periodically to
share and coordinate between neighborhoods. Half a dozen neighborhoods
had assemblies before May 15, and a couple assemblies even predate the
September 2010 general strike, but the participation in these assemblies
exploded after the beginning of the plaza occupations, and over a dozen
new neighborhoods formed assemblies of their own.
These
neighborhood assemblies are changing the face of the struggle in
Barcelona, overcoming the isolation and separation of the various,
pre-existing political ghettos, creating spaces of informal,
intergenerational debate, gathering resources for propaganda and legal
support, and preempting the isolation that is the express purpose of
government repression. The neighborhood assemblies are directly
responsible for at least part of the unprecedented turnout of nearly a
thousand people taking the streets in a solidarity demonstration the
same day that Catalan police began arresting protestors identified from
the June Parliament blockade (see “Wave of Arrests Sweep Barcelona
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/10/crackdown-in-spain/). Since we’ve
met our neighbors in the streets, we’re no longer alone, and the State
can try to lock us up or wear us down, but they cannot isolate us.
What’s
more, the neighborhood assemblies attack capitalist isolation and the
enclosure of public space in the very act of meeting. Every neighborhood
assembly is also an occupation that takes over a plaza, park, or street
corner without permission, eroding legality and demonstrating that the
city is ours. On countless occasions, neighborhood assemblies have
blocked major streets as an act of protest (against a hospital closing,
for example), or they have decided, almost whimsically, to hold their
meeting in a large intersection and simply shut down traffic. In the
feeder marches to major protests the people of a neighborhood have met
to march all the way to the center, blocking every street along the way,
even though they may only consist of forty people. And because of the
greater social legitimacy enjoyed by the neighborhood assembly as
opposed to some political faction or specific organization, the police
have been hesitant to create problems because any repression would draw
more people down into the streets. Temporarily, the neighborhood
assemblies have negated government sovereignty in the streets; if the
police ask whether marchers have a permit, they just get laughed at.
Interestingly,
the plaza occupations that began on the 15th of May provided a unique
opportunity for people trying to change the world to meet each other and
increase our forces and understanding, but it seems that at each step,
we had to pass an obstacle constituted by the original forms of the 15M
movement. Similarly in the US, the starting points imposed by the Occupy
Wall Street action serve as a sort of cocoon that must be broken in
order to go further. A number of features that have aided the growth of
our struggle in Barcelona may be useful for people in the US to reflect
on in comparison with the occupations now happening in New York and
other cities.
History is Wisdom
The
deeper a struggle’s historical roots, the greater its collective
knowledge. In the beginning, both the media and some leading activists
tried to present the 15M movement as something new. But in reality, the
vast majority of us who occupied Plaça Catalunya and created the
movement with our own participation were informed by a lifetime of
frustrations and a long history of struggles. In Barcelona, that history
includes the struggle against the austerity measures (including two
general strikes and a Mayday riot, among innumerable smaller actions),
the student movement against the privatization of education, the
squatters’ movement, anti-border and immigrant solidarity struggles, the
anti-war and anti-globalization movements at the beginning of the last
decade, the struggle against gentrification and the Olympics in the
’90s, the struggle in the prisons or the movement of military objectors
in the ’80s, the workers’ autonomy and neighborhood movements at the end
of the dictatorship and the transition to democracy, the clandestine
struggle against Franco, the Civil War, and going back to the beginning
of the century, the anarchist struggle against capitalism.
All
of these movements constitute lessons learned that can be passed down
to aid future struggles. So often, the mistakes that defeat a
revolutionary movement are repeated. The neighborhood assemblies in
Barcelona serve as spaces where people from different generations can
share their perspectives, where those with experience in past struggles
can collectivize that experience and turn it into communal property. In
the beginning, the organizers of the 15M movement presented their
protest model as something ultra-modern, with more references to Twitter
than to the country’s rich history of social movements. This model was
rejected by many in Barcelona, especially older people or those who had
already participated in a previous movement. People preferred to build
off their own tradition of struggle, while taking advantage of the new
situation and adapting certain features of the 15M model to their use.
The
historical memory of past instances of bureaucratization, co-optation
by grassroots politicians, and pacification have already served to help
the ongoing movement avoid a number of pitfalls. Despite attempts to
centralize them, the neighborhood assemblies remain independent and
decentralized, allowing for a broader, freer participation, and meaning
that politicians who attempt to take advantage of these spaces are at a
disadvantage because they cannot operate openly without being kicked out
of the assemblies.
The memory of struggles from before
the global economic crash has allowed people to move beyond a simple
kneejerk response to the present crisis and instead formulate a deeper
critique of the system responsible for their woes. In practice, this has
meant a popular shift from complaints about specific laws or specific
features of the banking system that might serve as scapegoats for the
crisis, to a radical critique of government and capitalism. While the
movement is heterogeneous and by no means consistent, on multiple
occasions it has popularly defined itself as anticapitalist, thus
drawing on a strong tradition of struggle that goes back more than a
century throughout Europe.
The United States is also a
country with inspiring histories of popular struggle. But it is a
country with a case of social amnesia like no other. It seems that to a
certain extent, the Occupy Wall Street actions exist more as a trend
than anything else. The slight extent to which they draw on, or even
make reference to, earlier struggles, even struggles from the past
twenty years, is worrying. The fact that a present awareness of US
history would shatter certain cornerstones of the new movement’s
identity, for example this idea of the 99% that includes everyone but
the bankers in one big, happy family, is not a sufficient excuse to
avoid this task. The historical amnesia of American society must be
overcome for a struggle to gain the perspective it needs.
International Connections Feed Local Roots
The
local roots of the neighborhood assemblies foster a great many
advantages that have allowed these bodies to become useful tools at
everyone’s disposal, provided the participants recognize them for what
they are. Especially those assemblies that have remained informal places
of meeting, despite the frequent attempts by grassroots politicians to
herd them into some formal structure or another, serve a primary
function of allowing neighbors to meet each other and share their
stories, thus fulfilling a fundamental emotional need for human contact
that contrasts with everyday alienation. It is the fulfillment of this
need that keeps many people coming back; not just the activists who were
already meeting junkies before May 15, but the old folks who had long
since given up on meetings, as well as the hospital and education
workers or the young students who had never participated in meetings
before all this.
The assemblies of some neighborhoods,
particularly the more yuppy ones that are full of liberals and
authoritarian socialists, have chased away a great deal of participation
by spending months deciding on a unitary definition of themselves, or
otherwise using consensus or voting processes to achieve a forced and
artificial unity. Meanwhile, the more fluid, effective assemblies have
recognized that, as it was articulated on one occasion, “we’re not an
organization, we’re a neighborhood; we don’t have unity, we have
heterogeneity. The only thing we have in common is that we live in the
same neighborhood and we’re trying to make things better.”
The
fact that we have brought our focus to the neighborhood we inhabit
spares us from the abstractions and mediations of politics, allows us to
measure our success not in meaningless figures like the number of
people who come out to a protest but in very real, increasingly visible
quantities, such as the extent to which we know each other, to which we
are no longer strangers in our own neighborhoods, and the extent to
which these relations of acquaintance are transforming into relations of
material and emotional solidarity.
The city, in fact,
is an abstraction. In the particular case of Barcelona, most of the
neighborhoods were independent villages that were absorbed by the
life-devouring machine—first based in industry and now in tourism—that
is Barcelona. Village/neighborhood identity was lost as the urban
fiction advanced. Returning to the neighborhoods allows us to recover a
human scale and distances us from the illusion of politics, which places
all emphasis and power at the so-called higher levels of organization.
If we ever regain power over our own lives, it will mean nearly all
coordination and decision-making takes place at the level on which our
own direct participation is possible: locally. This local emphasis has
meant that in the attempts to create a coordinating body among the
different neighborhood assemblies—a process rife with possibilities for
bureaucratization or take-over by self-appointed representatives, if
history is any indication—most assemblies have insisted on jealously
preserving their own autonomy, putting the centralizers at a distinct
disadvantage.
Notwithstanding, the localization of this
movement is aided immeasurably by its international contacts. Thanks to
the participation of immigrants in these assemblies, we have access to
the experience of neighborhood assemblies in Argentina in 2001, the
lessons of the Chilean student movement or the Mapuche struggle, or the
model developed over the last several years by the Seattle Solidarity
Network, to name just a few examples. And because of direct
relationships of solidarity with international struggles, when the
pacifists try to hijack the story of the Arab Spring or the uprising in
Iceland to try and steer the movement in Barcelona towards legalism and
civility, people with friends and comrades in Cairo or Reykjavik can
remind everyone that those revolts were fought with sticks, stones, and
molotov cocktails, and that in any case it’s still too early to declare
victory.
It seems that in many cities in the US, the
occupy movement is marked by a certain chauvinism that at most takes
some inspiration from struggles in other parts of the world, without
taking any critical lessons. The idea of “taking back America” is a
tried and true strategy for self-defeat: creating a fictive community
that in reality includes conflicting interests and conflicting desires
and will inevitably be directed by its most powerful elements.
Actually,
one need not even look to other countries to find the problem with this
sort of populism. George Washington and James Madison were among the
richest inhabitants of the North American colonies. They used a unifying
patriotism to whip the farmers and laborers into a frenzy, do the
fighting and dying for them, kick out the 1% represented by the British
overlords, and then when it was all done they wrote a Constitution that
preserved their privilege and power, subsequently crushing several
farmers’ rebellions that rose up to contest this quiet
counterrevolution. Neither did they blink, so soon after their pretty
talk about “liberty,” while continuing their policy of genocide against
Native Americans and enslavement of kidnapped Africans.
The
American identity needs to be challenged as one of the oldest tools for
getting the middle and lower sectors of US society to betray themselves
and help push down those who are even lower in the hierarchy. The US
could not possibly have created the largest wealth gap in the so-called
developed world without the complicity of large parts of the population.
Just below the 1%, there are plenty of people looking for a leg up, and
they’re more than happy to pretend they’re just like everyone else if
it lets them shake a few more apples from the tree.
Another
disadvantage that needs to be overcome in the US is the near total
absence of place. Hardly anyone is from anywhere, and most places are
built according to the needs of planned obsolescence, so that local
identities barely have any common foundation from one decade to the
next. The landscape itself is constantly dissolving. In the US, people
are born into precarity and forced mobility. In the past, the most
extreme cases, the tramps, developed their own nomad culture, and these
tramps were a major force in US labor struggles at the beginning of the
20thcentury, making up a large part of the Industrial Workers of the
World, to name an example. But even this has been marginalized or made
to disappear.
This alienation of place cannot be
accepted with resignation as a simple feature of American society. It is
the direct result of capitalist strategies of accumulation and State
strategies of repression. How many times has the US government used the
forced internal relocation of oppressed groups as an explicit strategy
for social control? The only country I can think of that has done this
more is China (going back, interestingly enough, through the Communist
period all the way to the early dynasties).
In order to
overcome the severe disadvantages created by the denial of place,
American rebels and revolutionaries need to hold on to their locale for
dear life, prevent its periodic reconstruction or gentrification, and
put down roots. The idea of “American” as a homogenous, uniting ideal
and xenophobic sense of specialness needs to be eroded in favor of local
cultures and global awareness. The progressive bumper sticker cliché
about “thinking globally” is not enough. People also need to understand
themselves as part of those global struggles, able to influence and be
influenced by them.
Take Public Space
Barcelona
is a city with a long history of popular life in public space. Chris
Ealham, in Anarchism in the City, describes how workers pushed into
overcrowded slum housing at the end of the 19th century converted the
streets into their living rooms, creating an indispensable foundation
for the informal neighborhood networks that gave strength to subsequent
anticapitalist movements. This street culture survived the decades of
fascism intact only to be sharply and effectively undermined by the
democratic regime starting at the end of the ’70s. The Olympic Games of
’92 provided a major boost to commercial urbanization, and the civic
behavior ordinances, passed in Catalunya after consultation with ex-NYC
mayor Rudi Giuliani, might have been the penultimate nail in the coffin
of street culture. Barcelona was fast closing in on the American model
of the total privatization of public space that not only prohibits—but
also installs new urban architecture to engineer out of existence—anyone
who is not a consumer in motion.
The neighborhood
assemblies are starting to reverse this process, drawing on popular
memory of the way things used to be, and architectural remnants such as
central plazas in each neighborhood. The more modern neighborhoods that
bear greater similarity with US urban spaces and have no plazas take
advantage of well positioned parks.
By holding their
meetings outside, without permission, the neighborhood assemblies are
eroding government and commercial sovereignty over public space and
creating a visible referent for self-organization. Even though only
fifty people might participate in a particular assembly, thousands see
that it exists, and this changes their perception of what is normal and
what is possible. This is no small accomplishment. If someone were to
write the definitive history of capitalism, the 20thcentury’s enclosure
of public space would merit as much attention as the enclosure of
communal lands hundreds of years ago, that allowed capitalism to develop
in the first place.
The US, once again, is at a
disadvantage in this respect. Whereas all European cities were
originally designed for defense and at a certain point they had to be
redesigned to put the would-be invader at an advantage, thus allowing
armies to easily reoccupy cities—it wasn’t only Paris, after all, that
had its commune—US cities were designed from the start according to the
needs of Capital. It is no coincidence that Capital and the police
forces of social control experience converging needs.
Nonetheless,
public space does exist in the US, however inconvenient its shape, and
it must be taken for popular struggles to advance. The occupy movement
is clearly breaking ground in this respect, although the embarrassing
habit in several cities of asking for permission for what is supposed to
be an occupation endangers any gains that have been won.
Break Out of the Democratic Ideology
In
many other cities, leading activists in the 15M movement succeeded in
imposing pacifist, populist, and democratic limits to the plaza
occupations, meaning that anarchists and other radicals were expelled,
while fascists, among others, were included. But in Barcelona, thanks
perhaps to the Catalan spirit of independence, the occupation maintained
an autonomous character from the beginning, defeating an explicit
attempt by would-be leaders to impose a narrow program. Not
coincidentally, the Barcelona occupation maintained a greater
heterogeneity and a greater force than most other cities’ occupations.
And since then, the new movement has been largely reabsorbed into a
broader, older, and more intelligent movement with much deeper roots:
namely, the anticapitalist movement.
Within the
neighborhood assemblies, which are interwoven with workplace struggles
and the fight against privatization and cutbacks in health and
education, the confused and populist calls for electoral reform have
given way to more revolutionary visions. Just a brief scene from our
meeting on Wednesday night can give an indication of the healthy effect
this radicalization has had on morale:
There were
perhaps seventy of us, people from our neighborhood and a few people
from other neighborhoods who had come to share. This time, instead of
the usual plaza, we were meeting in front of the nearby hospital that is
being forced to close down or privatize. Capriciously, we had decided
to hold the assembly in the intersection of two streets, shutting down
traffic to cut down on the noise, win space for our meeting, and most of
all, just because we wanted to, to demonstrate that the city was ours.
At one point, a younger person spoke of the need to remember our
prisoners and the people facing trial for fighting against an eviction
or for harrassing politicians during the Parliament blockade, and not
just to remember them today but to remember and support them a year from
now, and as long as there are prisoners. Everybody applauded.
Subsequently, a woman in her 60s spoke of the need to increase our
forces, to fight harder, to get out of control, to do whatever it takes
to shut this system down. People cheered loudly. Another speaker
remarked on the need to support the struggle beyond any single issue, as
important as the problem of healthcare is, because in truth we were
struggling against capitalism. Another urged everyone to boycott the
upcoming elections. Only one of these people, as far as I know, was an
anarchist, but no political division was visible. All of us were just
neighbors, and each of these statements won broad agreement.
In
the assemblies we look for ways to take action ourselves. What could be
more tedious than sitting through a two hour meeting where we’re
counselled to follow rules stacked against us, perhaps sign a petition
or two, come out to a protest, provided we behave a certain way, and
then leave the rest to the specialists? If someone had gotten up to
speak of the need to be nonviolent or respect the laws, they probably
would have been booed or ignored as a simpleton. If someone had spoken
in favor of negotiating with the politicians or supporting a political
party, they might have been kicked out.
The fact of the
matter is, the neighborhood assemblies are not open to everyone. They
are not spaces for fascists, for politicians, for journalists (at least
in the case of some neighborhoods), or for bosses. They are places for
building a struggle against capitalism, among those of us who are angry
and who respect the principle of solidarity. As such, they fly in the
face of democratic fundamentals such as equal rights, free speech, and
universal participation. As much as the ideologues of direct democracy
try to hide the conflict between the notion of rights and the ideal of
freedom, there’s no getting around this fact. The principles of
democracy were drafted by elites interested in mediating class conflict
and allowing the preservation of a class society. A struggle, to
challenge the foundations of this system, must be antidemocratic.
While
the alternative media have generally taken a cue from the 15M
movement’s self-appointed leaders and described it, in the words of
these leaders, as a movement for “real democracy now,” the chants in the
protests and the comments in the assemblies leave no doubt—at least in
Barcelona, where this movement is strongest—people are increasingly
abandoning the concept of democracy and moving towards a growing
anticapitalist consensus. There is still plenty of democratic rhetoric
in the movement, but every month it seems to wane, and in the most
active, dynamic neighborhoods, the common ground is not support of
democracy but the shared opposition to capitalism.
Meanwhile,
the cities that held on to a democratic ideology quickly wasted their
energies. This should not be a surprise. Movements that hope to bring
together fascists and immigrants, that hope to inspire people by
drafting petitions to their leaders, that ask us to respect the laws
created by those who rule us, that underwrite the police’s monopoly on
force, that insist on an artificial unity maintained by interminable,
process-heavy and easily manipulated meetings rather than trusting the
intelligence of decentralization and people’s own ability for
self-organization, are destined to fail.
While we must
be increasingly communicative to overcome social isolation, populism
should be shunned like the plague. We do ourselves no favor by dumbing
down our analysis, while we do make strategic errors more likely. Not
only is populism counterproductive, it can be dangerous as well. At a
peak of the global anticapitalist struggle in the 1920s, fascism
appeared within the belly of the movement. Although fascism is
identified as a rightwing phenomenon, it began with an anticapitalist
rhetoric that blamed an obscure, elite minority for robbing “the
nation,” and it recruited heavily from within workers’ movements. The
bosses quickly supported the new fascist movement, giving it protection
and resources, as an effective way to neutralize revolutionary
struggles. The pro-democracy movement prevents the worst of fascism by
promoting tolerance, but in many places it has already won the financing
of forward-looking elites, hijacked growing struggles and steered them
in populist, self-defeating directions, and marginalized more radical
elements, directly assisting in their repression.
From
the very origins of the democratic concept, “rule by the people” has
always been a way to increase participation in the project of
government, and “the people” have always excluded classes of slaves and
foreigners, whether inside or outside of national boundaries. The
question of freedom lies not in who rules, but whether anyone is ruled,
or whether all are self-organizing.
In this respect,
people in the United States have a great advantage over those in
Barcelona. The Spanish state has experienced democracy for less than
forty years, and the transition from dictatorship was a clear case of
shuffling the cards, with fascists becoming conservatives and the
Socialists being allowed into government as long as they didn’t try to
change the ground rules inherited from the earlier system. Historically
speaking, it’s an easy mistake for people here to make, calling for a
“real” democracy as though their own were somehow false, or any
different from any other democracy anywhere else on the planet.
The
United States is the oldest continuous democracy on the planet. People
there have no excuse for misunderstanding the nature of democracy. In
fact, among the apolitical majority, there may well be a greater
contempt for politicians and for government in general than in most
other countries. The welfare states of northern Europe, for example,
have successfully undermined popular autonomy and created a population
of dependents and sycophants that, even today, in the face of growing
abuse and governmental fascism, seem unable to constitute popular
struggles. This innate American antiauthoritarianism, though it tends to
remain in self-destructive or inert forms, could transform into an
important ingredient for popular struggles.
In general,
people in the United States face severe disadvantages in fighting
power. The popular struggles of past generations were brutally crushed
and critical lessons were not passed on. People have to start from
scratch in a society constructed to meet the needs of money. In part
because of this, people in the US have a unique opportunity to influence
struggles worldwide, should they overcome the obstacles and turn these
protests into something powerful. One thing is for sure: in the
neighborhood assemblies in Barcelona, people have been whispering to
each other, “Now, there’s even occupations starting in the US. Something
really big must be happening!”
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