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zaterdag 28 april 2018
Anarchic update news all over the world - Part 1 - 27.04.2018
Today's Topics:
1. anarkismo.net: The search for truth in the rubble of Douma
by Robert Fisk - The Independent - and one doctor's doubts over
the chemical attack (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
2. US, black rose fed - WITH ALLIES LIKE THESE: REFLECTIONS ON
PRIVILEGE REDUCTIONISM (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
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Message: 1
Exclusive: Robert Fisk visits the Syria clinic at the centre of a global crisis
This is the story of a town called Douma, a ravaged, stinking place of smashed apartment
blocks - and of an underground clinic whose images of suffering allowed three of the
Western world's most powerful nations to bomb Syria last week. There's even a friendly
doctor in a green coat who, when I track him down in the very same clinic, cheerfully
tells me that the "gas" videotape which horrified the world - despite all the doubters -
is perfectly genuine. ---- War stories, however, have a habit of growing darker. For the
same 58-year old senior Syrian doctor then adds something profoundly uncomfortable: the
patients, he says, were overcome not by gas but by oxygen starvation in the rubbish-filled
tunnels and basements in which they lived, on a night of wind and heavy shelling that
stirred up a dust storm.
As Dr Assim Rahaibani announces this extraordinary conclusion, it is worth observing that
he is by his own admission not an eyewitness himself and, as he speaks good English, he
refers twice to the jihadi gunmen of Jaish el-Islam[the Army of Islam]in Douma as
"terrorists" - the regime's word for their enemies, and a term used by many people across
Syria. Am I hearing this right? Which version of events are we to believe?
By bad luck, too, the doctors who were on duty that night on 7 April were all in Damascus
giving evidence to a chemical weapons enquiry, which will be attempting to provide a
definitive answer to that question in the coming weeks.
France, meanwhile, has said it has "proof" chemical weapons were used, and US media have
quoted sources saying urine and blood tests showed this too. The WHO has said its partners
on the ground treated 500 patients "exhibiting signs and symptoms consistent with exposure
to toxic chemicals".
At the same time, inspectors from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
(OPCW) are currently blocked from coming here to the site of the alleged gas attack
themselves, ostensibly because they lacked the correct UN permits.
Before we go any further, readers should be aware that this is not the only story in
Douma. There are the many people I talked to amid the ruins of the town who said they had
"never believed in" gas stories - which were usually put about, they claimed, by the armed
Islamist groups. These particular jihadis survived under a blizzard of shellfire by living
in other's people's homes and in vast, wide tunnels with underground roads carved through
the living rock by prisoners with pick-axes on three levels beneath the town. I walked
through three of them yesterday, vast corridors of living rock which still contained
Russian - yes, Russian - rockets and burned-out cars.
So the story of Douma is thus not just a story of gas - or no gas, as the case may be.
It's about thousands of people who did not opt for evacuation from Douma on buses that
left last week, alongside the gunmen with whom they had to live like troglodytes for
months in order to survive. I walked across this town quite freely yesterday without
soldier, policeman or minder to haunt my footsteps, just two Syrian friends, a camera and
a notebook. I sometimes had to clamber across 20-foot-high ramparts, up and down almost
sheer walls of earth. Happy to see foreigners among them, happier still that the siege is
finally over, they are mostly smiling; those whose faces you can see, of course, because a
surprising number of Douma's women wear full-length black hijab.
I first drove into Douma as part of an escorted convoy of journalists. But once a boring
general had announced outside a wrecked council house "I have no information" - that most
helpful rubbish-dump of Arab officialdom - I just walked away. Several other reporters,
mostly Syrian, did the same. Even a group of Russian journalists - all in military attire
- drifted off.
It was a short walk to Dr Rahaibani. From the door of his subterranean clinic - "Point
200", it is called, in the weird geology of this partly-underground city - is a corridor
leading downhill where he showed me his lowly hospital and the few beds where a small girl
was crying as nurses treated a cut above her eye.
"I was with my family in the basement of my home three hundred metres from here on the
night but all the doctors know what happened. There was a lot of shelling [by government
forces] and aircraft were always over Douma at night - but on this night, there was wind
and huge dust clouds began to come into the basements and cellars where people lived.
People began to arrive here suffering from hypoxia, oxygen loss. Then someone at the door,
a "White Helmet", shouted "Gas!", and a panic began. People started throwing water over
each other. Yes, the video was filmed here, it is genuine, but what you see are people
suffering from hypoxia - not gas poisoning."
Oddly, after chatting to more than 20 people, I couldn't find one who showed the slightest
interest in Douma's role in bringing about the Western air attacks. Two actually told me
they didn't know about the connection.
But it was a strange world I walked into. Two men, Hussam and Nazir Abu Aishe, said they
were unaware how many people had been killed in Douma, although the latter admitted he had
a cousin "executed by Jaish el-Islam[the Army of Islam]for allegedly being "close to the
regime". They shrugged when I asked about the 43 people said to have died in the infamous
Douma attack.
The White Helmets - the medical first responders already legendary in the West but with
some interesting corners to their own story - played a familiar role during the battles.
They are partly funded by the Foreign Office and most of the local offices were staffed by
Douma men. I found their wrecked offices not far from Dr Rahaibani's clinic. A gas mask
had been left outside a food container with one eye-piece pierced and a pile of dirty
military camouflage uniforms lay inside one room. Planted, I asked myself? I doubt it. The
place was heaped with capsules, broken medical equipment and files, bedding and mattresses.
Of course we must hear their side of the story, but it will not happen here: a woman told
us that every member of the White Helmets in Douma abandoned their main headquarters and
chose to take the government-organised and Russian-protected buses to the rebel province
of Idlib with the armed groups when the final truce was agreed.
There were food stalls open and a patrol of Russian military policemen - a now optional
extra for every Syrian ceasefire - and no-one had even bothered to storm into the
forbidding Islamist prison near Martyr's Square where victims were supposedly beheaded in
the basements. The town's complement of Syrian interior ministry civilian police - who
eerily wear military clothes - are watched over by the Russians who may or may not be
watched by the civilians. Again, my earnest questions about gas were met with what seemed
genuine perplexity.
How could it be that Douma refugees who had reached camps in Turkey were already
describing a gas attack which no-one in Douma today seemed to recall? It did occur to me,
once I was walking for more than a mile through these wretched prisoner-groined tunnels,
that the citizens of Douma lived so isolated from each other for so long that "news" in
our sense of the word simply had no meaning to them. Syria doesn't cut it as Jeffersonian
democracy - as I cynically like to tell my Arab colleagues - and it is indeed a ruthless
dictatorship, but that couldn't cow these people, happy to see foreigners among them, from
reacting with a few words of truth. So what were they telling me?
They talked about the Islamists under whom they had lived. They talked about how the armed
groups had stolen civilian homes to avoid the Syrian government and Russian bombing. The
Jaish el-Islam had burned their offices before they left, but the massive buildings inside
the security zones they created had almost all been sandwiched to the ground by air
strikes. A Syrian colonel I came across behind one of these buildings asked if I wanted to
see how deep the tunnels were. I stopped after well over a mile when he cryptically
observed that "this tunnel might reach as far as Britain". Ah yes, Ms May, I remembered,
whose air strikes had been so intimately connected to this place of tunnels and dust. And gas?
Related Link:
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/syria-chemical-attack-gas-douma-robert-fisk-ghouta-damascus-a8307726.html
http://www.anarkismo.net/article/30953
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Message: 2
We reprint this essay as important contribution to critical discussions around privilege
and identity first published in 2014. Although it is hard to say the concepts discussed
are "relatively hegemonic" anymore as the article leads with given the fierce debates the
left has had more recently, nonetheless the piece presents a number of important and early
criticisms around privilege and identity. This text was originally published in Mortar:
Revolutionary Journal of Common Cause, Volume 2. Common Cause was an anarchist political
organization based in Southern Ontario, Canada that was active from 2007 to 2016. Image by
Emory Douglas, former Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party, and with the slogan
"All Power to the People" is an example of the Panther's politics of solidarity. ---- By 2
Hamilton members and 1 Toronto member of Common Cause
Over the course of the last several decades, anti-oppression politics have risen to a
position of immense influence on activist discourse in North America. Anti-oppression
workshops and reading groups, privilege and oppression checklists and guidelines, and
countless books, online blogs and articles make regular appearances in anarchist
organizing and discussion. Enjoying a relatively hegemonic position in Left conversation,
anti-oppression politics have come to occupy the position of a sacred object-something
that expresses and reinforces particular values, but does not easily lend itself to
critical reflection. Indeed, it is common for those who question the operating and
implications of anti-oppression politics to be accused of refusing to seriously address
oppression in general. A political framework should be constantly reflected upon and
evaluated-it is a tool that should serve our struggles and not vice versa.
Against this backdrop, this article aims to critically engage with the dominant ideas and
practices of anti-oppression politics. We define anti-oppression politics as a related
group of analyses and practices that seeks to address inequalities that materially,
psychologically, and socially exist in society through education and personal
transformation. While there is value in some aspects of anti-oppression politics, they are
not without severe limitations. Anti-oppression politics obfuscates the structural
operations of power and promotes a liberal project of inclusion that is necessarily at
odds with the struggle to build a collective force capable of fundamentally transforming
society. It is our contention that anti-oppression furthers a politics of inclusion as a
poor substitute for a politics of revolution. The dominant practices of anti-oppression
further an approach to struggle whose logical conclusion is the absorption of those deemed
oppressed into the dominant order, but not to the eradication and transformation of the
institutional foundations of oppression.
I. Historical Context
The Defeat of Liberation and the Rise of anti-oppression
In the Global North, the 1960s and 1970s marked a high point in social movement struggle.
Today, when revolution can seem impossible, it is difficult to imagine a time when
militants spoke of "the revolution" not cynically, but as something that was happening, or
would happen in the near future. Subdued using old-fashioned strategies of incarceration,
murder, sexual assault, espionage and surveillance, blacklisting, and other forms of
direct physical, economical, and emotional violence, beginning in the 1980s, the Left
found itself entombed in a sophisticated system of control and co-option. In describing
this, our goal is to illustrate how anti-oppression politics are neither radical, nor
revolutionary. In fact, the prominence of anti-oppression in activist circles is both a
symptom of, and contributing factor to, the ongoing victory of the ruling elite over our
movements.
Dylan Rodriguez (2007), in The Revolution Will Not Be Funded, elaborates this reality:
Indeed, the US state learned from its encounters with the crest of radical and
revolutionary liberationist movements of the 1960s and early 1970s that endless,
spectacular exercises of military and police repression against activists of colour on the
domestic front could potentially provoke broader local and global support for such
struggles-it was in part because they were so dramatically subjected to violent and racist
US state repression that Black, Native American, Puerto Rican, and other domestic
liberationists were seen by significant sectors of the US and the international public as
legitimate freedom fighters, whose survival of the racist State pivoted on the
mobilization of a global political solidarity. On the other hand, the US state has found
in its coalition with the Non-Profit Industrial Complex a far less spectacular, generally
demilitarized, and still highly effective apparatus of political discipline and repression
that (to this point) has not provoked a significant critical mass of opposition or
political outrage.
Strategies previously employed by State-Capital interests to dispose of a fighting trade
union movement were modified and extended to control the heterogeneous New Left movements
of the 1960s and 1970s. Rather than being crushed by outright military force, elements of
the resistance movements are subsumed into the inner workings of State and Capital, and
ultimately come to reinforce the overarching structures of exploitation and oppression. In
the 1950s in Canada, what is known as ‘labour peace' was declared by a subsection of the
labour movement, Capital and the State. The process of establishing labour peace involved
some key elements which could be seen as analogous to the pacification of other movements.
The process begins with legitimizing a section of the antagonistic movement, and propping
them up as leaders or representatives of the whole. This representation requires funding
and a bureaucracy to maintain itself. In the case of labour peace, funding was guaranteed
by the Rand Formula, a policy which requires employers whose workers are unionized to
collect dues and hand them over to the union, which serves to put the union in a dependent
position to the legislative framework, and therefore the State. The maintenance of power
and outside legitimacy by those placed on the top of the hierarchy is contingent on their
discipline of the rank and file.
Finally, other systems of domination are mobilized to keep everyone in check-for example,
white union workers enforcing a racial hierarchy among their co-workers.
The One-Two Punch: Destroy and Replace
While the co-option of revolutionary movements was no new insight on the part of the
ruling class, the scale of this project was novel. Understanding that every new generation
would bring with it a "new" awareness that revolutionary change is desirable, the ruling
class sought to create infrastructure not just to contain existing movements, but to
redirect the energies of future ones. Destroy existing movements by way of violence,
infiltration, etc., and replace all aspects of people's movements with institutions that
are in line with the interests of the ruling class. For our purposes, it is on this latter
point that we focus.
In the 1980s, substantial inroads were made for new areas where people's organizations
previously enjoyed a monopoly: the creation of revolutionary theory, the internal movement
and popular education by which that theory is shared and elaborated upon, the provision of
services to marginalized people and the creation of progressive social spaces. In these
four areas, liberalism posturing as an emancipatory politics has thoroughly washed the
revolutionary potential away.
Development of Analysis and Theory
While analysis and theory were historically produced by radicals in the context of
struggle, this task has largely been shifted into the realm of academia. Over the course
of the last several decades, entire bodies of literature and corresponding vocabularies
have been developed, turning radical theory and analysis into a highly specialized
undertaking. Coming out of the 1970s, many liberation movements sought to create homes for
themselves within the university through the creation of ‘Progressive Studies' departments
(eg. Gender Studies, Critical Race Studies, Disability Studies, Queer Studies, Labour
Studies, etc.).
At the time, some activists thought that obtaining space within universities was an
important goal because of its potential to organize collectively, and because of the large
amount of resources within the university. However, in hindsight, the channeling of
resistance into the universities facilitated the destruction of the grassroots movements,
and created a space in which people could build careers off of the backs of past
struggles. Despite ostensibly radical beginnings, Progressive Studies function to hinder
(rather than further) the interests of revolutionary movements.
The gravitation of would-be revolutionaries to the university for an "education", where
radical theory is subject to bourgeois pressures more than an accountability to humanity,
harnesses our radical traditions and erases collective memory of struggle. There exists a
fundamental misunderstanding (to be generous regarding motivation) of a radical education:
that the classroom can serve as a foundation for transformative politics, rather than an
adjunct to learning and development focused on real-world struggle.
"Research" conducted by students on marginalized constituencies, which is the closest
thing to grassroots work that may be seen, is often based on such exploitative assumptions
and power relationships that value may only occasionally be derived from it. The
demobilizing effects of the alienation of theory from action cannot here be overstated.
In the creation of Progressive Studies, the passing of stories, information, theory, and
practice was very smartly removed from organizations where work was happening. The
blossoming of the historical study of people's movements by academia in the past thirty
years has had some key effects. Those with the best access to university have the best
access to people's history. Simply having access to university, being competent working
within it, and having an interest in people's history, is enough to facilitate access to
the history.
Therefore, there is no correlation between access to history, the framing and development
of that history, and being engaged in struggle oneself. Lacking intimate knowledge of the
context of organizing, students of people's history are rarely capable of understanding
the material they study. Therefore, we have noticed that historians who consider
themselves "radicals" because they have an interest in liberation stories are often
stumped when it comes to extracting the value from their work.
While people's history was a people's pursuit in the 1960s and 1970s, its movement into
the university effectively removed people's access and contributions to it. In this sense,
history is back to being written by the victors - the liberal bourgeoisie, and those who
are able to adapt their studies to their criteria for inclusion. Despite this, it manages
to maintain a veneer of subversiveness, which is misleading and unhelpful.
Popular and movement education
Popular education has been almost entirely abandoned by the Left, from radical to
reformist. Here we focus on internal movement education, and how it is done.
Movement education continues in the form of mentoring, book-fairs, workshops, literature,
online forums, and formal training programs. This stands in contrast to the pedagogy
employed by successful movements in the past and contemporarily: education of individual
militants is best done in the midst of work, struggle, and action.
James P Garrett worked extensively on the creation of Black Studies at San Francisco State
University, a program which was exemplary in the creation of Progressive Studies
departments around North America. Interviewed by Ibram Rogers (2009) in Remembering the
Black Campus Movement: An Oral History Interview with James P. Garrett, he recounts his
own political education, beginning when he "got involved in the sit-in movements. We
demonstrated and I was arrested seven times that summer and I was hooked. My life
changed... by the time I got to[San Francisco]State I was ready. I was trained and
prepared. I came there as a veteran of the movement."
Here we contrast the militant who arrives at university "trained" (not in manners, but in
the manipulation of power for radical ends) and then proceeds to organize, instead of
arriving hoping to be educated.
Describing the goals of the creation of Black Studies as the redirection of university
resources "to benefit or ameliorate the Black community," he is critical of modern
careerists "who consolidated the attire of Black consciousness" and "owe a tremendous
amount - they don't pay - but they owe a tremendous amount to the sacrifices of people who
lost their hands their fingers, their eyes, people who spent time in prison who were
killed-students." Pragmatically, Garret is not wedded to the continuation of the
institution he helped to create, but hopes younger militants will "develop a worldview
about what education should be in the twenty-first century for young Blacks and then move
to organize around that."
Even in forms of movement education which were later depicted as individualized, such as
Consciousness Raising (CR), people actually emphasized the collective creation and
distribution of knowledge by those affected. CR, borrowed by the Women's Movement from
Chinese revolutionaries, was a self-education process in groups of women who articulated
the truthful realities of their lives to one another, thereby creating a new knowledge of
their collective situation.
Of course, the term consciousness raising is now used more to describe awareness of issues
faced by oneself or others. The original meaning of the term was not an individual
intellectual exercise or imposition. Instead, CR was a deliberate tactic whose goal was to
provide a tool with which people could raise themselves from the destitutions in which
they found themselves to become militants with agency, by fostering a class-consciousness,
based on their experiences (in this example) as women.
The development of class-consciousness, history and identity by a vast collective, in
contrast to representatives of given groups who are seen as having authority to speak is
perhaps subtle, but important. We see most often in anti-oppression an emphasis on the latter.
In researching this article, we found The Combahee River Collective Statement (1978) to be
one of the most frequently cited documents in the origin stories of anti-oppression. Often
mentioned in the first paragraphs of modern writing and workshop outlines, it was not
obvious to us that this document had in fact been read by most authors.
The Combahee Collective takes great pains to describe a process by which its members, all
Black Lesbians, educated themselves, and got them to the conclusion that they should
continue the creation of a Black Lesbian consciousness and analysis, rather than
individualizing insights regarding their condition, as is done contemporarily. The
Collective describes the effect that the group-based generation of knowledge had on their
development:
There is also undeniably a personal genesis for Black Feminism, that is, the political
realization that comes from the seemingly personal experiences of individual Black women's
lives. Black feminists and many more Black women who do not define themselves as feminists
have all experienced sexual oppression as a constant factor in our day-to-day existence
... Black feminists often talk about their feelings of craziness before becoming conscious
of the concepts of sexual politics, patriarchal rule, and most importantly, feminism, the
political analysis and practice that we women use to struggle against our oppression.
Practitioners of anti-oppression have been heard to say, "a white person cannot be an
expert on racism." In practice, especially in combination with the Non-Profit Industrial
Complex (NPIC), where paid jobs increasingly demand a university education, a degree in
any Progressive Study functions to make viable the prominence/importance/leadership of
individuals within movements where they would otherwise not be central. Using academic
credentials, an "ally" can obtain employment at an agency, where services are provided to
a constituency in which the worker may or (more often) may not have "lived experience."
This helps to propagate systems of domination within marginalized communities by entitling
non-members to important roles in their maintenance. Alisa Bierria (2007), in The
Revolution Will Not Be Funded, gives the following example of the progression in the ways
education is viewed:
Organizers often understood themselves as belonging to a mutual community of women who had
suffered from patriarchal violence. Seattle Rape Relief, for example, began from a
speak-out, a mutual sharing of stories about the experience of abuse. As the movement
developed and became increasingly professionalized, workers were expected to be not
"battered women" but experts with a master's degree in social work.
The Provision of Services
In the past, many revolutionary groups provided services to those who were unable to
obtain them elsewhere due to their marginalization. Examples of this would be the
development of shelters by radical feminists for women being subjected to violence, and
the Black Panther Party's free breakfast program. These services, provided by grassroots
organizers, posed important political questions: Why do women need shelters? Why do Black
children need breakfast? Then they proposed responses: patriarchy, white supremacy, and
capitalism.
Service provision was a valuable method for the recruitment, training, and retention of
militants. It served as a form of "prefigurative practice" via direct action, as a way to
develop organizing skills, and a venue to sharpen revolutionary analysis. Also, every
action taken by an organization or social movement is also a form of outreach and
recruitment. Different forms of action attract people with different goals. Symbolic
action may attract those interested in representation. Lobbying attracts those who are
invested in the power of the State. The direct service provision served to attract high
quality new recruits who were interested in immediate results, but as they were
constructed with revolutionary goals in mind, served as a way to demonstrate the viability
of alternative economic and social arrangements.
Social interactions
In recent years we have seen an emphasis placed on the role of anti-oppressive practice in
regulating social interactions on the left. As manners go, anti-oppression is not a bad
try at a moral code that seeks not to brutalize and disempower each other. Perhaps this is
the best that can be said about it. However, it does not in and of itself constitute
anything other than a bare minimum standard of behaviour, certainly not a politics.
Decades ago, in yet another work that has been left unread by those who invoke it, the
value of such interventions were questioned by Carol Hanisch (1970) in The Personal is
Political. Discussing CR she states, "personal problems are political problems. There are
no personal solutions at this time. There is only collective action for a collective
solution." Soon after, Hanisch dismisses lifestylism as without political merit:
The groups that I have been in have also not gotten into "alternative lifestyles" or what
it means to be a "liberated" woman. We came early to the conclusion that all alternatives
are bad under present conditions... There is no "more liberated" way; there are only bad
alternatives.
Reading and Waiting for the Anti-Globalization Movement
When the Anti-Globalization Movement saw a groundswell of activism, action and organizing,
the capacities of the NPIC and Progressive Studies to contain potential revolutionary
forces were put to the test.
Hungry to learn more about the world and how to change it, fresh activists turned to the
remnants of the last generation of high struggle. Only instead of finding the history in
their neighbourhoods, grandparents, political organizations and prisons, they found them
in books written by university-educated people, themselves overwhelmingly disengaged from
struggle, published in academic journals and university-affiliated presses.
Infused in this purportedly radical press was the ideology of anti-oppression. Explicitly
claiming heritage in the 1960s and 1970s liberation movements on the one hand,
anti-oppression theory on the other hand discourages direct connection with these
movements. Referencing and critiquing works of past generations while not making those
works directly available to new activists, academics and their allies on the one hand
stood on the backs of (often still-living) organizers of decades gone, while dismissing
their work as a whole as "problematic."
Black Power can be dismissed as anti-feminist and homophobic. Labour struggles are racist,
colonialist, and patriarchal. Radical feminism is anti-trans*, anti-sex, and sometimes
homophobic. Other feminisms are pro-capitalist, and white-centred. Gay liberation was
dominated by white, affluent men. Components of all movements sought to integrate
themselves in political power structures and Capital. In order for an idea to be worth
considering, the generator of the idea must be politically pure. And since the purity has
to do with strict adherence to a code of speech and conduct which was developed and is
learned primarily through universities in the past twenty years, which are accessible only
to a portion of workers (and in departments which are desirable to far, far fewer than
even have access) the pool of people who are able to speak with any authority is quite
small. Interestingly, it does not include many on-the-ground organizers, past and present,
but is dominated by those who have access or desire to pursue a formal education in
Progressive Studies.
The Anti-Globalization Movement, as it became known, thus came to serve as the means by
which anti-oppression politics would come to imbed itself in the theory and activity of
the Left, the activist milieu, etc. Now, a decade and a half later it is held as the
hegemonic, almost innate, orientation of most of the Left-radical, progressive, reformist,
or otherwise. We now will look at what this entails in day-to-day practice, and what we
understand the implications of this to be.
II. Practices
In order to situate our critique, it is useful to consider some of the common practices
associated with anti-oppression politics. Although a homogenous grouping of practices does
not exist, there are dominant trends that can be observed. There are common customs and
rules that constitute the lived practices of anti-oppression politics. The descriptions we
provide here are not exhaustive but representative.
Workshops, Workshops & More Workshops!
Workshops are a foundational component of anti-oppression politics. Anti-oppression
workshops are mandatory in many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and activist groups.
Workshops attempt to provide an overview of the ways in which power operates in society,
outline different forms of oppression, and encourage participants to reflect on the ways
in which they experience privilege. Group exercises such as "Step Forward, Step Back" and
"Mainstream/Margin" are used to draw on personal experiences to highlight the different
ways in which oppression and privilege affect participants.
In Pursuit of Safe(r) Spaces
Safe or "safer" space policies are a standard outcome of anti-oppression politics.
Organizations and groups incorporate into their mission statements or basis of unity
documents a policy that expresses their commitment to anti-oppression via the construction
of safe spaces. These statements present a laundry list of oppressions (racism, sexism,
homophobia, "classism," ableism, ageism, etc.), and cover guidelines for appropriate
behaviour. Common features of these policies include using inclusive language (i.e. avoid
gendered language), being respectful towards others, and the provision of "active" listeners.
Call-out Culture & "Working on Your Shit"
The "checking of privilege" is a fundamental component of anti-oppression practice.
The analogy of "unpacking the knapsack" first used by Peggy McIntosch in White Privilege:
Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack has been widely adopted by anti-oppression advocates, who
centralize recognizing and thinking about privilege. Part of this practice includes the
use of the qualifier-people preface statements with an acknowledgement of the ways in
which they are privileged ( i.e. "As a white able-bodied settler who is university
educated..."). If someone is not adequately "checking their privilege," the retaliation is
"the call-out"-an individual or group is informed (often publicly) that they need to "work
on their shit" in order to realize the ways in which they benefit, and are complicit in x
oppression.
The "Good Ally"
The identity of ally (as someone who primarily identifies as engaging in struggle in
support of others) is another cornerstone of anti-oppression politics. According to a
popular anti-oppression guide, an ally is "...a person who supports marginalized,
silenced, or less privileged groups." The fundamental pursuit of someone with privilege is
the quest to become a "good ally." It is considered fundamental to take leadership
(usually unquestionable) from representatives of oppressed groups and act as an ally to
their struggles. Innumerable lists, guides, and workshops have been produced to outline
the steps and necessary requirements for being an ally. The individual focus of the idea
of "ally" in contrast to the collective response of "solidarity" which used to occupy a
similar place is symptomatic of the general denigration of collective action by
anti-oppression politics.
III. Implications
Championing Individual Over Collective Action
While anti-oppression theory acknowledges that power relations operate at both the micro
and macro level, it places a disproportionate focus on the level of individual
interactions. Emphasis is placed on individual conduct and personal improvement, with
little attention given to challenging oppression at a structural level. Widely used by
activist groups and NGOs, the document Principles and Practices of Anti-Oppression is a
telling example of this trend. The statement describes the operation of oppression and
outlines steps for challenging the unequal distribution of power solely in terms of
individual behaviour. It puts forth the following suggestions for confronting oppression:
"Keep space open for anti-oppression discussion... Be conscious of how your language may
perpetuate oppression...promote anti-oppression in everything you do...don't feel guilty,
feel motivated."
In a similar vein, the popular blog Black Girl Dangerous in a recent post 4 Ways to Push
Back Against Your Privilege offers a simple four-step model. The first step is to make the
choice to relinquish power-if you are in a position of power, relinquish this position.
Step two is "just don't go"-"If you have access to something and you recognize that you
have it partly because of privilege, opt out of it". The third step is to shut up-if you
are an individual of privilege who is committed to anti-oppression you will "...sit the
hell down and shut up." And finally, step four is to be careful with the identities that
you claim. The strategy for ending oppression is articulated as a matter of addressing
power dynamics between individuals in a group context, but within the confines of the
State and Capitalism.
For the privileged subject, struggle is presented as a matter of personal growth and
development-the act of striving to be the best non-oppressive person that you can be. An
entire industry is built on providing resources, guides, and trainings to help people
learn to challenge oppression by means of "checking their privilege." The underlining
premise of this approach is the idea that privilege can be willed away. At best this
orientation is ineffective, and at worst it can actually work to recenter those who occupy
positions of privilege at the expense of wider political struggle. Andrea Smith reflecting
on her experiences with anti-oppression workshops, describes this issue:
These workshops had a bit of a self-help orientation to them: "I am so and so, and I have
x privilege." It was never quite clear what the point of these confessions were...It did
not appear that these individual confessions actually led to any political projects to
dismantle the structures of domination that enabled their privilege. Rather, the
confession became the political project themselves.
Resulting in what Smith terms the "ally industrial complex," the approach of challenging
oppression via the confession of one's privilege leads to a valorization of the individual
actions of a "confessing subject". Acknowledging the ways in which structures of
oppression constitute who we are and how we experience the world through the allocation of
privilege is a potentially worthwhile endeavour. However, it is not in and of itself
politically productive or transformative.
Privilege is a matter of power. It equates benefits, including access to resources and
positions of influence, and can be considered in terms of both psychological or emotional
benefits, as well as economic or material benefits. It is much more than personal
behaviours, interactions, and language, and can neither be wished, nor confessed away. The
social division of wealth and the conditions under which we live and work shape our
existence, and cannot be transformed through individual actions. We must organize together
to challenge the material infrastructure that accumulates power (one result of which is
privilege). Anything less leads to privilege reductionism-the reduction of complex systems
of oppression whose structural basis is material and institutional to a mere matter of
individual interactions and personal behaviours.
Relentless Articulation of Difference
As a component of anti-oppression politics, intersectionality accounts for the complexity
of domination by outlining the various ways in which different forms of oppression
intersect and reproduce each other. Rooted in feminist discussions of the 1970s and 1980s
that sought to problematize the notion of universal "womanhood," intersectionality
provides a framework for conceptualizing the ways in which different "positionalities"
(eg. gender, sexuality, race, class, ability, etc.) shape people's subjective experiences,
as well as material realities. Patricia Hill Collins describes intersectionality as an
"...analysis claiming that systems of race, social class, gender, sexuality, ethnicity,
nation, and age form mutually constructing features of social organization." In sum,
intersectionality provides a lens through which we can view people's social locations as
mutually constitutive and tied to systemic inequalities.
Intersectionality is often evoked in a manner that isolates and reifies social categories
without adequately drawing attention to common ground. Crucial to its analysis is an
emphasis on a politics of difference-it is asserted that our identities and social
locations necessarily differentiate us from those who do not share those identities and
social locations. So, for example, a working class queer woman will not have the same
experiences and by extension, the same interests as an affluent woman who is straight.
Similarly, a cis-man of colour will not have the same experiences and by extension the
same interests as a trans* man of colour, and so on and so forth. Within this framework,
difference is the fundamental unit of analysis and that which proceeds and defines
identity. This practice works to isolate and sever connections between people in that it
places all of its emphasis on differentiation.
There are seemingly endless combinations of identities that can be articulated. However,
these articulations of difference do not necessarily get at the root of the problem. As
Collins argues: "...Quite simply, difference is less a problem for me than racism, class
exploitation and gender oppression. Conceptualizing these systems of oppression as
difference obfuscates the power relations and material inequalities that constitute
oppression."
It is absolutely true that our social locations shape our experiences, and may influence
our politics. Acknowledging difference is important, but it is not enough. It can obscure
the functioning of oppression, and act as a barrier to collective struggle. The
experiences of a female migrant who works as a live-in caregiver will not be the same as a
male worker who has citizenship and works in a unionized office. These differences are
substantial and should not be ignored. However, in focusing only on difference we lose
sight of the fact that both are exploited under capitalism, and have a shared interest in
organizing to challenge Capital. To be clear, this is not to say that divisions can be put
aside and dealt with "after the revolution", but to highlight the importance of finding
common ground as a basis to bridge difference and organize collectively to challenge
oppression. In the words of Sherene Razack: "speaking about difference...is not going to
start the revolution." Moving beyond a politics of difference, we need an oppositional
politics that seeks to transform structural relations of power.
The Subcultural Ghetto and Lifestylism
The culture of anti-oppression politics lends itself to the creation and maintenance of
insular activist circles. A so-called "radical community" - consisting of collective
houses, activist spaces, book-fairs, etc. - premised on anti-oppression politics fashions
itself as a refuge from the oppressive relations and interactions of the outside world.
This notion of "community", along with anti-oppression politics' intense focus on
individual and micro personal interactions, disciplined by "call-outs" and privilege
checking, allows for the politicization of a range of trivial lifestyle choices. This
leads to a bizarre process in which everything from bicycles to gardens to knitting are
accepted as radical activity.
Call-out culture and the fallacy of community accountability creates a disciplinary
atmosphere in which people must adhere to a specific etiquette. Spaces then become
accessible only to those who are familiar with, and able to express themselves with the
proper language and adhere to the dominant customs. Participation in the discourse which
shapes and directs this language and customs is mostly up to those who are able to spend
too much time debating on activist blogs, or who are academics or professionals well
versed in the dialect. As mentioned previously, the containment of radical discourse to
the university further insulates the "activist bubble" and subcultural ghetto.
In addition to creating spaces that are alienating to those outside of our milieu,
anti-oppression discourse, call-out culture, and the related "communities" leads activists
to perceive themselves as an "enlightened" section of the class (largely composed of
academics, students, professionals, etc. who have worked on their shit and checked their
privilege) who are tasked with acting as missionaries to the ignorant and unclean masses.
This anarchist separatist orientation is problematic for any who believe in the
possibility of mass liberatory social movements that are capable of actually transforming
society.
One example of this orientation is a recent tumblr blog maintained by Toronto activists
entitled Colonialism Ain't Fashionable. The blog encourages activists to use their smart
phones to snap photos of people wearing Hudson Bay jackets in public and submit them.
Hudson Bay is a Canadian retailer which played a historically significant role in
colonialism, and the jacket in particular is seen by activists as an example of cultural
appropriation. Photos are then published in a strange act of attempted public shaming,
justified with some high-minded language about "challenging colonialism at a cultural
level," or "sparking discussion." What we actually see on display here is the arrogant
glee with which those within the activist bubble shake their finger at those outside it.
The retreat to subcultural bohemian enclaves and activist bubbles acknowledges that
revolutionary change is impossible, and as a substitute offers a counterfeit new society
in the here and now. We understand that such a proposition is appealing given the
day-to-day indignity and suffering that is life under our current conditions, but time and
time again we have seen these experiments implode on themselves. Capitalism simply does
not offer a way out and we must face this reality as the rest of the class that we are a
part of faces it everyday. No amount of call-outs or privilege checking will make us into
individuals untainted by the violent social relationships that permeate our reality.
Privilege, Militancy & Implicit Pacifism
As a pacifying feature of anti-oppression politics, the assertion is frequently made that
militancy is a luxury for the privileged. In the context of a meeting in which a militant
action is proposed, proponents of anti-oppression politics will often critique the
proposal on the basis that only those with x or y privilege can participate in such an
action. Due to the increased risks associated with militant action, it is argued that
confrontational politics are largely the domain of those who occupy a social location of
privilege, mainly cis-men. This line of argument is then used to criticize confrontational
actions as exclusionary and to gender such actions as masculine (i.e. the framing of a
tactic as "manarchist"). For example, the Autonomous Workers' Group notes that black bloc
actions in their city of Portland are often critiqued on the basis of furthering a
"...mentality of masculine, white privilege." In a similar vein, another article critiques
property destruction and illegal strike action, stating:
There are many problems with this. Some people cannot get arrested (immigration status or
compromise of professional licensing)...Other issues that warrant consideration are people
who may have had traumatic experiences around violence or the police (or both). People
with health issues (mental or physical) may also not be able to participate in these kind
actions...
Noting that it is not feasible for everyone to participate in high-risk actions, the
article concludes that peaceful protest provides an opportunity for anyone, regardless of
privilege, to participate. The end result of this logic is an aversion to risk that breeds
an implicit pacifism.
The avoidance of risk is a logical impossibility. To engage in revolutionary struggle is
necessarily to put yourself at risk. To be against Capital, the State, colonialism, white
supremacy, patriarchy, etc., is to declare yourself an enemy of these systems. Risk,
discomfort, conflict are unavoidable. The history and ongoing reality of resistance
movements is radically unsafe. Furthermore, for a lot of people simply going through their
daily life is not safe. Marginalized communities aren't safe going about their daily lives
because of institutions of oppression-police, prisons, individual, and systemic violence,
etc. To ignore this reality is to abandon revolutionary organizing. Jackie Wang notes:
"...removing all elements of risk and danger reinforces a politics of reformism that just
reproduces the existing social order."
If we accept that a) confrontation is relegated to privileged social positions, and that
b) inclusivity is an uncompromising imperative, it follows that pacifism is the only
acceptable approach to struggle. There exists an essential contradiction. Within the
framework of anti-oppression politics it is only the most oppressed who are considered to
be legitimate actors in struggle (the role of the privileged is the ally). Yet, it is
argued that militancy is for the privileged alone. Thus, the only option available is
passive resistance. The framing of confrontational forms of resistance as belonging to the
realm of privilege acts to relegate necessary tools - actions, tactics, strategies, etc. -
to a domain that is inaccessible. It re-inscribes, rather than challenges the unequal
distribution of power in society, acts to erase militant histories in which oppressed
peoples have engaged in violent resistance, and further thrusts a role of hapless victim
onto those who are oppressed. There is nothing liberatory about this.
IV. Moving Forward
We have identified the current regime of anti-oppression politics as inadequate in
providing a way forward in the task of developing a revolutionary movement capable of
meaningfully challenging systems of oppression and exploitation. Not only are these
politics inadequate, but ultimately regressive and counter productive. Attempts to address
the inadequacies of anti-oppression are often met with accusations of class reductionism.
While we acknowledge that class reductionism exists as an incorrect political orientation,
the accusation of such can be used as a strawman attack on those who transgress the
dominant discourse within anarchist/radical circles.
Reducing the Class
As an actual political orientation, class reductionism can be largely described as a
tendency on the Left which prioritizes the economic struggle in the workplace as the
primary terrain of revolutionary or progressive action. Often this will go further to
fetishize a particular segment of workplace struggle, namely that of blue collar,
industrial workers. Whether or not it is implicitly stated, the belief is held that the
struggle against other oppressions - white supremacy, hetero-patriarchy, ableism, etc. -
are incidental to the class struggle, to be engaged in as secondary, or that they are
simply prejudices concocted by the ruling class to be dealt with "after the revolution."
On the other hand, we have the proponents of anti-oppression politics attempting to
amalgamate "class" as another oppression alongside the rest, which "intersect" with one
another at various times and places in a person's life. Here we are presented with the
grotesque notion of "classism"-the result of an attempt by anti-oppression theory to
reconcile inadequate politics with the entirety of capitalist social relations. The School
Of the Americas Watch Anti-Oppression Toolkit section on classism offers a prime example:
The stereotype is that poor and working class people are unintelligent, inarticulate, and
"overly emotional." A good ally (a non-working class committed supporter) will contradict
these messages by soliciting the knowledge and histories of poor working class people,
being a thoughtful listener, trying to understand what is being said...
Putting aside for a second the conflation of "poor" and "working class" which indicates
this writer's lack of insight into the matter they seek to educate about, there is truth
in the descriptions of the "stereotype".
We are reminded of the 2010 movie, Made in Daginham, where Eddie O'Grady attempts to
ingratiate himself to his wife by pointing out that he does not beat her or their
children. Frustrated by her husband's lack of consideration of her struggle, Rita replies,
"That is as it should be...You don't go on the drink, do ya? You don't gamble, you join in
with the kids, you don't knock us about. Oh, lucky me. For Christ's sake, Eddie, that's as
it should be! You try and understand that. Rights, not privileges. It's that easy. It
really bloody is."
Similarly, for all the back-patting going on with regards to "allies" most of what is
advised and done constitutes nothing more than a minimal standard of behaviour. We do not
feel respected when someone in a position of power "consults" us before making a decision
regarding our lives, no matter how attentive and probing they may be. We see this emphasis
on listening to rather than creating-with as uncomradely and tokenizing.
In their essay Insurrections at the Intersections anarchists Jen Rogue and Abbey Volcano
address so-called classism by writing:
Since everyone experiences these identities differently, many theorists writing on
intersectionality have referred to something called "classism" to complement racism and
sexism. This can lead to the gravely confused notion that class oppression needs to be
rectified by rich people treating poor people "nicer" while still maintaining class
society. This analysis treats class differences as though they are simply cultural
differences. In turn, this leads toward the limited strategy of "respecting
diversity"[...]This argument precludes a class struggle analysis which views capitalism
and class society as institutions and enemies of freedom. We don't wish to "get along"
under capitalism by abolishing snobbery and class elitism.
Both of these instances of reductionism point to a fundamental misunderstanding of class
and class struggle, as well as to the limits of intersectionality in understanding social
relationships under capitalism. The class reductionism we should be critical of is that
which attempts to reduce the class to a mere section of it (whether it is simply the
poorest, or the most blue collar), and that which attempts to hold up the interests of
that section as that of the entire class. The reality is that the majority of the planet
is working class, and we must recognize that the material obstacles within our class, and
the manner by which they reproduce themselves must be attacked as a matter of necessity.
Not because we are good allies or because we want to check privileges or because we want
to reduce everything to "class first!" but because we are fucking revolutionaries and we
have to.
The (Re)production of Division
If our intention is not strictly limited to maintaining activist enclaves, we are required
to look for the means to understand the development of identity and division under
capitalism. In Caliban and the Witch, Silvia Federici examines the position of women
throughout the rise of capitalism. With an emphasis on the incredibly violent subjugation
necessary, witch burnings being an especially stark example, Federici outlines the
historical process that fostered the patriarchal social relationships which uphold, and
define capitalism.
This process is one which ran alongside the period of primitive accumulation in the
transition from feudalism to capitalism. The enclosure of the commons by a fledgling
bourgeoisie and the imposition of private property was the material basis for the
proletarianization of populations-without the land base necessary for subsistence,
peasants became workers who must sell their labour for a wage in order to survive.
Primitive accumulation is the subsumption of life into the rubric of Capital - land into
property, time into wages, things into commodities - and by extension the transformation
of social relationships necessary to maintain and reproduce these categories. The
subjugation of women to patriarchal capitalism was a crucial element of this process. The
construction of the nuclear family, the assignment of domestic and reproductive labour as
"women's work", and the subsequent devaluation and erasure of that labour, were historic
tasks achieved through the development of capitalism. Attempting to understand patriarchy
as limited to individual attitudes or actions, or somehow isolated from capitalism
(regardless of patriarchal or gendered divisions of labour in pre-capitalist history) is
therefore impossible. Speaking to the accomplishment of the implementation of these new
social relationships, Federici writes:
... in the new organization of work every woman (other than those privatized by bourgeois
men) became a communal good, for once women's activities were defined as non-work, women's
labor began to appear as a natural resource, available to all, no less than the air we
breathe or the water we drink.
The social, economic, and political position of women was thus defined under capitalism.
This new reality meant that the class struggle, that is the struggle for the emancipation
of the working class, takes on a particular character whether or not this is recognized by
its would-be partisans. Federici further explains:
With their expulsion from the crafts and the devaluation of reproductive labor, a new
patriarchal order was constructed, reducing women to a double dependence: on employers and
on men.
This "double dependence" thus implies that the oppression of women under capitalism is not
something that is incidental, nor something that can be addressed in isolation. As having
particular features and the product of (ongoing) historic development, attacking
patriarchy demands that we attack the conditions which allow the perpetuation of the
social relationships by which it is constituted. As class struggle anarchists then we
identify the class struggle as one against this "double dependence" as we struggle against
the conditions which are necessary for capitalism to reproduce itself.
Struggling at the Barricades, Struggling at Home
In 2006, the Mexican state of Oaxaca became engulfed in a popular uprising that lasted
several months. What began as an annual teachers strike developed into a popular conflict.
Barucha Calamity Peller's Women in Uprising: The Oaxaca Commune, the State, and
Reproductive Labour looks at the revolt and the particular role women played. The essay
shows us both what the disruption of the reproduction of patriarchal social relations can
look like and how the reinforcement of those relations from within the movement ultimately
contributed to its limitation and defeat.
On April 1st, 2006, a march of the Cacerolas (later imitated in Quebec and across Canada)
consisting of over ten thousand women, initiated the takeover of TV station Canal Neuve.
Several hundred women from the march occupied the building, which was repurposed as a
communication hub and resource to the ongoing struggle. Peller writes:
Besides transmitting, producing daily programming, and holding workshops, long hours were
spent during nightly patrols of the transmitter and defensive barricades in which the
women of Canal Nueve spoke to each other while huddled around small fires drinking coffee
to stay awake. The dialogue and solidarity that emerged between the women was perhaps one
of the most potent results of the takeover. What was before "private" and "personal"
became a site for resistance. It was during these conversations that women for the first
time experienced a space not dominated by men, in the absence of the market, in which they
could organize freely and relate experiences, and talk to other women. This is where the
idea of women's autonomy emerged in Oaxaca, and it was to this formation of women, where
there was no exploitation of their labor, no dominance of the market or the family, that
the women would refer throughout the struggle.
What we find important here is the implication that the creation of new, anti-capitalist,
anti-patriarchal relations requires the creation of the material basis to do so. The
creation of such a basis requires the negation and disruption of the conditions that
produce the old ways of interacting. Here, the occupation of the Canal Neuve could be
understood as what a revolutionary women's movement in embryo might look like-where the
conditions were created for the creation of a new subjectivity and the destruction of the
former identity.
In the case of Oaxaca, patriarchy still persisted within the movement. Women who attempted
to challenge traditional gender roles were subjected to domestic abuse and/or forced to
continue to take on the full burden of reproductive labour.
Rather than rely on limited class reductionist understandings, either limiting itself to
the factory floor or sociological definitions of "proles," we must strive for a class
struggle which directs us towards the abolition of the divisions within our class that are
necessary to uphold capitalism. We find the example of the Oaxaca uprising useful insofar
as it provides us with a glimpse of both the undoing of oppressive social relationships,
and the defense of those relationships in a period of intensified struggle.
While this section has focused primarily on gendered division and oppression under
capitalism, our intention is to emphasize that these categories and identities are
historically constructed, and have a material basis to their continued reproduction. We
see the process of their destruction as one that is necessarily part of the class
struggle. To paraphrase Marx, this is the process of moving towards a class that is
conscious of itself, and able to act in its own interest-a class for itself.
V. Conclusion
It is our belief that the ways in which humans are exploited, assaulted, pitted against
one another, and robbed of individual and collective agency must (and furthermore, can) be
overcome and replaced with a liberatory existence. While some see anti-oppression politics
as contributing to this endeavour, we see these politics as a substantial hindrance to
revolutionary organizing. We would like to challenge our comrades and fellow travellers to
do better than this half-hearted liberal project that facilitates the reduction of complex
social and economic problems to interpersonal dynamics and individual privileges. Our
struggle is collective, and so too must be our tools and analysis.
http://blackrosefed.org/allies-like-these-reflections-on-privilege-reductionism/
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