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Title: Five Principles of Direct Action Author: CrimethInc. Date: January 17, 2017 Language: en Topics: direct action, principles, protest, J20 Source: Retrieved on 22nd April 2021 from https://crimethinc.com/2017/01/17/five-principles-of-direct-action-what-we-can-learn-from-the-2001-inauguration-protests
On January 20, 2001, anarchists nearly stopped the inauguration of
George W. Bush. Although there was considerable anger about Bush winning
the election while losing the popular vote, the Washington, DC police
hoped it would be easy to confine protesters to âfree speechâ zones. In
contrast, anarchists had decided to âdisruptâ the inauguration by
attempting actively to block Bushâs motorcade from the Capitol to the
White House. Passive protest groups complied with police orders, leaving
the anarchists out in the cold. An anarchist black bloc a few hundred
strong had formed, but most people had no idea how to get through the
police barricades between the protesters in âfree speech zonesâ and the
bleachers of those who had paid to cheer Bush into the presidency.
However, one affinity group had a bright idea. Out of nowhere, four
black-masked anarchistsâclad in the Carhartt clothing popular among
train-hopping traveler kids of the timeâappeared at the edge of the
bloc. Clearly, they had scouted the area beforehand. The affinity group
seized a rolling dumpster from a nearby construction site and asked the
assorted anarchists to pile in whatever construction supplies were
nearbyâchiefly poles and other garbage.
âOne, two, threeâgo!â the affinity group shouted, with more than a
hundred somewhat surprised anarchists behind them. In an almost
superhuman effort, they pushed the dumpster straight at the line of
police checking IDs to enter the free-speech zone. The police
maintaining the checkpoint fled in horror and the relatively fragile
barrier separating the free-speech zone from the black bloc was smashed.
Anarchists in black masks penetrated the zone right next to the
bleachers and the parade route without the police succeeding in checking
their identities. In a moment of insane courage, the affinity group
continued to rush forward pushing the dumpster, releasing it straight
into the parade route. However, one quick-witted police officer drove
his car straight into the dumpsterâs path, blocking it.
The affinity group scattered, melting back into the crowd. Although
Bushâs inauguration itself was not disrupted, the free-speech zone and
area near the route descended into chaos at that moment, and Bushâs
motorcade was quite nearly interrupted.
CrimethInc. operatives carried out a few other creative direct actions
based in affinity groups. One group set up a pirate radio station to
broadcast an anarchist critique of democracy, while others throughout DC
encouraged residents to get out into the streets, distributing thousands
of fliers urging people to tune to the pirate radio station for an
âemergency message.â
What can we learn from 2001? Letâs revisit a few fundamental principles
of successful direct action from the mass mobilizations against
capitalist globalization and the Iraq War.
Before we get into the principles, letâs take a look at the protagonists
of these mobilizations. The participants in these actions can be divided
broadly into the organizers from the host city and the people coming
from out of town. It is essential that those arriving from out of town
already be organized in affinity groups, so they are prepared to make
decisions and act autonomously throughout the events.
The local organizers are the people who, by lucky chance of living in a
city like Washington, DC during Trumpâs inauguration, have been given
the honor of doing a lot of organizational work to make the direct
action a success. Often, this is an overwhelming task, and it is
generally appreciated if people from out of town arrive early to help.
As local organizers are the ones most likely to have their houses raided
after the protest, they may delegate some of the action-oriented work to
people from out of town who can more easily evade detection and escape
local police.
Is it simply a media stunt? Or is it a direct action with a specific
objective?
Even rioting is often more or less a media action. Often the lines are
blurred: blocking people from attending the inauguration or otherwise
disrupting itâfor example, by getting into the parade route itselfâis
definitely direct action, but it is also spectacular if it is aimed at
the media. While getting beat up by Trump-supporting fascists might be a
tactical disaster and set a terrible precedent, in front of the media it
could also convey that anarchists are the front line fighting the
nascent fascism around Trump. In shortâany combination of media actions,
direct actions, and covert actions is possible, but itâs important that
all the participants are clear what their concrete goal is.
An abstract goal of âdisruptingâ the inauguration may not be concrete
enough to produce solid results. More specific goals could include âstop
Trumpâs carâ or âtear down the so-called âfree speechâ zones,â as in the
above story, or a variety of other objectives. There will always be
arguments over what goals are most appropriate for anarchists, but it is
crucial to make at least some attempt to formulate and achieve a
concrete goal.
organizers should publicize a planâŠ
âŠthat will create the conditions in which to accomplish their goal,
while preparing at least one secret plan that will enable them to
achieve it. Ideally, there should be one sensible public plan, one
secret backup plan, and a backup for the backup plan. Secret plans
should be shared only with trusted affinity groups, but it is essential
to be able to articulate them rapidly to others in the streets. Itâs
important to preserve the element of surprise, but once you are putting
your plan into action it is equally important to be able to get other
people on board with it. BecauseâŠ
âŠcreating a situation in which it is impossible to isolate a militant
minority from the rest of the population. Unless they expect to be the
majority of the participants, anarchists should not isolate themselves
from everyone else. At the least, they should seek crowd cover from
liberal protesters, so it is more difficult for police to attack or
arrest them without broader repercussions; at best, anarchists should
aim to create a situation in which confrontational action spreads far
beyond their ranks.
If anarchists march alone, it is much easier for the police to isolate
them, surround them, and arrest them en mass. This happened to the black
bloc at the Climate Change summit in Copenhagen in 2009; Washington, DC
police did the same thing to tamer protesters in the âDemocracy Springâ
demonstration in 2016. By contrast, in the successful protests at the
Seattle WTO demonstrations in 1999, where the Teamsters infamously
joined anarchists fighting in the streets, as well as at the anti-FTAA
demonstrations in Quebec in 2001, anarchists enabled black bloc tactics
to proliferate throughout a large crowd.
This lesson has not been lost on liberals. Reformists like Gloria
Steinem are holding the Womenâs March on Saturday, when Trump will have
left and downtown DC will be completely empty. Steinem and her friends
might as well work for Trump (just as she worked for the CIA):
encouraging a purely symbolic march a day after the actual Trump
inauguration will discourage people from concentrating their energies on
resisting the inauguration itself. It would be more effective for
everyone to participate in a single day of direct action, in a framework
affirming autonomy and a diversity of tactics.
decentralized actions by affinity groups.
Realistically, affinity groups may pull off some banner drops or
isolated vandalism; if theyâre lucky, they might even glean a bit of
media coverage. However, such actions are rarely effective by themselves
and cannot, by the nature of their size, possibly take the place of
large and well-organized street demonstrations. The truth is that there
has never been a protest in which decentralized affinity group actions
by themselves were the deciding factor. More often than not, calls for
decentralized actions produce nothing at all.
Furthermore, closed affinity groups actions rarely create a situation in
which people who are not already sure of their politics can get involved
and have radicalizing experiences. Short of bank robbery and arson,
decentralized actions are almost always ignored. Hoping that other
people will carry out decentralized actions is often a coping mechanism
used by anarchists to avoid doing any real organizing work themselves.
Successful decentralized actions are most likely to come about in the
wake of an organized mass action opening a rift in the fabric of order,
as at the Seattle WTO demonstrations or the Quebec FTAA protests.
working communications infrastructure.
Knowing when and where the police (and others) are attacking protesters
is crucial.
Formerly, at anti-globalization and anti-war protests before Trump, the
main issue was getting the mainstream media to pay attention to protests
in the first place. This is why sites like Indymedia (which still exists
in DC) were established in the first place. The Indymedia model of
user-provided content was later commodified to produce the likes of
Facebook.
However, lack of mainstream media attention is unlikely to be an issue
for the Trump inauguration. The more important question will be how to
remain apprised of developments throughout downtown. Historically,
anarchists have helped trail-blaze the use of mobile technologies to
keep the crowd informed of police movementsâfrom TxtMob at the
Republican National Convention in 2004 to Twitter in 2008. It usually
helps to have bike scouts to verify rumors of police movements, as well.
In 2016, the most useful technologies are probably Twitter and encrypted
messaging applications like Signal.
Itâs worth going the extra mile today to be secure. During the 2008
Republican National Convention, the communications headquarters was
raided after police followed the organizers back to it from a
spokescouncil meeting. The same problem led to the raid of the âsecretâ
headquarters for the Twitter feed during the actions against the 2009
G20 Summit in Pittsburgh. There should be some separation between any
communication center and in-person meetings. Likewise, any group
coordinating communications should probably use Tor between their
connection and Twitter, and communicate via Jabber over Tor.
Of course, groups involved in possibly illegal decentralized actions
should not carry mobile phones or use this sort of infrastructure at
all. The likelihood of being tracked is just too high. However, for the
rest of the crowdâand for anarchist contingents in particularâa solid
communications infrastructure is a vital component of a successful
action.
These are just a few of the many conclusions that we could pass on from
the era of the 2001 inauguration protests. Those who are preparing to
act against the inauguration of Donald Trump on January 20, 2017 are
part of a lineage of revolt stretching back generationsâa lineage older
than the United States itself. Letâs learn from the past to sharpen our
wits for the future. Good luck out there, comrades.