💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › l-a-kauffman-the-new-unrest.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 11:58:46. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-07-09)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: The New Unrest
Author: L.A. Kauffman
Date: February 2000
Language: en
Topics: Free Radical, insurrection
Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20021205011140/http://www.free-radical.org/issue1.shtml
Notes: Issue #1 of Free Radical

L.A. Kauffman

The New Unrest

For the longest time, being on the left has meant being marginal,

powerless, and embattled. Since at least the Reagan years, we've been

history's losers, the dorks and freaks of the political realm. Often, we

adapted poorly to our general irrelevance, turning inward to fight over

inanities or purveying stale messages -- "Bad slogans repeated, ensure

we'll be defeated" -- at predictable demonstrations.

There were issue-oriented movements that bucked this trend -- big,

important causes that won sizable victories, like the anti-apartheid

movement or the AIDS direct action group ACT UP. But viable on-

the-ground activism with a sweeping economic and political agenda? That

kind of radicalism was almost nowhere to be found.

History has turned a corner. Suddenly, as this new century begins, a new

radicalism has emerged: broad, confident, and compelling. The World

Trade Organization protests in Seattle marked this movement's first

major victory and mass media debut, but the new unrest is not limited to

the loud and varied activism around issues of corporate globalization.

You can find it any place where dissent is growing more vocal and

spirited, and where groups that once worked at arm's length from one

another are newly discovering common ground -- from the increasingly

multi-generational and multi-ethnic campaigns against police brutality

and the "prison-industrial complex" to the new collaborations between

organized labor and immigrant rights groups to secure amnesty for the

undocumented.

"People are getting fed up everywhere, people are seeing the same

things," says JR Valrey, a young activist in Oakland, California, who

has worked on everything from guerrilla hip-hop concerts to direct

action protests as part of an expansive community empowerment campaign.

"It doesn't stop at the borders -- it's nationwide, if not worldwide.

The world is already an oligarchy with only a few people running it, and

it's about to turn into one big monopoly, and people know that if we

don't combine, it's going to eat us."

Han Shan, program director for the Ruckus Society, a five-year-old

organization that trains activists in the techniques and strategies of

direct action, echoes this analysis: "I think that people have finally

begun to dig deeper and understand that there are vast economic

paradigms that underlie a lot of the environmental problems that we

have, a lot of the human rights issues that they face."

With this new sense of momentum and common ground, level- headed

organizers are beginning to talk in terms that would have seemed

delusional just a short time ago.

"This is the biggest opening for building a mass movement in my

lifetime," says David Solnit, a veteran of 1980s and 1990s activism and

one of the key organizers of the Seattle WTO blockade. "Most of the past

mass movements in this country have been around single issues like

disarmament or Central America or forests.This is bringing people

together from all the different fights and very clearly saying that the

economic system of this country and this world is wrong -- and we're

going to overthrow it and build a new one in its wake."

Personally, I'm dubious about anything being actually overthrown -- the

snarky cynicism of the 1990s is beginning to seem dated, but healthy

skepticism never goes out of style.

That said, a whiff of insurrection is unquestionably in the air.

Everywhere you turn, it seems, people are vowing to shut one or another

elite institution down.

The biggest such event in the near-term future is a major protest in

Washington, D.C., on April 16, designed to disrupt an annual meeting of

the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Radical activists

around the world have declared May 1, 2000 to be a "Global Day of

Action, Resistance, and Carnival Against Capitalism," with talk of

blockading stock exchanges and other institutions of the global economy.

And plans are afoot in Los Angeles and Philadelphia to mess with this

summer's Democratic and Republican Party conventions, on the reasoned

grounds that both parties have become nothing more than shills for

moneyed interests.

Meanwhile, local fights are escalating. In New York City, for example,

where I live, there has been a longstanding battle against private

luxury development on publicly owned community gardens. The other night,

several hundred people calling themselves the Subway Liberation Front

staged a raucous outlaw party, taking over first an L and then an A

train. A large part of the crowd, juiced by its own defiance, proceeded

to the recently bulldozed Esperanza Garden on Manhattan's Lower East

Side, where they tore down the developer's fence and began replanting

the land. This impromptu action came at a high price: With no news

cameras or legal observers to provide cover for the radical gardeners,

the NYPD swooped in, badly beating a number of the participants.

There is much about the new unrest that bears closer examination. Will

gestures of revolt overwhelm strategic considerations, as they did that

night in Esperanza Garden? How deep are the new alliances, particularly

those that seek to bridge racial and class divides? What role does the

identity politics of recent decades play in activism today? How far in

the direction of direct action is organized labor willing to go?

For the moment, anything seems possible. "People are very conscious of

the passing of time and the fact that history is being written,"

observes Nadine Bloch, one of the organizers of the upcoming IMF/World

Bank protests, "and young people especially are jumping in and taking

responsiblity for what their future will look like.