đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș j-sakai-beginner-s-kata.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 11:32:54. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Beginnerâs Kata Author: J. Sakai Date: December 4, 2018 Language: en Topics: anarchist organization, organization, not-anarchist, organizing Source: Text: https://kersplebedeb.com/posts/kata/ Cover: https://www.akpress.org/beginner-s-kata.html Notes: Publisher: Kersplebedeb.
Plain talk with J. Sakai about what we do and donât know about
revolutionary organization, and, indeed, about being revolutionaries.
---
âBeginnerâs mindâ is a zen phrase. It reminds us that when we first took
this path as beginners, we approached it almost with awe. Self-conscious
of knowing so littleâknowing nothing, reallyâwe were open for seeing
anything. Aware mostly of how unimportant our own little knowledge was.
But as we became much more experienced, even became âexpert,â it was
different. We could separate useful from scrap, what we judge is good
from bad, so automatically we hardly needed to pause over it. Our
journey became a polished routine. And now we sometimes ask ourselves,
is it still a journey?
i was reminded of âbeginnerâs mindâ all over again once, in a very
different context. Accidentally tuning past an ongoing discussion
between a few marxists and anarchists about the pros and cons of
leninism vs. âhorizontalâ spontaneity in revolutionary organization. It
was like people at a dinner party having a familiar argument across the
room from you. You canât catch everything being said, but you know where
itâs going anyway.
Seems that every culture has strange traditions. Seemingly illogical ,
ritual ways of approaching some things. Guess itâs just human. As in the
Japanese cartoon world we know as anime, the artistic convention is that
the characters are pictured as Caucasians, even though the artists and
audience are Japanese. (Critics here guess maybe respecting their artâs
origins in the fandom for imported u.s. comic books during the post-1945
Occupation?)
Our left subculture, like in that discussion on leninism & revolutionary
organization, is as strange as that. Instead of centering on actual
organizations we ourselves might have experimented with, learned from or
fought against, by cultural convention the debate often uses the Russian
Revolution of 1917 and the conflicting stalinist and anarchist
experiences of the 1937 Spanish Civil War as its framework. So
discussions on a key subject are familiarly conducted at a removeâusing
the puppetry of actors and scenarios from almost a century ago, on a
different continent; none of it in our living memory or knowledge. This
is still a serious political discussion, just as Paris couture fashions
are still seriously-intended clothing. But both are heavily stylized and
artificial, for unspoken class purposes?
Someone in that small discussion pointed out that leninism and his kind
of command organization had played such a large role to this day in
modern revolutionary politics, that whether it was negative or positive,
good or bad in someoneâs opinion, it should be better understood.
Unfortunately, put me down as more than skeptical on this.
Only yesterday i had said the exact same thing. But hearing it played
back again in someone elseâs voice, realized that i donât really expect
it to happen. Useful idea, abstractly, but the left in this country has
never been able to successfully do this one specific thing about
understanding revolutionary organization, not in a hundred years.
Neither anarchists nor marxists. So why would you expect it to happen
now? Is it that weâre much smarter all of a sudden? Is everyone more
interested in leninism now?
[Those words might sound like iâm either dissing Lenin or dissing revs
in this country. No, not at all. But his politics have been
untranslatable here, because of the complex barrier which divides our
realities. Same reason so many people donât understand his Russian
predecessor, the anarchist Bakunin. If time allows, we might touch
lightly on this at another turn down the road.]
This is a singular moment in the struggle, where the old left from the
1960s-70s has finally gone, and where the wind-shaken leafs of brand new
radicalisms have begun to sprout up, fragile yet driven. As generations
go on and off stage, and society is transformed once again by the leap
in the means of economic production & distribution. This is a space in
the transition between different historic epochs, in the simultaneous
unnatural flowering/world collapse of capitalist civilization. Still, in
a brutal continental u.s. empire of some 325 millions, it is only
ordinary that there are numbers of radical people as well as different
groups with revolutionary ideas. But if only temporarily, there is no
revolutionary organization yet which is strong enough to impress its
ideas upon mainstream politics.
Everyone who has been around radical protest activity for awhile has
heard left organizational ideasâanarchist, social-democratic, old
marxist-leninist, maoist, eco-survivalist, whatever. To me the first
question isnât any longer which ideas are âbestââwhich is how the
organization question is usually framedâbut how true or useful are the
assumptions on which our discussions are based? Where are we really when
we start to navigate our course?
What i am trying to do here is not to argue one organizational form or
another, but to examine how we think about revolutionary organization.
What the framework is around everything. To examine how our easy
acceptance of so many assumptions could throw us forward or off-track.
Because, at least to me, thereâs a big gap between the reality and our
superficial talk about the shape of revolutionary organizations to come.
So how much have we learned about revolutionary organization? In
practical terms, in one way personally i know a lot (certainly much more
than we would ever want to spill in public), but in another way i donât
know near enough. Maybe like the backyard guy you know who fixes cars,
but isnât good enough to get a real mechanicâs job at the dealership?
So, not nearly enough. But hereâs a handful anyway, right or wrong,
tossed into the pot, my share towards what we need for starters.
i know that marxist-leninists here are supposed to know so much about
this subject, but donât.
In my political lifetime iâve seen what felt like dozens of primarily
middle-class, white and asian M-L collectives, organizations and
so-called parties started in the metropolis, this u.s. empire , and none
of them to my knowledge have been successful. Thatâs a zero. At one
point almost the entire, ex-college asian-american movement on the West
Coast and New York City emptied itself into fiercely warring
âMarxist-Leninist-Mao-Tse-Tung-Thought party-buildingâ organizations and
collectives of one kind or another. All long gone now. Most 1960s-70s
M-L organizations quickly disappeared. A few âTrotskyistâ sects
unfortunately lasted it felt like forever, like those fabled cockroaches
briskly going about their business immune to the glowing levels of
radioactivity in a post-holocaust world (when i think of those groups,
thereâs a reason a mental picture of radioactive cockroaches comes into
my mind).
If you started early enough way back then, we even saw âpragmaticâ
social-democratic organizations with their yearning for the wealthy
welfare state of nice civilian mice sharing the cheese, come and then go
in the blink of an eye. Their coming on in the late 1950s was the little
stirring before the much larger wave of radical rebellion in the 1960s.
Historically a more European than a u.s. empire phenomena, but with
Globalizationâs merciless neo-liberalism, more and more people are
wanting a full frontal welfare state as their best alternative to mass
middle-class flight to Canada. In the 2016 âBernieâ breakthrough, that
utopian socialist-capitalist reformism became a progressive âhappening.â
Yeah, been there, done that. Although for this particular discussion it
actually lies outside our map, outside the actual combat zone of
decisions about revolutionary organization.
i think that we all know scraps of things, but in practice today donât
know enough to do anything successful about revolutionary organization.
Which is one good reason why we arenât doing it.
One big obstacle to us learning more is our habit of covering up our
ignorance. Uncle Mao used the term âinvincible ignoranceâ to identify
the self-protective reflex of too many leftists. Shying away from
bluntly analyzing the political things that they needed to experience.
Clinging to the polishing and re-polishing of âclassicâ politics in
order to avoid the humbling uncertainties of the ever-changing struggle.
A typical old example to me was when famous poet Amiri Baraka & Co.
formed their would-be âMaoistâ party, the LRS (League of Revolutionary
Struggle). One of my asian comrades was a member, and pressing me to
join up. So i asked her why their would-be âpartyâ would succeed, when
Bob Avakianâs RCP, and the Beijing-officially-endorsed October League,
and most of the other 1970s âMaoistâ pre-party groups had fallen
face-first into the pavement? ( Hard as it may be to believe now, many
thousands of young activists had poured into these M-L party-building
groups, which had then promptly evaporated in one of the most striking
radical happenings of the Sixties generation. i mean, Charles Manson
left a bigger footprint ).
âBecause they had bad politics and we have good politicsâ, my asian
comrade simplemindedly answered me, completely confident . That sort of
left me speechless. Is mercy killing allowed in the movement, i
wondered? (guess not, or i would have been cold stone buried ages ago.)
Sadly, it isnât true that thereâs a special goddess to protect the
clueless.
The old Marxist left here was like an aircraft manufacturer, whose
elite, university-educated engineering teams with great theoretical
flourish developed 60 or 70 different airplanes. All of them
unfortunately crashing on takeoff. Their potential customers have long
since split into two feuding camps: the Marxist-Leninists keep
insisting, âOur people are so exceptionally experienced, we must buy
their next airplane.â (Anarchists reply: âWhat this proves is that
aviation should be banned, unless travelers going to a destination
spontaneously meet and piece together some kind of a âplaneâ out of
whatever parts are left around airports.â)
i also think that âdemocracyâ in revolutionary organizations is highly
overrated. At its worst, itâs like âpatriotismâ and âfamily,â being âthe
last refuge of scoundrels.â
Democracy in society may be a necessity of community life, but democracy
in revolutionary organizations is something else entirely different.
Among other things, revolutionary organizations are part of society and
also not part of it. In the society and also living antagonistically
outside its borders. Subject to different laws of physics. Resulting in
different structures.
Most discussions of revolutionary organizations right here in the garden
of the imperialist metropolis, assume and insist on some variety of
âdemocracy.â Itâs definitely something sacred. What does this usually
consist of? Something learned from our capitalist bosses. Usually
something resembling their bourgeois âdemocracy.â In which the marxist
or anarchist or socialist group is âdemocraticâ because there are
meetings in which all members have the theoretical right to speak, vote
or consent on its politics and activities. Usually, the handful of
leaders have met or communicated privately before that meeting, to
decide what the members must do. Often, everything is scripted as much
as possible.
Thereâs nothing strange about this. Itâs organizational âdemocracyâ as
we know it in the world of the imperialist center, like suburban village
government, state-regulated trade union locals, or the bored of trustees
for whatever NGO. Itâs a certain form that comfortably clothes
institutions in this decaying capitalist culture. As such, this
âdemocracyâ isnât anything that iâm up in arms about, either for or
against. Why shouldnât an anarchist organization or a trotskyist âpartyâ
operate like the local bridge club if it wants to? Itâs just our
cultural norm.
But the complete absence of this âdemocracyâ isnât necessarily a loss,
either.
Sometimes doing away with âdemocracyâ can be even more democratic in
real terms. In fact, stripping away unnecessary people and organization
has worked better than leftists here like to admit in many situations.
One reason that so much of what has worked well are individual or small
group projects, seriously committed to getting things done on a
particular issue or function.
As one example, i like the old Prison News Service (PNS) newspaper
project, done in the 1980-1990s by the late Jim Campbell & friends up in
Canada. For many years, PNS survived as a very open political forum,
primarily written by many, many different prisoners, and read by
thousands of prisoners. Particularly for New Afrikan prisoners in the
u.s.a., it became a rare meeting place to talk politics with each other,
spread news about the ongoing skirmishes between the brothers and
sisters versus the prison authorities, and generally make themselves
known.
Jim Campbell mostly financed it himself out of his wages, and although
he had a handful of co-conspirators on the project, from what i could
tell back then Jim basically made most of the decisions. If Jim didnât
think that your letter was that important, flip it went into the dusty
files (yes, that happened to me, tooâhave to laugh about it now). Not
only was this close to one-man rule, without any âdemocraticâ structure,
but it was one-white-man rule to boot. How about that for a taboo?
Why should one white anarchist up in Canada de facto control so much of
how prisoners of color in the u.s. gulag talked to each other? Because
no one else wanted to or could do it. (The black liberation
army-coordinating committee, to be sure, had its own quite serious
political discussion zine, but it was both closed and more specifically
defined.) Truth was, neither Black nationalist organizations nor white
M-L groups wanted to have that much to do with prisoners except to
exploit a few famous names. Who might have been hailed in speeches but
were privately considered too troublesome, too hard to control, and too
needy.
During those years, the National Committee to Defend Black Political
Prisoners was also a small but useful source of political linkage for
some of those inside, but that was really done by one dedicated older
Asian woman. Who stayed up late at night licking the stamps and sending
out mailings paid for by her thin wages as a waitress in Harlem (she
told me she took the job partly so that she could act as a message
center, where guys who might be ducking the Enemy could pick up âkitesâ
from comradesâand to slip hamburgers to hungry rads without cash.) So
Jim wasnât alone, but was one of a thin line of advanced explorers. An
actual modest person-by-person vanguard, if you will, probing the gulags
and other human garbage dumps for the future. There are vanguards in the
struggle, but maybe itâs not what people usually think.
So it was lucky that Jim Campbell identified so personally with the pain
and isolation of prisoners, and was so determined to break down the
walls to the extent that he and a few other comrades personally could.
PNS definitely had the effect of spreading liberation, enabling radical
political discussion among some of the oppressed. Which wasnât ideal,
sure wasnât everything, but was pretty democratic. The how they did it
was less important. Democracy isnât in the ritual forms, in our little
rules. Itâs in the politics of what we do or donât do.
Which brings us to data-mining the past. Taking lessons from the past is
inescapable, for me as well as everyone else. But check this out: We
âknowâ a lot from all our snatch & grab at the past that isnât what we
think it is.
One immediate suggestion i do have is to take some of the emotion and
value judgements out of it. As one of my old martial arts teachers used
to say at our annual class evaluations, âJust take it in as
information.â One by one, we had to step forward onto the floor and go
through our moves, and then were critiqued on the spot by classmates and
instructors. âDonât think of what youâre being told as positive or
negative,â he advised us. âItâs just information.â Youâll see what i
mean by the next story. [Oh, and to prevent miscuesâiâm not any martial
artist. Any more than when as kids we played pickup football games in
the park with much enthusiasm, that didnât make us what everyone means
by football players.]
When we look through the past as revolutionaries, thereâs a natural
tendency to focus on examples that verify our existing beliefs. This is
a natural but really dangerous habit. For example: for many years i
âknewâ that Stalin and his damned commissars were responsible for losing
the 1936â39 Spanish Civil War to the fascists. The stalinistsâ violent
repression of the anarchists and independent socialists there had
stabbed the most militant center of the working class in the back, and
thus fatally weakened the ground-breaking class war. i mean, not that i
knew much or anything at all about Spanish history, but like so many
others i had read George Orwellâs moving first-hand account of the war,
Homage to Catalonia, and it all fit as neatly as a cherry on top of a
banana split. A one-book education. i never questioned it.
By karma, back then i knew an older Maoist comrade who actually had been
a young soldier with the International Brigades fighting in that Spanish
Civil War. Thinking it strange that up to then weâd freely talked about
our own confused 1960s movement politics, but he had never brought up
his war experiences in Spain, one afternoon i asked him what he thought
of Orwellâs book. My friend jumped to his feet and started cursing. He
thought that Orwell was a dishonest asshole, and his self-serving
version of the anti-fascist Civil War a fabric of clever novelistic
half-truths and distortions. The way this older comrade described his
war came from a completely different angle than any iâd thought of
before then. It really took me aback.
He told me: âIn the field hospital I saw wounded die for nothing,
freezing to death in the cold overnight without blankets, because
someone had fucked up the supply list. Do you think Stalin had blankets
withheld to increase his power? â My Maoist friendâs angry sarcasm had a
sharp point: that the whole war was fucked. To him the two sides in
Spain, fascist-clericalist versus liberal and left Republican,
unfortunately were also the militarily competent versus the idealistic
but not-yet competent. He said that all the revolutionaries, the
socialists and communists no less than the anarchists, were stumbling
around trying to learn how to build a new kind of society there for the
first time with the clock running. While with the other hand also
fighting a new type of total war against an advancing, experienced
mercenary colonialist army, with plenty of guns, artillery and air
squadrons.
To him this was a tragic loss in a far deeper way than abstractly our
team versus their team. It was his experiences in Spain, my friend said,
that made him an early Maoist sympathizer. Since it was a sign of real
hope to him and his comrades in Spain that while their flickering
progressive Republic was being inexorably crushed by the fascists, in
remote regions of China that Red Army was solving the problem of
survival in combat against even the largest capitalist armies. No small
thing to my friend, after losing so badly, with more real life
casualties he knew than he wanted to remember.
He also said that contrary to what Orwell wrote about, anarchism was a
real military problem in Spain. To my surprise, he wasnât talking about
the Durruti Column or other legendary anarchist workersâ formations. He
was talking about what he considered latent or basic anarchism within
the International Brigades, which was stalinist, remember. Like most
wars, that one was fought by the young, in many cases teenagers no older
than fifteen or sixteen years old (the Canadian naturalist R.D. Lawrence
had enlisted as a Spanish anti-fascist infantryman back then when he was
only fourteen. He was so short that his rifle slung over the shoulder
kept almost bumping the groundâbut as he said, âno one cared how old you
were if you could shoot a gun.â)
Whenever a fascist offensive somewhere would start, many of the eager
young volunteers would spontaneously âdesert to the Front.â Taking their
rifle and hitching rides on supply trucks or trains to wherever the most
intense fighting was. Abruptly leaving their own units short of
soldiers. Training plans and readiness and new moves on its own front
upset.
Since it is hard to successfully plan an overall war that way,
âdeserting to the Frontâ was quickly banned. Soldiers were talked to
about revolutionary discipline, etc. etc. Nevertheless, just like with
sex, when romanticism and adrenalin flood the heart, young dudes arenât
always thinking ahead to the larger picture. And the men who did this
felt that no blame could be attached to any individual who decided to
just go off more bravely by themselves into the fighting. Spontaneous
soldiering just went on.
Finally, the commanders decided that a sobering line had to be drawn.
The next time it happened, a pretty blameless but undisciplined young
American revolutionary was selected for charges, court-martialed, and
then executed by his own buddies. Their shooting was understandably bad
and the condemned comrade was badly wounded, not cleanly killed. So
their unitâs commissar (a young tough guy from Brooklyn, my comrade
recalled) had to step up, draw his pistol and finish him. Then the
commissar wrote the soldierâs parents a letter of condolence, saying
that their son had died bravely fighting the fascists. But when their
unit returned home, the working class stalinist commissar used his
pistol once more and committed suicide. The whole thing was hushed up by
the movement. Isnât it always? (Yes, i know that there were probably a
dozen better ways to handle that problem politically, not by coercive
authority, but thatâs the kind of thing many normally confused macho men
did right thenâor even now.)
Was that first-hand view all true, or just my friend stretching memories
to defend the integrity of the revolutionary band of his youth? He had
only one personâs experiences, but think he had an important part of the
truth, anyway. i donât know about the whole deal, but i do believe that
the Moscow-directed repressing of so many of the most militant Spanish
workers was textbook stalinist anti-revolutionary maneuver 101. So iâm
definitely not going to want any stalinist anything around at the next
revolution. But give us a break, thatâs kind of like, duh. Maybe hot
shit as an insight in 1929 or 1939, but pretty small change as a lesson
about revolutionary organization now in the 21^(st) century. We should
have easily learned that a long time ago, and much, much more.
The question isnât whether the stalinists or the socialists or the
anarchists were right or wrong or in what ways in the 1936â39 Spanish
Civil War. Thatâs one series of questions, but is that the main lesson
we can learn from that past? In radical debates things can get pretty
black and white awful fast, lots of tunnel vision, i think. But in the
actual struggle with millions of real people freeing themselves, rushing
around trying to do things they themselves have never seen before, there
are always layers of reality. i mean, not just one true thing, but many
true factors of varying meaning, shifting in time. To me what my older
comrade said struck a note that went towards the practical heart of
things.
Sometimes we can be technically right about something â and still miss
the main point.
One very smart anarchist comrade that i told this to, about Spain, came
back immediately with: âNo, it was the arms. The lack of arms. See,
France and Britain wouldnât sell arms to us. And Stalin cut us off. He
wouldnât give us enough arms.â Actually, iâve heard that line more than
once as an explanation. Which only sounds reasonable until you start to
think about it, in terms not of liberal âfairnessâ but of revolutionary
organization. This is something my friend was obviously just repeating
from someone else, not something he ever had to work out bit by bit for
himself.
Letâs see, the anarchists and independent socialists back then in Spain
were saying that Stalin was running a bloodthirsty dictatorship which
needed to be overthrown, with the stalinist sycophants and criminal
bureaucrats needing to be put before workers courts and firing squads?
And yet, they really expected that the same lumpen Joe Stalin was going
to pour shiploads of weapons into their hands like the hip-hop Insane
Santa Claus? How unreal was that as strategy? Thatâs like some homeless
dude sleeping rough under a bridge, but expecting every freezing night
that Obamaâs limo will soon be pulling up to take him to his lush
bedroom in the new mansion.
The problem in this kind of thinking goes deeper still than that.
Whether the anti-capitalist forces in Spain didnât get enough arms
because of Stalin or Wall Street conspiracies or because the boat was
late, or whatever, the net practical effect was the same. That the
progressive Republic was outgunned by the mercenary forces of General
Franco and his eager German and Italian fascist mentors. Skip past the
back story and get to where the rubber meets the road. Letâs say that
they were outgunned two to one, three to one, or even worse. So? Whatâs
the big deal? i mean, itâs a nice-sounding civilian excuse, but it
doesnât mean much in terms of revolutionary practice.
We revs are always way outgunned and outnumbered by the mercenary forces
of the capitalist state, until the final stages of the struggle. In Old
China way back then, the communist Red Army was outnumbered and
outgunned more like five or ten to one, by both the rightist Chinese
armies and the Japanese invaders, for many harsh years. True everywhere
for anti-capitalist guerrillas, too, not just that particular Spain.
Itâs not an excuse, itâs just the usual violent environment of
capitalist hegemony everywhere that we must to learn to survive in and
grow in.
Everything we do, our tactics and strategies, our organizations and
subcultures, all assume great imbalances in strength between us and the
capitalist ruling class. Whether of mainstream propaganda, numbers,
experience, money, guns, whatever. If it were only a contest of morality
and justice, the capitalists would have been kicked out long ago. We all
know all this, too. We just donât always absorb the full meaning.
The lesson that really strikes home to me from that experience back then
was not only the brilliant courage of those people overturning backward
oppressive society, but also our own lack of revolutionary development
in the broadest sense. And tragically what it meant when we had to put
it to the test in real life, in real time, with the lives of millions
involved. Right now we are used to laughing at the incompetence of Big
Capitalism, reeling from setback to setback, from Trump the Reality TV
Government to their hopelessly lost but unbelievably lethal
misadventures in the Muslim world.
But we conveniently forget how even this crumbling
chunks-falling-off-of-it Big Capitalism has accumulated within its
structures centuries of learning-by-experience knowledge of how to run
society part by part their way. Too often, we think that criticizing
them well is equal to having enough know-how to design up and
successfully operate our own oppositional counter-cultures and
societies. While in practice these two things are many miles apart.
Acknowledging that we anti-capitalist revolutionaries are only
beginners, are in historical terms still a young culture, still just
starting to learn how to build, is to me a healthy first step in better
revolutionary organizations. (What we now know as industrial capitalism
took 900 years, historians tell us, to evolve out into a dominant social
systemâoh, donât worry, my momâs a dangerously wild driver and we revs
are going to take a much shorter route.)
One thing that i learned the last time around is never to expect
evolution to just repeat itself. In the early 1960s, what was that eraâs
old left and new left overlapped briefly, and the disarray was
tragi-comical.
Still active veterans of the great 1930s industrial unionism battles in
workplaces and factories, watched with bewilderment as 1960s kids staged
small, really personal rallies in the middle of a campus, to support a
fellow college student holding up and then burning his draft card.
Reading aloud his own individual statement of rejecting the draft and
the Vietnam War. And accepting soon going into federal prison.
Meanwhile, we marched proudly out of Black communities, crossing borders
now not as friends but as reluctant enemies, bitterly into the
hate-filled euro-settler working class neighborhoods. The old left
veterans from the 1930s were horror-stricken, since they had always
believed in the revival of mass euro-settler industrial unionism as the
central event in radical social change, like in their own idealistic
youth way back when dinosaurs roamed the earth. We felt so sorry for
them, because they didnât get it that our future would never look like
them. We knew instinctively what Dylan was singing about: âYou donât
know what it is, do you, Mr. Jones?â
But for everyone now, too, the fault lines have shifted once more. The
passing of the old, euro-colonial economies and the thermal fusing of
national imperialisms have been as tectonic plates, grinding deep
underneath the earth. Reshaping the political surface into a surprising
geography which brings the labor of massive Chinese and Mexican
proletariats popping right up into every neighborhood. While the great
archipelago of the New Afrikan major cities built up by accretion like
coral reefs during the 20^(th) century, is being physically pounded down
and broken up, one after another. As New Afrikans of the âdangerous
classâ are forced to disperse, to keep moving, keep moving, once again.
Many to the prison kamps of the u.s. empireâs vast gulag, while others
to the isolated suburban exile townships.
When we first took this path, when we joined our lives with the
struggle, we were conscious of knowing so very little. One good reason
we were so attracted to this revolutionary organization or that one. Not
only to find rads we could run with, but to find mentors and a busy hive
of experience we hoped to take cues from. What never occurred to us is
that those organizations might know next to nothing, too.
Hereâs a cellphone snapshot that comes to mind: One of the liveliest
cultural gate-crashers of the 1960s was the sudden popularity of Eastern
philosophy and arts. Which was a lot more than the Beatles going to
India to try out meditation. The most nitty-gritty among that being the
craze for the Eastern martial arts. Even before Bruce Leeâs great Enter
the Dragon, young guys Black and Latino as well as Asian were haunting
the cheap rerun movie theaters that showed the Hong Kong martial arts
flicks. My dumpy baby sister became a changed teenager, as angular and
menacing as the Praying Mantis forms she would train at day after day.
All good.
This enthusiasm swept through revolutionary organizations and protest
movements as well. Whether it was the desire to help protect our marches
from street attacks by the white racists, or just the pull of wanting to
be strong physically in the struggle, this was something everyone
understood. It was a pretty pathetic new revolutionary organization
which didnât have its martial arts class on the side. Or at least its
favorite local dojo where its people tended to go. i knew it was really
cresting when an enthusiastic white friend told me he had decided to
join a rapidly growing local Marxist group, âbecause their karate class
is so good! You should come and try it out!!â
You get the contradiction, the slightly crooked picture. On the one
hand, we had so many young revolutionaries sworn to tear down the old
American way of life, and most especially all the old left crap. Pushing
forward with new radical organizations that were formed next to
spontaneously, on the fly, shaped by the dynamite blast of the latest
page in the struggle. Often more or less blessed only by a quick papal
reading of some âheavyâ left text or another. It didnât matter which
one, really, since most of us hardly understood any of them.
But when it came to serious business, to being personally able to really
fight, many of the same youth eagerly embraced the legendary training of
Eastern martial arts. Which is more traditional and top-down in its
teaching than death, with students in the dojo learning forms and
sparring painstakingly developed and then tested over generations.
Overseen and directed by the black-belt instructor, whose every decision
was law on the class floor. Nothing spontaneous or doing
whatever-new-you-felt-like there.
To me the double message was definitely signaling something. While youth
were in revolt against old oppressive authority, we were hungry for
authority in the other sense. For finding empowering knowledge that came
from the doing. Learning from those who had actually done it and learned
to do it well. Like, you wouldnât want to learn plumbing from a person
who read to you out of some textbook, but who themselves had never
picked up a wrench or gotten shit all over themselves.
One thing was for sure. Since there were no already worked out
blueprints for organizations back there and then, we had to borrow from
incomplete old histories, from any dusty zombie organizations still
stumbling about, and mostly from our own imaginations to improvise
organizations best we could (pretending, naturally, that we knew much
more than we did). To predictable good and not so good results: neat
breakthroughs and equally mass running out of gas and abandoned cars
scattered on the freeway.
There were hundreds of thousands of people improvising, trying on and
remaking and breaking radical organizations of all kinds in the
1960s-70s New Left. From GI anti-war newspapers and off-base coffee
shops to the usual mass protest coalitions owned by nationally famous
ministers and charismatic male lumpen hustlers. There were countless
local student radical groups running on the horizontal principle of
âparticipatory democracy,â as well as at least one nationwide
underground of thousands also trying to grow itself by spreading
âparticipatory democracyâ local groups well into armed struggle. There
were study groups and informal self-defense circles everywhere, way too
many to ever keep track of.
There were socialists replacing their college dormitories with a âpartyâ
form in which they rented large apartments together in inner city
neighborhoods, functioning as community activists together while using
their group homes as busy political theory schools. And always there
were new seemingly spontaneous grassroots direct actions happening. From
mass walkouts closing entire city public school systems (covertly guided
in at least one major city by New Afrikan revolutionary nationalist
cells quietly working with major youth âgangsâ) to the âleaderless
resistanceâ of one hundred anti-war firebombings of Bank of America
branches by primarily white youth in California, to the many lumpen
militant street organizations. To say nothing of the background murmur
of various Old Left âpartiesâ or their copycats trying to carry on
traditional euro-agendas.
[It goes almost without saying that a disproportionate number of the
most dramatic breakthroughs in the 1950s-70s here came from the u.s.
empireâs inner coloniesâcalled the ghetto, inner city, rez, barrios or
communidad.]
Looking back, the rich diversity of mass organizational experience was
too large to easily describe. Little of which was analyzed or passed on
as learning experiences. Thatâs how disorganized and uneducated we were,
despite the university intellectuals who composed much of the movementâs
leadership. Hope comrades doing lift-off now do much better at that.
Hereâs a thought to share: People sometimes talk about revolutionary
organizations as if they were all varieties of one thing, like different
gasoline engines to drop under the hood of your same compact car. V6 or
straight 4? Which they arenât. There are broadly two very different
types of what we mean when we say ârevolutionary organizations.â The
most familiar is like the small left collective or intellectual journal
or zine. Sometimes in the outward form of a local anti-war group or
whatever. Like an antifa group or like one of the âpartiesâ keeping
alive the flicker of someoneâs ideas. Or it could be the local radical
caucuses in the teachers union. And so on.
These are what we are used to seeing sprouting here in the garden of the
imperialist metropolis. In other words, meaning ârevolutionary
organizationâ as an organization of revolutionaries, promoting
anti-capitalist ideas and activity. To help people survive or reinforce
protest movements. Usually pretty public and acting more or less legally
or with official tolerance, since why not? Such organizations are by
their nature transitory, and any one will probably be long gone by the
time capitalism is overthrown. There is nothing wrong with this,
obviously.
Thatâs not an organization that actually makes a revolution itself,
though. Overthrowing the old society and its state. While there have
been many Marxist âpartiesâ here (put this in quotes because they are
free to call themselves anything they like, but most here havenât met
the real definition of a party) claiming that they were going to carry
on and on forever until someday they would overthrow capitalism, revs
can safely assume that this stuff is largely delusional.
The other kind of revolutionary organization is simply, directly that.
Engaged to actually make the revolution against capitalism and its
state. To carry out revolutionary transfer of power. These organizations
are by their fundamental nature illegal and usually clandestine
instruments of warfare. Always popping up from the lower depths, always
being repressed and hunted. They are widely present though with
different results in the developing neo-colonial periphery, from Mexico
to India, but real examples are scarce here in the imperialist
metropolis, for obvious reasons, except among the oppressed
neo-colonies. Donât think i need to explain that.
One thought that keeps coming up in every generation, is to narrow the
gap between these two kinds of organizations. Exploring just how much
terrain, of what kinds, revolutionaries could take over and remake now
in daily life in the structures of capitalist society?
Like all complex mechanisms, like a hospital emergency room or a tank
brigade, actual revolutionary organizations are super high maintenance.
If youâve never been in one, know that they are a big pain in the ass to
keep going. They are also obviously highly dangerous, more dangerous
than sex work is or a contract firefighting crew is, or being a clueless
u.s. army private somewhere. For sure. So they had better be worth it.
In this violent capitalist end zone of unlimited war and repression, the
question of organization suddenly becomes drastically changed for us.
Because there you cannot be an individual revolutionary in any
meaningful sense. There a lone revolutionary is like being a lone
firefighter. You can be as good as you can be, but you are outclassed in
the scale of events. Then it is only complex revolutionary organization
that lets our full political thoughts and intentions become sails full
of reality. This is often lost right now in the garden of the imperial
metropolis, where middle-class people so easily deceive themselves that
agreeing with this radical idea or that one, makes you a revolutionary.
No, it only makes you someone who likes ideas. (And as that lesbian
philosopher once said: âTheories are like assholes, everybody has one.â)
This has just been an initial re-examination; a walking over of the
uneven ground that structures might be built on. There are obviously
tons of critical stuff, most things, really, on anti-capitalist
organization that i never got around to here. So take this as a restart
button. A beginnerâs mind isnât a bad thing to have.
END