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Title: The Armed Strike
Author: Errico Malatesta
Date: 2 June 1902
Language: en
Topics: armed struggle, strike, anarcho-syndicalism, general strike
Source: The Method of Freedom: An Errico Malatesta Reader, edited by Davide Turcato, translated by Paul Sharkey.
Notes: Translated from “Lo sciopero armato,” Lo Sciopero Generale (London) 1, no. 3 (2 June 1902).

Errico Malatesta

The Armed Strike

We are promised the likely appearance of a new Spanish-language

anarchist newspaper, entitled The Armed Strike.

Its title defines its program.

Whether the planned publication comes off or not, we hope that the title

will be taken up and become the motto of a brand new approach to

revolutionary tactics. Words and slogans are of great importance in

popular movements; and the expression ”armed strike” may prove very

useful, in that it is the happiest encapsulation of a pressing need at

the present time. And it is good that it has come from Spain where there

is already a mass of organized and conscious workers who have already

shown what they are worth and who are better placed than anyone else to

demonstrate the new tactics by practical example.

The propaganda for the general strike has done and is still doing an

immense amount of good.

By pointing out to workers an effective means with which they can

emancipate themselves, it demolishes blind and harmful belief in

parliamentary and legislative methods; it banishes from the workers’

movement the ambitious types on the look-out for a springboard to power;

it provides revolutionaries with the means of involving the great

toiling masses in the struggle and poses that struggle in such terms

that a radical transformation of social relations must naturally and

well-nigh automatically ensue.

But the big benefits of this propaganda and the success it has had, have

given rise to a grave danger that threatens the very cause it promotes.

The illusion has been forming that the revolution can be made almost

peaceably, by folding one’s arms and reducing the bosses to discretion

by simply refusing to work for them. And by dint of repetition of the

great importance of the economic struggle, it has been all but

overlooked that, beside and defending the boss who keeps us hungry,

there is the government that famishes and kills.

In Barcelona, in Trieste, in Belgium, the price of this illusion has

already been paid in the blood of the people.[1] The strike has almost

entirely been mounted without arms and without any definite intention of

deploying what very few there were—and with a few volleys the

governments have restored order.

When thought of as merely a law-abiding, peaceful strike, the general

strike is a nonsensical idea.

To begin with, given the proletariat’s circumstances and the specific

nature of farm production, it can be general only in a manner of

speaking; in actuality, it will merely be the handiwork of a more

forward-looking minority—a forceful minority capable of deploying its

moral and material energies on the steering of events—but it will always

be a numerically tiny minority that could only have a brief impact on

the scales of production and consumption. But even if we supposed the

strike to be authentically general, that would makes things even more

nonsensical—provided, we say again, that it be thought of in terms of a

lawful, peaceable movement.

What would there be to eat? What would be used to purchase life’s

necessities?

The workers will have starved to death well before the bourgeois are

forced to give up any morsel of their surplus.

So, if one wants to mount a general strike, one has to be ready to seize

possession of the means of existence, despite any of the alleged rights

of private ownership. But then along come the troops and one must flee

or fight.

So, if we know that the strike will necessarily lead to a clash with

armed force and turn into a revolution, why not say so and make our

preparations?

Must this inept farce of periodical clashes, in which proletarian deaths

are numbered in the hundreds with scarcely a soldier or policeman struck

by a stone, carry on for all eternity?

Let us go on strike, but let us do so in circumstances in which we can

defend ourselves. Since the police and the troops show up wherever a

clash between bosses and workers occurs, let us ensure that we are in a

position to command their respect.

Revolutionaries should arm themselves so that they are ready to make the

revolution whenever the opportunity arises. Non-revolutionary workers

should arm themselves as well, if only to avoid being beaten like so

many sheep.

Even with their savings, proletarians will never be in a position to

amass the capital needed to fight the bosses’ capital; but with a

modicum of good will they may well get their hands on a revolver. And a

mob of strikers armed with revolvers or any other weapons commands a lot

more respect than one blessed with a strike fund, no matter how swollen.

Long live the general strike, but let it be an ARMED STRIKE.

[1] In February 1902, a strike of the Barcelona metal workers developed

into a city-wide general strike, during which about thirty workers were

killed in street fighting. In Trieste, it was a strike of the stokers at

Lloyd Austriaco’s shipping company that gave rise to a general strike in

the city. A great demonstration took place on 15 February 1902, at the

end of which fourteen workers were left dead. In Belgium, a general

strike against the plural vote system was called on 13 April 1902. On

the night of 18 April, the civil guard fired into a crowd of protestors,

injuring fourteen and killing six.