đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș peter-little-at-war-with-calendula.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 13:25:24. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-07-09)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: At War With Calendula Author: Peter Little Date: May 29, 2005 Language: en Topics: Industrial Workers of the World, workplace struggles, Bring the Ruckus Source: Retrieved on March 14, 2019 from https://web.archive.org/web/20190314161026/http://www.bringtheruckus.org/?q=node/25 Notes: Peter Little is an organizer with Bring the Ruckus and the IWW.
A month ago a call came into the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
Hall in Portland. The front-end staff of a small, recently opened
restaurant had struck the week before. The ownerâs immediate response
was to fire all four of the strikers. Although this was the IWWâs first
contact with these workers, the union decided to support these workers
in negotiating a settlement to the strike.
The negotiating committee of four workers and union representatives
arrived at the restaurant at 9:15pm on a Sunday, approaching the owner
on the sidewalk as he returned from taking an order on the patio.
Catching his attention, they waited until he was through taking his
order, and notified him that the IWW would now be representing the fired
workers. When the union representatives requested a meeting be set up to
discuss resolving the strike, the owner replied, âYou are trespassing.
If you donât leave my property right now, Iâm calling the police.â
Although this response may seem typical, this was not your typical
employer.
For those who are not aware of him already, Craig Rosebraugh has made
himself into a household name in the Pacific Northwest. About the same
time the Portland Police department broke his arm during a rally to free
political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal, Craig was the press spokesman for
the Animal Liberation Front-Earth Liberation Front. For years, his house
was regularly raided and openly surveilled by the FBI, and he was
eventually subpoenaed, first to a federal grand jury in Portland, and
later to testify before Congress, both times regarding âecoterrorism.â A
number of local organizers, (including myselfa member of the IWW
assisting the striking restaurant workers) supported Craig, organizing a
local support committee to combat the grand jury. Craig took a
principled, political stand in the face of the attacks against him from
the state, refusing to testify before the grand jury, and openly
defending actions against property in front of Congress. Although always
controversial both personally and politically, his principled stance won
him the respect of many local revolutionaries, even if there were
numerous disagreements with his understanding of revolutionary politics.
Most recently, Craig himself decided to launch a small capitalist
venture to continue to fund his ârevolutionaryâ projects. His upscale
vegan restaurant in SE Portland was billed as Portlandâs progressive
eatery, with the menus and ads touting organic food, recycling, and well
treated workers as the base of the business. The workers who appeared at
the IWW Hall soon after the strike told another story, however. They had
applied at Calendula excited at the idea of helping to promote healthy,
vegan food. After working for eight months to build the business, they
repeatedly found the promises made upon employment primarily health care
and a respectful work environmentâunfulfilled. After two rounds of wage
cuts left them back at minimum wage, the workers decided to act. The
striking workers made it clear that their primary issue was not wages,
but the lack of respect for the workers within the restaurant.
Abigail, was one of the striking waitresses. She posted this to
Portlandâs Indymedia site in response to attacks from the owner and by
other Rosebraugh supporters,âThere is no doubt that Craig worked hard,
he did, however it often felt like he was working against our collective
flow. His ego often blocked communication, when our lead server voiced
our collective concerns he pronounced that if we were not happy then we
should all leave, and she was sent home on one of our busiest nights. We
had to cover for his egotistical decisions always. He made rash
decisions like laying off our awesome busser, while lowering our wages
and changing the menu. So that we were working harder, with lower
morale, with less wages. Instead of lowering prices and seeing results
first.â
Jimmy Ray, another striker, responded to criticisms of the strikers on
Indymedia in this way, âAs an employee on strike from Calendula, I would
first like to state that this entire debate is not about money. In
Craigâs advertisement he rants on about the mad cash we were making at
his floundering business. The issue at hand is not about Craig lowering
our wages, but is about respect and a concerted desire to retain our
dignity. Furthermore, the issue could have been quickly resolved had
Craig agreed to listen to our grievances. Instead, he chose to treat us
with disrespect, accusing us of trespassing and calling the police when
we peacefully approached him to negotiate. In the long run, this has
forced him to take out expensive full-page ads and hire high profile
lawyers to speak on his behalf. Ironically enough, had Rosebraugh simply
listened to us and responded tactfully and with respect, his money could
have been saved. Additionally, after free meals and beverages were
eliminated, the floor manager attempted to discuss the staffâs
grievances with Rosebraugh, only to be sent home âfor having a bad
attitudeâ on the night of our extremely busy grand re-opening party.
That set precedence for the rest of us, and we became fearful of
discussing our concerns with Rosebraugh. Indeed, when I did attempt to
discuss my own issues with Craig (being passed up for a promotion which
had been promised to me), he accused me of having a bad attitude and
insisted that, unless it was âin my heartâ to work for him, weâd
separate. If Rosebraugh believes these conditions constitute a
ârespectful work environment,â he has a very skewed definition of the
term.â
Recognizing that Craig was a favorite target of the bossâ press,
right-wing groupings, and the state itself, the IWW approached the
strike at Craigâs restaurant carefully. The union decided to withhold
publicizing the struggle, denying press interviews and attempting to
persuade the owner to negotiate through contact with various members of
the local left, rather than using the more common approaches of pickets,
media, and bad publicityâthus avoiding giving right wing groups, the
press, and the state more fodder against an individual who had taken
brave stands against them.
For three weeks, the union attempted to get Craig to negotiate. During
this time, both the striking workers and the union denied the press
interviews or information, not wanting to play into right wing blood
lust for the former ALF/ELF spokesman on the other end of the dispute.
Craigâs response was to hire a lawyer, and in conversations with
community members attempting to mediate he declared he would âclose the
business before he would hire those workers back.â Finally, after three
weeks of stonewalling from the owner, the workers went to the press.
Three local papers covered the story, and Craig responded by spending
almost $3000 on a full-page ad in the two local weekly papers. His
advertisement names the four workers and one IWW representative with
full legal names, and accuses the IWW of trying to shut down Portlandâs
âMost Progressive Business.â In a string of lies, the ad accuses IWW
representatives of bringing a mob to intimidate and harass Craig during
his peak business hours.
The most visible gauge of the debate within the âactivist communityâ in
Portland revolved around the Portland Indymedia site. From accusations
of the IWW being a part of a COINTELPRO operation (carried as far as
naming specific striking workers as cops) to condemnation of the IWW
because it allows its members and organizers to eat meat, a rather
entertaining discussion ensued.
ARISSA is an organization launched by Craig a few years back,
ideologically driven by Craigâs first book, âThe Logic of Political
Violence.â Rosebraughâs supporters and members of ARISSA went on
Indymedia to post numerous accusations of police infiltration and state
collusion, specifically naming the IWW and striking workers as
provocateurs and agents. The posting of unfounded and unverifiable
accusations in a public forum goes beyond the obvious attempts at
displacing responsibility for the strike on Craigâs behalf. It enters
the dangerous, irresponsible realm of snitch-jacketing: opening those
truly struggling for a better world to manipulations by the state.
Following the thread of debate on Indymedia, the accusations quickly
became picked up and repeated as fact, although no individual or
organization had produced a shred of evidence to verify them.
Craig himself has been a very visible and vocal name within Portlandâs
activist community. Because of this, the Indymedia debate was largely
split along two lines. In the minority of those posting, there were
those who recognized that workersâ struggles against boss-imposed
direction and discipline against the alienation that capitalist work
relationships foster, regardless of good intentions, is at the base of
the struggle for the new society. These folks supported the IWW and the
strike. On the other, there were those who argued that for a broad range
of reasons--Craigâs past work, the mediaâs blood lust for him, the fact
that the restaurant was all organic and vegan and locally owned, or that
Craigâs intention with the restaurant was to, âfund social change
venturesââthat the union should not have involved itself in the strike.
To those on Craigâs side of the fence, the IWW was guilty of undermining
the community, the struggle, and the revolution itself by supporting
these workers. A number of people, Craig included, even argued that the
workers had no right to protest because with tips they were making a
better wage than other workers in the area.
These responses from Rosebraugh, ARISSA, and the Portland activist
community provide an excellent demonstration of a number of limitations
of a class-less âprogressiveâ politics. Even when playing lip service to
workerâs struggles, to liberation, and to revolution itself, the
âactivistâ left is dominated by petit bourgeois voices. This is not
meant as a simplistic assessment of individuals based on class
background. What this actually reflects is how the activist left, which
has often the people who have the most access to resources. Because
class and class interests have not been at the fore of the ânew
anti-globalizationâ activist movement, it has not been capable of
developing a politic capable of assuring that leadership and voice will
be given to social groupings currently disenfranchised within this
system. In missing this critical understandingâan assessment of which
class and which portions of that class are most likely to push struggles
into revolutionary directionsâthis movement has missed the target
entirely. The voices currently dominating the discussion have class
interests incapable of bringing a meaningful criticism of capital and
the social relationships that result from capitalism.
This is a significant reason why this ânew activist leftâ does not have
a mass base or appeal within the working class. Due to its lack of class
position, it is those who have access to resources that get to define
the politics of this movement. When those resources and the privilege
that come with them come are questioned in struggle (no matter how
small), real principles go out the window. Itâs fine to talk about
saving forests, monkeys, and fighting imperialism outside of the Empire
itself. It is also tactical to host, âEnding white supremacyâ trainings
and sessions deconstructing privilege. But when real struggle comes to
these leadersâ own backyards and they find themselves in a position
where their own relationships to capitalism are seriously questioned,
class interests themselves speak louder than revolutionary sloganeering.
This small strike brings to the fore why the âactivist leftâ has little
interest to that broad, stratified and diverse mass we call the working
class. In challenging the alienation that is a necessary by-product of
work under capitalism, the struggle against that alienation is the
actual basis of struggle for a new world. The voices leading the
âactivist leftâ are incapable of allowing a criticism that answers to
the daily struggles of workers and to their alienation. This is in part
because they cannot grasp the real meaning of these struggles but even
more, they canât grasp the actual experience of that alienation. Their
class positions guide their actions, regardless of their theoretical
understanding (or misunderstanding) of the struggle we face.
Particularly telling are some of Craigâs arguments in his paid
advertisement: that the workers were well paid (a debatable assertion),
or that his actions in the restaurant were justified because the
restaurant was going to fund his âsocial change ventures.â The
statements made on Indymedia by the workers themselves are arguments
that a meaningful revolutionary politic must be based on the rejection
of capitalist work models themselves. This politics is a yearning for
worker control and not simply a struggle for wages. Itâs a struggle to
reclaim that large portion of their lives working for someone else and
to reorganize it in a manner that suits their own inclinations,
regardless of the ârevolutionarily consciousnessâ of their boss.
It is the struggle and rejection of work itself, and the alienation that
is inherent in wage labor, in which the seeds of the new world lie. Any
ârevolutionaryâ movement incapable of seeing the rejection of work
itself as the basis for struggle will find itself unable to relate to
the daily struggles of the only class of people who are capable of
bringing this decrepit system to its knees, regardless of whether the
facet of struggle is against police brutality, environmental
devastation, prisons, poverty, or any of the other potentially explosive
contradictions that our society confronts. It is within the struggles
workers are constantly waging to reclaim control of the workplace itself
that revolutionaries must learn to recognize the potential revolutionary
force in those portions of the population so often dismissed by
activists as âbackwardsâ and inept.
The situation with Craig Rosebraugh and his little adventure in petit
bourgeois capitalism have only brought a suppressed contradiction within
this new activist left to the fore. The activist community is
comfortable fighting for rights for animals, for an end to clear
cutting, for more bikes, and even sometimes advocating armed struggle as
an avenue for social change. As a white-led and largely privileged
strata, there is a massive disconnect between reading Ward Churchill and
writing your thesis on armed struggle and actually being a part of
organizing a movement capable of asserting its own power and defending
itself. Craigâs inability to recognize how truly relinquishing power and
privilege are necessary in creating the space for revolutionary
leadership is an excellent example of this stumbling block. This same
political trend is good at holding trainings and workshops on
deconstructing privilege and speaking the language of âcommunities of
colorâ and ârevolutionary feminism,â but as a movement it is incapable
of opening spaces where theses communities and perspectives can actually
lead a movement. It will continued to be incapable until it not only
speaks of, but puts into play a recognition of class, and how it
interacts with racism, sexism, and all of the other destruction reaped
upon our planet and our lives. This is not an argument that the long
sought after unity of the working class across racial, sexual, and other
boundaries will simplistically come about as a result of workplace
struggles. It is simply an acknowledgement that to even begin to
confront the central questions of race, class, and gender in building a
revolutionary movement, a recognition of the limitations and misleading
nature of the activist leftâs politics must be given.
What happens when the interests of those truly disenfranchised (and the
only class capable of making the revolutionary change we envision) come
into conflict with a fearless leader who is using a capitalist
enterprise to further his revolutionary projects? There is no longer a
fence for âanti-capitalists, anarchists, radicals, or progressivesâ to
sit on when it comes to class.
The activist leftâs defense of Rosebraughâs actions against wildcat
activity by workers within his restaurant provides a long-needed
clarification of the position of a number of organizations and
individuals within this milieu. Craigâs thousands of dollars of
advertising are a great opportunity for the IWW to define itself as
clearly committed to a revolutionary model that is led by workers
themselves. In doing so, it has placed the IWW in a position of
alienation from portions of the activist left but opened itself to an
explicit commitment to supporting workers in their struggle to regain
control of their workplaces and their lives. (Four new workers called to
join the union in the two days after Rosebraughâs ad was published.) Not
only is this clarification useful, it is necessary if we are to build a
mass movement with class and race at the fore. What this small struggle
has done is force the activist left to declare its alliances--on one
side the workers, and on the other, an opportunist, underdeveloped
politic. This opportunistic side of the leftâs own class interests leave
it unable to see how the struggle of workers against not only poverty
but for control of the production process itself is the only basis on
which we can begin to build a new society.
For those not in the IWW, or not engaged in organizing around workplace
struggles, this is an opportunity to reflect on how we must break with
this class-less left if we are to develop organizations capable of
interacting with the real struggles of oppressed and potentially
revolutionary strata within the United States itself. There is a massive
segment of the population forced to struggle daily against numerous
contradictions, which threaten to open this state to a real
revolutionary upsurge. A movement led by petit bourgeois class interests
will at best co-opt these upsurges, and at worst be entirely incapable
of engaging them. If we plan to be a part of those struggles, to engage
with them, or to work alongside them, we must drop the baggage of the
existing left, and forge a new movement with an explicit commitment to
developing leadership and analysis outside of that milieu.