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Title: For Starters (WS47) Author: Workers Solidarity Movement Date: 1995 Language: en Topics: Ireland, Workers Solidarity Source: Retrieved on 5th December 2021 from http://struggle.ws/ws/start47.html Notes: Published in Workers Solidarity No. 47 â Spring 1996.
WE ALL MADE a difference. As the opinion polls showed support for
divorce slipping some feared that this basic civil right would be
defeated again. Then Patricia McKenna won her High Court case to stop
the government funding the âyesâ side. Meanwhile the anti-divorce groups
were pulling in big money to fund their propaganda.
Instead of fatally damaging the âyesâ side, her case had an unforeseen
result. A lot of people who had not intended to do anything got worried,
and then got stuck in. In the end the good guys won by a whisker. But,
however small the majority, we did win. And every single person who put
leaflets into their neighboursâ letter boxes, stuck up a few posters,
talked to their family & friends... everybody who worked for a âyesâ
victory made a difference. Every vote was needed.
So, the next time you wonder if there is any point in getting involved
in campaigns or struggles for change think of the divorce referendum.
Every person has a contribution to make, and sometimes an extra one or
two people can, literally, make all the difference.
WSM members have been involved in the anti-water charges campaign since
its inception. We have helped organise local meetings, protests at
Labour & DL conferences, pickets of court cases. We have worked to win
trade union support, and assisted in the building a movement which, in
Dublin alone, now has over 8,500 paid-up members. We have written about
it in our paper and produced a special edition of our Anarchist News
bulletin. Why so much effort?
Because it is about working class people saying we refuse to continually
foot the bill for everything while the rich avail of tax amnesties.
Because it is about people taking direct action: getting organised and
refusing to pay the double tax instead of naively relying on the empty
promises of politicians. Because it offers an opportunity for rebuilding
class consciousness and confidence. Thatâs why!
As councils move to cut-off the water supply of non-payers the heat will
be turned up as the campaign protests, obstructs and reconnects. The
state will probably take a more aggressive stance than they have up to
now. One immediate task is to set up local groups and involve more
non-payers in them. Just as trusting politicians wonât win anything,
neither will relying on a relatively small number of activists to
organise events.
Instead of leaders and followers, we need involvement â working class
people managing their own struggle. We can turn more supporters into
activists, build strong local groups, and defeat the water tax. Letâs do
it.
Readers looking for more detailed information and ideas than we have
space for in this paper should get hold of the Workers Solidarity
Movementâs magazine, Red & Black Revolution. Issue no.2, which appeared
recently, carries an exclusive interview with Noam Chomsky. Here he
gives his views on anarchism and Marxism, and the prospects for
socialism.
Other articles look at Sinn Feinâs pan-nationalist strategy (by Gregor
Kerr, a former National Committee member of the Irish Anti-Extradition
Committee), Irish Travellersâ struggles for civil rights and ethnic
recognition (by Travellersâ rights activist Patricia McCarthy),
management attacks and union leaders love of partnership (by SIPTU
Regional Committee member Des Derwin), how single issue campaigns can
get sucked into the system they were set up to oppose (by former
unemployed activist Conor McLoughlin), what anarchists mean by
revolution, the trials and tribulations of the modern Russian anarchist
movement, and a report from the European libertarian gathering in Spain
last summer.