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Title: Factionalism & Individualism Date: 1968 Source: Retrieved on 19<sup>th</sup> May 2021 from [[https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/8gtk63][www.katesharpleylibrary.net]] Notes: This letter is part of the discussion following the âStatement by the Black Flag Group to the Liverpool Conference of the Anarchist Federation of Britain, Sept., 1968â Authors: Albert Meltzer Topics: Organization, Individualism, Anarchist federation Published: 2021-05-19 13:04:59Z
It is a pity Peter Neville descends to meaningless abuse (âis the AFB a twinkle in my eyeâ etc) which can only put people off the discussion. It IS confusing to ânewcomersâ and he adds to, and perhaps participates in, the confusion.
He regards it as perfectly proper that he, or others, should raise the factional banner of âIndividualismâ to distinguish themselves from others who are presumably faceless, mob anarchists. However, he pours out invective on anyone who wants to raise another factional banner, say âRevolutionaryâ â as if they were the only revolutionaries, forsooth! The âBlack Flagâ Group (formerly to the Liverpool Conference, calling themselves âCuddonitesâ as a joke against the âStirneritesâ) âintroduced factionalismâ â but the âMinus Oneâ Group merely asserted its individuality.[1] (Declension: âI assert individualityâ; âYou introduce factionalismâ; âThey are schismaticsâ). The manifesto of that Black Flag group was described by Donald Rooum (Conscious Egoist from way back) as âexceptional in its courtesyâ â he suggested âMelioristâ instead of the suggested âLiberalâ and âRevolutionaryâ; in the final draft, someone suggested âRevolutionaryâ and âLibertarianâ it not being suggested that one was not the other, but solely to distinguish, just as âIndividualistâ does.
For despite Neville, ALL anarchists are individualists. The reason most anarchists who know the movement only since âMinus Oneâ began reject the word âindividualismâ is because âMinus Oneâ has made it a factional slogan. (This, despite Neville, is perfectly proper. There is no reason why it should not do so. Sid Parker has always behaved in the most honourable manner towards the movement â e.g. he would not attend meetings called to discuss action knowing he was in advance opposed to action; to the best of my knowledge he has never since forming âMinus Oneâ called himself a member of the AFB because he is opposed to any such action as it might undertake).
Prior to 1940, most anarchists used the words individualism, communism, socialism, syndicalism as denoting phases of anarchism, or different aspects of anarchism, but not â in this country â did they denote factional trends. Most accepted the view â reiterated by Christie and myself in âFloodgatesâ[2] â that inasmuch as anarchism is one extreme of individualism at the other end of which is Capitalist Individualism, so it is also another extreme of socialism, at the other end of which is Marxist Communism. It is extreme individualism and extreme socialism.
After 1940, Eddie Shaw, of Glasgow, introduced into the AFB the idea of âConscious Egoismâ as working-class revolutionary syndicalism. He made a great impression in Glasgow (at one time the Glasgow AF commanded audiences of two or three thousand). What he was doing was, of course, rephrasing syndicalist clichĂ©s in terms of Stirner (unofficial strike committees are âunions of egoistsâ and so on). He had a striking command of working class oratory and his theories sounded new and original. He and Jimmy Raeside made a strong influence on the British anarchist movement. (Many of those calling themselves âindividualistsâ in the 1960 census in Freedom meant just this).
Of those to be influenced in the English movement, I think one can fairly include Donald Rooum and Tony Gibson though both I think later parted company with his class struggle ideas. Both however, and others like them, believed in anarchism as revolutionary â Tony Gibsonâs articles on the money system, prisons, intelligence &c. in âFreedomâ are quite specifically revolutionary anarchist. Nobody thought of the conscious egoist then as in any way a faction. Only when Sid Parker began âMinus Oneâ â with using the word âindividualismâ to denote what I suppose would be nearer the individualism of Armand in France or the American âIndividualistsâ â Tucker etc. â was it thought of here as something apart and separate. But even then, this did not cause any confusion since Sid Parker always honourably made his position quite clear.
Confusion and âanti-individualismâ really began when the Lamb & Flag meetings in London[3] became well attended and provided a Sunday night entertainment. Along came a new bunch â who happened to take the name Individualist from Minus One but were in fact Elitists. They affected languid philosophical manners and wearily deplored action, the working class etc. They turned from that to sustained interruptions, and posed a problem: If anarchists believe in freedom, at what point do you stop people breaking up meetings with persistent interruptions? (added to the fact that if you throw someone out of licensed premises, or allow them to continue making a scene, the landlord will close you down for âdisorderly conductâ).
âThese are not Individualists,â protested Tony Gibson. âThey are just ill-mannered cuntsâ. Nor had their âindividualismâ anything in common with what had hitherto been known as such. What were the questions that âcould not be answeredâ â as P. Neville smugly asserts? They were all variations on one theme: the expression of normal Conservative clichĂ©s but stating that these were anarchistic. Anarchism is already as revolutionary as one can go without expressing it in action and they deplored action so they sought to be outrĂ© and shocking by such opinions as â âI am an anarchist but I am opposed to negroesâ; âThe money system is anarchistic and guarantees freedomâ; âGoldwater/Poujade etc are anarchisticâ; âI need a government, as an anarchist, for the safeguarding of my freedomâ; âanarchism means libertarian prison wardersâ etc. (I could put names in brackets but this seems to be regarded as unkind!)
One can answer such questions as normal Tory questions. To be expected to answer them as âexpressions of a school of anarchismâ is to place oneself in a ridiculous position. Take away your anarchistic audience, however, and what do these people try to out-outrĂ© each other with? Not the same conservatism â almost immediately one of them becomes âun ami de Bonnotâ to shock his fellow-âindividualistsâ.[4]
All this is what we have shaken ourselves away from. But now P. Neville has his new position as an âindividualistâ-elitist. He, however, is a child of the Peace Movement. Intellectually superior as he is, he must have his âconferancesâ and meet âinformerlyâ for democratic discussions. He wants it to be part and parcel of a âconferanceâ-making machinery. Thus he introduces attacks on various people, strives to analyse attitudes while maintaining the platitudes of loftiness.
Well, let him do so. But is the anarchist movement a revolutionary organisation, or is it a debating society? If the latter, he has his place, though one feels the arguments are dishonest. But why does he object so strongly to there being TWO organisations â one a debating society, in which all points of view can go on talking until Doomsday, and the other striving to be a revolutionary organisation? Perhaps it will succeed, perhaps it wonât â but why must there be only the one to be burdened with the perennial discussion of the point âif anarchism means freedom why canât I call myself an anarchist and oppose anarchism?â which is what some of it amounts to. (In a recent pamphlet, published âfor the anarchist federationâ, someone actually says he is and always has been in favour of government but does not consider this means he should not call himself an anarchist.)
A. Meltzer.
P.S. I do not suggest Neville supports all or any of the views expressed by the other Elitists. Neither do they! They have in common a desire to âshockâ and an ability to bore â even by debating society standards.
[1] **Minus One** (âIndividualist Anarchist Reviewâ) see [[https://www.unionofegoists.com/journals/minus-one-1963/][www.unionofegoists.com]]
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[2] **Floodgates of Anarchy** (Albert Meltzer and Stuart Christie) was published in February 1970.
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[3] the disruption was discussed in **Freedom** 12/11/66, 19/11/66, 26/11/66
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[4] Photo of the first meeting of âLes Amis de Jules Bonnotâ is at [[http://www.sidparker.com/photos/][www.sidparker.com]]