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I had a hard time coming
back from Quebec City. I know because, almost two
months later, I still have the map in my backpack.
In part it was exhaustion, tear gas residue, and
the sense of having been through a battle in a war
most of my neighbors are totally unaware of. But
deeper than that is my sense that something was
unleashed in that battle that can't be put back,
that underlying the chaos, the confusion, the real
differences among us and the danger we were in, was
something so tender, exuberant and wild that I
don't want to let it go, something that smells and
tastes and feels like the world I'm fighting
for.
How we achieved this sense
of sweet unity on the street is a mystery to me. In
the lead-up to the action it often seemed that
every single group involved was either actively
disagreeing with some other group or ignoring their
existence. The conflicts were mostly around issues
of tactics, in particular the question of
nonviolence. Quebec City was the first time since
Seattle that a major antiglobalization direct
action in North America was organized by groups
that were committed to a "diversity of tactics"
rather than to an explicit set of nonviolence
guidelines. I admit that I came into the
preparations for the action uneasy about the
concept of 'diversity of tactics.' I'm fifty years
old: I've been an anarchist and an activist since I
was in high school back in the streetfighting days
of the sixties. I've also been an advocate for
nonviolence for many, many years, in part because
of what I experienced in the sixties and seventies,
when mostly male dominated militant groups moved to
clandestine actions, sectarianism and armed
struggle that left their base of support far
behind. I experienced the nonviolent direct action
groups of the eighties, with their commitment to
feminist process and nonhierarchical structure, as
far more empowering, effective, and liberating. My
fear about 'diversity of tactics' was that it would
open a space for people to do things that I thought
were stupid and wrong. That, it fact, proved to be
partly true-at least, people did do things I would
never have agreed to. But what surprised me is that
it didn't seem to matter in the way I thought it
would.
I thought people would only
come to a mass action if it had clear nonviolence
guidelines, but people came to Quebec City anyway.
I thought high levels of confrontation would lose
us popular support, but we had the strongest
support ever from the local people, many of whom
joined us or opened their homes to give us water,
food, and access to toilets. I thought people new
to direct action would be terrified by the level of
conflict we experienced. But our cluster included
many people who had never been to an action before.
The first day, yes, some were terrified. By the
second day, more were ready to go to the wall. By
the third day, they were demanding better gas masks
for the next one.
There's an ethic and a
strategy about nonviolence that's clear and easy to
understand: that violence begets violence, that if
we resort to violence we become what we're fighting
against, that a nonviolent movement will win us
more popular support, gain us legitimacy, heighten
the contrasts between our movement and what we
oppose, and perhaps even win over our opponents.
That's a powerful and persuasive set of values,
that I've held to for many years. But they're not
the only values I sympathize with. Some advocates
of nonviolence assume the high moral ground in any
argument, and to see those who disagree with them
as unethical. In Quebec City, 'diversity of
tactics' meant respecting that those who employ
other tactics do so not out of a lack of
principles, but out of their own politics and
values.
High-confrontational
struggle has its own principles: that a high level
of confrontation is appropriate in the situations
we now face, that people have the right and
responsibility to defend themselves against police
violence, that many people are already angry and
mostly not saintly and a political movement needs
room to express that rage, that active self-defense
can be empowering and may also win people to our
cause, that to bring down an economic and political
system that worships property, property must be
attacked.
And there is also an ethic
behind 'diversity of tactics' that the phrase
itself does not convey-that people should be free
to make their own choices, that a nonauthoritarian
movement doesn't tell people what to do, and that
we should stand in solidarity even with people
whose choices we disagree with.
I can't do justice to any
of the positions in a few sentences, and they by no
means represent all of the debates in the movement,
especially when it moves beyond North America with
our particular political cultures and histories.
But I think it's worth the trouble to try and
articulate what they are. .The debates have
continued since Quebec. Some people are now hailing
'diversity of tactics' as the new watchword and
while others call us to get back to Gandhian
nonviolence.
My sense is that many
people coming to Quebec wanted something that was
not fully described either by 'nonviolence' as it
has come to be practiced, nor by 'diversity of
tactics'. I'm talking about people who know there
is no set-in-stone definition of what constitutes
violence, or right and wrong. Who want an action
that's real, not just symbolic, but don't equate
that with throwing rocks at fully armed riot cops.
Who wanted to see the fence go down and cheered
when tear gas canisters were thrown back toward the
police lines, but who also know that we're in
danger whenever we dehumanize another group of
people, even cops. Who don't necessarily want to
hand out flowers to the dear policemen, but who do
want to remember that under the Darth Vader outfits
the cops are human beings capable of changing.
People who are willing to risk arrest or injury
when necessary, but who would rather succeed in an
action and get away with it than go to jail or be
martyred. Who don't see suffering as
transformative, but are willing to suffer if that's
what it takes to change this system. Who will act
in solidarity with others they may not agree with
rather than leave them to suffer alone. Who want to
take actions that are powerful, visionary,
creative, and empowering.
I'm not suggesting some
middle ground between the Gandhians and the Black
Bloc. I'm saying that we're moving onto unmapped
territory, creating a politics that has not yet
been defined. And to do so, it might be time to
leave Martin and Malcolm arguing around the dinner
table with each other and Emma, Karl, Leon and all
the rest, and step out into the clean night air.
The debate around 'violence' and 'nonviolence' may
itself be constricting our thinking.
The term 'nonviolence'
itself doesn't work well from a magical point of
view. Every beginning Witch learns that you can't
cast a spell for what you don't want-that the deep
aspects of our minds are unclear on the concept of
'no.' If you tell your dog, "Rover, I can't take
you for a walk," Rover hears "Walk!" and runs for
the door. If we say 'nonviolence' we are still
thinking in terms of violence.
I'm old enough to have seen
a lot of revolutions fail or go wrong. In fact, for
someone of my generation to even dare the word
'revolution' is like someone who has been really
badly hurt in an affair daring to risk love again.
I'm willing to take that risk-the risks of being
let down, disillusioned, betrayed, and maligned as
well as the ongoing risks of being jailed, gassed,
beaten, thrown around and generally stomped on the
street-but not merely to change who holds power in
this system. I want a revolution that changes the
very nature of how power is structured and
perceived, that challenges all systems of
domination and control, that nurtures the
empowerment of individuals and the collective power
we can wield when we act together in solidarity. I
don't yet have a catchy name for this approach to
political struggle. For lack of anything better,
I've been calling it 'empowered direct action.' And
it's already evolving in our movement.
The goal of an empowered
direct action is to make people believe that a
better world is possible, that they can do
something to bring it about, and that we are worthy
companions in that struggle. And then to bring to
life that world in the struggle itself, to be the
revolution, to embody and prefigure what we want to
create. Empowered direct action doesn't simply
reject or restrict certain tactics: it actively and
creatively searches for actions that prefigure and
embody the world we want to create. It uses symbols
skillfully but is more than symbolic: it gets in
the way of the operations of oppression and poses
confrontational alternatives. Empowered direct
action means embracing our radical imagination and
claiming the space we need to enact our visions:
it's magic defined as 'the art of changing
consciousness at will.' It challenges the structure
of power itself and resists all forms of domination
and all systems of control. It undermines the
legitimacy of the institutions of control by
embodying freedom, direct democracy, solidarity,
and respect for diversity in our organizations and
our actions. And it starts with clarity of
intention before we get around to diversity of
tactics.
What would victory look
like? Is it the political gains we make, the
delegitimizing of the institutions? Or is it
actually shutting the meeting down, or disrupting
it? How important is a tactical victory to the
political victory? Is there a possibility of
inspiring dissension in the ranks of our
opposition? (Dissent within the military was a huge
factor in ending the Vietnam War, for example.) Are
there ways we can embody an alternative in the
moment of protest itself? How do we make the action
have real, not just symbolic, impact?
In those initial
discussions, we'd look for dialogue among as wide a
spectrum of groups as possible, with no single
organization or group preempting the turf. We'd
actively seek a diversity of race, class, and
gender as well as diversity of political
philosophies. We'd understand that no one group or
tactic gets to own or define the movement, and that
there are times when we want to organize together,
and need to compromise and negotiate, and other
times we might want to organize in parallel but
separate structures.
Instead of decreeing a set
of guidelines telling people what not to do,
clusters and groups would state their intentions
for what they do want. For example:
"We will carry out this
action in a manner that prefigures the world we
want to create, and act in the service of what we
love. "We will use means consistent with our
ends.
"We will act with respect
for this community, for its homes and enterprises,
and in a way that encourages all to join
us.
"We hold open the
possibility that those who are currently our
opponents may change their allegiance and join
us.
"We will protect and care
for each other in this action, and act in
solidarity even with those whose choices differ
from ours."
In many ways, Quebec City
embodied these ideas. But what didn't quite happen
in Quebec City is what many of us dreamed of-masses
of people swarming the fence, taking it down in so
many places at once it couldn't be effectively
defended, flooding the area around the Congress
Center and utterly stopping the meeting. What is so
tantalizing about the action, in retrospect, is the
sense that it could have happened-that with only a
little more coordination, a little more trust, a
little less fear on everyone's part, we could have
done it.
And we will.
Starhawk
Reclaiming a
Community of people, a Tradition of Witchcraft, and
a religious organization.
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