March was a Waste of Time
mr Opinions | 02.10.2002 13:22
A few days ago I wrote an artcile criticisng the basic assumptions of the anti- war movement, concluding it to be flawed in its policy and dubious in its class content. Its also rather too late in the day.
"No Devastation without the United Nations" was how I titled it; there is nothing more disingenuous about calling for peace under the guise of expecting someone else to carry out the war. I quoted Trotsky, who exposed a similar ploy of the Stalinists in the 1930s when they were calling for peace knowing the next few years would ineveitably erupt into wars and revolutions. I suggested that any anti-war movement trying to base itself on a mass gathering of junior IT managers was doomed to fail, precisely becuase it didnt really WANT to stop the war at all, that in fact, far from being anti-Blairite, it was a new generation of neo- or post-Blairites preparing to take over from the aging Tony, and using a "peace" slogan as a piece of class-positioning. I pointed out that nowhere (with the exception of the marginalised anarchists) was there to be seen on that march any sustained, fundamental critique of the social liquidation policy being conducted by labour, the society even the Quango leaders talk of in loving terms as "Synthetic". (Yes, one said exactly that). "The Labour party aims to be the political arm of the British people as a whole" was how one document stated it long ago, and I also noted that it was picked up by Martin Sixsmiths recent documentary for the sinister piece of Stalinist rhetoric it really was. Unfortunately, most of the poeple on the march have acepted the parameters constructed by Blair. Any notion of complete social revolution has been forgotten, lost in the mists of tear-gas since 1968. "Our world is not for sale?" Mine was sold off a long time ago and you werent bothered, so i dont feel motivated to care much about yours! "Not In my name?" O, poor you. So if Blair and Bush do the bombing in the name of the UN, thats all right then, is it ? Even though you probably know nothing about the UN and how it really works. Just as at the TUC conference recently, when Blair spoke at the Labour party feast of filth yesterday, not one person dared to challenge his strident, self indulgent, rhetoric (which is all it was). You case was dismissed. He's won. Whatever you were hoping, its too late. This is the New Clear Dawn, moving quickly from the old social-democratic "stop-go" into something much more sinister. A new oligarchy, using a similar technique to that of the "Victorian" age, ruling through social measures rather than any overt politicization.
Unless notions of natural egalitarianism are prevalent among the movement, it cannot succeed. When marchers are more concerned with what they feel to be their own petty position within society to be more important than building a genuine movement against the whole neo-capitalist
edifice, I regard their motives with extreme suspicion. Moreover, many of them were quite happy to support NATO a few years ago, so Presumably there are good wars and bad wars ? In fact, no, all wars are awful events. I break with this movement now. If I am to place my personal poisition at risk for political principle, I want to have some confidence in the people with whom I march. I have none whatsoever.
Unless notions of natural egalitarianism are prevalent among the movement, it cannot succeed. When marchers are more concerned with what they feel to be their own petty position within society to be more important than building a genuine movement against the whole neo-capitalist
edifice, I regard their motives with extreme suspicion. Moreover, many of them were quite happy to support NATO a few years ago, so Presumably there are good wars and bad wars ? In fact, no, all wars are awful events. I break with this movement now. If I am to place my personal poisition at risk for political principle, I want to have some confidence in the people with whom I march. I have none whatsoever.
mr Opinions
Comments
Hide the following 7 comments
Maybe its time you came off the valium
02.10.2002 14:53
Optimistofthewill
no to war
02.10.2002 15:11
donny
I worship the ground you walk on
02.10.2002 16:09
I think I'm now going to go weep with tears of joy. Can you post your address, so I can grab the next Ryanair flight to London and haul on your cock? I'm sure it's a monster, perfect like everything else about you.
chris
chris
don't sulk, argue your case
02.10.2002 16:56
what i'd like to know is how they developed their current political outlook. from what they say it would appear that they were born with a fully fledged class based anarchist perspective, which I find hard to believe.
i could be described as an anarchist, but I haven't always been one. it's not suprising really because i didn't have access to anything beyond the mainstream sources of information. At best i was a socialist of the Labour left variety. Then i found out about what marx and others wrote, saw what the RCP and SWP were and got inspired by reclaim the streets. In the end, i got involved in the more anarchist direct action scene.
I get frustrated with the sort of rubbish that i read in papers like the guardian and i'd be really happy if all the people on the march on saturday were class warriors, but why would they be? Given that we never hear anything about iraqi casualties, oil as the reason for war (let alone capitalism) and that the government and media are doing the best to terrorise us with stories about the horrible fate that awaits us unless we go to war, i think that it's great that so many people are seeing through the propaganda.
I've also been finding that for the first time i can talk to friends and people at work about political issues without them treating me as if i am weird. I reckon that if someone has a decent analysis of what is going on, including what is wrong with the anti war movement, then they should have the bottle to engage with people, argue their case and try to inspire them to go further? In this respect, I thought that the disobedience paper that people handed out on saturday was excellent.
christopher spence
It's a start
02.10.2002 19:32
The atmosphere was fantastic too and i felt honoured to walk among so many dedicated souls.
now, gauging its sucess, well, you can deconstruct any march or demo based on what was said in the original post.
i think what matters is that people bothered to turn up.
i always though that apathy ruled ok in the uk but judging by Sat's march, not so.
daniel gurney
funny that
02.10.2002 23:49
also this isnt news if you want to post comments do it in a fucking chatroom not on indymedia its not a forum for whiners its a newswire
(A)
I dont think he's whining
03.10.2002 14:40
Its also worth pointing out that Blair's ostensible position of 'only through the UN' has already been breached. He has suddenly shifted again to Bush's demand for a new UN resolution, and will doubtless continue to do so. This is hardly treating the UN as the final arbiter, but actually pressuring and haranguing it into a pre-determined UK-USA Axis policy.
Towards a Critique