more questions than answers: a critique of critiques of the ESF
kurious oranj | 24.11.2004 15:40 | European Social Forum
[hi folks! cameo comment written with reference in particular to the widely-posted Paul Kingsnorth article, but hopefully with wider relevance]
There's been a flurry of articles and postings on various websites critiquing the 2004 European Social Forum in London, in particular the role of the 'verticals' ie. the Greater London Authority, the Socialist Workers Party, and the Trade Unions. In essence this incongruous triumverate* are accused of acting together to take over the ESF and dictate the wrong agenda.
My first thought is that there are more important thing to focus on, like, y'know, the war in Iraq or the growing attack on civil liberties.
[Stop the War: http://www.stopwar.org.uk]
But since the ESF critiques insist on the importance of a debate, here's my bit. The more of these critiques I read the more it strikes me that they too are underpinned with unacknowledged and unchallenged assumptions, and it's valid to ask some serious questions about those. I'm going to set out a few briefly here:
1. Anti-war / anti-imperialism was pushed to the top of the agenda across the ESF. Clearly this is true. But hang on, why was this wrong? Can anyone actually argue that with Iraq on fire, Fallujah about to be besieged and Bush running for re-election on the War On Terror ticket, the ESF should have prioritised (say) trade justice or global warming above the war?
2. Trade Union involvement, good or bad? 'Anti-authoritarians' have contradictory attitudes to the unions, they enthuse about the need to broaden the movement and involve the millions of workers organised in unions, but too often when trade unionists turn up they denounce them for funding Labour and being hierarchical, sometimes even for being tools of the state! Union involvement in the ESF offers the prospect of involving way more people, and even some of us already involved are members of unions, y'know.
3. Opposing anti-Muslim racism. Some critiques have suggested it was a weakness of the ESF that all agreed that the headscarf ban in France and other manifestations of anti-Muslim racism are wrong, that there was no 'opposing view' put. Are we really saying we want to provide a platform for anti-Muslim arguments, like there aren't already enough in the mainstream media? This sounds too much like the sort of confused notion of 'balance' and 'inclusion' which has paralysed elements of the French left and paradoxically cut them off from most Muslims there.
4. Speeches that set out the case against war and capitalism: should we have moved on? Paul Kingsnorth says "five years ago this was useful, now it's unecessary". Well, maybe for you Paul. But the whole movement are not at the same stage. There are new people joining in all the time, and even us who've been around for years need firing up sometimes. There's always value in speaking truth about the world.
5. Diversity only if we say so. Paul Kingsnorth, again, insists on the need for a variety of speakers, but then goes on to suggest George Galloway should've been given a miss.. apparently because he was too loud, old-fashioned, made demands Kingsnorth finds unrealistic, and said nice things about Cuba! We really have to get a grip, if we claim to be for diversity and debate but exclude groups and people that annoy us, we'll be rightly accused of hypocrisy.
6. Old is bad, new/young is good and must be right. This one really irritates me. Why is an idea wrong just because it's old? Gravity, evolution, the wheel? Equally silly and perhaps even more dangerous to assume all new ideas are good, or even truly new. All principles and tactics need testing against reality, we can't just assume.
Hey ho, there ya go. Hope I haven't caused offence, not my intent. But I think we do too often challenge the ideology and assumptions of others while insisting we ourselves have no fixed ideas to challenge. Let's be honest, we do, and they are worthy of debate.
(*I can only imagine the reaction of Labour-loyal union leaders like Dave Prentis to the
suggestion that they're conspiring with the SWP!)
kurious oranj
Comments
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This Masterpeice Has Already Been Posted As A Comment
24.11.2004 16:04
Teacher's Pet
This was posted earlier
24.11.2004 17:05
See http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/11/301728.html - where the above has already been posted as a comment earlier today.
Anonimous Grass
The struggle against anti-globalisation begins with the struggle against Leftism
24.11.2004 17:38
How many times has this happen in the last twenty years? Look at CND an effective mass campaign, taken over by the same new Labour politicians who are now invade Iraq. Look at the Poll Tax where the most effective local groups like Bournemouth refused to join the militant controlled national campiagn and got the best results. Look at the numerous campaigns led against privatisation or "rationalisation" by the TUC in the 1980's all of which ended in unmitigated disasters. Even the London Assembly could not stop PFI on the tube and is itself made up of local councillors who where only too happy to impose the poll tax on us. Evidence from the miners strike also reveals the way MI5 penetrate, as a matter of course, structures like Trade Unions.
Further is there a single successful campaign in the last twenty years led by any of these three organisations? The answer is no, why is that? Sheer stupidity? Bad Luck? Poor Theory?
The new anti-capitalist movement was not the initative of these three bodies so by what right do they now seek to control it? Simple they were all desperate to get on the band wagon that was rolling because they have no future for their tired bankrupt and clearly failed ideas.
Now if your an international capitalist or a state intelligence officer who are you going to be more worried about. A vigorous campaign from out of know where, only loosely organised, of autonomous groups acting independently and outside the traditional left? or the same old defeated hacks from the left, corrupt officials or informers only too willing to "name names" as Tommy Sheridan once put it, who are despised by the working class, hated by ethnic minorities for their patronising manner and beaten more often than a Tory MP in a brothel.
When the anti-globalisation movement was not controlled by the authoritarian left it was successful witness May Day 1998, now it is controlled by the left all we have is infighting and the agenda again determined not by the activists but by the hacks.
The anti-globalisation movement does not need the traditional left. While it continues to allow it self to be organised by the old left defeat is inevitable, just look at their record for the last 20 years and ask if it was a race horse would you put money on it?
There is one lesson from the London ESF - completely reject the traditional left, they are the problem not the solution.
Albert Taplock
on the headscarf
24.11.2004 17:54
It is not true that all agreed that the headscarf ban was racist.
All the *speakers* on the *platform* agreed - and appelas from the french left to have an opposing view were ignored.
They were then treated to being called racist when they said they thought it was a good thing.
I oppose the ban on headscarfs as a reactionary and racist measure - I don't believe that everyone on the left that (in my view wrongly) agrees with the ban is a racist - that is simply untrue.
If the ESF does not allow debate then it is not a forum at all. There are major currents on the anti-capitalist left that believe the ban is right - I think the best way to persuade them they are wrong about that is to treat them with respect and allow them to speak.
Jim J
e-mail: jimjepps@hotmail.com
Homepage: http://www.socialistunitynetwork.co.uk