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An Assembly of Well-Meaning People

anon | 01.08.2006 22:03 | Lebanon War 2006 | Anti-militarism | London

Tonight’s assembly in Central London for direct action against the invasion of Lebanon was not entirely unproductive. However the discussion often seemed to be going round in circles, with little progress being made towards the aim of ‘direct action’ and people feeling increasingly frustrated and drained. This scenario will have felt familiar to people who have attended similar meetings in the past. The problem, in a nutshell, is a fundamental flaw in the design of such meetings.

It would be absurd for somebody who thought capitalism should be destroyed to call an ‘ASSEMBLY OF WELL-MEANING PEOPLE’ in which to organise it. Upon proposing to destroy capitalism, discussion would inevitably turn to whether well-meaning people should support the destruction of capitalism, whether well-meaning people might be hurt in the process of destroying capitalism, what it means to be well-meaning, whether it could ever be well-meaning to destroy anything, and so on. The well-meaning people could not possibly reach agreement on these questions in the course of one meeting, and those who had already decided that capitalism should be destroyed would be no closer to their aim.

And so the organisers of assemblies of ‘direct action’ must be more specific. As long as the boundaries of discussion are made clear on the call-out for the meeting – so nobody turns up under the impression that ‘what it means to be well-meaning’ will be on the agenda – this is no less democratic than defining a meeting in broad terms such as ‘anti-capitalist’, and much more effective. We should not be bashful about making our call-outs ideologically and politically precise, and in some sense exclusive. This may deter those who actively disagree with us, but what use are they in our meetings anyway? Genuinely open-minded newcomers need not be alienated. They should be welcomed but it must be made clear that attendance is on the basis that discussion of the pre-announced ‘points of unity’ is saved for another time and place. At the start of the meeting, a short explanation of the points of unity by the organisers could serve to answer frequently asked questions.

All credit to those who took the initiative and called tonight’s meeting, sorted out the room, and attempted the impossible task of facilitating it. This is by no means an attack on them but hopefully a model for more effective meetings in future.

anon

Additions

Concrete plans that came out of the meeting

01.08.2006 23:54

Perhaps this poster left before the end? - things improved, and concrete plans emerged.

For details, see

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/08/346658.html

Anon Too


Comments

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the consensus process is necessarily full of spirals

02.08.2006 07:45

Now. I wasn't at the meeting unfortunately. Every intention of going but ended up that i hadn't finished making flags for something else. So, i'm not commenting on this meeting but the consensus process in general. The consensus process is necessarily LABORIOUS, because the process of democracy (as we see it) is slow. It might be easy to forget in the heat of the anger / frustration / impatience with israeli / us agression / brit poodlery that our consensus processes are as much of a challenge to capitalism as direct action ...and I repeat, AS MUCH ... just as frustration is what capitalism inspires in us, just as saying 'it's all YOUR fault' is how the system wants us to respond.

I'm kind of suspecting that an open meeting, and the meeting in question was open i believe, can't smooth over differences in tactics that may arise and need to be discussed. each time we find ourselves in an 'emergency situation' maybe we need to go through the same old arguments because the pedagogy of the process and the learning experience of working with newer / younger activists in a non-authoritarian way is one that all activists need to commit to.

sharon & tracey


Hmmm ...

05.08.2006 21:55

Not that helpful an attitude, in my opinion. People were basically unified by the desire for an immediate ceasefire, and evidently by a desire to immediately stop the flow of arms to Israel. Why should we try and exclude people who are not only basically on our side in this fight, but willing to take action to do something about it?

There is no unified "us" as you seem to imply, nor would there necessarily be more consensus if you called for a meeting of "anti-capitalists only" rather than simply well-meaning people who want to do something direct and physical. Indeed making such a call may even give us more focus, in my opinion, since at least in the former case we are focused on a specific issue and goal on which we can work together, rather than having to bring in divisive ideological agendas, which it is invariably tedious, exhausting and counter-productive to go over.

Anyway, as the previous poster says, the obvious sense of urgency allowed people to come up with some good, concrete plans towards the end of the meeting.

Tim