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"How non-violence protects the state" - UK tour

Me | 07.01.2008 11:48

A speaking tour of UK autononmous social centres by Peter Gelderloos.



"Gandhi said it's better to resist violently than to use nonviolence to hide your passivity. Meanwhile, Bono, the Burmese military, and 9 out of 10 humanitarian NGOs agree, peaceful resistance is the best!"

Violence never solves anything. Violence begets violence. The government is strong when it comes to violence, we need to attack them where they are weak!

Everyone working for social change is familiar with the cliches of pacifism. And to many people it seems that using more radical, illegal, or violent tactics is naturally isolating.

But what if it's actually our supposed allies, or our own revolutionary practices, that are isolating us? What if violence is something diverse, undefinable, a hopelessly broad category that encompasses institutions that perpetuate oppression and actions that can empower and liberate us?

What if we are all cogs in a violent system, and what if pacifists are tools of a violent system?

People working for social change face plenty of difficult questions, but sometimes matters of strategy and tactics receive low priority. Among many activists, the role of nonviolence as the default mode of struggle bears little scrutiny.

Even as it pretends to contain moral strength, nonviolence is a major obstacle in global movements for social change.

Nonviolence is based on a number of historical falsifications that enforce an inaccurate understanding of revolution, it protects white privilege and the privilege of the Global North, it can reinforce patriarchal dynamics, and it makes anti-authoritarians complicit with the authorities, preserving the State monopoly of force.

Ultimately, nonviolence is created and encouraged by the State, and antithetical to anarchist revolution.

See "Arms and the Movement: pacifism equals pacified" - an extract from "How Nonviolence Protects the State" (2007), by Peter Gelderloos

Tour dates
Wednesday 23rd Jan @ Kebele Social Centre (Bristol) starts 7pm
14 Robertson Road, Easton, Bristol, BS5 6JY
Tel: 0117 9399469
Web: www.kebelecoop.org

Thursday 24th Jan @ PAD (Cardiff) starts 7.30pm
118 Clifton Street, Adamsdown, Cardiff, CF24 1LW
Web: thepad.wordpress.com

Friday 25th Jan @ Next to Nowhere (Liverpool) starts 7pm
96 Bold Street, Liverpool, L1 4HY
Tel: 0151 703 6806
Web: www.liverpoolsocialcentre.org

Thursday 31st Jan @ Common Place (Leeds) starts 7pm
23 - 25 Wharf Street, Leeds, LS2 7EQ
Tel: 0845 345 7334
Web: www.thecommonplace.org.uk

Friday 1st Feb @ Cowley Club (Brighton) starts 6pm
12 London Road, Brighton BN1 4JA
Tel: 01273 696104
Web: www.cowleyclub.org.uk

Saturday 2nd Feb @ Ramparts* (tbc) starts 7pm
15 -17 Rampart Street, London E1 2LA (near Whitechapel, off Commercial Rd)
Tel: 07050 618445
Web: therampart.wordpress.com

Extra Dates
Glasgow // Saturday 26th Jan (tbc)
Edinburgh // Monday 28th Jan (tbc)

* Ramparts is under eviction, please keep checking Indymedia for updates.

For more info on the tour see this web site soon.

Me

Comments

Display the following 15 comments

  1. Piffle — Mumraah
  2. So? — Rank Hovis
  3. To Mumraah — Hot head
  4. Piffle indeed — Me
  5. what the book its trying to say — (A) Sab x
  6. A Guess — Innocent Dave
  7. link — Me
  8. Welcome to the UK, please expect but ignore drivel comments as above! — @narchist
  9. Stop the Piffle — Brian B
  10. response to Brian B — (A) Sab x
  11. anarchists stay at home — twinkletoes
  12. ... — Me
  13. Not much clearer — Rank Hovis
  14. cycles of violence — emigre
  15. link — Tim