Give Up Anti-Fascism: An Anarchist Response
Freedom Press | 07.12.2009 10:10 | Anti-racism | Other Press | Social Struggles
An article appeared in the August edition of Red Pepper magazine entitled ‘Anti-fascism Isn’t Working’. Written by a non-aligned anarchist it was originally called ‘Give Up Anti-fascism’ it is this version we shall be referring to here for the simple reason it’s both the author’s original edit and the one most read, by radicals at least.
Putting a case together
‘Give Up Anti-fascism’ offers up an interesting and valid addition to the debate on anti-fascism and should be viewed positively in that regard. Too easily radicals adopt and maintain familiar political criteria out of ideological loyalty, or just plain laziness, that stops them looking critically at what it is they are trying to achieve and the methods and tactics employed to achieve it. Although the article doesn’t mention anarchists’ relationship to anti-fascism, addressing itself as it does to the liberal left and radical left (we can only speculate as to why the author didn’t mention or even acknowledge Antifa in his assessment), anything that encourages us to look at and reassess how we apply our ideas is always useful, especially at a time of the anarchist movement’s continued disorientation and lack of purpose, impact and confidence.
The article focuses on three distinct aspects: 1) where the BNP currently stand electorally; 2) the failure of the left to successfully combat the rise of the BNP; and 3) positive suggestions how the left could and should reformulate itself, laying out the problems with the ongoing strategies for opposing the BNP. In a frank and considered way it centres itself around the question: is anti-fascism the answer to the BNP?
Conditions of participation
On the surface it commits a common sense approach to the problem of the BNP, and has a lot to commend it, but it also suffers flaws and contradictions. The first part of the article is expressed as “some brief facts and figures to situate the debate”. The problem with this is it doesn’t put those figures in any social or political context.
This is troubling for two reasons. Firstly it gives us nothing to anchor our understanding about just why people are voting for the BNP in the numbers they are; secondly we are given no frame of reference, no insight into just who the BNP are appealing to and under what circumstances. No political party is cut off from the social, cultural and economic conditions of the day and simply presenting statistics this way does just that. We have had 12 years of a Labour government most of which have been spent involved either directly or indirectly in wars in the Middle East bringing with it the rise of political Islam and the hardening of Muslim identities; we’ve seen the imposition of official multi-culturalism as government social policy; we’ve seen the opening and expansion of the internal European Union borders resulting in economic migration on an unprecedented scale; we’ve seen escalating military conflict across the globe creating mass population displacement; we no longer have in this country sustainable heavy industries or large scale manufacturing to bind communities together or build discernible class dynamics in the traditional way.
As reported previously in Freedom, we are living through a unique set of social conditions, and the BNP operate within these conditions. How and why the left have failed to address and capitalise on the same conditions in the same way is beyond the scope of this piece but one that will have to involve some fearless soul searching for all those concerned. The irony being in order for Labour to enjoy the longest uninterrupted term in office in its history it had to get rid of Clause 4, take away all elective and decision-making powers from the largely working class dominated area branches, effectively barren outposts of the Millbank Empire, and rope in endless middle-class consultants as policy makers to fill the gap. In abandoning the working class they have achieved their biggest victory.
(continued here: http://www.freedompress.org.uk/news/2009/10/24/give-up-anti-fascism-an-anarchist-response/
‘Give Up Anti-fascism’ offers up an interesting and valid addition to the debate on anti-fascism and should be viewed positively in that regard. Too easily radicals adopt and maintain familiar political criteria out of ideological loyalty, or just plain laziness, that stops them looking critically at what it is they are trying to achieve and the methods and tactics employed to achieve it. Although the article doesn’t mention anarchists’ relationship to anti-fascism, addressing itself as it does to the liberal left and radical left (we can only speculate as to why the author didn’t mention or even acknowledge Antifa in his assessment), anything that encourages us to look at and reassess how we apply our ideas is always useful, especially at a time of the anarchist movement’s continued disorientation and lack of purpose, impact and confidence.
The article focuses on three distinct aspects: 1) where the BNP currently stand electorally; 2) the failure of the left to successfully combat the rise of the BNP; and 3) positive suggestions how the left could and should reformulate itself, laying out the problems with the ongoing strategies for opposing the BNP. In a frank and considered way it centres itself around the question: is anti-fascism the answer to the BNP?
Conditions of participation
On the surface it commits a common sense approach to the problem of the BNP, and has a lot to commend it, but it also suffers flaws and contradictions. The first part of the article is expressed as “some brief facts and figures to situate the debate”. The problem with this is it doesn’t put those figures in any social or political context.
This is troubling for two reasons. Firstly it gives us nothing to anchor our understanding about just why people are voting for the BNP in the numbers they are; secondly we are given no frame of reference, no insight into just who the BNP are appealing to and under what circumstances. No political party is cut off from the social, cultural and economic conditions of the day and simply presenting statistics this way does just that. We have had 12 years of a Labour government most of which have been spent involved either directly or indirectly in wars in the Middle East bringing with it the rise of political Islam and the hardening of Muslim identities; we’ve seen the imposition of official multi-culturalism as government social policy; we’ve seen the opening and expansion of the internal European Union borders resulting in economic migration on an unprecedented scale; we’ve seen escalating military conflict across the globe creating mass population displacement; we no longer have in this country sustainable heavy industries or large scale manufacturing to bind communities together or build discernible class dynamics in the traditional way.
As reported previously in Freedom, we are living through a unique set of social conditions, and the BNP operate within these conditions. How and why the left have failed to address and capitalise on the same conditions in the same way is beyond the scope of this piece but one that will have to involve some fearless soul searching for all those concerned. The irony being in order for Labour to enjoy the longest uninterrupted term in office in its history it had to get rid of Clause 4, take away all elective and decision-making powers from the largely working class dominated area branches, effectively barren outposts of the Millbank Empire, and rope in endless middle-class consultants as policy makers to fill the gap. In abandoning the working class they have achieved their biggest victory.
(continued here: http://www.freedompress.org.uk/news/2009/10/24/give-up-anti-fascism-an-anarchist-response/
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Comments
Hide the following 10 comments
what we're up against
07.12.2009 10:48
Far from abandoning 'the working class', the State has deliberately focused a manipulative and insidious attention upon it. We are up against a strategy of keeping the poor ill-educated and slaves to the lowest popular culture that preaches consumption, exploitation and entitlement. With these basic conditions entrenched via TV, advertising, shit newspapers etc, it's then a fairly easy step to convince people that foreign is bad, foreigners are criminals, asylum seekers scroungers, and foreign countries, ours to invade and exploit.
Anti-fascists aren't simply up against aggressive, hate-filled thugs, they are up against capitalism and a society that is being brain-washed into submission.
@non
Some local anarchist viewpoints ...
07.12.2009 14:00
Notts Anarchist
Ian Tomlinson (1961/62 – 1 April 2009)
07.12.2009 16:19
The Tories physically attacked working class communities and caused a quarter of a century of impoverishment. The Labour Party has introduced over 3000 new crimes since 1997 and has whittled away our hard-won liberties - such as Habeas corpus, the right not to be tortured, etc, etc, and even, with their supposed solutions to anti-social behaviour, the right to a trial by a jury of our peers - to a higher degree than any other peacetime government. ALL mainstream political parties follow the same socially and environmentally destructive Neoliberal (and highly fascistic) economic trajectory that has been responsible for so much suffering in working class communities
The RED FACIST FRONT OF THE SOCLIST WORKERS PARTY have just shouted slogan fucking slogan and The Anarchist have just been fighting each other time we brought THE CLASS WAR BACK HOME?
underclassrising.net
I thought
07.12.2009 21:48
but I was wrong
fair point @non
07.12.2009 23:05
As for new labour abandoning the working class - that is simply a question of political history. 'The State' is a different beast altogether.
the author
excellent article in redpepper http://www.redpepper.org.uk/Anti-fascism-isn-t-wo
08.12.2009 10:35
durruti02
Give Up Anti-fascism - original article
08.12.2009 11:39
Although this is the orginial text of the article the response is aimed at
http://meanwhileatthebar.org/blog/?p=10
ta
Simplistic NeoFascism?
08.12.2009 13:13
BigDebate
total takeover
10.12.2009 15:50
that leaves about two anarchists in a squat in salford and one of them is suspect - so how to prioritise? if all these are fascists who is the most immediate threat?
fascists everywhere
Horse-s**t in Red Pepper
18.01.2010 01:53
Class-struggle anarchists are jealous as f**k because the BNP seem to succeeding (a bit) where Class War (and similar groups) FAILED - in commanding the affections of at least some of the white working class, but the threat we have to counter stems from the fact that traditional British antipathy to Fascism has been weakened by sheer historic distance from WW2, and from the fact that the political agenda has been set by 9/11 and 7/7 rather than by any self-generated strategic "breakthrough" on behalf of the BNP.
In the circumstances we currently face it's inevitable that Fascism will grow, a bit, but that still doesn't mean that that Fascism has SUCCEDED or that therefore Anti-Fascism has "failed" - it means we have to work harder because times have changed to suit the Fascist agenda - and by "working harder" I mean thinking harder as well as agitating, rather than just falling back on the simple comforts of Victorian ideologies.
Wolfie