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In Defence of the Royal Wedding

Cautiously Pessimistic | 31.01.2011 17:41 | Public sector cuts | Social Struggles

Well, not quite, but I do think the calls that have gone out to disrupt the wedding need to be seriously thought through.

I’d been meaning to write something about this for a few days now, but now that the Sun’s suddenly discovered the anarchist plot against the Royal Wedding (an article which has already been demolished by Rob Ray here), now seems like a good time to take the subject up. Calls to disrupt the wedding have been coming from sources as different as Ian Bone, Laurie Penny and Phil Dickens for a while now. However, at the risk of outing myself as a spineless liberal opportunist, I really don’t see what we’d gain from it. This isn’t talking about the threat of strikes by rail workers on the day, which I think makes perfect sense, but that’s not an act directed against the wedding so much as an act exploiting the wedding in order to put maximum pressure on their employers. That makes sense to me, but most of us won’t be in that position – when you’ve been given the day off work anyway, not coming in is hardly a radical act. My argument in this article should also not be read as a criticism of the protesters who attacked Charles and Camilla – that was making good use of an opportunity that spontaneously fell into their lap, no-one had spent any time organising or building for that moment, and so it can hardly be called a waste of time and resources.
I understand, and completely agree with, the argument that says that the wedding is an irrelevant distraction from the real economic issues that we face. I don’t understand why that means we should focus our own attention on it rather than concentrating on the real issues, though. That sounds too much like the Trot logic that says that parliamentary elections are a meaningless charade, so we should stand our own candidates in order to expose them, instead of just refusing to participate in the whole shitty circus at all. When Phil Dickens says that “if we would pause a struggle against the ruling class out of deference to the distraction they have created, they have no reason to take us seriously”, he makes a valid point, but I think there’s a big difference between refusing to pay deference to a distraction and actively directing your attention towards the distraction, which is what calls to blockade the wedding ultimately come to. Not only is it a waste of time, I think the class politics of anti-monarchy events are actually less clear-cut than those of anti-cuts campaigns. On its own, getting rid of the monarchy wouldn’t end class society, and it wouldn’t even severely damage the ruling class – it’d just bring us into line with other liberal democratic republics, like the United States and France. Excuse me if I don’t find the prospect that exciting.
I’d just like to ask: what do we have to lose, and what do we have to gain? On the negative side, I’m sure there are a good number of workers who’re vaguely aware of their economic interests, and not enthusiastic about the cuts, who still have some sentimental attachment to the royals, or who, at the very least, don’t particularly give a shit about the royals but have a healthy respect for anything that gives them a day off work, and find the idea of disrupting a couple’s wedding day (and protesting against the event that gives them a day off work) to be mean-spirited and offputting. We will upset and alienate these people, many of whom might otherwise be won to our side. Of course, this argument could be levelled against any effective (i.e. disruptive) action, so we should weigh it against what we have to gain. Which is, um… well, what exactly? Are we hoping that we’ll be disruptive enough that we can physically stop the wedding from happening, and perhaps bring down the monarchy altogether? Because that’s not going to happen. Are we hoping that our actions will in some way decrease support for the monarchy and increase the popularity of the anti-cuts movement? Again, how exactly do people think that’ll happen?
If people are determined to hold anti-wedding events, I’d suggest that it’d make sense to try and organise events that cannot be interpreted as just the actions of mean-spirited killjoys. Instead of trying to fuck up someone else’s party, I think it’d make more sense to just use the day off to organise alternative celebrations of community solidarity. That might not be as exciting or dramatic as talking a load of sinister-sounding bollocks to tabloid journalists, but it’s also a lot more likely to actually have some appeal to people who aren’t already hardened revolutionaries. I am not a fan of the institution of marriage, and I don’t think it’s a choice I’d ever want to make for myself, but if there are any radically-minded couples in your area thinking of getting married/making a similar symbolic commitment around that time, you could hold a celebration of their relationship (provided that they’re up for it, of course), as a way of pointing out that a) it’s fucking absurd to hold a big public event celebrating a relationship between two people – but if the Royals get that treatment, why not the rest of us? and b) those two people have probably achieved more worthwhile stuff in their entire lives than Wills & Kate ever will.
Bottom line: if the Sun and Chris Knight are both getting really excited about something, you can pretty much guarantee that it’s a shit idea.

Articles referenced, in order:  http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3380637/Anarchists-target-Prince-William-and-Kate-Middleton-royal-wedding.html
 http://libcom.org/blog/anarchists-right-royal-plot-31012011
 http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/laurie-penny/2011/01/wedding-government-public
 http://truth-reason-liberty.blogspot.com/2011/01/economic-blockades-and-royal-wedding.html
 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/royal-wedding/8250676/Royal-Wedding-tube-strike-threat.html
Entire piece lifted from:  http://nothingiseverlost.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/in-defence-of-the-royal-wedding/

Cautiously Pessimistic
- Homepage: http://nothingiseverlost.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/in-defence-of-the-royal-wedding/

Comments

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Fuck you are dull

31.01.2011 20:56

Couldn't even get through your boring shite article. FFS-anything to disrupt the inbreed huntscum "royal" cunting shite is fucking great!

me


Good one

31.01.2011 21:04

Obviously a bit too thoughtful and grown up for 'Me me me' (tit!)

Hugo de Pomfret III


to the streets

31.01.2011 21:57

You say
Instead of trying to fuck up someone else’s party
but it's not just "someone else". It's two people representing the monarchy-a group of people who will have access to vast weath-stolen from others years ago, who like to shoot defenceless animals for their bloody joy and who really have no fucking right to exist.
So please-let's fuck up their party.

A N Other


Hidden Comment

This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

Who is now running indymedia

31.01.2011 22:59

Censoring posts(that a lot of people here would agree with-ie anti royal family} -what's going on?

Suspicious


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This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

out of control

01.02.2011 00:00

haven't you noticed, there's nobody left on here, i'm off now, suggest you switch off the lights on your way out.

Bored


@to the streets

01.02.2011 10:55

They're still on the rob now, who do you think that mystery 3% shareholder is in the Bank of England.

Wes Da Monie


Leaflets and communication

01.02.2011 12:13

There are other reasons for disrupting royal events. Research should be done to show just how much these predators leech from our society. For instance the vast amounts of money Charles receives from the Common Agricultural Policy Allowances just because he "owns" (ie his ancestors stole) huge swathes of land.

There are many examples of how the royal scroungers are the biggest benefit fraudsters, and a concerted media campaign to highlight that, followed by protests on the day with good leafletting, I see as all part of the consciousness-shifting we need to create in the average joe public, to get the Tunisia effect going.

90% of ordinary folk have no idea just how much the Royals cost them personally, and as the cuts hit and prices keep soaring, that information may help, along with all the other campaigns, to feed the fuel of real revolutionary change.

Camilla


But how?

01.02.2011 15:23

"Instead of trying to fuck up someone else’s party
but it's not just "someone else". It's two people representing the monarchy-a group of people who will have access to vast weath-stolen from others years ago, who like to shoot defenceless animals for their bloody joy and who really have no fucking right to exist.
So please-let's fuck up their party."
Yeah, I agree that the Royal Family are a bunch of shits. But I'm not sure that everyone celebrating the occasion will see it as being about the royals, I think a lot of people'll just be glad to have a day of, and will see it as being their own party as much as anyone else's. So I think that fucking things up would be counter-productive unless we're very confident that we can get our message across to everyone that we're not just doing it because we're a bunch of mad killjoys who hate people enjoying themselves, which is how the media's inevitably going to portray us. This isn't an event like the G20 which is openly about the interests of capitalism, this is an event which is portrayed and marketed as being about a fairytale love story. We need to win the argument about the nature of the event before we can expect people to have any sympathy for what we're doing.

The other point is this - how exactly do we hope to disrupt things on the day? What're our chances of doing it? Ignoring the shite Chris Knight spouts, I really don't think we've got the strength to beat our way through the TSG and stop the ceremony from actually happening. Which means that, whatever we do, it won't really be meaningful direct action, it'll just be a symbolic way of showing our feelings. With that in mind, I think we should be considering a range of options and not just automatically assume that smashing shit is the way forward.

CP


cheer up

01.02.2011 18:43

negative cocks. get a life. Is you to-do list so empty that you actually consider this important. sad

jedward


please do

03.02.2011 08:26

As a vox pop on how much your views should be heard, go there in maximum force, everybody....

and then if you OUTNUMBER the crowd gathered to watch, support and enjoy the occasion, then by democratic right you win,

if however, there are say about 20 of you, and there are thousands of them, will you, for the sake of peoples right to self determination, shut the fuck up?

doudtfull as I feel that there is far to much of the politics of envy in some who contribute.
Funny how the "the young ones" was over 25 years ago and the charciters are still the same, only now they think its all new and revolutionary.

anon


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