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version of Section J.
J.1 Are anarchists involved in social struggles?
Yes. Anarchism, above all else, is a movement which aims to not only analyse
the world but also to change it. Therefore anarchists aim to participate
in and encourage social struggle. Social struggle includes strikes,
marches, protests, demonstrations, boycotts, occupations and so on.
Such activities show that the "spirit of revolt" is
alive and well, that people are thinking and acting for themselves
and against what authorities want them to do. This, in the eyes of
anarchists, plays a key role in helping create the seeds of anarchy
within capitalism.
Anarchists consider socialistic tendencies to develop within society,
as people see the benefits of co-operation and particularly when mutual
aid develops within the struggle against authority, oppression and
exploitation. Anarchism, as Kropotkin argues, "originated in everyday
struggles." [Environment and Revolution, p.58] Therefore,
anarchists do not place anarchy abstractly against capitalism, but
see it as a tendency within (and against) the system -- a tendency
created by struggle and which can be developed to such a degree that
it can replace the dominant structures and social relationships
with new, more liberatory and humane ones. This perspective indicates
why anarchists are involved in social struggles -- they are an expression
of this tendency within but against capitalism which can ultimately
replace it.
However, there is another reason why anarchists are involved in
social struggle -- namely the fact that we are part of the oppressed
and, like other oppressed people, fight for our freedom and to make
our life better in the here and now. It is not in some tomorrow that
we want to see the end of oppression, exploitation and hierarchy.
It is today, in our own life, that the anarchist wants to win our
freedom, or at the very least, to improve our situation, reduce oppression,
domination and exploitation as well as increasing individual liberty.
We are aware that we often fail to do so, but the very process of
struggle can help create a more libertarian aspect to society:
"Whatever may be the practical results of the struggle for immediate
gains, the greatest value lies in the struggle itself. For thereby
workers [and other oppressed sections of society] learn that the
bosses interests are opposed to theirs and that they cannot improve
their conditions, and much less emancipate themselves, except by
uniting and becoming stronger than the bosses. If they succeed in
getting what they demand, they will be better off: they will earn
more, work fewer hours and will have more time and energy to
reflect on the things that matter to them, and will immediately
make greater demands and have greater needs. If they do not
succeed they will be led to study the reasons of their failure
and recognise the need for closer unity and greater activity
and they will in the end understand that to make victory
secure and definite, it is necessary to destroy capitalism.
The revolutionary cause, the cause of moral elevation and
emancipation of the workers [and other oppressed sections of
society] must benefit by the fact that workers [and other
oppressed people] unite and struggle for their interests."
[Errico Malatesta, Life and Ideas, p. 191]
Therefore, "we as anarchists and workers, must incite and
encourage them [the workers and other oppressed people] to
struggle, and join them in their struggle." [Malatesta,
Op. Cit., p. 190] This is for three reasons. Firstly, struggle
helps generate libertarian ideas and movements which could
help make existing society more anarchistic and less oppressive.
Secondly, struggle creates people, movements and organisations
which are libertarian in nature and which, potentially, can replace
capitalism with a more humane society. Thirdly, because anarchists
are part of the oppressed and so have an interest in taking part in
and showing solidarity with struggles and movements that can improve
our life in the here and now ("an injury to one is an injury to all").
As we will see later (in section J.2) anarchists
encourage direct action within social struggles as well as arguing
anarchist ideas and theories. However, what is important to note here
is that social struggle is a sign that people are thinking and acting
for themselves and working together to change things. Anarchists agree
with Howard Zinn when he points out that:
"civil disobedience. . . is not our problem. Our problem is civil
obedience. Our problem is that numbers of people all over the world
have obeyed the dictates of the leaders of their government and have
gone to war, and millions have been killed because of this obedience. . .
Our problem is that people are obedient all over the world in the face
of poverty and starvation and stupidity, and war, and cruelty. Our
problem is that people are obedient while the jails are full of petty
thieves, and all the while the grand thieves are running the country.
That's our problem." [Failure to Quit, p. 45]
Therefore, social struggle is an important thing for anarchists
and we take part in it as much as we can. Moreover, anarchists do
more than just take part. We are fighting to get rid of the system
that causes the problems which people fight again. We explain anarchism
to those who are involved in struggle with us and seek to show the
relevance of anarchism to people's everyday lives through our work
in such struggles and the popular organisations which they create
(in addition to trade unions, campaigning groups and other bodies).
By so doing we try to popularise the ideas and methods of anarchism,
namely solidarity, self-management and direct action.
Anarchists do not engage in abstract propaganda (become an anarchist,
wait for the revolution -- if we did that, in Malatesta's words, "that
day would never come." [Op. Cit., p. 195]). We know that
our ideas will only win a hearing and respect when we can show both
their relevance to people's lives in the here and now, and show that
an anarchist world is both possible and desirable. In other words,
social struggle is the "school" of anarchism, the means by which people
become anarchists and anarchist ideas are applied in action. Hence
the importance of social struggle and anarchist participation within
it.
Before discussing issues related to social struggle, it is important
to point out here that anarchists are interested in struggles against
all forms of oppression and do not limit ourselves to purely economic
issues. The hierarchical and exploitative nature of the capitalist
system is only part of the story -- other forms of oppression are
needed in order to keep it going (such as those associated with the
state) and have resulted from its workings (in addition to those inherited
from previous hierarchical and class systems). Like the bug in work,
domination, exploitation, hierarchy and oppression soon spreads and
infests our homes, our friendships and our communities. They need
to be fought everywhere, not just in work.
Therefore, anarchists are convinced that human life (and the struggle
against oppression) cannot be reduced to mere money and, indeed, the
"proclivity for economic reductionism is now actually obscurantist.
It not only shares in the bourgeois tendency to render material egotism
and class interest the centrepieces of history it also denigrates
all attempts to transcend this image of humanity as a mere economic
being. . . by depicting them as mere 'marginalia' at best, as 'well-intentioned
middle-class ideology' at worse, or sneeringly, as 'diversionary,'
'utopian,' and 'unrealistic.' . . . Capitalism, to be sure, did not
create the 'economy' or 'class interest,' but it subverted all human
traits - be they speculative thought, love, community, friendship,
art, or self-governance - with the authority of economic calculation
and the rule of quantity. Its 'bottom line' is the balance sheet's
sum and its basic vocabulary consists of simple numbers." [Murray
Bookchin, The Modern Crisis, pp. 125-126]
In other words, issues such as freedom, justice, individual dignity,
quality of life and so on cannot be reduced to the categories of capitalist
economics. Anarchists think that any radical movement which does so
fails to understand the nature of the system they are fighting against.
Indeed, economic reductionism plays into the hands of capitalist ideology.
So, when anarchists take part in and encourage social struggle they
do not aim to restrict or reduce them to economic issues (however
important these are). The anarchist knows that the individual has
more interests than just money and we consider it essential to take
into account the needs of the emotions, mind and spirit just as much
as those of the belly. Hence Bookchin:
"The class struggle does not centre around material exploitation alone
but also around spiritual exploitation. In addition, entirely new issues
emerge: coercive attitudes, the quality of work, ecology (or stated
in more general terms, psychological and environmental oppression). . .
Terms like 'classes' and 'class struggle,' conceived of almost entirely
as economic categories and relations, are too one-sided to express the
universalisation of the struggle. . . the target is still a ruling
class and a class society . . . but this terminology, with its
traditional connotations, does not reflect the sweep and the
multi-dimensional nature of the struggle . . . [and] fail to
encompass the cultural and spiritual revolt that is taking place
along with the economic struggle."
[. . . ]
"Exploitation, class rule and happiness, are the particular
within the more generalised concepts of domination, hierarchy
and pleasure." [Post-Scarcity Anarchism, pp.229-30 and
p. 243]
As the anarchist character created by the science-fiction writer
Ursula Le Guin (who is an anarchist) points out, capitalists "think
if people have enough things they will be content to live in prison."
[The Dispossessed, p. 120] Anarchists disagree, and the experience
of social revolt in the "affluent" 1960s proves their case.
This is unsurprising for, ultimately, the "antagonism [between
classes] is spiritual rather than material. There will never be a
sincere understanding between bosses and workers. . . because the
bosses above all want to remain bosses and secure always more power
at the expense of the workers, as well as by competition with other
bosses, whereas the workers have had their fill of bosses and don't
want any more." [Errico Malatesta, Life and Ideas, p. 79]
Social struggle is an expression of the class struggle, namely the struggle
of working class people against their exploitation, oppression
and alienation and for their liberty from capitalist and state
authority. It is what happens when one group of people have hierarchical
power over another. Where there is oppression, there is resistance
and where there is resistance to authority you will see anarchy in
action. For this reason anarchists are in favour of, and are involved
within, social struggles. Ultimately they are a sign of individuals
asserting their autonomy and disgust at an unfair system.
When it boils down to it, our actual freedom is not determined by
the law or by courts, but by the power the cop has over us in the
street; the judge behind him; by the authority of our boss if we are
working; by the power of teachers and heads of schools and universities
if we are students; by the welfare bureaucracy if we are unemployed
or poor; by landlords if we are tenants; by prison guards if we are
in jail; by medical professionals if we are in a hospital. These realities
of wealth and power will remain unshaken unless counter-forces appear
on the very ground our liberty is restricted - on the street, in workplaces,
at home, at school, in hospitals and so on.
Therefore social struggles for improvements are important indications
of the spirit of revolt and of people supporting each other in the
continual assertion of their (and our) freedom. They show people standing
up for what they consider right and just, building alternative organisations,
creating their own solutions to their problems - and are a slap in
the face of all the paternal authorities which dare govern us. Hence
their importance to anarchists and all people interested in extending
freedom.
In addition, social struggle helps break people from their hierarchical
conditioning. Anarchists view people not as fixed objects to be classified
and labelled, but as human beings engaged in making their own lives.
They live, love, think, feel, hope, dream, and can change themselves,
their environment and social relationships. Social struggle is the
way this is done collectively.
Struggle promotes attributes within people which are crushed by
hierarchy (attributes such as imagination, organisational skills,
self-assertion, self-management, critical thought, self-confidence
and so on) as people come up against practical problems in their struggles
and have to solve them themselves. This builds self-confidence and
an awareness of individual and collective power. By seeing that their
boss, the state and so on are against them they begin to realise that
they live in a class ridden, hierarchical society that depends upon
their submission to work. As such, social struggle is a politicising
experience.
Struggle allows those involved to develop their abilities for self-rule
through practice and so begins the process by which individuals assert
their ability to control their own lives and to participate in social
life directly. These are all key elements of anarchism and are required
for an anarchist society to work ("Self-management of the struggle
comes first, then comes self-management of work and society,"
in the words of Alfredo Bonnano ["Self-Management", Anarchy:
A Journal of Desire Armed, no. 48, Fall-Winter 1999-2000, p. 35-37,
p. 35]). So self-activity is a key factor in self-liberation, self-education
and the creating of anarchists. In a nutshell, people learn in struggle.
A confident working class is an essential factor in making successful
and libertarian improvements within the current system and, ultimately,
in making a revolution. Without that self-confidence people tend to
just follow "leaders" and we end up changing rulers rather than changing
society.
Part of our job as anarchists is to encourage people to fight for
whatever small reforms are possible at present, to improve our/their
conditions, to give people confidence in their ability to start taking
control of their lives, and to point out that there is a limit to
whatever (sometimes temporary) gains capitalism will or can concede.
Hence the need for a revolutionary change.
Until anarchist ideas are the dominant/most popular ones, other
ideas will be the majority ones. If we think a movement is, all things
considered, a positive or progressive one then we should not abstain
but should seek to popularise anarchist ideas and strategies within
it. In this way we create "schools of anarchy" within
the current system and lay the foundations of something better. Revolutionary
tendencies and movements, in other words, must create the organisations
that contain, in embryo, the society of the future. These organisations,
in turn, further the progress of radical change by providing social
spaces for the transformation of individuals (via the use of direct
action, practising self-management and solidarity, and so on). Therefore,
social struggle aids the creation of a free society by accustoming
the marginalised to govern themselves within self-managed organisations
and empowering the (officially) disempowered via the use of direct
action and mutual aid.
Hence the importance of social (or class) struggle for anarchists
(which, we may add, goes on all the time and is a two-sided affair).
Social struggle is the means of breaking the normality of capitalist
and statist life, a means of developing the awareness for social change
and the means of making life better under the current system. The
moment that people refuse to bow to authority, its days are numbered.
Social struggle indicates that some of the oppressed see that by using
their power of disobedience they can challenge, perhaps eventually
end, hierarchical power.
Ultimately, anarchy is not just something you believe in, it is
not a cool label you affix to yourself, it is something you do. You
participate. If you stop doing it, anarchy crumbles. Social struggle
is the means by which we ensure that anarchy becomes stronger and
grows.
No, we are not. While most anarchists are against reformism (namely the notion
that we can somehow reform capitalism and the state away) they are
most definitely in favour of reforms (i.e. improvements in the here
and now).
The claim that anarchists are against reforms and improvements in
the here and now are often put forth by opponents of anarchism in
an effort to paint us as extremists. Anarchists are radicals; as such,
they seek the root causes of societal problems. Reformists seek to
ameliorate the symptoms of societal problems, while anarchists focus
on the causes.
In the words of the revolutionary syndicalist Emile Pouget (who
is referring to revolutionary/libertarian unions but whose words can
be generalised to all social movements):
"Trade union endeavour has a double aim: with tireless persistence, it
must pursue betterment of the working class's current conditions. But,
without letting themselves become obsessed with this passing concern,
the workers should take care to make possible and imminent the
essential act of comprehensive emancipation: the expropriation of
capital.
"At present, trade union action is designed to won partial and gradual improvements
which, far from constituting a goal, can only be considered as a
means of stepping up demands and wresting further improvements from
capitalism. . .
"This question of partial improvements served as the pretext for
attempts to sow discord in the trades associations. Politicians
. . . have tried to . . . stir up ill-feeling and to split the unions
into two camps, by categorising workers as reformists and as revolutionaries.
The better to discredit the latter, they have dubbed them 'the advocates
of all or nothing' and the have falsely represented them as supposed
adversaries of improvements achievable right now.
"The most that can be said about this nonsense is that it is witless.
There is not a worker . . . who, on grounds of principle or for
reasons of tactics, would insist upon working tend hours for an
employer instead of eight hours, while earning six francs instead
of seven. . .
"What appears to afford some credence to such chicanery is the
fact that the unions, cured by the cruel lessons of experience from
all hope in government intervention, are justifiably mistrustful
of it. They know that the State, whose function is to act as capital's
gendarme, is, by its very nature, inclined to tip the scales in
favour of the employer side. So, whenever a reform is brought about
by legal avenues, they do not fall upon it with the relish of a
frog devouring the red rag that conceals the hook, they greet it
with all due caution, especially as this reform is made effective
only of the workers are organised to insist forcefully upon its
implementation.
"The trade unions are even more wary of gifts from the government
because they have often found these to be poison gifts. . .
"But, given that the trade unions look askance at the government's
benevolence towards them, it follows that they are loath to go after
partial improvements. Wanting real improvements . . . instead of
waiting until the government is generous enough to bestow them,
they wrest them in open battle, through direct action.
"If, as sometimes is the case, the improvement they seek is subject
to the law, the trade unions strive to obtain it through outside
pressure brought to bear upon the authorities and not by trying
to return specially mandated deputies to Parliament, a puerile pursuit
that might drag on for centuries before there was a majority in
favour of the yearned-for reform.
"When the desired improvement is to be wrestled directly from
the capitalist, the trades associations resort to vigorous pressure
to convey their wishes. Their methods may well vary, although the
direct action principle underlies them all. . .
"But, whatever the improvement won, it must always represent a
reduction in capitalist privileges and be a partial expropriation.
So . . . the fine distinction between 'reformist' and 'revolutionary'
evaporates and one is led to the conclusion that the only really
reformist workers are the revolutionary syndicalists." [No
Gods, No Masters, pp. 71-3]
By seeking improvements from below by direct action, solidarity
and the organisation of those who directly suffer the injustice, anarchists
can make reforms more substantial, effective and long lasting than
"reforms" made from above by reformists. By recognising that the effectiveness
of a reform is dependent on the power of the oppressed to resist those
who would dominate them, anarchists seek change from the bottom-up
and so make reforms real rather than just words gathering dust in
the law books.
For example, a reformist sees poverty and looks at ways to lessen
the destructive and debilitating effects of it: this produced things
like the minimum wage, affirmative action, and the projects in the
USA and similar reforms in other countries. An anarchist looks at
poverty and says, "what causes this?" and attacks that source of poverty,
rather than the symptoms. While reformists may succeed in the short
run with their institutional panaceas, the festering problems remain
untreated, dooming reform to eventual costly, inevitable failure --
measured in human lives, no less. Like a quack that treats the symptoms
of a disease without getting rid of what causes it, all the reformist
can promise is short-term improvements for a condition that never
goes away and may ultimately kill the sufferer. The anarchist, like
a real doctor, investigates the causes of the illness and treats them
while fighting the symptoms.
Therefore, anarchists are of the opinion that "[w]hile preaching
against every kind of government, and demanding complete freedom,
we must support all struggles for partial freedom, because we are
convinced that one learns through struggle, and that once one begins
to enjoy a little freedom one ends by wanting it all. We must always
be with the people . . . [and] get them to understand . . . [what]
they may demand should be obtained by their own efforts and that they
should despise and detest whoever is part of, or aspires to, government."
[Errico Malatesta, Life and Ideas p. 195]
Anarchists keep the spotlight on the actual problems, which of course
alienates them from their "distinguished" reformists foes. Reformists
are uniformly "reasonable" and always make use of "experts" who will
make everything okay - and they are always wrong in how they deal
with a problem.
The recent "health care crisis" in the United States is a prime
example of reformism at work.
The reformist says, "how can we make health care more affordable
to people? How can we keep those insurance rates down to levels people
can pay?"
The anarchist says, "should health care be considered a privilege
or a right? Is medical care just another marketable commodity, or
do living beings have an inalienable right to it?"
Notice the difference? The reformist has no problem with people
paying for medical care -- business is business, right? The anarchist,
on the other hand, has a big problem with that attitude -- we are
talking about human lives, here! For now, the reformists have won
with their "managed care" reformism, which ensures that the insurance
companies and medical industry continue to rake in record profits
-- at the expense of people's lives. And, in the end, the proposed
reforms were defeated by the power of big business -- without a social
movement with radical aims such a result was a forgone conclusion.
Reformists get acutely uncomfortable when you talk about genuinely
bringing change to any system -- they don't see anything wrong with
the system itself, only with a few pesky side effects. In this sense,
they are stewards of the Establishment, and are agents of reaction,
despite their altruistic overtures. By failing to attack the sources
of problems, and by hindering those who do, they ensure that the problems
at hand will only grow over time, and not diminish.
So, anarchists are not opposed to struggles for reforms and improvements
in the here and now. Indeed, few anarchists think that an anarchist
society will occur without a long period of anarchist activity encouraging
and working within social struggle against injustice. Thus Malatesta's
words:
"the subject is not whether we accomplish Anarchism today, tomorrow or
within ten centuries, but that we walk towards Anarchism today, tomorrow
and always." ["Towards Anarchism,", Man!, M. Graham (Ed.), p. 75]
So, when fighting for improvements anarchists do so in an anarchist
way, one that encourages self-management, direct action and the creation
of libertarian solutions and alternatives to both capitalism and the
state.
Firstly, it must be pointed out that the struggle for reforms within capitalism
is not the same as reformism. Reformism is the idea that reforms
within capitalism are enough in themselves and attempts to change
the system are impossible (and not desirable). As such all anarchists
are against this form of reformism -- we think that the system can
be (and should be) changed and until that happens any reforms will
not get to the root of social problems.
In addition, particularly in the old social democratic labour movement,
reformism also meant the belief that social reforms could be used
to transform capitalism into socialism. In this sense, only
the Individualist anarchists and Mutualists can be considered reformist
as they think their system of mutual banking can reform capitalism
into a co-operative system. However, in contrast to Social Democracy,
such anarchists think that such reforms cannot come about via government
action, but only by people creating their own alternatives and solutions
by their own actions.
So, anarchists oppose reformism because it takes the steam out of
revolutionary movements by providing easy, decidedly short-term "solutions"
to deep social problems. In this way, reformists can present the public
with they've done and say "look, all is better now. The system worked."
Trouble is that over time, the problems will only continue to grow,
because the reforms did not tackle them in the first place. To use
Alexander Berkman's excellent analogy:
"If you should carry out [the reformers] ideas in your personal
life, you would not have a rotten tooth that aches pulled out all
at once. You would have it pulled out a little to-day, some more
next week, for several months or years, and by then you would
be ready to pull it out altogether, so it should not hurt so much.
That is the logic of the reformer. Don't be 'too hasty,' don't
pull a bad tooth out all at once." [What is Communist Anarchism?,
p. 53]
Rather than seek to change the root cause of the problems (namely
in a hierarchical, oppressive and exploitative system), reformists
try to make the symptoms better. In the words of Berkman again:
"Suppose a pipe burst in your house. You can put a bucket under the
break to catch the escaping water. You can keep on putting buckets
there, but as long as you do not mean the broken pipe, the leakage
will continue, no matter how much you may swear about it . . . the
leakage will continue until you repair the broken social pipe."
[Op. Cit., p. 56]
What reformism fails to do is fix the underlying causes of the real
problems society faces. Therefore, reformists try to pass laws which
reduce the level of pollution rather than work to end a system in
which it makes economic sense to pollute. Or they pass laws to improve
working conditions and safety while failing to get rid of the wage
slavery which creates the bosses whose interests are served by them
ignoring those laws and regulations. The list is endless. Ultimately,
reformism fails because reformists "believe in good faith that
it is possible to eliminate the existing social evils by recognising
and respecting, in practice if not in theory, the basic political
and economic institutions which are the cause of, as well as the prop
that supports these evils." [Errico Malatesta, Life and Ideas,
p. 82]
Reformists, in other words, are like people who think that treating
the symptoms of, say, cholera is enough in and of itself. In practice,
of course, the causes that create the disease as well as the disease
itself must be combated before the symptoms will disappear. While
most people would recognise the truth of this in the case of medicine,
fewer apply it to social problems.
Revolutionaries, in contrast to reformists, fight both symptoms
and the root causes. They recognise that as long as the cause
of the evil remains, any attempts to fight the symptoms, however necessary,
will never get to the root of the problem. There is no doubt that
we have to fight the symptoms, however revolutionaries recognise that
this struggle is not an end in itself and should be considered purely
as a means of increasing working class strength and social power within
society until such time as capitalism and the state (i.e. the root
causes of most problems) can be abolished.
Reformists also tend to objectify the people whom they are "helping;"
they envision them as helpless, formless masses who need the wisdom
and guidance of the "best and the brightest" to lead them to the Promised
Land. Reformists mean well, but this is altruism borne of ignorance,
which is destructive over the long run. Freedom cannot be given and
so any attempt to impose reforms from above cannot help but ensure
that people are treated as children, incapable of making their own
decisions and, ultimately, dependent on bureaucrats to govern them.
This can be seen from public housing. As Colin Ward argues, the "whole
tragedy of publicly provided non-profit housing for rent and the evolution
of this form of tenure in Britain is that the local authorities have
simply taken over, though less flexibly, the role of the landlord,
together with all the dependency and resentment that it engenders."
[Housing: An Anarchist Approach, p. 184] This feature of reformism
was skilfully used by the right-wing to undermine publicly supported
housing and other aspects of the welfare state. The reformist social-democrats
reaped what they had sown.
Reformism often amounts to little more than an altruistic contempt
for the masses, who are considered as little more than victims who
need to be provided for by state. The idea that we may have our own
visions of what we want is ignored and replaced by the vision of the
reformists who enact legislation for us and make "reforms"
from the top-down. Little wonder such reforms can be counter-productive
-- they cannot grasp the complexity of life and the needs of those
subject to them.
Reformists may mean well, but they do not grasp the larger picture
-- by focusing exclusively on narrow aspects of a problem, they choose
to believe that is the whole problem. In this wilfully narrow examination
of pressing social ills, reformists are, more often than not, counter-productive.
The disaster of the urban rebuilding projects in the United States
(and similar projects in Britain which moved inter-city working class
communities into edge of town developments during the 1950s and 1960s)
are an example of reformism at work: upset at the growing slums, reformists
supported projects that destroyed the ghettos and built brand-new
housing for working class people to live in. They looked nice (initially),
but they did nothing to address the problem of poverty and indeed
created more problems by breaking up communities and neighbourhoods.
Logically, it makes no sense. Why dance around a problem when you
can attack it directly? Reformists dilute social movements, softening
and weakening them over time. The AFL-CIO labour unions in the USA,
like the ones in Western Europe, killed the labour movement by narrowing
and channelling labour activity and taking the power from the workers
themselves, where it belongs, and placing it the hands of a bureaucracy.
The British Labour Party, after over 100 years of reformist practice,
has done little more than manage capitalism, seen most of its reforms
eliminated by right-wing governments (and by the following Labour
government!) and the creation of a leadership of the party (in the
shape of Tony Blair) which is in most ways as right-wing as the Conservative
Party (if not more so). Bakunin would not have been surprised.
Reformists say, "don't do anything, we'll do it for you."
You can see why anarchists would loathe this sentiment; anarchists
are the consummate do-it-yourselfers, and there's nothing reformists
hate more than people who can take care of themselves, who will not
let them "help" them.
Also, it is funny to hear left-wing "revolutionaries" and "radicals"
put forward the reformist line that the capitalist state can help
working people (indeed be used to abolish itself!). Despite the fact
that leftists blame the state and capitalism for most of the problems
we face, they usually turn to the state (run primarily by rich - i.e.
capitalist - people) to remedy the situation, not by leaving people
alone, but by becoming more involved in people's lives. They support
government housing, government jobs, welfare, government-funded and
regulated child care, government-funded drug "treatment," and other
government-centred programmes and activities. If a capitalist (and
racist/sexist/authoritarian) government is the problem, how can it
be depended upon to change things to the benefit of working class
people or other oppressed sections of the population like blacks and
women? Surely any reforms passed by the state will not solve the problem?
As Malatesta pointed out, "[g]overnments and the privileged classes
are naturally always guided by instincts of self-preservation, of
consolidation and the development of their powers and privileges;
and when they consent to reforms it is either because they consider
that they will serve their ends or because they do not feel strong
enough to resist, and give in, fearing what might otherwise be a worse
alternative" (i.e. revolution) [Op. Cit., p. 81] Therefore,
reforms gained by direct action are of a different quality and nature
than reforms passed by reformist politicians -- these latter will
only serve the interests of the ruling class as they do not threaten
their privileges while the former have the potential of real change.
Instead of encouraging working class people to organise themselves
and create their own alternatives and solutions to their problem (which
can supplement, and ultimately replace, whatever welfare state activity
which is actually useful), reformists and other radicals urge people
to get the state to act for them. However, the state is not the community
and so whatever the state does for people you can be sure it will
be in its interests, not theirs. As Kropotkin put it:
"We maintain that the State organisation, having been the force to
which the minorities resorted for establishing and organising their
power over the masses, cannot be the force which will serve to
destroy these privileges . . . the economic and political liberation
of man will have to create new forms for its expression in life,
instead of those established by the State.
"Consequently, the chief aim of Anarchism is to awaken those constructive
powers of the labouring masses of the people which at all great
moments of history came forward to accomplish the necessary changes
. . .
"This is also why the Anarchists refuse to accept the functions
of legislators or servants of the State. We know that the social
revolution will not be accomplished by means of laws. Laws
only follow the accomplished facts . . . [and] remains a
dead letter so long as there are not on the spot the living forced
required for making of the tendencies expressed in the law
an accomplished fact.
"On the other hand . . . the Anarchists have always advised taking
an active part in those workers' organisations which carry on the
direct struggle of Labour against Capital and its protector,
-- the State.
"Such a struggle . . . better than any other indirect means, permits
the worker to obtain some temporary improvements in the present
conditions of work [and life in general], while it opens his [or
her] eyes to the evil that is done by Capitalism and the State that
supports it, and wakes up his thoughts concerning the possibility
of organising consumption, production, and exchange without the
intervention of the capitalist and the State." [Environment
and Evolution, pp.82-3]
Therefore, while seeking reforms, anarchists are against reformism
and reformists. Reforms are not an end in themselves but rather a
means of changing society from the bottom-up and a step in that direction:
"Each step towards economic freedom, each victory won over capitalism will
be at the same time a step towards political liberty -- towards liberation
from the yoke of the state. . . And each step towards taking from the
State any one of its powers and attributes will be helping the masses to
win a victory over capitalism." [Kropotkin, Op. Cit., p. 95]
However, no matter what, anarchists "will never recognise the
institutions; we will take or win all possible reforms with the same
spirit that one tears occupied territory from the enemy's grasp in
order to keep advancing, and we will always remain enemies of every
government." Therefore, "[i]t is not true to say . . . [that
anarchists] are systematically opposed to improvements, to reforms.
They oppose the reformists on the one hand because their methods are
less effective for securing reforms from government and employers,
who only give in through fear, and because very often the reforms
they prefer are those which not only bring doubtful immediate benefits,
but also serve to consolidate the existing regime and to give the
workers a vested interest in its continued existence." [Life
and Ideas, p. 81 and p. 83]
Only by working class people, by their own actions and organisation,
getting the state and capital out of the way can produce an improvement
in their lives, indeed it is the only thing that will lead to real
fundamental changes for the better. Encouraging people to rely on
themselves instead of the state or capital can lead to self-sufficient,
independent, and, hopefully, more rebellious people -- people who
will rebel against the real evils in society (capitalist and statist
exploitation and oppression, racism, sexism, ecological destruction,
and so on) and not their neighbours.
Working class people, despite having fewer options in a number of
areas in their lives, due both to hierarchy and restrictive laws,
still are capable of making choices about their actions, organising
their own lives and are responsible for the consequences of their
decisions, just as other people are. To think otherwise is to infantilise
them, to consider them less fully human than other people and reproduce
the classic capitalist vision of working class people as means of
production, to be used, abused, and discarded as required. Such thinking
lays the basis for paternalistic interventions in their lives by the
state, ensuring their continued dependence and poverty and the continued
existence of capitalism and the state.
Ultimately, there are two options:
"The oppressed either ask for and welcome improvements as a benefit
graciously conceded, recognise the legitimacy of the power which is over
them, and so do more harm than good by helping to slow down, or divert . . .
the processes of emancipation. Or instead they demand and impose improvements
by their action, and welcome them as partial victories over the class
enemy, using them as a spur to greater achievements, and thus a valid
help and a preparation to the total overthrow of privilege, that is,
for the revolution." [Errico Malatesta, Op. Cit., p. 81]
Reformism encourages the first attitude within people and so ensures
the impoverishment of the human spirit. Anarchism encourages the second
attitude and so ensures the enrichment of humanity and the possibility
of meaningful change. Why think that ordinary people cannot arrange
their lives for themselves as well as Government people can arrange
it not for themselves but for others?
Firstly, we must note that anarchists do take part in "single-issue"
campaigns, but do not nourish false hopes in them. This section explains
what anarchists think of such campaigns.
A "single-issue" campaign are usually run by a pressure group which
concentrates on tackling issues one at a time. For example, C.N.D.
(The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) is a classic example of "single-issue"
campaigning with the aim of getting rid of nuclear weapons as the
be all and end all of its activity. For anarchists, however, single-issue
campaigning can be seen as a source of false hopes. The possibilities
of changing one aspect of a totally inter-related system and the belief
that pressure groups can compete fairly with transnational corporations,
the military and so forth, in their influence over decision making
bodies can both be seen to be optimistic at best.
In addition, many "single-issue" campaigns desire to be "apolitical",
concentrating purely on the one issue which unites the campaign and
so refuse to analyse or discuss the system they are trying to change.
This means that they end up accepting the system which causes the
problems they are fighting against. At best, any changes achieved
by the campaign must be acceptable to the establishment or be so watered
down in content that no practical long-term good is done.
This can be seen from the green movement, where groups like Greenpeace
and Friends of the Earth accept the status quo as a given and limit
themselves to working within it. This often leads to them tailoring
their "solutions" to be "practical" within a fundamentally anti-ecological
political and economic system, so slowing down (at best) ecological
disruption.
For anarchists these problems all stem from the fact that social
problems cannot be solved as single issues. As Larry Law argues:
"single issue politics . . . deals with the issue or problem in
isolation. When one problem is separated from all other problems,
a solution really is impossible. The more campaigning on an issue
there is, the narrower its perspectives become . . . As the perspective
of each issue narrows, the contradictions turn into absurdities . . .
What single issue politics does is attend to 'symptoms' but does
not attack the 'disease' itself. It presents such issues as nuclear
war, racial and sexual discrimination, poverty, starvation, pornography,
etc., as if they were aberrations or faults in the system. In reality
such problems are the inevitable consequence of a social order based
on exploitation and hierarchical power . . . single issue campaigns
lay their appeal for relief at the feet of the very system which
oppresses them. By petitioning they acknowledge the right of those
in power to exercise that power as they choose." [Bigger Cages, Longer
Chains, pp. 17-20].
Single issue politics often prolong the struggle for a free society
by fostering illusions that it is just parts of the capitalist system
which are wrong, not the whole of it, and that those at the top of
the system can, and will, act in our interests. While such campaigns
can do some good, practical, work and increase knowledge and education
about social problems, they are limited by their very nature and can
not lead to extensive improvements in the here and now, never mind
a free society.
Therefore, anarchists often support and work within single-issue
campaigns, trying to get them to use effective methods of activity
(such as direct action), work in an anarchistic manner (i.e. from
the bottom up) and to try to "politicise" them into questioning the
whole of the system. However, anarchists do not let themselves be
limited to such activity as a social revolution or movement is not
a group of single-issue campaigns but a mass movement which understands
the inter-related nature of social problems and so the need to change
every aspect of life.
Basically, we do it in order to encourage and promote solidarity. This is
the key to winning struggles in the here and now as well as
creating the class consciousness necessary to create an anarchist
society. At its most simple, generalising different struggles means
increasing the chances of winning them. Take, for example, a strike
in which one trade or one workplace goes on strike while the others
continue to work:
"Consider yourself how foolish and inefficient is the present form of labour
organisation in which one trade or craft may be on strike while the other
branches of the same industry continue to work. Is it not ridiculous that
when the street car workers of New York, for instance, quit work, the
employees of the subway, the cab and omnibus drivers remain on the job? . . .
It is clear, then, that you compel compliance [from your bosses] only when
you are determined, when your union is strong, when you are well organised,
when you are united in such a manner that the boss cannot run his factory
against your will. But the employer is usually some big . . . company that
has mills or mines in various places. . . If it cannot operate . . . in
Pennsylvania because of a strike, it will try to make good its losses by
continuing . . . and increasing production [elsewhere]. . . In that way
the company . . . breaks the strike." [Alexander Berkman, The ABC of
Anarchism, pp. 53-54]
By organising all workers in one union (after all they all have
the same boss) it increases the power of each trade considerably.
It may be easy for a boss to replace a few workers, but a whole workplace
would be far more difficult. By organising all workers in the same
industry, the power of each workplace is correspondingly increased.
Extending this example to outside the workplace, its clear that by
mutual support between different groups increases the chances of each
group winning its fight.
As the I.W.W. put it, "An injury to one is an injury to all."
By generalising struggles, by practising mutual support and aid we
can ensure that when we are fighting for our rights and against injustice
we will not be isolated and alone. If we don't support each other,
groups will be picked off one by one and if we are go into conflict
with the system there will be on-one there to support us and we may
lose.
Therefore, from an anarchist point of view, the best thing about
generalising different struggles together is that it leads to an increased
spirit of solidarity and responsibility as well as increased class
consciousness. This is because by working together and showing solidarity
those involved get to understand their common interests and that the
struggle is not against this injustice or that boss
but against all injustice and all bosses.
This sense of increased social awareness and solidarity can be seen
from the experience of the C.N.T in Spain during the 1930s. The C.N.T.
organised all workers in a given area into one big union. Each workplace
was a union branch and were joined together in a local area confederation.
The result was that:
"The territorial basis of organisation linkage [of the C.N.T. unions] brought
all the workers form one area together and fomented working class solidarity
over and before corporative [i.e. industrial] solidarity." [J. Romero Maura,
"The Spanish Case", in Anarchism Today, D. Apter and J. Joll (eds.), p. 75]
This can also be seen from the experiences of the syndicalist unions
in Italy and France as well. The structure of such local federations
also situates the workplace in the community where it really belongs
(particularly if the commune concept supported by social anarchists
is to be realistic).
Also, by uniting struggles together, we can see that there are really
no "single issues" - that all various different problems are inter-linked.
For example, ecological problems are not just that, but have a political
and economic basis and that economic and social domination and exploitation
spills into the environment. Inter-linking struggles means that they
can be seen to be related to other struggles against capitalist exploitation
and oppression and so encourage solidarity and mutual aid. What goes
on in the environment, for instance, is directly related to questions
of domination and inequality within human society, that pollution
is often directly related to companies cutting corners to survive
in the market or increase profits. Similarly, struggles against sexism
or racism can be seen as part of a wider struggle against hierarchy,
exploitation and oppression in all their forms. As such, uniting struggles
has an important educational effect above and beyond the benefits
in terms of winning struggles.
Murray Bookchin presents a concrete example of this process of linking
issues and widening the struggle:
"Assume there is a struggle by welfare mothers to increase their
allotments . . . Without losing sight of the concrete issues that
initially motivated the struggle, revolutionaries would try to
catalyse an order of relationships between the mothers entirely
different from [existing ones] . . . They would try to foster a
deep sense of community, a rounded human relationship that would
transform the very subjectivity of the people involved . . . Personal
relationships would be intimate, not merely issue-orientated.
People would get to know each other, to confront each other;
they would explore each other with a view of achieving the
most complete, unalienated relationships. Women would discuss
sexism, as well as their welfare allotments, child-rearing as
well as harassment by landlords, their dreams and hopes as
human beings as well as the cost of living.
"From this intimacy there would grow, hopefully, a supportive system of kinship,
mutual aid, sympathy and solidarity in daily life. The women might
collaborate to establish a rotating system of baby sitters and child-care
attendants, the co-operative buying of good food at greatly reduced
prices, the common cooking and partaking of meals, the mutual learning
of survival skills and the new social ideas, the fostering of creative
talents, and many other shared experiences. Every aspect of life
that could be explored and changed would be one part of the kind
of relationships . . .
"The struggle for increased allotments would expand beyond the
welfare system to the schools, the hospitals, the police, the physical,
cultural, aesthetic and recreational resources of the neighbourhood,
the stores, the houses, the doctors and lawyers in the area, and
so on - into the very ecology of the district.
"What I have said on this issue could be applied to every issue
-- unemployment, bad housing, racism, work conditions -- in which
an insidious assimilation of bourgeois modes of functioning is masked
as 'realism' and 'actuality.' The new order of relationships that
could be developed from a welfare struggle . . . [can ensure that
the] future penetrates the present; it recasts the way people 'organise'
and the goals for which they strive." [Op. Cit., pp.
231-3]
As the anarchist slogan puts it, "Resistance is Fertile."
Planting the seed of autonomy, direct action and self-liberation can
result, potentially, in the blossoming of a free individual due to
the nature of struggle itself (see also
section A.2.7) Therefore, the generalisation of social struggle
is not only a key way of winning a specific fight, it can (and should)
also spread into different aspects of life and society and play a
key part in developing free individuals who reject hierarchy in all
aspects of their life.
Social problems are not isolated from each other and so struggles
against them cannot be. The nature of struggle is such that once people
start questioning one aspect of society, the questioning of the rest
soon follow. So, anarchists seek to generalise struggles for these
three reasons -- firstly, to ensure the solidarity required to win;
secondly, to combat the many social problems we face as people
and to show how they are inter-related; and, thirdly, to encourage
the transformation of those involved into unique individuals in touch
with their humanity, a humanity eroded by hierarchical society and
domination.
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