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So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement

The Phoenix anti-war movement delivered Monday the latest sequel in it's seemingly never-ending series of boring and ineffective protests against the war in Iraq. The Arizona Republic reported that "Demonstrators marched a favored route for protests, making the short walk from Sen. Jon Kyl's central Phoenix office to McCain's office, where the names of Arizonans killed in Iraq were read during a candlelight vigil [my emphasis]." But preferred by who?

So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement


By Phoenix Insurgent

The Phoenix anti-war movement delivered Monday the latest sequel in it's seemingly never-ending series of boring and ineffective protests against the war in Iraq. The Arizona Republic reported that "Demonstrators marched a favored route for protests, making the short walk from Sen. Jon Kyl's central Phoenix office to McCain's office, where the names of Arizonans killed in Iraq were read during a candlelight vigil [my emphasis]." But preferred by who? That question goes unanswered, but overall this was a generous characterization indeed by the Republic, given that in fact every protest against the war in recent memory has followed this template almost exactly, except for the occasions where there was no march at all and protesters simply remained in front of McCain's office, pathetically pleading with passersby to support their cause.

As on previous occasions, demonstrators also delivered a petition demanding that the politicos change their positions on the war. Callers to the Charles Goyette show, a local Libertarian morning radio show, were largely self-congratulatory, and the organizers' dual strategy of boredom and begging politicians went largely unquestioned. The hope seemed to be that the decline in support for the war itself would somehow bring an end to the war, and that therefore our effectiveness with regards to that goal should be measured not in terms of the escalation of the war (i.e., the amount our protests have actually impacted the elites' war in Iraq), but rather in terms of the number of honks of support subjectively recorded by participants. The obvious and painful fact is, if we have protested the war for more than four years (we protested before it started as well, it should be remembered) and yet the elite has escalated it, our actions are not having the desired effect.

Indeed, as the war bleeds into it's fifth year, the local anti-war movement has displayed an almost criminal lack of creativity and a total failure of analysis. Within the movement, tactics are non-existent or stale and, perhaps even more importantly, the strategies have failed utterly. Despite the limited heat of the protests, or the 50-odd percent of Arizonans against the war, there is almost no chance that Republicans Kyl and McCain will be persuaded to alter their stance on the war, especially given super-hawk McCain's desire to escalate the war. This despite years of protest at their offices by local anti-war organizations.

The East Valley Tribune put it this way:
The protesters would be heard by his staff and the message would be passed on, but the event would be unlikely to change the Republican senator’s stance on the war, said Paul Hickman, McCain’s state director.
“Sen. McCain is always happy to hear people on all sides of whatever issue is in question,” Hickman said. But McCain “obviously doesn’t agree” with the demonstrators, he said.

McCain, a Vietnam War veteran and 2008 presidential candidate, has long advocated sending more troops to Iraq and said he supports President Bush’s recent decision to do so.

Hickman said he would call the senator this morning “just to keep him apprised,” though most of the event took place after the office closed and its staff went home at 5 p.m.

Still, some demonstrators made their way into McCain’s office before closing time and read aloud the names of Arizona soldiers killed since the invasion.
Even Arizona's Democratic governor has taken a 'pragmatic' stance on the war, resisting the tide of public opinion and refusing to advocate for withdrawal of troops there. The governor clearly hopes for a national appointment under a future Democratic administration and has opted to get her ducks in a row with regard to the largely useless Democratic Party, whose leaders likewise refuse to call for immediate withdrawal. Both parties - any party - is by nature dependent on the good will of the elite class. This reality is reflected in both parties' pro-war policies, therefore, not as an aberration, but as a natural effect of it.

Expressing a perhaps previoulsy unknown appreciation for irony, the governor recently called for giving the war in Iraq "one more shot" and told reporters, "People that I met with were cautiously optimistic that they're at least seeing improvement. I think we're restoring stability." "Restoring stability", of course, is nothing more than code for the imperialist project in Iraq, so we should not be surprised to see a politician with national ambitions committed to the successful application of state violence towards these ends. Indeed, despite the obvious schism with its largely frustrated and confused base, according to Democratic Party Chairman David Waid the governor's position is "entirely consistent with Democrats." This despite the clear national vote against the war less than six months ago!

Naturally, Democratic leaders and their supporters in the anti-war movement will forever tell us that the solution to our problems lies with a properly cast vote, but what's interesting about the anti-war movement, both here and nationally, is the disconnect between the national trend against the war and the stagnating or shrinking turnout at anti-war protests. Protests here in Arizona have never again approached the numbers achieved right before the war, thus revealing that the problem lies in part with a profound disenchantment with the movement itself, not just the political parties. And this blame lies with the movement's leadership, who continue to call again and again for the same boring protests despite the glaring evidence of their complete failure to achieve their alleged goal of ending the war.

In fact, many Americans, frustrated with the bloodbath in Iraq and seeing little alternative in the boring and impotent anti-war movement, opted to hold their noses and vote against the war by choosing the lesser of two evils, checking the Democratic box in the voting booth rather than joining the obviously ineffective anti-war movement. This tactic has clearly, and predictably failed, despite the equally unsurprising, infantile and self-serving "vote Democratic or else" threats of the liberal left before the election.

However, there is hope, because even if the anti-war leadership in town fails to realize the obvious impossibility of convincing politicians to end this war by begging and vigiling, not everyone at the protest Monday was similarly confused.
"I have more faith in the people than I do in the politicians," said 19-year-old Rosela Martinez, an Estrella Mountain Community College student, explaining her reason for joining the Phoenix protest.

"I think it's still possible for the people to have the real power," she said.
Which brings us to the point. If appealing to politicians is not going to stop the war... and, if voting for politicians is not going to stop the war, perhaps it's time to re-evaluate our tactics and strategies. Rosela Martinez hints at a different direction, a direct action direction.

Several places around the country have broken out of the stale politics of pleading and have begun to take matters into their own hands, opting for a system's disruption strategy that relies on direct action. In Tacoma, Washington, protesters tried to prevent the deployment of a Stryker brigade to Iraq, and faced a brutal attack from police in response. And, in New Brunswick, NJ, several hundred protesters Monday took to the streets, shutting down a recruitment center and storming a freeway offramp, cutting off traffic. One organizer declared, "We're going to try to shake things up!" In Milwaukee, militants descended on a recruitment center, smashing windows and setting off smoke bombs. Displaying what must be a near critical level of irony, Army public affairs officer Pat Grobschmidt expressed consternation at the attack on the violent institution she works for, saying, "Soldiers defend the right of all Americans to peacefully express their point of their view. We're dismayed that their actions are anything but peaceful." Yet, are we surprised by the violent reaction of Iraqis to the US Army?

But isn't that the point? If we are to end the war, we must accomplish four tasks that the anti-war movement so far has failed to achieve. First, we must push the contradictions in the system, forcing the evaporation of the pragmatic middle ground now occupied by the Democratic Party. The existence of this middle ground allows the Democrats to stand between us and our goal of stopping the war. The illusion of the Democrats as an appropriate vehicle for opposing the war must be revealed for the bankrupt fantasy that it is. Politicians, clearly useless to us, must be ignored and refused access to our movement. Our attacks on the pro-war right must not obscure our opposition to the equally pro-war left. We must save ammunition for both our opponents in this fight, as we have no place with either.

Second, we must make irrelevant the local leadership of the anti-war movement, rejecting their stale tactics and failed strategies. Their lack of creativity has directly led to the state of the current movement and, along with it, the failure to achieve after four bloody years the end of this criminal and imperialist war. Unlike Janet Napolitano, we must not give the leadership yet another shot. Their time is done. We have tried their way and it has failed. Power and the right to make decisions must now be reconstituted in the hands of the base of the movement, and new, militant strategies will help to bring new blood and ideas into the movement. Direct action must be the watchword of the day. We have to develop broadly participatory and accountable forms of protest rooted in affinity, militancy and solidarity.

Third, these strategies must be applied with an eye towards system disruption. That is, making the every day functioning of the war-making apparatus impossible, or at least difficult and politically costly. This, in fact, is a much more historically rooted strategy than that pursued by local anti-war leaders. Petitioning and begging have not historically proved successful strategies for ending wars. Vietnam was brought to an end by three forces: the sabotage of the war machine from inside by defecting, refusing and resisting soldiers; the attack on the military by the Vietnamese guerrillas and regular army; and, the resistance and sabotage of citizens in the United States, who engaged in far more resistance than mere sign-holding. This is the combination that will force an end to the war this time as well.

Fourth, we must connect to local struggles, such as the immigrant movement. The parallels are striking. Between 1846 and 1848 an illegal war, based on lies, took Northern Mexico and delivered it to the US. Since then, Mexicans and immigrants have been repeatedly stripped of their rights and alternately brought in and driven out of the US, depending on the needs of the elite class and the compliance of a large section of the working and middle class.

Like the imperialist alliance that binds many middle class folks to the foreign policy of the ruling class in this country, the white supremacist immigration and policing policies in this country binds the white working class domestically to the interests of the ruling capitalist class by offering them privileged access to jobs and other resources. When the authorities crack down on immigrants, this is clear signal to the white working class that this "devil's bargain" is alive and well and that their elite benefactors will continue to honor that special relationship, just like when the state frames its foreign wars in terms of protecting Americans from terrorism abroad. Because it is primarily the working class that fights this war, if we cannot break down this alliance we face little hope of breaking down the second in any meaningful or long-term fashion. This white supremacist history repeats now, as so-called 'illegal immigrants' now risk being labeled domestic terrorists for even minor crimes - a measure that 50 percent of Arizonans support! Our support for the immigrant movement must be strong and unopportunistic, and we must highlight the necessity of building a movement committed to free movement and rights for all people at home as a crucial element of our fight against the war abroad.

It's time for a radical departure for the anti-war movement in Phoenix. We need a broad coup from below against the current leadership and a sharp break from the strategies that currently dominate. Energy, vitality and fresh ideas are sorely needed if we want to end the war. The time for action is now.

Phoenix Insurgent: Revolutionary Anarchy

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Here's what others have to say about 'So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement':

catholicanarchy.org » So many candles, so little fire
Tracked on Thursday, March 22 2007 @ 10:11 PM UTC

So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement | 10 comments | Create New Account
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So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: sum1wholuvsu on Wednesday, March 21 2007 @ 06:12 PM UTC
It's time for a radical departure for the anti-war movement in Phoenix.

I can't speak for Phoenix, per se, but I think that the tactics being employed across the country by radical anti-war activists (especially the recruiting station direct actions, military shipment blockades, and illegal marches) are generally positive, but the main problem contributing to their relative ineffectiveness is the small number of radical participants, not the tactics being used. So the challenge for the proportionately small number of radicals is not one of tactics, but a need to increase the numbers of resisters employing such tactics. The U.S. government is probably the most powerful in history, so it's no surprise that a handful of anarchists or a few thousand liberal protesters are unable to affect its warring nature.

It's going to take a radicalized mass of thousands, if not millions, to curb the oppressive desires of this government. Yet, we should not be discouraged -- as long as the numbers of those willing to openly resist the Military Industrialized Complex are growing (and I think they are), then the movement is headed in the right direction. Of course, this means both the radicalization of the large number of liberal protesters, as well as a change of action by those not currently participating in the anti-war movement at all.

I guess what I really mean to say is this: I generally agree with your frustrations directed at the anti-war movement, and that it needs to be further radicalized to be effective. However, in order for this to happen, the relatively moderate wing of the anti-war movement (i.e., the vast majority of it) needs to be persuaded to become radicalized, not berated and discouraged until they give up altogether. Far too many anarchists, on both Infoshop and Indymedia, are quick to slam any moderate form of protest as ineffective, instead of expressing solidarity and then proposing (by word, or even better, through example) a radicalization of tactics.

Furthermore, I doubt that too many moderate protesters are going to be swayed into radical action by a blog (phoenixinsurgent.blogspot.com) whose masthead image seems to fetishize and romanticize machine guns and violent confrontation. If what you're really proposing here is a tactic of armed violence, then say it; if not, why the pose? I think this kind of macho show of toughness only serves to discourage large numbers of people from joining with us in resistance, because it reinforces the negative image that most have of the anarchist philosophy.

So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Admin on Wednesday, March 21 2007 @ 08:00 PM UTC
I think you are making an important point here about the importance of growing the numbers of radicals at these protests. I've commented about this over at DC Indymedia, which is having a raging discussion about the efficacy of the youth bloc that happened there over the weekend. These blocs aren't really that important in and of themselves, so it doesn't make any sense to pick apart the details of what happened. When these blocs happen in the context of a bigger mass demonstration they can only accomplish so much.

Over-analyzing one small bloc is not a productive discussion. It's more important to look at the bigger picture and ask questions about how we can increase the number of radical participants at future protests. Perhaps more importantly, what can we do to increase the number of radicals who can simply organize their own forms of dissent? More people means that you can do more with a tactic like a bloc. A bloc of 250 people is easily controlled by the police. A bloc of 4000 people can do more things. Five blocks of 5000 people can paint the town red.

Building a larger mass movement requires lots of hard work. There aren't any shortcuts. And it's the little things that are important. Too many of us think that stuff like "security culture" and the tactics on the streets are important. Little stuff like paying attention to the details of your call to action are probably more important. As I pointed out last week, if your call looks half ass, people will assume that the organizing of the action is half ass. Most people are going to be reluctant to join a risk action that looks half-assed. Calls need to be inspirational and informational. They need to be spell-checked. Calls to action should have a contact group and address. It also helps to have endorsers, so that people can see that other groups support the action.

Yes, we need to remember that *radicalization* is one way we convert moderate people into radicals. There are many ways to do this and for most people, it really is a personal journey. But when our radical movement has its shit together, we radicalize lots of people. We all know about Seattle, but I saw many moderate activists go to the Quebec City protests and come back as inspired radicals.

Chuck0
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: freeboot on Thursday, March 22 2007 @ 05:49 PM UTC
I couldn't agree more with this sentiment. The question then is, as chuck has pointed out, how do we increase numbers while, at the sam time, increase the tolerance of militant actions? I think one apect of the problem that must be discussed is the confusion bred by equating violence enacted against property, being the equivalent of violence enacted against an individual. There is a very real dichotomy here that is not even discussed amongst most of the mainstream protesters. It may seem a hackneyed dialogue amongst anarchists and anti-authoritarians who have an understanding of this dichotomy, but how do we engage the less militant in a dialogue about the necessity of increasing these militant actions? Here on the border there is a large catholic presence in the anti-war movement. Given that the anarchists here have converged in agreement with them about the necessity to end the war itself, there has been disagreement about tactics. Many are scared of hurting people, and misconstrue destruction of property with violence enacted against an entity. Via discussion, we found it useful to point out, that even Christ became violent when he drove the money lenders from the temple. While we spoke of this with regard to Jesus, the man, many Catholics took the time to reconcile this position with their reticence to enact violence against a person, and found that destruction of property, sabotage, and indeed fighting "power" was not integrally antagonistic to their ideologies. This is not to imply that all were on board, nor is it meant to imply that anecdotal cases can be extended though-out the war movement. It is merely an indicy of analysis that creates a cognitive dissonance with in the mind of many pacifists of the Christian bent. I offer this humbly, for debate, dialogue, and discussion.
heart,
Freeboot
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: sum1wholuvsu on Friday, March 23 2007 @ 09:26 AM UTC

increase the tolerance of militant actions? ... the confusion bred by equating violence enacted against property, being the equivalent of violence enacted against an individual.

I would argue that an even more serious problem worthy of discussion is the confusion bred by equating militant or radical actions with violent actions. Non-violent direct action can be equally militant and radical, if not more so, especially because it stands, by its mere existence, as a glaring antidote to the favored tactics of the state. Non-violence leads by example; it can be both disruptive to power and instructive.

Of the radical tactics that I mentioned earlier (actions at recruiter stations, military shipment blockades, illegal marches, as well as war tax resistance), none of them require any kind of violence, whether directed at property or persons, to be effective in disrupting the U.S. war apparatus. They just need larger numbers of participants in order to increase their impact. It's not necessary to break the window of a recruiting office in order to shut it down for a while. Hundreds of anarchists simply blocking the entrance would be much more effective, because it not only performs a more powerful direct opposition to power, but also presents an image to the public of a growing mass resistance.

I'm not going to argue that violence against property and violence against persons are one in the same (although I am firmly opposed to the latter). But I do think that anarchism's greatest hurdle, which prevents it from becoming a more widely accepted political philosophy (and thereby increasing its numbers), is its image of being a juvenile practice. I think the idea of black-clad anarchists hurling rocks through windows does as much to reinforce this perception as anything else.

So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Thugarchist on Wednesday, March 21 2007 @ 11:02 PM UTC
Same folks that bitch about the "boring tactics" of others are the ones that get all worked up when militant direct action gets criticized and then start whining about respecting a diversity of tactics.
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Guilt on Friday, March 23 2007 @ 10:44 AM UTC
It's not so much that said tactics are boring as it is that they're utterly ineffective. Nobody gives a shit about peace marches and vigils- nothing at all is accomplished, not even the minor cost of a new window. It's absurd to refer to such marches and vigils as "tactics."
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Thugarchist on Friday, March 23 2007 @ 06:27 PM UTC
Are the pacifists oppressing you?
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, March 22 2007 @ 12:48 PM UTC
people in KC can we protest this...............

The American Correctional Association's (ACA) "Congress of Correction" is a huge annual meeting of prison labor companies and corrections officials (wardens, administrators, etc). It's advertised as "the largest gathering of corrections personnel in the United States." This many oppressors in one place is a rare event. The social justice movement and anarchists especially shouldn't ignore such a gathering. The anti-globalization movement has lost a lot of steam and there will be no WTO or G8 meetings in the future in the US. Also the anti-war movement will disappear once the US withdraws from Iraq. So maybe we should put our energies into protesting the prison industrial complex. Also theres probably a lot of low-income people who would come to a demo like this since they are most frequently victimized by the prison system. The US does have the worlds highest incarceration rate. There are other prison industrial complex meetings in the US besides this but the "Congress of Correction" is the largest.

137th Congress of Correction
August 10-15, 2007
Kansas City, Missouri

138th Congress of Correction
August 9-14, 2008
New Orleans, Louisiana

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Kansas City offers visitors a wealth of attractions. The city's striking landscape with wide boulevards, beautiful parks, fantastic architecture and more than 200 fountains includes world class museums, a vibrant arts scene, superb shopping and great blues and jazz clubs.

For more than 100 years, corrections professionals from across the country and around the world have relied on ACA
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: mokey on Friday, March 23 2007 @ 06:08 AM UTC
this is a great idea. i'd be more than willing to convince a crew to come to something like this if locals organize against it. it certainly sounds more interesting than yet another march in DC (not dissing what people are doing, it just seems like i've done that a million times). and yeah, who doesn't hate their PO? this is something that's more immediately relevant to a large number of people in the U.S. than free trade agreements. still plenty of time to organize . . .
So Many Candles, So Little Fire: The Sad State of the Phoenix Anti-War Movement
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, March 22 2007 @ 06:38 PM UTC
This is a great analysis. Remove Phoenix, make it Chicago, Minneapolis, LA,whatever and it's relevant to every city in this country.