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Victory in Seattle (CounterPunch)
Beyond the wildest hopes of the street warriors, five days in Seattle have
brought us one victory after another. The protesters initially shunned
and denounced by the respectable "inside strategists", scorned by
the press, gassed and bloodied by the cops and national guard: shut
down the opening ceremony; prevented Clinton from addressing the
WTO delegates at Wednesday night gala; turned the corporate press
from prim denunciations of "mindless anarchy" to bitter criticisms
of police brutality; forced the WTO to cancel its closing ceremonies
and to adjurn in disorder and confusion, without an agenda for the
next round.
In the annals of popular protest in America, these have been shining
hours, achieved entirely outside the conventional arena of orderly
protest and white paper activism and the timid bleats of the professional
leadership of big labor and environmentalists. This truly was an
insurgency from below in which all those who strove to moderate
and deflect the turbulent flood of popular outrage managed to humiliate
themselves. The contradiction between the demur agenda of the genteel
element and the robust, tear it all down approach of the street
legions was already apparent by Tuesday.
All day long, Tuesday, November 30, the street warriors in downtown
Seattle vindicated their pledge to shut down the first day of the
WTO talks, in itself a rousing victory. Locked-down Earth-First!ers,
Ruckus Society agitators, anarchists and other courageous troublemakers
sustained baton charges, tear gas and rubber bullets, hopefully
awaiting reinforcement from the big labor rally taking place around
the space needle, some fifteen or twenty blocks from downtown. As
the morning ticked away and the cops got rougher, the street warriors
kept asking, "Where are the labor marchers?", expecting that at
any moment thousands of longshoremen and teamsters would reinforce
them in the desperate fray.
But the absent legions of labor never showed. Suppose they had.
Suppose there had been 30,000 to 40,000 protesters around the convention
center, vowing to keep it shut all week. Would the cops have charged
such a force? Downtown could have been held all night, and perhaps
President Bill would have been forced to make his welcoming address
from SeaTac or from the sanctuary of his ardent campaign funder,
the Boeing Company. That would have been a humiliation for imperial
power of historic proportions, like the famous greeting the Wobblies
organized to greet president Woodrow Wilson after the breaking of
the Seattle general strike in l9l9 when workers and their families
lined the streets, block after block, standing in furious silence
as the President's motorcade passed by. Wilson had his stroke not
long thereafter.
This might-have been is not posed out of churlishness, but to encourage
a sense of realism about what is possible in the struggle against
the trading arrangements now operative in the WTO.
Take organized labor, as embodied in the high command of the AFL-CIO.
As these people truly committed to the destruction of the WTO? Of
course they aren't. It was back in February of this year that the
message came down from AFL-CIO HQ that rallying in Seattle was fine,
but the plan was not to shut down the WTO. Labor's plan was to work
from the inside. As far as any street action was concerned, the
deals were cut long ago. Labor might huff and labor might puff,
but when it comes to the WTO what labor wants, in James Hoffa's
phrase, is a seat at the table.
And what does this seat at the table turn out to be? At Seattle
those labor chieftains were willing to settle for a truly threadbare
bit of window dressing, in the shape of a working group which will,
in the next round of WTO talks, be sensitive to labor's concerns.
Here's the chronology. The present trade round will ponder the working
group's mission and composition and make recommendations for the
next round of trade talks. Then, when the next round gets under
way, the working group will perhaps take form. Guess what? It's
at least 20l4AD before the working group is up and running.
Sweeney's AFL-CIO isn't against the WTO. Sweeney himself is physically
fading into the woodwork. One well informed-friend of CounterPunch
used the brutal comparison (in health terms) of Boris Yeltsin. Gerry
Shea, Sweeney's head of government affairs and the man essentially
running the show at l6th St in Washington, has no ideological posture
on the issue, and listens closely to his old friend David Smith,
who heads the AFL-CIO's public policy department and who is a zealous
free trader, cerebellum thickly stuffed with neo-liberal hokum.
There are unions -- the autoworkers, steelworkers, teamsters, machinists,
UNITE -- which have rank and file members passionately concerned
about "free trade" when, as a in the case of teamsters, it means
Mexican truck drivers coming over the border at $2 an hour. But
how many of these unions are truly ready to break ranks and holler
Death to the WTO? For that matter, how many of them are prepared
to think in world terms, as the capitalists do? Take the steel workers,
the only labor group which, in the form of the Alliance for Sustainable
Jobs and the Environment, took up position in downtown that Tuesday
morning (and later fought with the cops and endured tear gas themselves).
But on that same day, November 30, the Moscow Tribune ran a story
reporting that the Clinton administration has effectively stopped
all cold-rolled steel imports from Russia by imposing penalty duties
of l78 per cent. Going into winter those Russian working families
at Severstal, Novolipetsk and Magnitogorsk are facing tougher times
than ever. The Moscow Tribune's report, John Helmer, wasn't in doubt
why: "Gore must try to preserve steel company and steel worker support."
As the preceding item suggests, there's no such thing as "free
trade". The present argument is not about trade, for which (except
for maybe a few bioregionialists in Ecotopia) all are in favor in
some measure. The argument is about how trade is to be controlled,
how wealth is to be made and distributed. The function of the WTO
is to express in trade rules the present balance of economic power
on the world held by the big corporations, which see the present
WTO round as an opportunity to lock in their gains, to enlist its
formal backing in their ceaseless quest for cheap labor and places
to dump their poisons.
So ours is a worldwide guerilla war, of publicity, harassment,
obstructionism. It's nothing simple, like the "Stop the War" slogan
of the l960s. Capitalism could stop that war and move on. American
capitalism can't stop trade and survive on any terms it cares for.
We truly don't want a seat at the table to "reform" trade rules,
because if we get one, then sooner or later we'll be standing alongside
Global Exchange's Medea Benjamin proclaiming that Nike, which pays
its workers less than 20 cents an hour, has made "an astounding
transformation", and in Seattle actually defending Nike's premises
from well-merited attack by the street warriors. Capitalism only
plays by the rules if it wrote those rules in the first place. The
day the WTO stipulates the phase-in of a world minimum wage of $3
an hour is the day the corporations destroy it and move on. Anyone
remember those heady days in the l970s of the New World Economic
Order when third world countries were going to get a fair shake
for their commodities? We were at a far more favorable juncture
back then, but it wasn't long before the debt crisis had struck,
the NWEO was dead and the mildly progressive UN Commission on Trade
and Development forever sidelined. Publicity, harassment, obstructionism...Think
always in terms of international solidarity. Find targets of opportunity.
South Africa forces domestic licensing at cheaper rates of AIDS
drugs. Solidarity. The Europeans don't want bio-engineered crops.
Fight on that front. Challenge the system at the level of its pretensions.
Make demands in favor of real free trade. Get rid of copyright and
patent restrictions and fees imposed on developing nations. Take
Mexico. Dean Baker, of the Center for Economic and Policy Research
reckons that Mexico paid the industrial nations last year $4.2 billion
in direct royalties, fees and indirect costs. And okay, let's have
real free trade in professional services, with standardization in
courses and tests so that kids from Mexico and elsewhere can compete
with our lawyers, accountants and doctors.
A guerilla war, without illusions or respectable ambitions. Justice
in world trade is by definition a revolutionary and utopian aim.
CounterPunch
www.counterpunch.org
last updated: December 29, 2004
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