Date: Wed, 01 May 2002 09:16:04 +0100 Subject: Another World is possible! A Black Flag May Day Special This is the text of a leaflet produced for the May Day demonstration in Glasgow. ****************************************************** Another World is possible! Across the world, people are changing the world. This spring, resistance is blossoming across the world. March saw half a million protesting in Barcelona in the latest in a long line of anti-capitalist demonstrations. April saw twenty million workers on strike in Italy. Protesting against proposed new labour laws, they brought the country to a halt. Over two million people took to the streets in demonstrations. In India, 10 million state workers went on strike against proposed changes to labour laws and privatisation. In London and across America, hundreds of thousands expressed solidarity with the Palestinians and their struggle against Israeli occupation. Across France, over a hundred of thousand took to the streets to stop fascism by the only means possible, direct action. The Birth of Our Power! These strikes and protests are seeds from which a new world can grow. In Argentina, this is already happening. Mass demonstrations are demanding that all politicians are kicked out. All across the country popular assemblies are being organised in neighbourhoods and workplaces. Strikes are turning into factory occupations. The community assemblies, workplace assemblies and unemployed groups are linking up and fighting together. Anarchy in Action! After every anti-capitalist protest, the politicians and media ask, "what do we want?" What we want is being created whenever people organise themselves and use direct action to fight back against those who oppress and exploit them. The only limit to oppression is the power with which it is resisted. This resistance gives those involved a sense of their own power, both as individuals and as a class. By organising our own struggles, we get experience of managing our own lives and see that politicians and bosses are not needed. The embryo of a free society exists in the free federation of the community and workplace assemblies struggle creates. The struggle against capitalism shows that another world is possible and how to create it! For anarchists the politics of living can end those of surviving, hope can replace despair. Resist to exist! Plant the seeds of liberty and help them grow! *********************************************************** Make everyday May Day! On May Day, International Workers Day, hundreds of thousands of people are celebrating and resisting across the world. We are remembering past and current struggles, showing those in power that their subjects refuse to accept their allotted place in the social hierarchy. We are showing that not only is a new world possible, but that we are already creating it in our struggles and festivals! But demonstrations by themselves will not end capitalism or its imposed, top-down, globalisation. Only when the bulk of the population take direct action, organise themselves and fight for their freedom will real change occur. The "principles of anarchism" are born from the class struggle, when people fight for a better life. Argentina shows the direction the anti-capitalist movement must take: it must apply its principles of direct action, solidarity, self-managed self-organisation within everyday life and struggles. We need to build strong roots in our communities and workplaces. Without this grassroots activity, the anti- capitalist movement will wither, just as a flower cut off from its roots. The May Day protests are part of a wider movement, a movement which shows another world is possible, a world based on mutual aid, which celebrates individuality, which rejects the idea that people are little cogs in a big machine and the planet is just a resource to be sold off to the highest bidder. This movement celebrates life and diversity. It shows that a society based on liberty, equality and solidarity is possible by applying them now. It says that there is more to life than profit. It rejects the Hobson's choice of selling your liberty to a boss or rotting in unemployment. It says this world is not for sale and neither am I. It knows what it wants and it knows how to get it. Together, we can create the new world that lives in our hearts! *********************************************************** Celebrate Liberty, not Tyranny! The generosity of the Monarchy knows no bounds. Year in, year out, they have relieved us of the terrible burden of deciding whether to invest millions in health or education thanks to the civil list. Now, as a reward for years of giving one of the richest families in the world millions, we finally get payback: two days holiday! Talk about value for money! So use those days wisely, because we have earned them. Do not squander those two days of freedom from wage slavery by condoning past tyranny and its legacy. Tyranny? Yes, tyranny. Monarchy is just the old name for dictatorship. Its history is the history of oppression, exploitation, and rule by one person. Unlike the serfs of the past, we can show our disgust of the remains of absolutism and their insulting claims to rule over us without having to worry about being hung, drawn and quartered for treason. Let us do so. Let us celebrate real history, the history of resistance, rebellion and revolt from below! Festivals of the Oppressed The history we are feed in school and in the media is history from above, the acts of the elite few who govern and exploit the many. Why celebrate parasites who have happily sent their subjects to die in wars to ensure their rule? Why waste a holiday celebrating an institution which is an insult to our intelligence and liberty? On June 3rd, why not celebrate history from below, the struggles of working class people like ourselves who fought to change society for the better? Celebrate this, our history, the history of liberty, the history of resistance! 1381 England: Sir Simon de Burley charges a man with being a serf, in Gravesend; this touched off the Peasant Revolt, led by Wat Tyler and John Ball the next day. Tyler demands that all rank and status be abolished and social equality established. 1647 England: The Parliamentarian Army kidnaps Charles I. After beheading the King two years later, Cromwell turns on the "switzerising anarchists" on his left, the Levellers, stating their demand for radical democracy "tends to anarchy." 1793 -- France: Marat addresses the Jacobin club on the insurrection of May 31st. Organised by directly democratic neighbourhood assemblies ("the sections"), the people of Paris rise in revolt. Marat states that the rising gave "a great impetus to the Revolution" and that it aimed to secure "happiness and comfort" for the working class, the sans-culottes. The ensuring struggle between the sections and the Jacobin government becomes the struggle for the heart of the revolution, the struggle of the working class against the rich. 1840 France: Jean-Louis Pindy born (1840-1917), Brest, France. Member of the Internationale, communard, anarchist, carpenter. On March 18th, 1871, the working class of Paris rise and start a "Communal Revolution." Seeking a free society of free individuals, the Commune proclaims its autonomy and starts to form co-operative workplaces. It creates the "permanent intervention of citizens in communal affairs" by the mandating and instant recall of delegates and free federation from below. 1896 Spain: Isaac Puente born (1836-1936). Militant in the anarchist CNT union, he was arrested in Zaragoza in 1933 together with the other members of the Revolutionary Committee for organising a popular revolt. In 1936, the CNT leads the resistance to the fascist coup of July 17th. Defeating the military, millions start to create anarchism, taking control of their own fates. Workers kick out their bosses and organised libertarian collectives in industry and agriculture. They organise democratic militias to liberate those parts of Spain under Franco. The revolution breaks down sexual and social barriers, introducing a fraternal character to social relations. Betrayal by the Communists, Republicans and the western democracies ensure Franco's victory. 1900 US: International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) founded. In 1909, it organised a strike of 20,000 workers in New York. A mass meeting demanded that a general strike be declared. Workers in more than three hundred workplaces won their demands. 1906 Mexico: Workers in Cananea seize their town after two days of rioting when a strike breaks out. The strike stimulates nationwide labour protest and the alarmed Mexican and US governments begin a concerted effort to break the anarchist PLM and its revolutionary ideas before it is too late. 1917 Russia: First All-Russia Congress of Workers and Soldiers Soviets opens. This is a symbol of the revolution from below sweeping Russia. Overthrowing the monarchy by demonstrations and mass strikes in March, the Russian workers form councils ("soviets"). These councils, like the Paris Commune, are made up of mandated and instantly recallable delegates who execute the decisions, so taking the first steps towards anarchy. In the workplaces, committees are formed and introduce workers' self- management of production. Peasants seize the land. This ferment from below continues until crushed by the Bolsheviks, who, after seizing power in November, then gerrymander and disband soviets and crush working class protest to remain in power. This accumulates in the Bolshevik crushing of the Kronstadt rebellion in March, 1921, in which sailors and workers had demanded free elections and basic liberties for the masses. 1921 -- Russia: Workers rebelling against Bolshevik tyranny in the Ukrainian town of Ekaterinoslavl. Labelled a "mini-Kronstadt," strikers raise similar demands as those of the Kronstadt rebels. They also raise the demand for "free soviets," popularised by the anarchist insurgent army, the Makhnovists. 1936 -- France:. Two million workers all across France are occupying their workplaces, winning sigificant concessions by their actions and showing the power of direct action, solidarity and the working class. 1944 -- Italy: The first trade union in liberated Italy created, the Confederazione General Italiana del Lavoro. 1968 -- France: Over 3,000 militants are assembled by the "Permanent Factory Mobilisation" Action Committee in Paris to support workers striking and occupying their factories across the country. This is the legacy of the near revolution of May, which saw hundreds of thousands practising direct democracy and direct action all across France. These are just a few examples of history from below, the history of struggle, the history of our class and its power, the history of liberty. History is made by the masses when they unite and fight for their liberty against their rulers, whether political or economic. So celebrate liberty, celebrate the power of working class people to change the world, celebrate life! And, at the same time, create new festivals of the oppressed to finish the work created by rebels past! Their actions point the way -- direct action, solidarity, self-organisation from the bottom up, self-management of both the struggle and the new society. These are the principles of anarchism. Join with us, we have a world to win! *********************************************************** Mayday - A tradition of fighting back! This rally celebrates solidarity with similar demonstrations worldwide. Yet many of these are suppressed by the violence of the State. There are some who support the aims of Mayday who mistakenly confuse international workers day - with a public relations gambit of Non- Violence. An anarchist responds: There is only one act worse than being the perpetrator of violence - it is passively succumbing to it and thereby rendering resistance ineffective. Paraphrasing Peter Kropotkin a century ago this sums up an anarchist view on violence. People with revolutionary ideas do not wish violence to be part of the equation. Violence is the preserve of the State. The State has the legitimised use of violence, as well as the force of Law to keep their subjects "in order". It is organised to protect the power of the interests it serves. Using or provoking violence is utilised by the State -- with riot cops, undercover police, paramilitary forces, and the regular army. You only have to witness the calculated brutality of the Israeli State at present to see the "iron fist" unleashed outside the "velvet glove" of respectability. Non-violent mass protest is a valid tactic which is the appropriate means to face the power of oppressors on most occasions. Yet it is a cardinal mistake to "elevate" a tactic into an ideology, fetishising the sense of sacrifice into potential defeatism. It is incredibly brave to maintain non-violence in the face of overwhelming odds, but the people who turn such activity into an ideology - pacifists - remove the ability of the oppressed to defend themselves. It is no coincidence that religious justification for pacifism is pervasive - Christian, Hindu or Buddhists. Religion is organised mysticism which serves to reconcile the oppressed to terrible fates. The reward is in the afterlife rather than a commonwealth in the here and now. Yet these same religions and others such as Islam, have historically legitimised the use of military force by the State. Such defeatism removes options, when a valid response is to defend the struggle you are engaged in with the most appropriate response that is collectively decided upon. On most occasions that will be to maintain non-violent determined and brave resistance. But to rule out, or even worse as some "pacifists" do - to sabotage and inform on people prepared to physically resist, is to prepare for defeat rather than organise to win. The events of September 11th are invoked as justification by our rulers: violence is their preserve and it is the enemy that is "fanatical." They have manipulated the public perception of the atrocity to suit their own agenda. Yet indiscriminate loss of life, even if aimed at symbolic targets, such as the World Trade Center, is not going to advance liberation. Persecuted individuals manipulated by would be States or jihads are indicative of desperate measures in a world of the spectacle. It is not going to foster class solidarity. To summarise: neither terrorism or pacifism but a flexible response which includes fighting back when the need arises - what do you think?. Jim McFarlane *********************************************************** A lie - Nation Back in the 19th century old Karl Marx identified alienation as signifying the worker's relation to what he produced. This sense of alienation dovetailed with the uprooting of former rural labourers in the new urban slums, to herald the beginnings of working class experience of exploitation and powerlessness under capitalism. Well over a century later, the community spirit which tied people together, through adversity, has been steadily eroded. In today's modern life, seeming material progress stimulated by consumer credit & spiralling debt, has narrowed the focus to the family & the individual. Yet such individuals are not empowered, not citizens, not in control of their work or environment. They are bombarded with images and expectations which lead to a confused consciousness of who they are. Instead of the old deferred gratification in the early days of consumerism, often accompanied - especially in Scotland - by the old deference & 'tug of the forelock', the new individual is self-seeking, cynical, hedonistic & no longer bound by restraints of religion. Also from the 19th century old Michael Bakunin stated it was also creative to unleash destructive urges. But, 'freed' from former conventions, such destructive urges are now part of the malaise of modern alienation. Generations are encouraged to see others as 'fuddy duddies', 'muppets', 'neds' & so on. As technological sophistication compounds such distancing within families and communities, rebellion becomes expected as a rite of passage expressed through the hedonism fashionable to the generation in question. In many urban areas, spreading to former urban villages where community ties used to stifle individualism, the breakdown of social cohesion has led to a proliferation of barbaric behaviour. This is expressed in destructive use of drugs, muggings, anti-social vandalism & lack of respect for anybody apart from immediate cronies. Any revolutionary appeal has therefore to offer the hope that a free society and the fight to achieve it will fill a void in the personal & the social side of existence. Invariably we will be cast as role models despite being ourselves constantly subjected to such media and advertising saturation. It is too easy to 'sit on the sidelines' faced with such social disintegration. Yet people who are substantially alienated are not going to turn automatically to anarchist perspectives. If you hate other people of your class you despise yourself, you think you are above others & fall into an elitist trap. You contribute to the pollution & rubbish around you, you make elderly people feel insecure and you spread bad habits amongst children. So becoming an anarchist isn't just about appreciating the power relation of capitalism, it is about projecting anarchy as a change of moral outlook, an ethics for the 21st century. Otherwise dependence on the State & authoritarian solutions will be encouraged, instead of a full appreciation of the appeal & social responsibilities of anarchism. Your choice, follow trends & bad habits, or shake them off & live as an anarchist! Jim McFarlane *********************************************************** Why Mayday? May 1st is a special day for the labour movement. It is a day of world-wide solidarity. A time to remember past struggles and demonstrate our hope for a better future. A day to remember that an injury to one is an injury to all. Mayday originated with the execution of four anarchists in Chicago in 1886 for organising workers in the fight for the eight-hour day. May Day is a product of "anarchy in action": of the struggle of working people organising themselves and using direct action to change the world. It began in the 1880s in the USA. In 1884, the Federation of Organised Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada passed a resolution which asserted that "eight hours shall constitute a legal day's work from and after May 1, 1886, and that we recommend to labour organisations throughout this district that they so direct their laws as to conform to this resolution." A call for strikes on May 1st, 1886 was made in support of this demand. In Chicago the anarchists were the main force in the union movement. The anarchists thought that the eight hour day could only be won through direct action and solidarity. They considered that struggles for reforms, like the eight hour day, were not enough in themselves. They viewed them as only one battle in an ongoing class war that would only end by social revolution and the creation of a free society. It was with these ideas that they organised and fought. In Chicago alone, 400 000 workers went out and the threat of strike action ensured that more than 45 000 were granted a shorter working day without striking. On May 3, 1886, police fired into a crowd of pickets at the McCormick Harvester Machine Company, killing at least one striker, seriously wounding five or six others, and injuring an undetermined number. Anarchists called for a mass meeting the next day in Haymarket Square to protest the brutality. According to the Mayor, "nothing had occurred yet, or looked likely to occur to require interference." However, as the meeting was breaking up a column of 180 police arrived and ordered the meeting to end. At this moment a bomb was thrown into the police ranks, who opened fire on the crowd. How many civilians were wounded or killed by the police was never exactly ascertained. A reign of terror swept over Chicago. Meeting halls, union offices, printing shops and private homes were raided (usually without warrants). Such raids into working-class areas allowed the police to round up all known anarchists and other socialists. Many suspects were beaten up and some bribed. "Make the raids first and look up the law afterwards" was the public statement of the States Attorney when a question was raised about search warrants. Eight anarchists were put on trial for accessory to murder. No pretence was made that any of the accused had carried out or even planned the bomb. Instead the jury were told "Law is on trial. Anarchy is on trial. These men have been selected, picked out by the Grand Jury, and indicted because they were leaders. They are no more guilty than the thousands who follow them. Gentlemen of the jury; convict these men, make examples of them, hang them and you save our institutions, our society." The jury was selected by a special bailiff, nominated by the State's Attorney and was composed of businessmen and the relative of one of the killed cops. The defence was not allowed to present evidence that the special bailiff had publicly claimed "I am managing this case and I know what I am about. These fellows are going to be hanged as certain as death." Not surprisingly, the accused were convicted. Seven were sentenced to death, one to 15 years' imprisonment. An international campaign resulted in two of the death sentences being commuted to life, but the world wide protest did not stop the US state. Of the remaining five, one (Louis Lingg) cheated the executioner and killed himself on the eve of the execution. The remaining four (Albert Parsons, August Spies, George Engel and Adolph Fischer) were hanged on November 11th 1887. They are known in Labour history as the Haymarket Martyrs. Between 150,000 and 500,000 lined the route taken by the funeral cortege and between 10,000 to 25,000 were estimated to have watched the burial. In 1889, the American delegation attending the International Socialist congress in Paris proposed that May 1st be adopted as a workers' holiday. This was to commemorate working class struggle and the "Martyrdom of the Chicago Eight". Since then Mayday has became a day for international solidarity. In 1893, the new Governor of Illinois made official what the working class in Chicago and across the world knew all along and pardoned the Martyrs because of their obvious innocence and because "the trail was not fair". The authorities had believed at the time of the trial that such persecution would break the back of the labour movement. They were wrong. In the words of August Spies when he addressed the court after he had been sentenced to die: "If you think that by hanging us you can stamp out the labour movement . . . the movement from which the downtrodden millions, the millions who toil in misery and want, expect salvation -- if this is your opinion, then hang us! Here you will tread on a spark, but there and there, behind you -- and in front of you, and everywhere, flames blaze up. It is a subterranean fire. You cannot put it out." At the time and in the years to come, this defiance of the state and capitalism was to win thousands to anarchism. Since the Haymarket event, anarchists have celebrated May Day (on the 1st of May -- the reformist unions and labour parties moved its marches to the first Sunday of the month). We do so to show our solidarity with other working class people across the world, to celebrate past and present struggles, to show our power and remind the ruling class of their vulnerability. Anarchists stay true to the origins of May Day and celebrate its birth in the direct action of the oppressed. Oppression and exploitation breed resistance and, for anarchists, May Day is an international symbol of that resistance and the power it generates, the power to change the world. *********************************************************** What the Chicago Anarchists wanted: "First -- Destruction of the existing class rule, by all means, i.e. by energetic, relentless, revolutionary and international action. "Second -- Establishment of a free society based upon co-operative organisation of production. "Third -- Free exchange of equivalent products by and between the productive organisations without commerce and profit-mongery. "Fourth -- Organisation of education on a secular, scientific and equal basis for both sexes. "Fifth -- Equal rights for all without distinction to sex or race. "Sixth -- Regulation of all public affairs by free contracts between autonomous (independent) communes and associations, resting on a federalistic basis." *********************************************************** New issue of Black Flag out now! This issue contains anarchist analysis of the revolt in Argentina, the anti-capitalist demos in Genoa, Brussels and New York, national and international news, book reviews and much, much more. Black Flag magazine is essential reading for all anarchists and other anti-capitalists. Well worth £2! Available from all good bookshops or from Black Flag, BM Hurricane London WC1N 3XX E-mail: blackflageds-AT-hushmail.com Website: flag.blackened.net/blackflag *********************************************************** Black Flag For a social system based on mutual aid and voluntary co-operation; against state control and all forms of government and economic repression. To establish a share in the general prosperity for all - the breaking down of racial, religious, national and sex barriers - and to fight for the life of one world. Black Flag, c/o 17 West Montgomery Place, Edinburgh, EH7 5HA Counter Information c/o 17 West Montgomery Place, Edinburgh, EH7 5HA http://www.j12.org/lothian/ci/ Anarchist Federation PO Box 248, Aberdeen, AB25 1JE www.anarchistfaq.org www.struggle.ws www.infoshop.org www.ainfos.ca
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