The Black Bloc Anarchists

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 2:14 am

bks wrote:
JR wrote:

Hedges and Jensen are right, although I object to rhetoric like "cancer." That isn't helping, but the analysis is inarguable.

The graphic truthdig added to Hedges's article is inexcusable. Not helping.

One of the most important facts about black-block infantilism is the automatic magnification such actions receive from an unscrupulous media (of which the unscrupulous polit-peacock Maher is only one example). The media are completely irresponsible to ignore 10,000 marchers (often being beaten and tased and tear-gassed by police) but focus on a Starbucks window broken by a handful of idiots (often enough broken by provocateurs). (These example numbers are taken from last year's Toronto events.)

We can and must call the media on this, but we cannot expect them to do otherwise at this point. If you think, who cares about a piece of cloth burned or a window broken when the security forces are establishing an unconstitutional tyranny, you have a point. But indeed: Who cares enough to bother to break it, when it can only hurt the situation?


I like almost everything Hedges writes but I can't agree that this was a good piece. He's shrill and way off the mark if he thinks that the BB tactics are somehow killing Occupy. If OWS is dying, it's dying for failure to take some other form beyond simply occupying. If it dies, it dies because no purchase was gained in poor and working-class neighborhoods in the urban centers surrounding the encampments.

You and I are stuck on this point of the proper stance toward media. Basically, as i see it, the stance should be, in a nice way: fuck you. Be nice to reporters when you see them, but let them know we understand that even if OWS did nothing but help old ladies across the street all day, the press would still search, for the sake of 'balance', for an old lady who claimed that a guy in a black mask squeezed her hand too hard. I'm not saying getting good press is impossible, only that no amount of image-management is going to make the press an ally of OWS in this fight for very long. It's wasted energy. Accept that they are part of the system you're fighting, and instead use the energy that might otherwise be put into image-management to reach out to the populations you need to appeal to in order to sustain a movement. Knock on doors. Have community organizing meetings and town halls where priorities for political action can be discussed wherever the poor and working-class live.

Revolution = not televised, my brotha.


yes.

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby undead » Wed Feb 08, 2012 3:12 am

How do you get black-blockers to shift their energy and desire for thrills and showboating to more constructive and effective activity?


Reichian sexuality clinics.

Group psychotherapy with mushrooms.

Or,

Growing a pair and doing it without hiding behind all the bourgeois liberals they like to bitch about all the time.

I don't care if someone wants to destroy the property of culpable parties, or even kill the culpable parties. If it were completely separate, this kind of thing would reinforce the efforts of the peaceful mass movement by showing it to be a more desirable alternative. Instead, when you stand next to someone trying to communicate nonviolently with the public, it is a gift to the police.
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 4:13 am

To Be Fair, He Is a Journalist: A Short Response to Chris Hedges on the Black Bloc

By charles | February 7, 2012

One of our lovely authors, wrote the following response to Chris Hedges’ recent, sadly misinformed attack on anarchists…



To Be Fair, He Is a Journalist: A Short Response to Chris Hedges on the Black Bloc

By Don Gato

It was a little weird to wake up today to an article by Chris Hedges on a website called “Truth-Out” when “truth” is in such short supply in the piece. Hedges was trained as a journalist and worked for years at such luminaries of lies like the New York Times, so it shouldn’t be a secret where he’s gotten his sensationalism, his tendency to lie, his hyperbole, and, most of all, his seeming inability to do rudimentary research. Nonetheless, when activist celebrities like Hedges (and his friend here, Derrick Jensen) write even complete nonsense like this, it tends to have a certain conceptual currency with people. And though I’d much rather be visiting with friends today (who promised me peanut butter cookies, no less!), I figured I’d take a few minutes to point out some of the more egregious distortions in Hedges’ terrible piece.

Definitions

First, we need to clear up some definitional problems. Now, as a journalist, I really don’t expect Hedges to be able to “research,”—it does seem to go against the prime directives of the profession, but let’s be clear: There’s no such thing as “The Black Bloc movement.” The black bloc is a tactic. It’s also not just a tactic used by anarchists, so “black bloc anarchists” is a bit of a misnomer—particularly because Hedges doesn’t know the identities of the people under those sexy, black masks. In fact, it was autonomists in the 80s who came up with the (often quite brilliant) idea in Germany. Protecting themselves against the repression of what Hedges calls “the security and surveillance state,” squatters, protesters, and other rabble rousers would dress in all black, covering up tattoos, their faces, and any other identifying features so they could act against this miserable world and, with some smarts and a sharp style, not get pinched by the pigs. This was true of resisters who were protecting marches (because the state never needs an excuse to incite violence and police are wont to riot and attack people), destroying property, or sometimes just marching en masse. That is, the black bloc has all kinds of uses. And in Oakland, where Hedges seems particularly upset by people actually having the gall to defend themselves against insane violent police thugs instead of just sit there idly by getting beaten, on Move-In Day the bloc looked mostly defensive—shielding themselves and other protesters from flash grenades and police mob violence with make-shift shields (and even one armchair). So, to be clear: The black bloc is a tactic used by lots of people, not just anarchists, and it has all kinds of uses. It’s not a “movement.”

Who Is This Straw Frankenstein?

And, importantly, people in black blocs don’t have “unity” with one another about politics. This is another bizarre part of Hedges’ hatchet job. He goes on this long diatribe about what “The Black Bloc Movement” (this weird straw Frankenstein he’s created) believes. We learn in his piece that this Frankenstein is “against organization” when members of the black bloc, anarchists included, have all kinds of ideas about organization (none of which are “against organization”). If Chris did a little research, he’d find that “The Black Bloc Papers,” for example, were edited and compiled by two members of a formal political organization. And while many anarchists do reject formal political organizations, no anarchists oppose “organization” as such. Rather, we have disagreements over organizational form, duration, formality, purpose, and so on. Not to state the obvious, but considering our collective failure to smash capitalism, the state, and all other manifestations of coercive power over others, uh, shouldn’t we be building those kinds of critiques? If Hedges were interested in honesty, he might know that’s also why many anarchists are critical of the Left (I imagine dishonest and divisive hatchet jobs by Leftist celebrities like this one is another reason why more and more anarchists reject the Left—among its many other shortcomings and failures).

He goes on to state that this Frankenstein he’s created is universally under the influence of John Zerzan, then attacks Zerzan. Again, this just shows how out of touch Hedges is and how he’s fooled himself into believing he knows what he’s talking about when he doesn’t (a very common trait for celebrity journalists). Apparently it needs repeating, the black bloc is not a unified “movement”—it’s a bunch of folks dressed similarly so they can’t be identified by the popo. There are all kinds of thoughts on Zerzan in such a grouping, some supportive, some not, some who, no doubt, have no idea who he is. But Zerzan doesn’t speak for the bloc—no one does. And so there’s this weird “guilt-by-association” in this piece which ends in blaming criticisms of the Zapatistas on this “Black Bloc Movement” that he’s created.

Gender Essentialism! It’s Not Just For the 70s Anymore!

Hedges also critiques the black bloc for its supposed “hypermasculinity,” engaging in a gender essentialism that belies his inability to keep up with contemporary radicalism. In Oakland, part of the militant march on Move-In Day was the “Feminist and Queer Bloc.” I’m sure they would be quite surprised to learn that self-defense against violent police thugs and petty vandalism is actually a man’s activity! Why, those poor, beleaguered women and queers are probably alienated from such militancy, along with the befuddled masses that Hedges seems to be writing for! Rather than a lengthy critique of this already-disposed-of pseudo objection, I’ll let Harsha Walia enlighten Hedges on the problems of wealthy white, men like himself attempting to speak for the alienated and frightened “victims” of such “masculine” activities as building a confrontational and militant movement against capitalism and the state. Check it out:







The Personal Is Antipolitical

Some of this is personal to me, in the interest of full disclosure. I have friends in Oakland. They’re brave and awesome. Seeing them stand up to police repression and attempt to take an empty building while people sleep in the streets was exciting and invigorating for me. It was a welcome sight in today’s age of non-violent fundamentalism, where so many are beset with the crippling belief that if we just get beat up badly enough we’ll attract “the masses” with our moral superiority and somehow the wealthy and powerful will recognize the error of their ways and give us the world back that they’ve so successfully turned into their nightmarish, authoritarian, and wasted playground. My friends were gassed, beaten, given broken faces, broken dreams, and locked in cages for their bravery. And now they’re being denounced by a comfortable journalist who wasn’t there who refers to them as a “cancer”.

I don’t want to suggest that they shouldn’t be critiqued. Self-critique is important for any improvement of practice—if it’s honest.

But here I feel betrayed. When Hedges wrote about the Greeks, notorious for their black blocs, he praised them for “getting it.” Indeed, according to Hedges, they knew what to do. In Hedges own words:

“They know what to do when they are told their pensions, benefits and jobs have to be cut to pay corporate banks, which screwed them in the first place. Call a general strike. Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out. Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare—the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat. The Greeks, unlike most of us, get it.”

Apparently for Hedges, that’s good enough for the Greeks. But, by God, don’t you dare bring this filthy resistance to his home! You might accidentally (horror of horrors!) break a window! Perhaps it might belong to Hedges! Well, I passed around his piece on Greece thinking that perhaps there was, in fact, a journalist that “gets it.” I was wrong and I feel betrayed.

So I am angry at Hedges. I know it shows and it will look ugly to some people, but at one point, I trusted his work. And now, I have broken and brave friends that he is denouncing in a movement that he is dividing and presuming to speak for.

After the Move-In Day, the Mayor of Oakland, Jean Quan, asked the Occupy movement to “disown” Oakland because they were militant, uncompromising, and because they were willing to engage in the kinds of “class warfare” that Hedges once praised in Greece. Occupy groups quickly dismissed this as a divisive tactic, but Hedges and Derrick Jensen seem all too eager to help Mayor Quan out. We live in interesting times, but we need to see these kinds of attacks for what they are—forms of recuperating needed and justified rage. When rigid ideologues who think they have some kind of special access to “Truth” come in swinging like this, particularly right after being politely asked to by liberal Mayors like Quan to do so, it’s time to do some quick disowning. We should reject the attempts to divide us by the likes of Quan, Jensen, and Hedges and, more importantly, reject the lies and distortions embedded in these facile “critiques.” Shame on you, Chris. If you want to denounce “violence,” you might use your time to target the police and Mayor Quan instead of doing the work they’ve asked Occupy “leaders” to do for them.

http://www.revolutionbythebook.akpress. ... lack-bloc/

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can we haz a black bloc smiley, drew?

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 5:36 am

A Postcolonial reading of Chris Hedges

Posted by Editors

Posted on Tuesday, February 7th, 2012 at 11:15 am.

via Infoshop News

The sudden volte-face of famed Liberal destroyer Chris Hedges in his recent demonization of the Black Bloc, sinisterly entitled ‘The Cancer of Occupy’, is a wonderful introduction for North American activists to the field of Postcolonial Theory. Edward Said’s seminal text ‘Orientalism’ examines how Western study of ‘The Orient’ contributes to the functioning of colonial power. Representations of ‘The Orient” in Western texts purporting to offer knowledge and insight into ‘other’ countries actually perpetuates the dichotomy between the West and ‘Others’ – in so doing, reaffirming the colonial relationship, even long after postcolonialism has apparently been established following the decolonizing process. The role of former colonizer is adopted in the discourse by the white, educated Chris Hedges, who writes glowingly of Greece’s response to their economic crisis in an article from May 2010:

Call a general strike. Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out. Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare—the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat. The Greeks, unlike most of us, get it.

The Greeks, here, take the liminal role of “other”. In Hedges’ terms, they mimic his intellectual, activist ideals, without ever becoming equal to him. They are the student: he the master, echoing Thomas Babington Macaulay’s ‘Minutes on Indian Education’ printed in 1835, which set out an agenda to train ‘natives’ who were ‘Indian in blood and colour’ to become ‘English in taste, in opinions, in morals, in intellect’. These mimics would constitute a class who could protect British interests and help them in exerting rule over the empire. They would emulate, but never initiate or fully embody the ruling class values, in so doing ensuring their subjection and reliance on the colonizer. Hedges exhorts his ideal Occupiers to do the same, to denounce Diversity of Tactics, and to hurl their anarchist and Black Bloc comrades beneath the bus, by handing them over to the police. Hedges quotes indignant former eco-terrorist Derrick Jensen struggling with the radical aversion to resorting to the representatives of militaristic rule, to deal with internal problems: “When I called the police after I received death threats, I became to Black Bloc anarchists ‘a pig lover.’”

This indignity alone, it seems, is enough to fuel Jensen and Hedge’s disturbing anti-anarchist rant.

Frantz Fanon writes in ‘Black Skin, White Masks’, that:

… it is not the colonialist self or the colonized other, but the disturbing difference in between that constitutes the figure of colonial otherness – the white man’s artifice inscribed on the black man’s body.

Fanon’s works examine the psychological affects of colonialism upon people of color in a predominantly white world. His work remains salient, particularly in the context of the Western desire to appropriate, claim and ‘orientalize’ the revolutionary activities in ‘other’ countries, in order to inscribe their name upon the successful results. Egypt under Mubharak is characterized as bad and anti-American, anti-democratic, inhumane…. Egypt revolting in order to embrace democracy is appropriated, through Western discourse, as a prodigal student of Western ideals. This can be seen clearly in Hedges’ ‘white man’s artifice’ – the approbation he gives to his students, the Greeks. “Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out”, Hedges’ exhorts Greece gloatingly. Compare this to his contradictory attitude to the “cancerous” anarchists of the Black Bloc, who, it seems, follow similar tactics to those Hedges admires in Greece – though the Black Bloc of Oakland have not yet come near to the violence and chaos of Greece. Despite this, Oakland’s Black Bloc has provoked the ire of a Master who finds himself discarded and bypassed – overtaken, unwanted, and left to struggle in their wake. Hedges does not recognize the autonomous discourse the Oakland Black Bloc utilize – or perhaps he feels slighted that they abandoned the “accepted” discourse, and appropriated another, before he, the patriarchal father, gave permission. The Oakland Black Bloc is not subject to Hedges, the colonizer, does not, therefore, have “the white man’s artifice inscribed on the black man’s body”, and so is rejected and penalized by Hedges:

Random acts of violence, looting and vandalism are justified, in the jargon of the movement, as components of “feral” or “spontaneous insurrection.” These acts, the movement argues, can never be organized. Organization, in the thinking of the movement, implies hierarchy, which must always be opposed. There can be no restraints on “feral” or “spontaneous” acts of insurrection. Whoever gets hurt gets hurt. Whatever gets destroyed gets destroyed.

There is a word for this—“criminal.”

Greece: the underdogs of Europe, the European ‘other’, are allowed – even encouraged – to riot. Violence, looting and vandalism are approved when it is to cast out the Colonizer’s enemy, which could, perhaps, result in the strengthening of a new colonialist discourse, the ‘other’s’ continuing subjection to a new colonizer – that which Hedges represents. Fanon notes that “The effect consciously sought by colonialism was to drive into the natives’ heads the idea that if the settlers were to leave, they would at once fall back into barbarism, degradation and bestiality”.

We see this at play in Hedge’s dark fear-mongering of the consequences of diversity of tactics in Oakland and the “Black Bloc”:

…the Occupy movement, through its steadfast refusal to respond to police provocation, resonated across the country. Losing this moral authority, this ability to show through nonviolent protest the corruption and decadence of the corporate state, would be crippling to the movement. It would reduce us to the moral degradation of our oppressors. And that is what our oppressors want.

Yet these are the same tactics – less violent, less widespread – that Hedges applauded in Greece.

Hedges is not alone in reproducing paradoxical colonialist discourse when talking of ‘other’ countries. Frequently, self-proclaimed ‘nonviolent’ participants in the Occupy movement talk in adoring terms of those in Tahrir Square and Syria, invoking the misty-eyed myth that their struggles with state oppression and police brutality in America, are somehow comparable to their comrades’ battles in the Middle East. Again, Said’s ‘Orientalism’ is worth invoking with the central tenet that knowledge is never innocent. Knowledge is always profoundly connected with the operations of power. Holding up Gandhi and Dr Martin Luther King as fuzzy and politically correct (because brown) proponents of nonviolence, Western nonviolent pacifists conveniently slide over the white lauding of both Gandhi and MLK precisely because both these figures failed to threaten the hegemony of the ruling classes by participating in the colonialist discourse in the language of the colonizer. Both Gandhi and MLK were, in a sense, “different” in blood and color, but “western” in taste, in opinions, in morals, in intellect, and in perpetuating the moral and ethical superiority of the nonviolence both individuals had appropriated from the western discourse itself. Gandhi’s notion of nonviolence was forged as a hybrid between Emerson, Thoreau, Tolstoy and ‘Ram Rajya’. King’s was formed predominantly by Gandhi’s influence, and a trip to postcolonial India in 1957.

The translation which occurs in Western colonial discourse mythologizes these Middle-Eastern struggles as somehow equal to North American struggles, and yet different to them. Such myths either promote the idea that the Egyptian revolution has been ‘nonviolent’ and ‘non-violent’, or that the violence on the side of the oppressed in, for example, Tahrir Square, is accepted and acceptable, without acknowledging or explaining the contradiction that it is never acceptable in North America. This promotes and sustains the idea that those in Western countries are, again, the same but different. They are different because they are better. North Americans and Europeans cannot expect revolutionaries in foreign lands to adhere to the same moral and ethical superiority as themselves, the true practitioners of nonviolence and pacifism. The Egyptian revolutionaries protesting in Tahrir Square get a free pass to throw stones because they are ‘less than’ North American protestors, and it sustains North American superiority to characterize our struggle in the West as a struggle which takes place on a higher moral and ethical plain. Despite the fact police brutality is a common and everyday occurrence for many Americans, particularly those living in poverty and homelessness, middle-class educated Occupiers such as Hedges decry the notion of violence as daily routine, because it occurs mainly to uneducated, socially, economically and racially ‘inferior’ sections of the American population. Revolutions on American soil must therefore adhere to a puritanical notion of nonviolence that brings the terminology under the Hegemonic control of those privileged few such as Hedges, who manipulate the discourse to give themselves the advantage, and discredit those who are ‘other’:

This is exactly what pacifists have done in phrasing the disagreement as violence vs. nonviolence. Critics of nonviolence typically use this dichotomy, with which most of us fundamentally disagree, and push to expand the boundaries of nonviolence so that tactics we support, such as property destruction, may be supported within a nonviolent framework, indicating how disempowered and delegitimized we are. - Peter Gelderloos

This emphasis on creating clear, defined dichotomies in order to “delegitimize” thinkers is another tool favored by the colonizer to oppress. The conflation between violence and diversity of tactics is thus another method of controlling and subjugating difference through language. The colonizer creates “the other” in order to define themselves by the perceived deficiency. Hedges’ draws the Black Bloc as the “other”, using colonizing language to create a fantastical, faceless bogeyman against which he can define himself and the “good” members of the Occupy movement, not these fakers, these hooligans, these “Black” bloc anarchists. The binary opposition of black/white good/bad is never explicitly stated, but played upon through Hedge’s powerful, derogatory language. Language is power. In deliberately misappropriating the tactical term ‘black bloc’ as an adjective, and in some cases even a noun, Hedges, perhaps intentionally, creates a mythical, frightening, all-powerful and wholly evil enemy… which does not actually exist:

The Black Bloc movement bears the rigidity and dogmatism of all absolutism sects. Its adherents alone possess the truth. They alone understand. They alone arrogate the right, because they are enlightened and we are not, to dismiss and ignore competing points of view as infantile and irrelevant. They hear only their own voices. They heed only their own thoughts. They believe only their own clichés. And this makes them not only deeply intolerant but stupid.

The struggle for the power to name oneself is enacted within words – to remove that power of naming is a specifically colonial, patriarchal act. No matter to Hedges that the diversity of tactics advocated by the anarchists he quotes and praises in the article on Greece, pushes not towards the replacement of hegemonic nonviolence with an “absolutist sect”, but rather towards a coalition of thought and action which represents the broadest spectrum of thinking and action by which to challenge the structures of oppression. To Hedges, preaching the exclusion of these faceless ‘black bloc’ individuals (which he later clarifies, somewhat disparagingly, given their impressive build up, as “a handful of hooligans”) there is no apparent contradiction. All who approve of violence in Egypt / Greece / Syria by the revolting masses, cannot ever hope to introduce it into their actions in North America. To do so is tantamount to a revolution – against the white, educated face of Hedges and his reformist sect. In a patriarchal twist of breathtaking hypocrisy, Hedges justifies his bigotry by claiming to be speaking “for” segments of the Oakland activist population who apparently cannot speak for themselves, presumably, in Hedges’ eyes, because of their race:

These anarchists represent no one but themselves. Those in Oakland, although most are white and many are not from the city, arrogantly dismiss Oakland’s African-American leaders, who, along with other local community organizers, should be determining the forms of resistance.

The contradictions of colonialism lie in its attempt to “civilize” its “other” – in this case, the Black Bloc anarchists – and simultaneously to fix them into perpetual otherness. We see this clearly in the apparent acceptable face of Diversity of Tactics in Syria, Greece and Egypt – but it’s abhorrence in North America and Europe.

In the process of decolonization, intellectuals and activists in the immediate political fall out of the deconstruction of empire, must still fight with its continuing legacy. In order to succeed in successfully destroying the dominant definitions of race, class, language and culture, they must offer an alternative to the old colonialist discourse, a new form which establishes itself as a formidale, powerful and distinct identity. This is what Oakland’s Black Bloc, the anarchists and the radicals of the Occupy movement are doing. The fact that they face resistance from the colonizer, represented by the white, educated face of Hedges, is only evidence that they are succeeding in challenging the old hegemonic ways of thinking. In the meantime, they leave Chris Hedges and his ilk struggling with the internal contradictions faced by their role as former colonizer, striving vainly to justify and sustain their old methods of control in the face of tumultuous revolution.

Like Sisyphus, we must imagine them happy.

http://occupyeverything.org/2012/a-post ... is-hedges/

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 5:37 am

A Reply to Chris Hedges' 'The Cancer in Occupy': Stop Scapegoating Black Bloc, Look Within
By Michael McGehee at Feb 06, 2012


The interweb is abuzz on Chris Hedges latest column, "The Cancer in Occupy." While employing hyperbole and non sequitur's to take digs at Black Bloc (not to mention the hypocrisy which was quickly pointed out when referring to a May 2010 article where he wrote that, "The Greeks Get It"), Hedges has managed to alienate himself from, and piss off, many non-Black Blocers. In his column he writes that, "The Black Bloc anarchists, who have been active on the streets in Oakland and other cities, are the cancer of the Occupy movement." A lot of people who admire Hedges—myself included—think his piece is wrong on many levels.

My first impression was that Hedges is sensing the death of Occupy, and is looking for a scapegoat. But rather than address the elephant in the room (which I will get to), he chose instead to employ a non sequitur. It does not follow that since many of the criticisms of Black Bloc are valid that it is "the cancer in Occupy."

Initially I was very excited about Occupy, but the romance quickly wore itself out. Speaking in mid-October, Noam Chomsky told occupiers in Boston something that resembled my thoughts: "It’s going to be necessary to face the fact that it’s a long hard struggle. You don’t win victories tomorrow. You have to go on and form structures that will be sustained through hard times and can win major victories. There are a lot of things that can be done." [emphasis added]

It was these "structures" I have been concerned with. I have often written on the need to develop a "culture of democratic thought"—in that we must overcome the passive, fatalist, atomized, and selfish culture that plagues us today (thanks to the efficacy of corporate propaganda)—and of the importance of organizing communities and workplaces. The idea behind General Assemblies is good but who can afford the luxury of camping out in city parks, and be committed and participative on a regular schedule? The fact is that the GA's are largely removed from our personal lives, and in effect alienating the working poor—the very people who should be involved and leading the movement!

So when my local Occupy camp put out a call for writers I quickly responded. I never heard back, even though afterwards they continued to put out the same call. I was troubled. What was it the invisible leadership found objectionable about saying we should organize communities and workplaces into self-managed councils?

Two months later Chomsky returned, and it was reported by Lance Tapley of The Boston Phoenix that,

Noam Chomsky has advice for the Occupy movement, whose encampments all over the country are being swept away by police. The occupations were a "brilliant" idea, he says, but now it's time to "move on to the next stage" in tactics. He suggests political organizing in the neighborhoods.

The Occupy camps have shown people how "to break out of this conception that we're isolated." But "just occupying" has "lived its life," says the man who is the most revered radical critic of American politics and capitalist economics.

Tapley went on to quote Chomsky as saying "Don't be obsessed with tactics but with purpose," and that, "Tactics have a half life." I couldn't have said it better. It is as if there is a romanticization of "occupying" a camp and droning on about "the one percent." Simply put, hanging out in city parks and holding signs with vague language about "the one percent," or the "99percent" is not nearly enough, and is no substitute for the "long hard struggle" that Noam spoke of.

A friend pointed out to me that the Occupy camps which have been the most successful (e.g. New York, Oakland, Boston) are those with a preceding history of organizing. I agree that the tactic of taking over a public space to draw attention to the power and influence that money has over politics was a "brilliant" idea, as Chomsky noted. I also liked that it was, to a considerable degree, decentralized. There was a lot of promise. However, that is dissipating quickly. Chris Hedges recent column gives me the feeling that he is sensing this, and is looking in the wrong place in order to explain it.

So when Hedges quotes Derick Jensen at the end in saying that,

we have to go through the process of trying to work with the system and getting screwed. It is only then that we get to move beyond it. We can’t short-circuit the process. There is a maturation process we have to go through, as individuals and as a movement.

—I get and accept the criticism levied at Black Bloc (I made a similar argument in my review of Ted Rall's The Anti-American Manifesto, where I thought Rall was jumping the gun in calling for violence), but I can't help but wonder why Hedges doesn't say something similar about Occupy. The hyperbole of calling Black Bloc "the cancer," the non sequitur of trying to link their shortcomings to Occupy, and the hypocrisy of saying that "The Greeks" who "riot," and so on, "get it," but not their American counterparts leaves me with a lot of questions on what Hedges hoped to achieve with his article. Does he really think Black Bloc is the reason Occupy is fizzing out? In a society that routinely has no problem with violence are we really to believe that burning cloth and breaking glass offends our sensibilities so much as to be "the cancer"?

According to one of the latest polls (USA Today/Gallup Poll. Nov. 19-20, 2011), 24% said they were a "supporter" of Occupy Wall Street, with only 19% saying they were an "opponent." An amazing 53% said they were "neither," and the same poll found that 59% didn't know enough to form an opinion. With polls showing Americans opposing the power and influence that money has on politics, and favoring increasing taxes on the rich, and so on, the biggest problem of Occupy is that it is not reaching the public. If anything, "the cancer in Occupy" is the avoiding of the "long hard struggle"; the attempt to reap the harvest without first tilling the soil. It's hard to believe that if Occupy was focusing on such efforts that young people clad in black would be holding them back.


http://www.zcommunications.org/a-reply- ... el-mcgehee

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 5:38 am

The Folly of Christopher Hedges
Nihilo Zero - Mon, 2012-02-06 20:49

Often, when describing the inevitable scenes of major protests in the United States, I evoke the image of a person who has lost a brother in Iraq, a person who has also lost a sister to the trumped up drug war, whose father had his job outsourced, whose mother had her pension gambled away by speculators, whose grandmother lost her home of 50 years because she missed a mortgage payment, and whose grandfather died of industrial poisoning and couldn't afford health care. And make no mistake... variants of such individuals readily exist. So when such a person understandably shows up to protest the corporate oligarchy at a G8 meeting (or the national conventions of the corporate parties), they aren't there to sing kumbaya, march along a permitted path, or have their head cracked by the brutal police. And if they get so angry that they throw a brick through a bank window... I will be the last person to condemn them. [and I will be the first!]

I'm not giving the condescending approval of a social worker who understands some flawed psychology behind such actions... I'm suggesting that such rowdiness is perfectly human, rational, and even inspiring. I'm not suggesting that any particular individual at any particular event engage in such actions, but I fully understand some of the motivation behind such actions and wouldn't condemn an individual engaging in them. And I don't feel that condemnation or further punishment of such individuals is beneficial to society. On the contrary, such individuals may likely prove to be on the cutting edge of actual change in this country.

Enter Chris Hedges and the privileged leftist elite trying to pacify and reign in the righteous indignation of many abused Americans. As in his latest article, they primarily prescribe as a method for social change... accepting more punishment and self-sacrifice. But that's easier to suggest for some than others. And why must they so often be quick to condemn those who aren't willing to take anymore punishment? I'd suggest this reflects a shallow understanding of the true pain already administered to so many people and the sacrifices they've already made.

Such a stance also often belies a hypocritical stance in regard to revolutionary self-defense and aggression when it occurs in their own backyards. For example... Chris Hedges in an earlier article about Greece wrote:

"Here’s to the Greeks. They know what to do when corporations pillage and loot their country. They know what to do when Goldman Sachs and international bankers collude with their power elite to falsify economic data and then make billions betting that the Greek economy will collapse. They know what to do when they are told their pensions, benefits and jobs have to be cut to pay corporate banks, which screwed them in the first place. Call a general strike. Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out. Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare—the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat. The Greeks, unlike most of us, get it."

But what has changed now that radicals in Oakland California have called a general strike, incited to riot, attempted to shut down city centers, and talked the language of class warfare? Why now condemn them as "the cancer of the occupy movement," as Hedges has done? Why are such actions in the U.S. "a gift from heaven to the security and surveillance state," according to Hedges? To me, such conflicting sentiments smack of the hypocrisy that comes about when one changes their opinions with the shifting of political winds. Hedges is not sticking to his proverbial guns, he is merely going with the flow to appease the leftist sycophants who comprise his cult of personality. It's sad, disgusting, and shameful.

In his recent article, "The Cancer in Occupy," Hedges proceeds to pigeonhole all Black Bloc anarchists in a most inaccurate manner. He claims, for instance, that Black Bloc adherents do not see corporate capitalists as the real enemy. This would be laughable if it weren't for the fact that he has such a wide readership that hangs on his every word. Further... he claims that Black Bloc anarchists see radical intellectuals and environmental activists as the real enemy. I only wish I could more clearly articulate how absurd this is. It's reminiscent of the way Trotsky used to slander the Makhnovists in the Russian Revolution. Seriously... this is Bolshevik level misinformation that he's offering.

As supposed proof of his misinformed statements he cites a single article in the defunct Green Anarchy magazine which was somewhat critical of the Zapatistas. That might be fair if that one article from Green Anarchy surmised the whole of the anarchist position, but it doesn't. Nevermind the fact that the Zapatistas should not be beyond criticism, it was one article in a publication that presented an incredible amount of content on a wide range of subjects. To use this one particular article to discredit the entire movement of anarchist militancy is, plain and simple, an intellectually dishonest straw man.

Hedges then proceeds with his article to over-associate the anarchist Black Bloc movement with John Zerzan, the editor of Green Anarchy. He begins his attempt to discredit Zerzan by bringing up the red herring of Zerzan's defense in regard to "Industrial Society and Its Future" by the imprisoned Theodore Kaczynski. He makes no mention of any real nuance in that defense, he doesn't have to, except to say that Zerzan did not endorse Kaczynski's bombings. But again, I reiterate, this a red herring. It really has little to do with Zerzan's overall position and doesn't really speak to the issue at hand -- namely John Zerzan's supposed influence in supporting the Black Bloc. He also brings up Zerzan's criticism of Noam Chomsky, another red herring. All of these things amount to an intellectually dishonest sidetrack in Hedges' attempt to undermine and condemn militant anarchism in the United States. Zerzan may be an overly-stoic curmudgeon, but he does not deserve to have his ideas so poorly represented by Hedges as this latter individual attempts to demonize something which he obviously does not understand. If Hedges wants to have an intellectually honest debate with Zerzan in an open public forum, I'd bet Zerzan would be willing to oblige him -- but Hedges also knows that his wishy-washy blend of bland leftist populism has garnered him a much broader platform from which to spread his condemnation of those with a truly deep-seated radical perspective.

Hedges concludes from a faulty interpretation of one single article in Green Anarchy that, "solidarity becomes the hijacking or destruction of competing movements, which is exactly what the Black Bloc contingents are attempting to do with the Occupy movement." And yet... what exactly is Hedges doing with the very article from which this quote is taken?! As he maligns and slanders strong radical elements within the Occupy movement he is doing the very thing which he accuses them of! The absurdity of his blatant hypocrisy is profound.

When Hedges then presents quotes from a conversation between himself and Derrick Jensen... I frankly have to question his level of journalistic integrity. Maybe Jensen said some of the things Hedges mentions, and maybe even in their full context they express the same things, but it's not like Jensen is beyond questioning any more than Hedges himself, Chomsky, the Zapatistas, Zerzan, or even myself. Without a deeper and more clear understanding of where these statements are coming from... they don't have much weight.

Then Hedges raises the spectre of a "locally owned coffe shop" that had it's windows smashed and contents looted. I have no details on the veracity of this claim. Maybe it happened, and maybe it was even done by Black Bloc protesters, but even then it hardly tells me much about the circumstances. As far as I know this coffee shop may have been operated by the KKK or maybe the owners generally mistreated the locals. I really don't know the details of this particular incident beyond hearsay. But I do know, from a number of Black Bloc communiques, that mom & pop shops are never their primary targets. And only an infinitesimally small number of black Bloc protesters would ever make such dubious claims along the lines of, "Whoever gets hurt gets hurt. Whatever gets destroyed gets destroyed." Even in the most militant insurrectionary anarchist tracts of Bonanno or Durruti you will not find such sentiments. Perhaps some infiltrating provocateurs mights suggest otherwise, but it is intellectually dishonest to paint insurrectionary anarchists as holding these positions, or acting upon them, beyond the most uncommon outliers.

In an attempt to divide by means of identity politics, Hedges proceeds with his drivel to equate the Black Bloc with some ill-defined "hypermasculinity" that is also found in the police forces or those who engage in imperialistic wars. While simultaneously dismissing the need for anonymity and the solidarity found in many Black Blocs, Hedges seems to ignore the involvement of women with the Black Bloc who organize to resist the brutality of police forces and imperialistic wars. To associate the Black Bloc with inchoate masculine rage is largely inaccurate and, therefore, intellectually dishonest.

Next, Hedges presents some logical fallacies which should be transparent to anyone who takes more than a passing moment to consider them. For example... he mentions, earlier in his article, various Occupy camps which were shut down because they were non-violent. Well, this in itself should not be seen as a positive in my opinion, but the point I want to make is that the police violently attacked and shut down those camps. They did not need the pretense of a real excuse to brutally attack people. To blame any escalation on those who would defend themselves (or counter-attack) ignores the point that the state will escalate its violence regardless of whether those people are there or not -- and if it encounters no real physical resistance the state will succeed by such means in shutting down the movement. This can be seen again and again, throughout history, as labor movements and civil rights activists did often defend themselves and the movement with violence. To marginalize the role of those who fought back in so many protest movements is ahistorical.

In a completely out-of-touch manner, Hedges suggests that chants like “Fuck the police” and “Racist, sexist, anti-gay / NYPD go away” will alienate people and lose hearts and minds. As if such sentiments are unpopular to anyone beyond privileged academics and the petit bourgeois. By marginalizing those who have uttered such chants, he weakens the movement and the millions of people across the country who strongly agree with such sentiments. Even to the extent that people might burn the American flag... well guess what, that flag is a symbol of incredible violence and oppression to a great many people -- both in the United States and around the world. Hedges may not like it, and it may offend his sensibilities, but any movement that would marginalize that latter point is a weak one. The Occupy movement should not be nationalistic and it should not apologize for, or overlook, the brutality of the state's police forces. As for hearts, minds, and popular opinion... NWA wrote one of the most popular songs in the history of American music, and it wasn't apologetic or dismissive of police brutality.

And then comes what amounts to a confession from Hedges... "Nonviolent movements, on some level, embrace police brutality." Indeed. Well, he should feel free to embrace that brutality until he ends up in the same place that it's put so many other people. I mean... I'm sure that's pretty easy for him to say. He's probably the first person the police harass and brutalize on any occasion, and I'm sure that police brutality has wrecked his life and destroyed his community. As if. And like so many other idealistic leftists he talks about state brutality delegitimizing it's own power and forcing a passive population to respond. But he fails to note that, historically, the effective response from the masses has often been violent -- as with the U.S. civil rights movement, and in Indian nationalist movement -- and that violence is what actually prompted the state to change its ways. I don't mean to totally marginalize militant non-violence, it is ideal and effective to a degree, but it's not intellectually honest to overstate its historical role and remove it from the context of broader violent militancy. And, in fact, the state loves non-violent militants! That's why people such as MLK, Gandhi, and even characters like Jesus, are effectively deified by the state. The state would rather people forget the details about the likes of John Brown, Emma Goldman, or Malcom (Shabazz) X.

At this point in Hedges' article, just when I thought it couldn't possibly top itself in producing more guffaws, bursts of laughter, or eye-rolls... Hedges criticizes the Black Bloc's supposedly "thought-terminating cliché of diversity of tactics.” My first thought when reading this section was that he must not be very aware of how that term has often been used in recent American protests. "Diversity of tactics" is not something solely promoted by Black Bloc protesters and I am actually more familiar with it being used by other types of protesters, militantly non-violent protesters, who engage in activities like lock-downs to block an intersection or to close down a particular corporate business. Therefore, his criticism of this doctrine is potentially more impacting to them than anyone else. But this characterization of "diversity of tactics" as being "thought-terminating" is laughable in itself. What is the alternative? Only one single accepted tactic? And, mind you, this critique of diversity of tactics comes only a couple paragraphs before he describes the Black Bloc as bearing "the rigidity and dogmatism of all absolutism sects." Talk about the leftist pot calling the anarchist kettle black! Are you kidding me?! Is Hedges being satirical when writing all this?! Let me get this straight... according to Hedges no one in the Occupy movement is to engage in any violence, even self-defence. Provocative public critiques of the police state are taboo. Destruction of even corporate property is a no-no. Blocking streets with garbage or debris is out. Flag burning is unacceptable. And yet... Hedges is the one supposedly condemning dogmatism and absolutism. Hedges is the one who describes Black Bloc anarchists as believing that "they alone understand. They alone arrogate the right, because they are enlightened and we are not, to dismiss and ignore competing points of view as infantile and irrelevant. They hear only their own voices. They heed only their own thoughts. They believe only their own clichés. And this makes them not only deeply intolerant but stupid." Really? Who are you describing now, Mr. Hedges? Everyone may not have went to Ivy League schools and didn't always cut their teeth in the corporate press corps, but I feel your analysis of Black Bloc anarchists is hollow and petty. And if you, Christopher Hedges, want to march peacefully in to a charging phalanx of riot cops, I won't condemn you, demonize you, or try to stop you. You'll have to excuse me if I laugh up my sleeve a bit though.

Hedges closes his ridiculous article with another quote from Jensen, perhaps to draw attention away from his own inane sentiments. And if the following really was the gist of Jensen's comments to Hedges then he, too, should be ashamed. In closing, he quotes Jensen as saying the following: “If you live on Ogoni land and you see that Ken Saro-Wiwa is murdered for acts of nonviolent resistance, if you see that the land is still being trashed, then you might think about escalating. I don’t have a problem with that. But we have to go through the process of trying to work with the system and getting screwed. It is only then that we get to move beyond it. We can’t short-circuit the process. There is a maturation process we have to go through, as individuals and as a movement. We can’t say, ‘Hey, I’m going to throw a flowerpot at a cop because it is fun.’” Is Jensen really suggesting that we simply haven't worked with the system enough?! Really? Is this the radical Derrick Jensen that so many have come to know and love? Really?! And we haven't observed the land continuing to be trashed after working with the system? Really? Come on. We still must continue to go through the process of trying to to work with the system and getting screwed?! This is a joke, right? I know of no one throwing flower pots at cops simply because it's fun. And if DJ is spouting such nonsense at the behest of Chris Hedges... then he has lost his edge and is almost as worthless. Go join the Sierra Club DJ, and Chris... you should stop trying to stir up infighting amidst the Occupy movement -- you're not helping.

http://nihilo0.blogspot.com/2012/02/fol ... edges.html

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A couple more points... The
Nihilo Zero - Tue, 2012-02-07 02:44

A couple more points...

The initial promotion of the #OCCUPYWALLSTREET idea was an image which showed a ballerina on top of the Wall Street bull and, in the background, is a Black Bloc wearing gas masks. I do not feel that was completely an accident on the part of Adbusters and, either way, it has accurately predicted where things would be going. And, despite this imagery, or perhaps because of it, the movement did develop and spread around the world. For the likes of Hedges to dismiss such imagery (and the ideas behind it), which was with the movement from it's very inception, seems a bit presumptuous -- to say the very least.

More importantly, I'd like to point out how Hedges bamboozled so many people into believing he was some sort of truly revolutionary radical. After his piece on Greece, and probably with some other things he'd written, a lot of people probably trusted him as being some sort of an ally with impressive media connections. Well... now the truth has come out. But how much easier would it be for a slicker, younger, and more convincing "radical" to cozy up to various individuals within the movement? It's one thing to give support to a supposedly radical author, it's another when these sorts of individuals start trying to collaborate with you on other projects and involve themselves with your life directly. This business with Hedges should provide us with some very valuable lessons.

http://anarchistnews.org/node/21630

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 5:40 am

The cancer in Chris Hedges analysis
Bob Morris, on Feb 7, 2012, 5:47 pm

I don’t recall Chris Hedges being voted Moral Compass of Occupy, do you? Yet his temper tantrum in Truthdig implies just that. He knows what is best for the movement and it sure isn’t those icky Black Bloc anarchists. Yes, I think the Black Bloc are often misguided. But saying Occupy’s problems are due to them is simply not true. He also seems to think that lying around passively waiting to get your head cracked is a fine strategy indeed. To me, this seems almost as pointless as tossing a rock through a Starbucks window.

There’s a cancer in Occupy, says Hedges, blaming the Black Bloc.

The presence of Black Bloc anarchists—so named because they dress in black, obscure their faces, move as a unified mass, seek physical confrontations with police and destroy property—is a gift from heaven to the security and surveillance state. The Occupy encampments in various cities were shut down precisely because they were nonviolent. They were shut down because the state realized the potential of their broad appeal even to those within the systems of power.


He almost seems to be saying if you fight back you might not get shut down but if you’re nonviolent you surely will. Well excuse me Chris, put what possible good is a movement that meekly waits to be shut down?

Chris Hedges’ very public meltdown

It doesn’t even make rational sense. For example, Hedges claims that violent police crackdowns on Occupy encampments came “precisely because they were nonviolent.”

And yet he and others make the contradictory claim that the police justified their violent crackdowns on Occupy encampments because of “the Black Bloc anarchists” and their supposed violence — which is patently false.

He attacks a writer for an anarchist journal that’s no longer published for criticizing the Zapatistas. He falsely asserts that Black Bloc is yet another of the innumerable Occupy Movement hijackers, yet he can point to no example of hijacking by Black Bloc — in a Movement that was founded by anarchists.

Anarchists are the ones who made the intellectual and initial physical space for there to even BE an Occupy Movement.


This is the crucial point. Occupy wasn’t started by Marxists (or the Democratic Party) operating through front groups. It came from anarchists, who exist in all shades and stripes, not just the Black Bloc. Marxists are mostly clueless about Occupy as are the Democrats. The standard attempts by both to jack a growing movement have failed. This is definitely a good thing.

Occupy is something new, a viral movement with no national leaders that has successfully resisted being jacked by the Democratic Party or the Marxist fringe. Sure, its’ got problems now but that’s hardly all due to the Black Bloc.

http://polizeros.com/2012/02/07/the-can ... -analysis/

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 5:41 am

Hedging Our Bets on the Black Bloc - by Zakk Flash
by Zakk Flash on Tuesday, 7 February 2012 at 07:28 ·

Hedging Our Bets on the Black Bloc: the Impotence of Mere Liberalism

7 February 2012



Chris Hedges has written some of the most insightful analysis of the U.S. war machine in recent years. His 2009 book “The Empire of Illusion” was an exploration of how exhibition has eclipsed truth and meaningful connection in American society. His acknowledgment of the ease in which one can buy into such spectacles is a small part of why it was so odd to read his article on Truthdig attacking both anarchists and black bloc tactics entitled “The Cancer in Occupy.”



[the original column by Hedges: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the ... _20120206/]



It is patently clear that Hedges’ statements on anarchist theory and tactics of organizing are either false, unsubstantiated, or directly misleading. He has bought into the American Empire’s fallacy that direct action and organization in our communities is unfavorable and that submission to elected authorities is the only way to enact permanent change. But any legitimate critique of the black bloc that he manages to brush up against is quickly obfuscated by basing his conclusions on problematic assumptions and faulty definitions. It should be no surprise that Hedges, a proponent of statist solutions, should slander anarchism as a philosophy. But, for some reason, it was a surprise to many on the Left who follow his work. Here’s why:



Hedges’ Truthdig column titled, simply, “The Greeks Get It” (24 May 2010) showed a man then unafraid to take on rampant fascism, the insidious nature of capitalism, and the heavy hand of the police state.



“Here’s to the Greeks… They know what to do when they are told their pensions, benefits and jobs have to be cut to pay corporate banks, which screwed them in the first place. Call a general strike. Riot. Shut down the city centers. Toss the bastards out. Do not be afraid of the language of class warfare—the rich versus the poor, the oligarchs versus the citizens, the capitalists versus the proletariat.”



[The Greeks Get It - original article: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the ... _20100524/]



His recent demonization of the black bloc, therefore, is apparently more of the same "not in my back yard" brand of knee-jerk liberalism. This attitude is all too common among self-described members of the Left who celebrate certain tactics in other parts of the world or other points in history, but seem to place their own context in a place of American exceptionalism.



Rioting against austerity measures in Greece? Shutting down the city in Athens? It's "liberation."



In Oakland, it's "criminal" and "a cancer."



Hedges continues his article to lavish praise on Greek resistance but warns his readers of continued hardship in America and every other nation where economies are as rotten.



“…the corporate overlords will demand that we too impose draconian controls and cuts … the corporate state, despite this suffering, will continue to plunge us deeper into debt to make war. It will use fear to keep us passive.”



Nothing could be truer. The city of Oakland has long struggled with urban blight and high rates of crime and its residents, especially the roughly 35% of Black people that make up their population, are often the victims of not only violence by outsiders but by the Oakland Police Department itself.



African Americans living in the East Bay are twice as likely to live in poverty, twice as likely to become victims of violent crime and twice as likely to be unemployed compared to other metropolitan cities on the West Coast. Latest census figures show Black people make up the biggest single ethnic group in Oakland at 27.3%, with white people at 25.9% and Hispanics at 25.4%.



Yet despite having almost the same size populations in the city, white people account for only 16% of OPD vehicle stops, and 6.7% of motorists searched. Black people in Oakland, by contrast, account for a whopping 48% of vehicle stops, and 65.8% of motorists searched. Oakland’s minority and poor populations didn’t begin this war.



Hedges firmly states in his column on Greece that “there has to be a point when even the American public—which still believes the fairy tale that personal will power and positive thinking will lead to success—will realize it has been had.”



Oakland has been had, time and time again. But her residents have risen like lions from their slumber.



Chris Hedges’ straw-dog argument that some “Black Bloc Movement” is responsible for tainting the message of Occupy is either plain ignorance – which is unlikely, given his otherwise informed reporting on American fascism – or intellectual dishonesty. Given the inaccurate assumptions and implications propagated by Hedges, it is necessary to clarify a few terms.



The black bloc is a tactic, not a group nor a movement. Its origins can be found in the Autonomism movement of 1970s Germany, where activists wore heavy black clothing, masks, and helmets to provide protection from the watchful eye of the authoritarian police state. Given the continued illegal actions of the Oakland Police Department – dealings deemed by the government as heinous enough to place the department under the oversight of a federal judge – it is no surprise that the residents of Oakland would want to protect themselves in this manner.



Hedges says that activists using black bloc techniques actively seek to destroy all forms of collective organization and engage in petty vandalism as a means of bringing on “the revolution.” This is a blatant falsehood. He quotes an anarchist writer using the pseudonym ‘Venomous Butterfly’ as an example of how anarchists supposedly seek to obstruct progress, painting her dislike of Zapatista organization as characteristic of the whole of anarchist theory. But if Hedges had done any investigation worthy of being called ‘journalism,’ he would find the following from Venomous Butterfly’s ‘Open Letter to the Black Bloc.’



“The purpose for wearing black has been anonymity and a visual statement of solidarity, not the formation of an anarchist army. […] As I see it, the questions those involved with the black bloc need to be asking is: how do we carry out this specific method of struggle in such a way that it reflects our aims? […] I reject the sad and desperate slogan, “By any means necessary”, in favor of the principle, “Only by those means that can create the world I desire, those means that carry it in their very practice as I carry it in my heart.”



Indeed, activists using black bloc – who are not all anarchists, mind you – realize the strength that lies within mutual aid and collective organization. Without a structure to transfer ideas into action, one is paralyzed and cut off from potential.



Hedges makes a surprising choice in his recent article by interviewing Derrick Jensen, an author who claims to wake up each morning with the heartbreaking decision between continuing to write or blowing up a dam. In his book ‘Endgame,’ Jensen asks: "Do you believe that this culture will undergo a voluntary transformation to a sane and sustainable way of living?" His next question is: "How would this understanding — that this culture will not voluntarily stop destroying the natural world, eliminating indigenous cultures, exploiting the poor, and killing those who resist — shift our strategy and tactics? The answer? Nobody knows, because we never talk about it: we’re too busy pretending the culture will undergo a magical transformation." Endgame, he says, is "about that shift in strategy, and in tactics."



Making a central part of your column opposing violence a discussion with a man who says that “violence can be like sex: a sacramental, beautiful, and sometimes bittersweet interaction” is an interesting selection.



Hedges continues that the “Black Bloc movement is infected with hypermasculinity.” In using such gendered terms, he furthers the notion that people – in particular, males – are inherently violent and damaged beings. He ascribes the notion of masculinity as one that drives the black bloc to fulfill the “lust that lurks within us to destroy, not only things but human beings.” He ignores the participation of feminists and queers who are often participants in the bloc, rather choosing to view individuals as members of a homogenous mass. Nonwhite, nonmale participants are categorized as victims of “white, masculine aggression,” not recognizing the contributions of marginalized groups against rampant corporatism. There is also no acknowledgement of the fact that the bloc has been used primarily as a defensive technique against the violence of the State and not as an offensive measure against people. Hedges insipid sexism is not lost on the diverse crowds utilizing this tactic in recent marches, who were found chanting “Racist, sexist, anti-gay / NYPD go away.”



While individual members of the bloc have indeed done damage to multinational banks and other predatory business, Hedges, like many members of the mainstream media establishment, ignores the fact that strategic property damage is part and parcel of a long history of nonviolent struggle. From the Suffragettes attempting to gain the right to vote, to environmental activists protecting the rights of nature, property damages inflicts financial costs upon entities that only care about their bottom dollar. Martin Luther King Jr. had this to say about the struggle for human rights against the corrupt system of his time:



“I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a "thing-oriented" society to a "person-oriented" society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.”



Anarchists don’t oppose nonviolent methods of organizing. Hedges is engaging in binary thinking that has him convinced that participants in the black bloc don’t do anything else. He ignores years of alternative structures like Food Not Bombs, hundreds of Infoshops that provide literature, bike collectives, food cooperatives, and groups that provide services for marginalized groups. Anarchists, like many others, believe in a diversity of tactics. It is this diversity that is our strength. We cannot allow slander and fear to separate us; sectarianism is the real cancer of Occupy.The enemies that we face – fascism, authoritarianism, militarism, and the like – are legion in their attacks; our response should be equally multifaceted.



At one point, Hedges blames the black bloc in Oakland for overreaction by law enforcement and frames the police violence as something caused by militant action. He ignores weeks of self-sufficient organizing in Oscar Grant Plaza, complete nonviolence resistance by Scott Olsen – a veteran marine who was critically injured by police projectiles, and months of attacks on other Occupations nationwide.



He says that this police violence will "frighten the wider population away from Occupy" and follows, in his next paragraph, by saying that the explosive rise of the movement was the result of pepperspraying of two young women in New York.



So, his position is that violence by police will both scare people away and win them over to you? This thinking is indicative of the slippery argument put out by ideological pacifists who have no grasp of history. It is typical flaccid liberal double-think; the fault lies not with the ruling class for establishing and directing a police state, nor with the police themselves for acting like thugs and fascists – no, the fault lies solely with protesters who defied authority and therefore brought down the violence of the state. "Look what you made them do." This is the thinking of the beaten wife, the mindset of the victim. We are not victims of brutality on behalf of the State, but survivors of it.



The article ends with a quote by Derrick Jensen, a man who has written so eloquently of the dangers of industrial civilization and the need for immediate action :



“…we have to go through the process of trying to work with the system and getting screwed. It is only then that we get to move beyond it.”



The abuses of fascist government, capitalist feudalism, and paramilitary police forces have shown us that the system is not broken, but built to serve someone other than us. Hedges was correct when he said they would use fear to keep us passive. We are not afraid anymore.



Dr. Zakk Flash is an anarchist political writer, radical community activist, and editor of the Central Oklahoma Black/Red Alliance (COBRA). He lives in Norman, Oklahoma.

https://www.facebook.com/notes/zakk-fla ... 8089594241

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby undead » Wed Feb 08, 2012 7:54 am

Anarchists really love the abstract political hot air. They usually live on it. To be clear, I am not a nonviolence fetish person, nor do I defend Chris Hedges various mistakes in that piece, especially the over-generalization. I will only say what I said before - that the issue of provocateurs must be answered and anyone acting out violently at a public demonstration (not talking about self defense here) is working for the police intentionally or not. I will also say again: if it's so important to make petty little statements by destroying property, or picking a fight with the police, then do it on your own time, not where normal working people are trying to have a demonstration to improve their lives.

Also about Greece - Hedges certainly has his foot in his mouth in this case - the anarchist phenomenon here should not be given credit for the uprisings in Greece, at all. Squats, hooliganism, and black bloc tactics are all normal rites of passage for most adolescent Greeks. In a country that is so poor, people are forced to grow up and get jobs, build some kind of life for themselves, and by the time that happens they almost universally agree that violence at public demonstrations defeats the purpose and should be avoided whenever possible. It is much easier to see how anarchism plays out in a country where it is so popular, as an idea that many people simply follow in order to belong to a group. It is really a kind of political kids camp, which is not to say it is so bad for that purpose, just that it has it's limits.

What makes the uprising in Greece succeed is the level of political awareness in the general population, and as that fat fucking banker said during the Christmas season, "Having skin in the game". The general strike is effective because people are not at work, not because they take to the streets and have a demonstration. The public demonstration is a throwback to a time when people had to gather en masse in the streets to communicate. Now all it does is provide the police with an opportunity to profile and assault the people involved. The police clearly love every minute of it. All of those people would be much more effective if they were together planting gardens and building an alternative infrastructure, and that is what most anarchists who are not sexually frustrated adolescents tend to work toward.

And especially now that they are rolling out all the new crowd control weapons, you would think people would rethink this strategy. If it inspires you to see you friends getting the shit kicked out of them by police, getting locked in cages, suffering indignities and injustices, etc. - why is that? Probably because someone has trained you to imagine this as a precursor to some victorious struggle, when it is really just the shit that you have to crawl through to get there. Also there is the factor of feeling like a saint (shared by both nonviolent fetishists and anarchist types in general), impressing the ladies, getting laid, and compensating for one's own inadequacies and shortcomings.

I don't think street protests are very useful beyond allowing people with no other outlet - working people, without free time and disposable income - to participate in the collective struggle. If you make it your business to be hanging around street protests habitually, chances are that you have the means to do something more productive than that.

But hey, if you really want to, go ahead and keep getting sprayed in the face with teargas, shot with beanbags, paintballs, and rubber bullets. Have your hearing permanently damaged by LRAD. In the near future you will have the privilege to be microwaved by the Tesla death ray, induced into vomiting, shot with projectile Fentanyl patches, and of course gassed with weaponized SSRI antidepressants.

But just remember, if you get gassed with SSRI's, DO NOT ask your doctor about Abilify. It will not make the gas work better for you, and you could end up like those girls in New York.
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Feb 08, 2012 8:47 am

bks wrote:I like almost everything Hedges writes but I can't agree that this was a good piece. He's shrill and way off the mark if he thinks that the BB tactics are somehow killing Occupy. If OWS is dying, it's dying for failure to take some other form beyond simply occupying. If it dies, it dies because no purchase was gained in poor and working-class neighborhoods in the urban centers surrounding the encampments.


From current experience, OWS is growing. I can say what I see here, as protests continue and during the relative hibernation hundreds of groups are holding meetings and growing in membership. So I don't think anything is killing Occupy. But are BB tactics helping?

From reports from Oakland, to take an example, gaining purchase "in poor and working-class neighborhoods in the urban centers surrounding the encampments" is not being helped by a Black Block that is mostly white and not from Oakland giving the pretext to police attacks.

You and I are stuck on this point of the proper stance toward media. Basically, as i see it, the stance should be, in a nice way: fuck you. Be nice to reporters when you see them, but let them know we understand that even if OWS did nothing but help old ladies across the street all day, the press would still search, for the sake of 'balance', for an old lady who claimed that a guy in a black mask squeezed her hand too hard. I'm not saying getting good press is impossible, only that no amount of image-management is going to make the press an ally of OWS in this fight for very long. It's wasted energy.


Hey, absolutely. I say the same in the part you bolded, no? The corporate media will screw you. Don't forget however the media is a much larger group with thousands of new news sources in the hands of their own producers. Furthermore, we're not talking about press here exclusively, or saying actions should be tailored to the press exclusively.

We're talking about the utility of a minority group within the protests using the bourgeois liberals (here as ironic term) they say they dislike as a protective mass within which to hide, and sallying forth to break a couple of windows and provoke the cops. Never mind the press, what good does this do in gaining purchase in the urban neighborhoods, or keeping the "bourgeois liberals" in the fold, or doing anything constructive? What's the point?

Accept that they are part of the system you're fighting, and instead use the energy that might otherwise be put into image-management to reach out to the populations you need to appeal to in order to sustain a movement. Knock on doors. Have community organizing meetings and town halls where priorities for political action can be discussed wherever the poor and working-class live.


Yes. I think this is happening in many places right now. How does Black Block help with that?

Leaving aside the media and all other elements and all the coulds and shoulds, please focus on the subject at hand: What is the function of what the Black Block does at demonstrations? What are its consequences? Why is this desirable?

In your answer, please do not leave out the role of police and provocateurs: Why do they choose to piggy-back on the BB? Why do they have such a hard-on for it?

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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby Sounder » Wed Feb 08, 2012 9:49 am

undead wrote...
I will only say what I said before - that the issue of provocateurs must be answered and anyone acting out violently at a public demonstration (not talking about self defense here) is working for the police intentionally or not. I will also say again: if it's so important to make petty little statements by destroying property, or picking a fight with the police, then do it on your own time, not where normal working people are trying to have a demonstration to improve their lives.


Now all it does is provide the police with an opportunity to profile and assault the people involved. The police clearly love every minute of it. All of those people would be much more effective if they were together planting gardens and building an alternative infrastructure,


or build a conceptual framework based on a continuum model so that the barrier between the inner and outer might be softened or seen to be more permeable.


And especially now that they are rolling out all the new crowd control weapons, you would think people would rethink this strategy.


People need to put on their thinking caps.


If it inspires you to see you friends getting the shit kicked out of them by police, getting locked in cages, suffering indignities and injustices, etc. - why is that? Probably because someone has trained you to imagine this as a precursor to some victorious struggle, when it is really just the shit that you have to crawl through to get there. Also there is the factor of feeling like a saint (shared by both nonviolent fetishists and anarchist types in general), impressing the ladies, getting laid, and compensating for one's own inadequacies and shortcomings.


Until we collectively change the nature of power, which is the ability to enforce or to break any contracts the power center might be involved with, we will flounder as our productive efforts are co-opted by false accounting of values.
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 10:06 am

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A response to Chris Hedges "cancer" article, 140 characters at a time. Add to Favorites new
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tag Politics oakland occupy hedges Edit
Read Chris Hedges attack on Occupy Oakland: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the ... _20120206/
Then, if you really have to, you can read my response on Twitter.
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OccupiedOakTrib
Self-righteous asshole, heal thyself #WarOnHedges http://t.co/RNsjW4cf
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Oh my God, now that I read two paragraphs of Hedges diatribe I realize what complete fucking moron he is.
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Hedges: "Black Bloc anarchists spend most of their fury not on the architects of NAFTA or globalism, but on [others] such as the Zapatistas"
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

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"easier to pick up a rock and throw it through window than organize, or at least figure out which window you should throw a rock through"...
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Problematic though it may have been, the Travellers Aid building takeover took more thought than throwing a random rock at a random window.
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Socialist Hedges "There is a word for this—'criminal.'" vs. Socialist Debs "As long as there's a criminal element, I am of it."
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Hedges: "Once the Occupy movement is painted as a flag-burning, rock-throwing, angry mob we are finished." Me: "Then stop talking."
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
Hedges: "This is a struggle to win hearts & minds of wider public & those within structures of power (including the police)" LOLOLOLOL!!!!
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
"[Black Bloc] arrogate the right, bc they're enlightened & we r not, 2 dismiss & ignore competing points of view as infantile & irrelevant."
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OccupiedOakTrib
Hedges: "They believe only their own clichés. And this makes them not only deeply intolerant but stupid." This shit is hilarious.
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
"We have to go through process of trying to work w/ system and getting screwed. It is only then that we get to move beyond it." OBAMA 2012!!
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

OccupiedOakTrib
The #ftp march was both #BlackBloc and explicitly non-violent. Hedges must be spinning in his armchair.
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@akerfoot It takes hard work and organization to fill 100 bottles full of urine to throw at the cops.
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LMAO!!! RT @akerfoot: @OccupiedOakTrib And I suppose he thinks people just showed up on #J28 and were like "Oh shit! You made a shield too?"
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OccupiedOakTrib
If, like me, you were previously unaware of Derek Jensen, his book covers reveal that he is really into hand and trees: http://t.co/Sq9BpaSt
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#chrishedges #WeAreAllBlackBlocNow
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If the goal of #J28 was to get our asses beat by the police, I wish somebody had told me that in advance. #OO
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OccupiedOakTrib 1 day ago

http://chirpstory.com/li/4160
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 08, 2012 10:10 am

JackRiddler wrote:... Why do they choose to piggy-back on the BB? Why do they have such a hard-on for it?

.


Harsha Walia has a female hard-on for Black Bloc and explains why:

[warning: AD and Luther Blissett do not approve of the following]







she's definitely in need of

Reichian sexuality clinics.

Group psychotherapy with mushrooms.

Or,

Growing a pair and doing it without hiding behind all the bourgeois liberals they like to bitch about all the time.


riiiight.

*
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Feb 08, 2012 10:17 am

bks wrote:Revolution = not televised, my brotha.


Which is exactly why BB kids should have the common sense (and operational security) to be working off-camera instead using non-violent adults as human shields for their Zerzan Tantrums™.
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Re: The Black Bloc Anarchists

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Feb 08, 2012 10:23 am

Zakk Flash needs a better pseudonym wrote:He says that this police violence will "frighten the wider population away from Occupy" and follows, in his next paragraph, by saying that the explosive rise of the movement was the result of pepperspraying of two young women in New York.

So, his position is that violence by police will both scare people away and win them over to you? This thinking is indicative of the slippery argument put out by ideological pacifists who have no grasp of history...


That's a deliberate and painfully dumb mis-reading of Hedges. It's also non-believable that Zakk Flash really has such a simplistic conception of "violence" that he's unable to understand the difference between the Black Bloc's actions and police committing acts of digitally recorded violence on non-violent protesters.

Smart people are the dumbest motherfuckers ever, though, c'est la vie. This thread so far is a lot more important and interesting, grateful for all the points being made here.
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