Anon – Take Your Freedom – Black Autonomy & Abolition Is Our Birthright [2022]

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Source: trueleappress.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/129.-take-your-freedom.pdf

 

Study Guide: This zine makes an argument for an insurrectionary approach to activism and organising, rejecting ‘formal’ organisation, on top of this, it presents a rather neat blueprint for types of actions a group can take and pointed criticisms of NGOs and your typical left-wing organisations.  Following the first section, there is a graphic called “The Police/Prisons State Is…” is stylised in a whirl pattern here which due to formatting I cannot reproduce, please see the source for the actual image. June Jordan’s poem ‘Poem About My Rights’ has been omitted. Date taken from publishers 2022 catalogue. https://trueleappress.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/additions-to-the-catalog-booklet.pdf

 

If the abolition of slave-manacles began as a vision of hands without manacles, then this is the year; if the shutdown of extermination camps began as imagination of a land without barbed wire or the crematorium, then this is the year; if every rebellion begins with the idea that conquerors on horseback are not man-legged gods, that they too drown if plunged in the river, then this is the year. -Martin Espada 

 

Why We Are Abolitionists 

 

When they walked off the beach and into the ocean at Igbo landing, when they leapt from the decks of slave ships in the Middle Passage, when they ran from plantations knowing they could be killed for the crime of stealing back their own freedom, when they escaped and established marriages and kilombos: free communities of fugitives and indigenous people, our ancestors chose freedom and autonomy in the next world rather than enslavement in this one.

 

Abolition is our birthright and it is the debt we owe our ancestors. We know that police forces in the United States evolved directly out of slave patrols, and that laws, prisons and jails were established for the explicit purpose of preserving the institution of slavery: that’s why the 13th amendment includes the clause “except as punishment for a crime.” We will never be free, and our ancestors will never be at peace, until every cell is empty and every cop is strapped of badge and gun and every law is nothing but a scary story for teenagers to whisper around campfires.

 

Until we abolish the police, prisons, laws, and borders, no Black person is free.

 

We are the ones we’ve been waiting for – June Jordan

 

What Is Autonomy? 

 

Autonomy is freedom. Autonomy is what the rebels and angelic troublemakers among our ancestors chose over life itself. Autonomy is the right of each and every living creature to do what we want with our bodies and our lives, and to live our lives on our own terms.

 

Autonomy is being free:

-To get what we need to survive, no matter what.

-To live wherever we want, however we want, with whoever we want

-To define our genders and sexualities for ourselves

-To connect to spirituality and tradition of and how we want to

-To create families if and however we want

-To address conflict and harm in the ways we want

-To have abortions, access hormones and/or surgery , to choose freely form the full range of options for all types of medicine, healthcare, mobility aids, etc that we need.

-From racism, misogynoir, homophobia, transphobia, ableism, capitalism, and every other system that gives anyone the power to steal anyone else’s freedom.

 

All About Autonomist Politics

 

Autonomist politics are based in the truth that the freedom and autonomy of every living creature is sacred. Anarchy, Anarcha-transfeminism, Anarkata, insurrectionism, and Anti-Authoritarianism are all different names for autonomous politics: but the books we read and the labels we use don’t really matter. What’s important is that we believe in abolition: abolishing police, prisons, borders, laws, and all forms of social control and domination. There are three essential parts to every type of autonomist political practice: 

 

  1. Self-Determination & Decentralization 

 

Self-Determination means that not only is every individual free to choose how they engage in the work of abolition and who they do it with, but every community is free to determine what their collective needs are, how they would like to work together to meet them, and what they want abolition to look like, based on their particular geography, history, culture, traditions and spiritual wisdom; and that every single member of every community participates directly in making those decisions. It means that there is no singular right way to do things, and that no organizational or bureaucratic structure is more important than the rights and autonomy of each individual or community, so we don’t operate in formal organization structures subject one another to social hierarchies. Self-Determination means that everyone is respected as a leader and no one can be forced to obey anyone else.

 

  1. Mutual Aid

 

Mutual aid projects are long-term commitments by communities to meet their own survival outside of of the systems of capitalism and the law. Mutual aid is also, necessarily, mutual: it’s people who are being harmed by the same systems working together to defend themselves from the violence of those systems. It recognizes that the reasons we all struggle to meet our survival needs is not because there’s anything wrong with us, but because of everything that is wrong with the society we live in. Mutual aid projects are co-stewared collectively, and there is no authority deciding who deserves support and who doesn’t. Mutual aid projects can be things like free food distros, jail and prison letter-writing projects, eviction defense, community distros, jail and prison letter-writing projects, eviction defense, community skill-shares and political education, even free house parties where folks can enjoy music and friendship without having to pay an expensive cover. There are as many opportunities for mutual aid as there are things we all need, deserve and enjoy!

 

  1. Direct Action

Direct action is when we act like we are already free, and directly change things about our environments and communities in ways that make us more free. Mutual Aid is a type of direct action. This can look like liberating the food and resources we need from stores owned by big corporations and distributing it for free in our neighborhoods. Direct action is both creative and destructive: we destroy the symbols and institutions of white supremacy, like police ars and jails and corporate businesses; and we build infrastructure to support autonomy by doing things like bailing our friends out of jail, creating public art without permission, taking over abandoned houses and buildings so people can live there for free, sharing in the raising of the kids in our community without following the rules of legal guardianship or involving CPS.

 

We need, in every community, a group of angelic troublemakers. – Bayard Austin 

 

What Does Autonomous Action Look Like?

 

Autonomous Actions can be really big, like marches with thousands of people. Mass autonomous actions like this when communities take direct action as a collective, without being led by any singular person, nonprofit, or other type of organization. Autonomous action means everyone is looking out for each other’s safety, access, and needs while we’re in the streets together; and no one is “in charge” of policing people’s  behavior or telling a crowd what to do. Anyone can call for an autonomous action: you don’t have to have any “organizing” experience, political connections, or clout to have the right to call on your community to take direct action. Sometimes autonomous actions are called for by individuals, sometimes they are called for by underground networks or collectives, and often they are called for anonymously.

 

They can also start out as actions that an organization or “leader” has called for and is trying to control. Any Black person who shows up in the streets has the right to be free and encourage others to exercise their autonomy as well. This means that even if the “organizers” of an action are trying to tell folks what they can and can’t do, we don’t have to listen. Sometimes folks who don’t want to be told how to act can even initiate marches that break away from actions that are being controlled by nonprofits or celebrity activists.

 

Autonomous Actions Can Also Be Small: 

 

Something you do alone or with a small group of trusted friends, sometimes even in secret. Sometimes individuals and small group can agree to coordinate a specific date when everyone will take lots of different and separate actions. Mutual aid projects like court and jail support, food and grocery distros, eviction defense, and community gardens in abandoned lots are all autonomous actions. Graffiti, stealing of confederate flags, guerrilla theater, and puppet shows are also types of creative autonomous action. Autonomous action can be anything you can dream up!

 

Why Are Some Actions Called Anonymously? 

 

  1. COINTELPRO showed us how easily state can target and destroy militant movements when “leaders” and organizations are highly visible and publicly identifiable. Anonymity is a counter-surveillance safety measure.

 

  1. Nonprofits and political organizations have betrayed and co-opted social movements in ways that deeply harm and endanger our communities, so many people are starting to move away from formal organization as a framework for taking direct action. Most autonomous actions are just called by small groups of friends with no formal association to each other, so there isn’t really any name that would make sense to put on flyers and social media graphics.

 

  1. Creating a culture where communities show up for direct actions even when they don’t personally know the people calling for them helps more people feel empowered to organize direct actions, and disrupts the culture of “activist celebrities.”

 

What Are The Demands Of An Autonomous Action?

 

Nonprofit organizations have warped our understanding of what direct action is. They define direct action as something people do to put pressure on political “targets” like elected officials, to meet “demands” by making policy changes. But that’s not what direct action really is: it’s about using our collective power as regular people to change the world around us DIRECTLY, instead of relying on “targets” to change things for us.

 

Autonomous actions don’t have any one person or organization dictating the “message.” People come to actions with lots of different ideas about how to get free, and autonomous actions leave space for us to make and meet many demands at once.

 

How Do I Know An Autonomous Action Is Safe?

 

You don’t. There is no safe way to fight back against police violence. As Black folks, we know we aren’t safe in public no matter what we are doing, wearing, or saying. Our abolitionist ancestors were courageous and bold because they knew we have never had anything to lose but our chains, that there has never been and will never be any safety for us in this world until we abolish the state. “Peaceful” and “nonviolent” protests are often extremely violent and unsafe, because police don’t care whether or not protesters are following the law and attack people for gathering to protest regardless of how they do it.

 

While there is no way to guarantee everyone’s safety, it is on all of us to look out for one another and do what we can to protect each, and there’s lots of stuff we can all do to keep ourselves and each other safe. Even though we are never safe, we can always be careful with each other and dangerous together. It’s important to think carefully and prepare for the risks associated with taking direct action, including the possibility of arrest and catching charges. If you can’t trust yourself to stay silent under questioning, or to reject plea deals that sell out other people and damage the movement, you shouldn’t be taking direct action with other people.

 

We are each other’s harvest: we are each other’s business: we are each other’s magnitude and bond. 

– Gwendolyn Brooks  

 

We Keep Us Safe 

 

Anti-Repression Work is the work we do to build up the strength and knowledge of our communities to resist attacks from the state in the form of policing, surveillance, militarization, imprisonment and legislation.

 

Communities of color face repression and violence from the police and the state all the time in the form of ICE raids, and surveillance of Black and Brown neighborhoods, and surveillance of immigrant and muslim communities. Communities of color that take political action face even more repression in the form of political arrests, trumped-up charges, surveillance, incarceration, and infiltration.

 

Anti Repression work look like jail and court support, prisoner support; educating one another about our rights and about how to fight charges and practice non-cooperation with the state in court; and building our capacity for handling conflict.

 

Ways We Can Protect Each Other In The Streets

 

  1. Write down and share your local National Lawyers Guild Mass Defense Legal Support hotline number, which you can find here nlg.org/massdefenseprogram

 

  1. If a march is going too fast and people are getting left a behind, start a chant like, “Slow down, tighten up!” to encourange the crowd to find a pace that everyone can keep up with.

 

  1. Always roll with a buddy or a crew. If you see someone there alone who looks like they could use company and support, and you have some street experience, offer to be their buddy!

 

  1. NEVER record anything, not even speeches or “peaceful” actions where nobody is doing anything illegal. Police and the state target people they identify in footage from protests, with charges and sometimes even with killings in the cases of many Black activists who were disappeared after the Ferguson uprisings. If someone else is taking pictures of video, ask them to stop and if they refuse, hold up a sign , banner or umbrella to block the camera and /or hide people’s faces.

 

  1. If police are coming in to make arrests, help undocumented folks and others who can’t risk arrest get away from the scene however you can. Practice and skill up in de-arresting so you can help folks get away. Have conversations about de-arrest and ask your buddies if that’s an intervention they’d like you to make if they get grabbed.

 

  1. If you see someone get arrested, try to get the legal name and date of death, so it’s easier to find them and bail them out. If there are arrests at the action, show up to do jail support afterwards! Bring water, snacks, food, and/or cigarettes if you can.

 

  1. If you have the meansand are br protective supplies like water bottles, goggles, heat-resistant gloves, bandannas, etc., bring enough to share and offer them to others.

 

  1. NEVER talk to cops. If you are stopped and /or questioned, ask, “Am I free to go?” and if you’re being detained, say, “I choose to remain silent.”

 

  1. NEVER bring your phone to an action. Leave your phone at home, or at least in your car!

 

  1. NEVER help ANYONE identify another protester. Do not police anyone else’s behavior, or accuse people of being undercover cops unless you know for a FACT they are.

 

Street Actions:

 

  1. Start bail funds and jail and court support projects in your community: ones that serve everyone, not just protesters.

 

  1. Start a prisoner letter writing project, and talk to your community about how y’all can support the families of incarcerated people in your area.

 

  1. Cultivate strong, trusting relationships and build bridges between activist communities and other communities facing repression. Educate yourself and your community about different transformative justice practices; and use them to handle conflict without involving the state.

 

  1. Educate yourself and your community about digital security, anti-repression cultural practices, your legal rights, and how to resist surviellance and counterinsurgency programs like CVE (Countering Violent Extremism) in Black, immigrant, and Muslim communities..

 

  1. Start ICE watch and cop watch projects.

 

  1. Root out patriarchy, misogynoir, transphobia, classism, colorism and ableism is your community. Misogynists and others who use their privilege to dominate others and control spaces are the state’s best tools for destroying communities and movements.

 

  1. Reject respectability politics: don’t allow those who victim-blame to have a platform. Don’t entertain “good protester/bad protester” rhetoric or language that justifies the criminalization of any community.

 

  1. Create networks of community care, peer support, and mutual aid.

 

  1. Support your friends who get arrested, are facing charges, or are doing time, and call on your community to help support them. Remember that all prisoners are political prisoners!

 

  1. Have noise demos and/or sign outside prisons and jails to let those inside know they’re on folks minds.

 

All kinds of kids will die 

Who don’t believe in lies, and bribes, and contentment 

And a lousy peace. 

Of course, the wise and the learned

Who pen editorials in the papers, and the gentelement with Dr. In front of their names 

White and black, 

Who make surveys and write books

Will live on weaving words to smother the kids who die 

And the sleazy courts, 

And the bribe-reaching police, 

And the blood-loving generals, 

And the money-loving preachers

Will all raise their hands against the kids who die, 

Beating them with laws and clubs and bayonets and bullets

To fighting the people- 

For the kids who die are like iron in the blood of the people-

And the old and rich don’t want the people

To taste the iron of the kids who die,

Don’t want the people to get wise to their own power, 

-Langston Hughes 

Baker Baron – Beating back Mosley in Notting Hill, 1958 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Source: Forbidden Britain, Steve Humphries and Pamela Gordon, BBC Books, 1994

Study Guide: Baker Baron, born in 1925 in Port Antonia, Jamaica, had three brothers and a sister. Their father was a wharf official. Baron joined the Royal Air Force when he was fifteen by telling them that he was a year older. in 1944, after serving in the RAF for four years, he arrived in Britain and settled in London where he got a job working as a labourer on the railways. In 1958 at the time of the riots Baron was living in Notting Hill where he was involved in anti-fascist activities and in the campaign for better housing for the West Indian community. He still lives in West London.

 

Mosley tried to stir up a conflict between the blacks and the whites because his aim was to drive the blacks frorn North Kensington, to drive them from the shores of England. I wasn’t for that because I came here to fight for the mother country… Mosley was stirring up a hate campaign, his supporters, the Teddy boys running around with bicycle chains and ‘Keep Britain White, Keep Britain White’. They were going around in groups seeking out a coloured and beating him up, fighting, repressing coloured man or coloured woman, they go round kicking them about and beating them up.

 

Well, black people were so frightened at that time that they wouldn’t leave their houses, they wouldn’t come out, they wouldn’t walk the streets of Portobello Road. So we decided to form a defence force to fight against that type of behaviour and we did. We organized a force to take home coloured people wherever they were living in the area. We were not leaving our homes and going out attacking anyone, but if you attack our homes you would be met, that was the type of defence force we had. We were warned when they were coming and we had a posse to guard our headquarters.

 

When they told us that they were coming to attack that night I went around and told all the people that was living in the area to withdraw that night. The women I told them to keep pots, kettles of hot water boiling, get some caustic soda and if anyone tried to break down the door and come in, to just lash out with them. The men, well we were armed. During the day they went out and got milk bottles, got what they could find and got the ingredients of making the Molotov cocktail bombs. Make no mistake, there were iron bars, there were machetes, there were all kinds of arms, weapons, we had guns.

 

We made preparations at the headquarters for the attack. We had men on the housetop waiting for them, I was standing on the second floor with the lights out as look-out when I saw a massive lot of people out there. I was observing the behaviour of the crowd outside from behind the curtains upstairs and they say, ‘Let’s burn the niggers, let’s lynch the niggers.’ That’s the time I gave the order for the gates to open and throw them back to where they were coming from. I was an ex-serviceman, I knew guerrilla warfare, I knew all about their game and it was very, very effective.

 

I says, ‘Start bombing them.’ When they saw the Molotov cocktails coming and they start to panic and run. It was a very serious bit of fighting that night, we were determined to use any means, any weapon, anything at our disposal for our freedom. We were not prepared to go down like dying dogs. But it did work, we gave Sir Oswald Mosley and his Teddy boys such a whipping they never come back in Notting Hill. I knew one thing, the following morning we walked the streets free because they knew we were not going to stand for that type of behaviour.”

 

Some black anarchists in Philly – Notes on September 26th: Reflections on looting, black liberation and anarchism [2023] 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Notes on September 26th: Reflections on looting, black liberation and anarchism [2023] 

Some black anarchists in Philly

Source: https://phlanticap.noblogs.org/notes-on-september-26th-reflections-on-looting-black-liberation-and-anarchism/ 

 

Study Guide: An anonymous submission written by a group of Black anarchists which talks about the dynamics of the rioting and how it compares to the George Floyd rebellion of 2020.  Another group of anarchists in the city wrote a report back to the same page 3 days after the riots, this action, a report back which illustrates what the anonymous submitters were likely referencing was linked in a Itsgoingdown upload of the text, which for some reason changed the title to “Revolt Across Philadelphia: Black Liberation and the Police Murder of Eddie Irizarry” and some of the language, notably “attack” was changed to “actions” in the last paragraph. [https://itsgoingdown.org/revolt-across-philadelphia-report/]

 

[1] The WEB DuBois School of Abolition are critiqued further in the article “What the Fuck Does Reconstruction Even Mean to Y’all? A Critique of W.E.B. DuBois Movement School & the Black Left in Philadelphia” which is also featured in this reader.

 

[2] “On Tuesday, September 26, during the widespread looting, a small group attacked Clarkville. It’s another business that’s gentrifying West Philly and exploits its workers. After hearing about the looting we decided it was an easy way to contribute to the chaos. We read a cool zine called Toward Insurrection [*], in that zine they talk about anarchists interfacing with the riot. One way to do that is targeting our enemies just outside of where the riots are happening to overextend the police. Hopefully actions like these will grow the general disorder. We encourage other like-minded individuals to take action similar to this one next time.”

[https://phlanticap.noblogs.org/clarkvilled-attacked-during-eddie-irizarry-riots/]

 

[*] Toward Insurrection is a zine written two years prior, it also illuminates the complex relationships present in Black revolts in Philadelphia and the (often white) anarchist participants in them. This segment is a highlight that really shows just how disconnected the Black lumpen and white anarchist communities were at the time.

 

“In Philly, anarchists were far from being the main character of the 2020 uprisings. Most anarchists attended the Walter Wallace riots around 52nd St in October in an observational or supportive role, joining the fierce street fighting initiated by the majority-black residents of that neighborhood. In that context, those who arrived in black bloc were met with skepticism and occasionally with violence. At least one group of anarchists in bloc got jumped near 52nd St, while another pair were accused of being cops, then agitators, and narrowly avoided being attacked.

 

It was heartwarming to see multi-racial groups of people coming together to fight cops in the streets and set things on fire — this happened especially in May, when riots erupted in the wealthier downtown, commercial zone where none of us had anything at stake and everything felt up for grabs. The antipathy towards anarchists in bloc, though, when the riots moved to West Philly — a gentrifying neighborhood where many of us live, but are not originally from — shows us that these multi-racial moments of struggle are far from doing away the real hierarchies and differences between us, even in the joy and chaos of the moment. Many of us who are white anarchists severely underestimate the extent to which non-white people, whether rebels or reactionaries, distrust white people, regardless of what they hear us say about our politics. This distrust is heightened when they see us in their places of residence.”

[https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/towardsinsurrection-riseup-net-toward-insurrection#toc3]

 

Notes on September 26th: Reflections on looting, black liberation and anarchism [2023] 

 

On Monday August 14th 2023, Philadelphia police officer Mark Dial shot and killed Eddie Irizarry as he sat in his car. Police initially lied saying that Eddie attacked the cop with a knife, but video footage showed that Eddie was shot in mere seconds while seated in his car with the window up. Following this Dial was suspended for 30 days pending termination. In early September Dial was charged with a number of crimes including murder but the presiding judge would eventually dismiss his charges. The cops who attended the court date in uniform cheered and celebrated when the charges were dropped. On September 26th, that same day Eddie’s family and the Party for Socialism and Liberation (alongside Black leftist groups like Black Alliance for Peace and the W.E.B. DuBois Movement School) organized a peaceful march through Center City protesting the decision. That demonstration dispersed after a couple hours but was followed by looting, initially in Center City before spreading to West, North, and Northeast Philly as the night went on.

The Black liberation movement is alive! Those who say it’s dead are either racist or not in the street and these revolts are the proof. Although the number of people in the streets was smaller than in 2020, there was widespread revolt across Philadelphia. Police killed Eddie Irizarry, a non-Black Puerto Rican, and Black people responded with revolt. Similarly in 2020 in Kenosha, WI when Kyle Rittenhouse killed two white people in the midst of a riot against police and later had his charges dropped, Black people rioted in the Bay Area. These are both examples of a Black consciousness that recognizes anti-Black systems regardless of if they are targeting Black people in a specific instance.

Here in Philly looters and rioters were well prepared. People were overwhelmingly masked, wearing black clothes, and many were brandishing tools. The looting was organized spontaneously over social media the same day as it took place. People used police scanners to monitor police and prepare for their responses. Numerous businesses, car lots, and ATMs were targeted throughout the city, spreading the PPD thin. Many participants used cars to move between businesses, as getaways, and to generally stay mobile.

It is a far too common belief among radicals that the state is omniscient. This night of rebellion proves otherwise, that opportunity is abundant for insurrectionary activity! As Black radicals (and generally for “political” people) we need to understand it’s possible to get away with things if we plan on challenging the state. Many ordinary people already know this and behaved accordingly.

The riots on Tuesday night into Wednesday are an image from the future. Sprawling and scattered rebellions are becoming the norm. Better prepared participants spread across the city, overwhelming police forces that feel they cannot defend everything at once. What moves do we want to make in this new context?

After the run on the Apple store, as people saw that their looted iPhones and iPads were being tracked and bricked by security systems, they smashed them immediately. Poured orange juice on them. Dropped them into the sewers. A beautiful display of how commodities are bullshit. Destroying anti-Blackness necessarily involves attacking property and the relations needed to maintain it, whether commodities or capital. Black consciousness cannot be separated from class consciousness.

It is important to note that this revolt and the George Floyd Uprising (including the Walter Wallace rebellion nestled within it) hold key differences. This recent riot was overwhelmingly Black with minor Latine participation in the Northeast, as opposed to the multiracial character of 2020. This lines up with the reality of Black people being the most advanced in struggle against the so-called United States. September’s revolt also saw a more chill vibe with little focus on fighting police, as looters helped each other attack property and evade capture. They seemed to have a more collaborative and joyous attitude compared to the Walter Wallace rebellion of October 2020, which saw more skepticism and lateral violence amongst participants. Another interesting difference from those events was that September 2023 saw Black people of various ideologies and walks of life moving together in insurrection. As a result the revolt rejected a conventional political character while still maintaining an inherent black consciousness (best exemplified by the occasional Black Trump supporter joining in on the smash-and-grab).

The second day, looting continued in a smaller capacity although the larger crowds that gathered were noticeably absent. Instead, people mostly used their cars to do smash and grabs. The police were also more prepared and mobilized on the second day. Understandly, this probably meant a lot more people stayed home because the police presence was far more intense on the street.

The Left was either too afraid of or uninterested in participating in the Black revolt, sidestepped and left behind by young people who organized themselves via social media. These socialist groups constantly talk about the need for organziation. But young Black people on the 26th were ready to go. They didn’t need any self appointed community organizers then and they don’t now. The looting on September 26th is just a form of self organization that the Left refuses to take seriously. At best we saw boilerplate analyses that looting pales in comparison to corporate wage theft. The WEB DuBois School of Abolition went so far as to make a statement saying [1] “it isn’t our task to either celebrate or condemn the actions” of the looters. The inability (and cowardice) of leftist groups to even consider publicly celebrating attacks on capital by young Black people speaks to a real division between what Black people are doing versus what the Left is doing. The issue of how to include more activist and leftist organizations is as irrelevant as ever, the question now is how do we continue to sidestep the left and add to the growth of ever more terrible revolts?

Anarchists made an effort to add to the situation. Anarchists were not only present during the riots (albeit to a limited degree), some also carried out attacks [2]. Although anarchists were largely late to the game in terms of intentionally participating, a good amount of anarchists showed up. Segregation and being in different social networks may have played a part in why our response as anarchists was delayed. A proposal of dispersed attacks was made and followed through on. That said, an opportunity to raise morale was missed by prioritizing atomized attack over group action. The anarchist space in Philadelphia is growing right now, and tempering cautious attitudes with encouragement and support can further encourage that growth. Black clothes are cool again, anarchists need not worry about alienating others with monochrome outfits, though some sportswear brands (Nike, Adidas, and Champion were common) might go a long way.

This moment felt like an opening salvo of mass revolts to come. Let’s stay ready for next time.

– Some black anarchists in Philly

Prince Imari A. Obadele – New Afrikan, Revolutionary Nationalist … and Anarchist [1996]

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20100604003156/http://illvox.org/2007/10/new-afrikan-revolutionary-nationalist-and-anarchist/

[…] to your question about my perspective of anarchism, i really don’t know enough about it to mack it to you properly, Cuz. But from what i think i understand about anarchism i don’t see where it’s inconsistent with what We’re about as Reparators. In fact, the basic tenets of anarchism – as i am aware of them – and, if i’m correct about what i think i know, then, me thinks me’s an anarchist!

Now, “real” anarchist (meaning those who have chosen anarchism as a way of life and are true to the game) probably wouldn’t consider me an anarchist. They would, no doubt, find it a contradiction my being an elected official of a New Afrikan Revolutionary Nationalist, pre-independence government. But, i guess the same thing can be said about some Black Nationalists who probably wouldn’t consider me a nationalist, either. After all, i eat pork, hang in after-hour joints, and run with muggers, druggers and thieves. Nationalists don’t fuck with the “lumpen”. So, i guess what it gets down to is a matter of definition, and who’s doing the defining. i have a good track-record, and i’m relatively intelligent, so, i’ll try to make what i’m about to say coherent enough to be able to make some sense out of it. i have to tell you, though, i have no written material on anarchism so most of my analysis is based upon what i’ve been able to gather from reading anarchist newspapers. If i am not mistaken, anarchists struggle for a world with no nations, no states, no exploitation, no racism, no sexism (which includes no homophobia), no repression, no oppression, no forms of aggression and so on and they believe in agitation and confrontation with the “state” and other arms of repression and oppression to reach the ultimate state of liberty. i’m up for all that, and some!

One of the major principles of Amistad-March 31 is: “We believe in personal liberties guided by collective responsibility.” That basically breaks down to this: as long as what one does does not cause anyone else pain and discomfort (spiritually, physically and mentally), or, as in Our case, affect the work of the struggle, no one is going to fuck with another about personal preferences. Our Declaration unequivocally commits and demands of Us active confrontation with oppressive powers, for the express purpose of creating a better world. We just happen to say it in a different way; everything is reparations with Us. This helps to keep Us from getting bogged down in debates and polemics about specific ideologies and what they’re supposed to be and pins Us down to specific work with encompasses almost ALL ideologies.

The New Afrikan Declaration of Independence (which is is what most of Our philosophy is based on) likewise commits Us, indeed, every New Afrikan who has affirmed the Declaration and Creed, to this: socialist, world-wide revolution. And to, in my opinion, the ultimate state of liberty; where there are no laws and repressive governments and other agencies to enforce them; no exploitation of the land and people; where everyone is in harmony, thus no oppression and exploitation being necessary.

The New Afrikan Declaration of Independence says: “…in consequence of Our raging desire to be free of this oppression, to destroy this oppression wherever it assaults mankind in the world, and in consequence of Our inextinguishable determination to go a different way, to build a new and better world…”

Paragraph #3 begins: “Our’s is a revolution against oppression – Our Own oppression and that of all people in the world. In another place: “To support and wage the World Revolution until all people everywhere are so free…”

“To end exploitation…”

“To assure equality of rights for the sexes…” “To end color and class discrimination, while not abolishing salubrious diversity, and to promote self-respect and mutual respect among all people in the society…”

“To place the major means of production and trade in the trust of the state and to assure the benefits of this earth and man’s genius and labor to society and all its members.

“(Note: This is [from] the verbatim document written and signed on
31 March 1968. In light of Our revolution’s present consciousness of the historic oppression of [wimmin] and the concepts and terminology which have supported that oppression, the use of the male-centered language seems a curious anachronism. Our awareness of the inappropriateness of this male-centeredness is a sign of the growth which laboring toward independence has brought Us. Dr. IAO, 1991).”

On the surface, it would appear that it is contradictory for me to interpret a socialist/nationalist/revolutionary document as an anarchist philosophy and to call myself an anarchist. On the surface it would appear so! But, just as some enemies of the NAIM would interpret a Black, or Red Nationalist who is socialist as being the same as a National-Socialist / Nazi (which is White Nationalism, which is White Supremacy, which is racism), or would compare segregation (an oppressive condition imposed upon Us by Our enemy) with separation (an act by Us to relieve Ourselves of that oppressive condition), or the violence of the oppressor with the violence of the oppressed, one would be as wrong as two left shoes on a snake to say that it is a contradiction for a New Afrikan Independence fighter/nation-builder to be an anarchist!

Here is the hit: Political power, indeed life, is a process. Ideally We move from a bad state of existence to a higher, or better, state of existence. Marxists put it this way: We move from capitalism, to socialism, to communism. According to them, communism being the highest level of existence that people as societies can obtain. The anarchist takes the process a step further. The anarchist believes that people can obtain a level of existence without any dictatorship. (The Marxists believe that the governmental structure must still exist and that the ideal situation is that the proletariat becomes the government hence the dictatorship of the worker.) i’m for no government at all! Ultimately.

i say ultimately because, at this stage in the process of Reparating there have to be organized entities to mash on suckers who want to oppress the rest of Us, and i’m talking about all forms of oppression: political, social, economic and religious. Which brings Us to the absolute necessity of New Afrikan Revolutionary Nationalism, and why Black Nationalism is beginning to be more appealing to the masses of Blacks.

Da Doc (Dr. Obadele, PGRNA) puts it this way: “[There is] the reality of an underlying dynamic in America. People make events and history, but they do not make events or history in a vacuum. White control of the information media and the schools has always been a factor operating against Us. …It is clear to most of Our people that the strategy of using electoral politics to gain Our larger goals has failed Us. Our youth in the public schools are being ‘pushed out’ in large, unacceptable numbers, and those who remain are being assaulted and often damaged physically by White supremacist teaching and an abundance of White, female teachers who know nothing of Black love and are supported by a dominating abundance of purposeful White male and female supervisors. The drug economy has become pervasive in Our necessary pattern of producing, earning and exchanging. …Many of Our people – not just teenagers – are without either self-confidence or hope. “The u.s. congress is boldly and openly pursuing an anti-New Afrikan agenda, symbolized by its prison campaign and its refusal to deal, so far, with reparations. The u.s. supreme court’s gutting of Black Congressional and judicial districts is being done, in the words of Sandra Day O’Connor, to save Us from segregation.

“The Congressional Black Caucus today demonstrates neither comprehensive vision nor a willingness to fight. The NAACP has so far failed to move beyond palliatives.

“The united [snakes] staged an armed attack [several of them] on the RNA Provisional Government in mississippi and then jailed several leaders. ..Along with the killing of Black Panthers and George Jackson and the assault on Attica…

“We may say today that while the Provisional Government has not been simply waiting, the enemy, as predicted, is driving Our people toward Us.” That pretty much says it relative to the necessity and appeal of Nationalism to the masses of Blacks.

The White Supremacy Power System is driving people to Nationalism. It also says that We did not create the conditions and that in spite of all our efforts to “get along,” as Rodney King would have it, Whites don’t want to get along with Us and they have made that perfectly clear enough for even the dumbest trick to understand. We must not forget that power is a process AND that people are moved more by conditions and events than it is that they make conditions and events. We did not create these conditions. The White Power system did.

Oppression, by its very nature, means that we have to work within the framework of oppression until We can bust out of it. What i mean by that is as long as We don’t control Our lives everything We do in the attempt to control Our lives is dictated by the oppressive conditions that the oppressor created. Yeah, Cuz, me thinks me’s an anarchist, but at this stage of the game where i have to work from is, and must be, Black Revolutionary Nationalism. It is the only effective counter-measure to oppression for Us at this time. Anarchism is the IDEAL state of existence, but it is the last step in the process. So, theoretically, i am an anarchist, but practically speaking, i’m a Reparator. With all the problems that Black people are beset with, and all of them are racially based; internally WE have Our niggahs, bitches and boys. Externally We have the multi-faceted assaults on Black by Whites, and there is the attitude that people have that people cannot control themselves without being controlled.

With all these things facing Us we have to deal with the separation of idealism and practice. We’ve got too much ass to kick right now. i mean, WE’ve got a lot of reparating to do. So, that’s my perspective on anarchism. i believe in and struggle for an anarchist society. But i don’t control the existing conditions, so i practice New Afrikan Revolutionary Nationalism.

Ikemba Kuti – The 4th Precinct: A Black Anarchist’s Perspective on Struggle in Minneapolis’ Northside Streets 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20210413095620/http://m1aa.org/?p=1169 

4thPrecinctPamphlet

 

Study Guide: The author of this piece was a member of the (now defunct) 1st Of May Anarchist organisation The article articulates a familiar scene for many of us. The idea that anyone ‘kicking off’ at a protest is a white, outside agitator. Ignoring the history of Black insurgent movements and tradition. Any re-telling of this tale-as-old-as-time will conjure images of the West Indies Regiment made up of Black troops who put down slave uprisings. Of the Black cops defending the white state, of Black politicians dressed up to the nines demanding we ‘keep it peaceful’ as their paycheck depends on it. Our struggle is not just against the state, capital & racist white political organisations but also against our self-appointed leadership, whatever shape they take or label they use.

 

I came across this text after reading about a similar story in a reupload of a Unicorn Riot article on Itsgoingdown, this extract I think will serve as a great introduction to the piece;

 

On July 9th, 2016 Black Lives Matter Minneapolis (BLM-Mpls), along with members of other groups and non-group affiliated young people, led a protest march and shutdown of highway I-94 In St Paul, MN to demand justice for Philando Castile [A black man in his 30s who was murdered by police]

 

During the shutdown, a multi-jurisdiction task force fired multiple rounds of rubber bullets, flash bangs, CS gas, rubber ball grenades, 40mm marker rounds, and pepper spray at protesters. In response, water bottles, rocks, and firecrackers were hurled back by numerous protesters towards police lines.

 

In recent days, as tensions have grown over issues such as noise levels at occupations and defense against white supremacists, questions of militancy, anarchism, direct action, and community self-defense have shot to the front of public conversation.

 

During and after the action, prominent BLM-Mpls activists and others made statements asserting that it was solely outside individuals who were instigating self-defense against police.

 

A twitter user named @BlackVisionsMN wrote the following day;

“White anarchists and agent provocateurs have been endangering Black lives this entire shutdown.” 

 

An organizer also stated through a loudspeaker that “white anarchists” were throwing fireworks onto the highway and thus “endangering black lives”.

Throughout the action, white protesters presumed to be anarchists based on their protective facial masks were verbally pressured and confronted by some BLM-Mpls allies and activists. Black anarchists and others were seen coming to the defense of their white friends before, during, and after the I-94 demonstrations, arguing the importance of focusing energy on fighting for social and economic justice instead of blaming their own allies for police repression.

An anonymous black anarchist organizer summed up their frustration and stance on militancy by stating:

“I’m tired of this. Honestly. I’m gonna say some shit and I’m not gonna censor anything and you need to understand. Niggas been fuckin’ shit up. And by this I mean both at the 4th precinct and at 1-94. The militance that I’ve witnessed has been by hood niggas … with no politics and with no fucks given. I’m starting to understand that white liberals’ quest to seem so “not racist” and “POC-friendly,” and black leaders’ internalized respectability, has people completely ignoring the existence of black militance. That’s what I’ve seen. At the same time, I was too busy trying not to get hit with marker rounds up front to see everything, but if they were doing anything, white anarchists certainly weren’t alone.”

 

The implied targets of BLM-Mpls criticism and their supporters expressed their own frustration of BLM-Mpls’s statements. “Phillip”, an organizer with the IWW’s General Defense Committee (GDC), stated;

 

“White ally means fighting back. It doesn’t mean taking orders from some leader/authority on the megaphone. It means fighting back SIDE BY SIDE with our melanated comrades, not standing in front of them and snitching to the peace police that people are picking up rocks.”

 

Ikemba Kuti – The 4th Precinct: A Black Anarchist’s Perspective on Struggle in Minneapolis’ Northside Streets 

 

“As an anarchist, of African descent, I argue that we need revolutionary struggle controlled by the grassroots and not by top-down leaders. It was the domination of top-down leadership from BLM-Minneapolis, and their seemingly unconscious commitment to the system, that effectively steered Northside community militants away from 1) the encampment, 2) becoming further politicized, and 3) in playing any role in the organizing of their own communities self-determination. Their voices were effectively hushed; just as the system we function under has done for centuries to oppressed people of color.”

Jamar Clark

On November 15th, 2015, police executed Jamar Clark in North Minneapolis, MN. Several witnesses claim that Mr. Clark was handcuffed and on the ground when he was shot in the head. Following the execution, an occupation of the 4th precinct police station took place on Plymouth Avenue.

The call for the encampment and occupation came from Black Lives Matter – Minneapolis. BLM-MPLS, is a part of the nation-wide organization of chapters that is backed by the Democratic Party of the same system that ensures black and brown communities are hyper-policed. BLM-St. Paul is not a part of the nation-wide organization, and has even been condemned for making Black Lives Matter as a whole “look bad” for simply chanting “Pigs in a blanket, fry ‘em like bacon…” while they are not a chartered chapter.

BLM-MPLS’ call for the encampment resulted in BLM organizers heading the movement with little to no democratic process until later in the struggle. The encampment also generated tensions arising from different agendas, ideologies, levels of anger, and an array of different tactics that different organizations and members of the community aimed to use.

The nationally connected Black Lives Matter-Minneapolis did, and does, great work at getting people to come out. Unfortunately, they also do great work channeling that revolutionary energy into their dogmatic nonviolent reformism due to an undeniable affiliation with the Democratic Party (the system), which must be noted by those interested in liberation of the people, and which is quickly revealed through research on those who are heading #CampaignZero (Black Lives Matter flow chart to attain a world with limited police terror).

Take note of campaign zero’s four person “planning team” these are important facts: “In 2014, Brittany helped bring community voice to the Ferguson Commission and President Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing as an appointee to each. She’s been named one of TIME Magazine’s 12 New Faces of Black Leadership”. This individual works directly for the president.

The remaining three are also heavily connected to non-profits such as Teach for America (TFA), which is also historically connected to maintaining the system. For example: TFA was recently given a grant to continue to project their brand through the media.  Furthermore, another member of this four-person team was the other recipient; she is the director of St Louis TFA. TFA is, effectively, the leading edge of the neoliberal attempts to gut city schools and further hinder education equity, which in turn systemically hinders black and brown kids educational achievement under the guise of helping those kids.

As an anarchist, of African descent, I argue that we need revolutionary struggle controlled by the grassroots and not by top-down leaders. It was the domination of top-down leadership from BLM-Minneapolis, and their seemingly unconscious commitment to the system, that effectively steered Northside community militants away from 1) the encampment, 2) becoming further politicized, and 3) in playing any role in the organizing of their own communities self-determination. Their voices were effectively hushed; just as the system we function under has done for centuries to oppressed people of color.

Non-Profits and Their Agenda

Building off of the last section, it is easy to see how chartered Black Lives Matter organizers (not the people who come out to support and demonstrate), along with other reformist non-profits, can build movements through agitation. However, movements are more than just people in the streets. Non profit-ism is, more often than not, directly connected to government co-optation of a could-be movement; many times non-profits hijack a movement into electoral politics for Sanders, Clinton, or whoever claims that they are creating change for you while they are lining their pockets. You create change for you – we create change for we – from the grassroots.

These problems arose for many reasons. While it was great that people were in the streets, it is unacceptable to suppress the voices of the people who are terrorized by the police daily. We must come to terms with the fact that Democratic Party-aligned non-profits, while they look helpful, are in fact a hindrance to the movement. Many times, and historically, they co-opt movements. Non-Profits are one of the system’s many witty tactics that aids in halting militant actions and restrains the revolutionary spirit created by a rage that comes out of shared or comparable traumatizing experiences.

Minnesota calls itself the Land of 10,000 Lakes, but it’s also full of Non-Profits. The tendency of non-profits to co-opt, channel, and restrain revolutionary movements is not new to radical organizers in the Land of 10,000 Non-Profits. Many of these organizers have been pushed out of non-profits when their ideologies differed with those of the non-profit leadership in ways that resemble how community members were expelled, alienated, or made to feel unwelcome from the 4th Precinct encampment.  This happened many times, once on the first night of struggle when family, as well as community members wanted to see something other than the singing of “slave songs”, as one Northside resident put it.  At another moment during the occupation, police came outside and asked BLM-MPLS organizers if they could have protestors move a fire because the smoke from the fire was blocking vision of a police camera. Disgruntled working class community members attempted to dissent the BLM-MPLS protest police, as well as the real police who BLM-MPLS organizers were conforming to while at an action that was to oppose police.

Non-profits are constrained by their grants, money “for the community”, and paid organizing jobs that go on along with the continued oppression of those they are “fighting” to relieve. Paid organizer positions are unethical; a paid organizer continues to get paid at the expense of those they are fighting for. An anti-police paid organizer’s job continues, or BLM-the-brand, only exists because of the existence of police brutality, and the police in general. Non-Profits are extremely limited in their politics and actions because of their ties to the ruling class and the system that is killing the people.

Towards the end of the occupation, I had a conversation with family members of Jamar Clark. They voiced, with the support of people from that community, that they wanted to continue occupying the precinct. However, they were told by Black Lives Matter-Minneapolis organizers that when they would be told to leave by police, that BLM, which also means a large portion of the resources, were going to be obedient to the police, and desert the community who they called to action. Once again, ignoring and hushing the community that police violence is most prevalent in. Since the occupation, many but not all BLM-MPLS organizers have virtually gone A-wall in the midst of struggle when leadership is needed most and while the planning for future actions to obtain justice for Jamar Clark, which continues to this day and will continue against police terrorism even if the police in this case are prosecuted.

Who Came Out

There seemed to be three main groups that made up the 4th precinct occupation, which always had a multiracial character, and was always composed of both young and old people. Many protestors were not from the neighborhood. The three groups most represented at the precinct seemed to be (1) Black Lives Matter-Minneapolis and their following, which is multiracial, but predominantly made up of college students; (2) Northside community members; and (3) the revolutionary militant left. Already by the end of the first night of the occupation, one could see the polarization between working class black folks and “middle class” black folks, which seemed to occur because several people, including family members of Jamar Clark, were displeased with the celebratory tone of the night’s demonstrations.

High Points in Militancy – Wednesday

Wednesday, November 18th was different from the majority of the occupation – things were a bit more heated on this night. The escalation began when police complained about not being able to go home, and asked Black Lives Matter organizers if demonstrators could move away from the gates that allowed cars in and out of the precinct. They asked this in order for the police to leave and go home to their families, while Jamar Clark and the thousands of others slain by police will never be allowed to return home to their families. Demonstrators began to ensure that police were unable to go home that night. Protestors blocked exits by standing in front of them and linking arms.

As we know, even when we are peaceful, police use violence – because violence is all that they know. Police used mace on peaceful masses, and shot green marker rounds and rubber bullets at protestors. Only after police used their one and only tactic, violence, even when protestors were peaceful, did rocks begin to be thrown at police. Struggle began at the West side of the precinct. It shifted towards the East side of the complex after the police used enough force to regain the West side and demanded that they be allowed to go home.

After the police made these demands, and the struggle shifted from the West side of the building to the East the level of militancy rose. It was raised by the autonomous actions of a united front of Northside gangs as well as your “average Jamar” Northside community members who have lived with the feeling of being hunted by police since their innocent youth. Siege warfare tactics were used against the police station.

Two groups acted throughout the night, but not necessarily in accord with each other: BLM-MPLS organizers on the one hand, and a handful of radicals and community militants, on the other. Some BLM-MPLS organizers did use their bodies to prevent police from going home; they also pointed people out to be targets of police violence, because these people were not adhering to BLM-MPLS’ dogmatic non-violence.

No more that 20-30 feet from the BLM group, community militants threw stones and erected barricades. BLM-MPLS’ claims about these community militants became so absurd that at one point an organizer yelled at community members to “stop ruining our/your community,” when they tore down a mobile police camera. The brothers from that block promptly hushed him and the large camera was quickly used as a barricade to keep the police from coming out of their pigpen.

Later in the night, militancy rose to even higher levels. Molotovs were made and thrown, and shots fired at the police station. The siege lasted for 3 hours. During those 3 hours militant action of community members and the United Front of Northside gangs would match the police’s use of heightened militant repression on demonstrators. Elevated militant pushback by demonstrators took place in waves, because it matched the waves of police repression: when the police used violence as a terror tactic to scare protestors away, those committed to struggle used community self defense against the police, so that demonstrators could go peacefully back out, and not allow the police force occupying their neighborhood to go home.

After the shots were fired the crowd started to dissipate. Police found nothing that they could use as evidence, and no one was arrested on this night. However, the cops demonstrated their force by occupying all of the streets on the South end of the precinct in military fashion, with locked and loaded assault rifles. $40,000 of damage, carried out strictly and solely against police property, was done on that Wednesday, after Jamar Clark was handcuffed and executed.

Inner Movement Pushback

Organizers from Black Lives Matter-Minneapolis – along with the Chief of Police and the Mayor – condemned militant actions as a part of protest. They have claimed, for instance, that property damage, and the throwing of bricks and bottles, was due to the presence of “outside agitators.” These reformist organizers and city officials specifically referred to “white anarchists.” The lies also included accusations of non-BLM aligned demonstrators actually being police officers – as one vouched for the other; each was accused of being a police officer.

There are several problems with the line that was and is being pushed. First, Black Lives Matter-MPLS and city officials ignore the autonomous militant action of the North Minneapolis community. The community doesn’t need “white anarchists” or any other “agitators” to tell them to be angry, or how to take action. The purpose of these accusations was to maintain the system’s current agenda of BLM nationwide, and in this case BLM-MPLS’ monopolization of the anti-police brutality movement. This has become a part of BLM-MPLS’ program in the fight against police terrorism. As with other non-profits, BLM-MPLS and police officials actively tried to push revolutionaries and militants out of this movement, with no care for the repercussions these faulty accusations could cause the victims of their snitch-jacketing.

Fascist Pushback

Monday, November 23rd, 2016 neo-Nazis violently took their organizing to the streets and shot 5 demonstrators outside of the 4th precinct. The night of the attack neo-Nazis got into an altercation with demonstrators after being asked to leave. The altercation successfully lured several demonstrators Northeast of the precinct and Plymouth Avenue onto Morgan Avenue. It was significantly darker on the north side of Plymouth Ave and easy to flee northbound away from the precinct. That is when the 5, African-American, demonstrators were shot. Police and paramedics came to the scene after a lengthy wait, especially since this took place in front of the precinct. The police rejected to give medical aid to the wounded protesters when they were asked by other protestors to use their medic training, and instead established a cordon to prevent protesters from pursuing the attackers, who escaped (they were arrested later, after one of them negotiated his surrender via a high school friend who is now a police officer).

Lance Scarsella, a 23-year-old white male from Lakeville, Minnesota is the man who pulled the trigger, but not the only organizer. Events leading to the Nazi attack are interesting. First and foremost the shooter, Scarsella, is a white nationalist with white supremacist ideology and now action. There are also pictures that surfaced of the group who led the fascist attack at the 4th precinct toting guns with the confederate flag in the background. Much of the organizing for this attack took place on 4chan, which is described online as ‘a simple image-based bulletin board where anyone can post comments and share images anonymously.’ Those who accompanied Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella III, 23, were Nathan Gustavsson, 21, of Hermantown, Daniel Macey, 26, of Pine City, Joseph Backman, 27, of Eagan, and Julio Suarez, a 32 year old Hispanic (and believed to be ex-marine) was also briefly held in custody.

The Friday before the attack, November 20th, the shooters infiltrated the encampment. This is known for two reasons: 1) the attackers posted on 4chan using code names that have surfaced throughout the investigation (‘Black Powder Ranger’ being the one of the shooter) stating that they were heading to the 4th precinct to “knock this shit out” while holding a gun in the video. They urged for people to keep watching the stream as they logged off by saying: “stay white”. 2) People of the community that was created by the encampment caught on to the infiltrators during, what was ultimately their recon mission, which allowed them to execute their attack with precision. When they were identified, they were asked to leave. After the infiltration there were messages sent out on 4chan that read descriptions of specific individuals that were “high profile” targets. Those who were participants in the attack were told to “Remember to wear camo /k/lansmen, we will open fire on anyone who isn’t wearing camo.”

Fascism in the United States is a reality. The fact that Donald is polling so well after some of the most outlandish fascist remarks he has made, and after neo-Nazis carried out a successful violent terrorist attack on black protestors at the 4th precinct in Minneapolis, MN, there is simply no denying it. Throughout the 4th precinct shutdown individuals were forced to adapt and learn quickly. We were forced to understand violence and push back from police, white activists, and black activists. While most radicals are aware of neo-Nazism and it’s reality, I think those who are unaware of their activity both politically and on the street level were shocked that the white supremacists followed up their threat and took it to that level.

White supremacists and neo-Nazis terrorized the encampment for the next 4 days, at least. The day following the attacks, four shots were fired in an alley just South of the precinct. United fronts of gang members and others teamed up again to create a united front for armed security in the name of Community Self Defense. Many demonstrators had pointed out that the shooters had had tactical police equipment with them, and shared the sentiment that the police were connected to the shooting. This feeling was widely shared, firstly because community members saw police’s limited and near total neglect of the shooting victims while they were suffering and secondly, because of the common knowledge that the president of the police union, Bob Kroll, was a member of a white supremacist biker gang.

While Scarsella executed the attack, we must maintain an understanding that Nazis are building a nationwide movement similar to BLM or that of the revolutionary left. This is not an isolated occurrence or attack. Fascism, or more simply put – hate – is organizing to take similar action nationwide and globally.

Neighborhood Networks – Community Self Defense

After fascists came and the police refused to protect and serve the Northside community, an acquired taste for self-defense emerged. Members of the community came out and began organizing legitimate security to protect the encampment. This protection was not simply for protection from white supremacists, but also from some individuals from the neighborhood who were coming to the encampment for the wrong reasons; for example, amongst those wrong reasons were that of cat calling (harassment of women) as well as thievery while demonstrators were asleep. I recall one individual, who was affiliated with the Vice Lords stating that he had stopped people from stealing and even reclaimed phones as he proudly stated afterwards “I aint ‘bout that, I’m here to do a job… I’m an honest security guard.” It seemed as though an understanding swept across a large portion of the encampment and people realized that policing is violence and police are a reactionary force. Therefore, if they won’t protect us, we should.

November 15th, police executed a man in North Minneapolis, MN during an altercation where several of witnesses stated that Jamar Clark, the man whose life was stolen by Minneapolis police, was handcuffed and on the ground. Who is to protect us when those who are meant to protect and serve the people, the police, have a monopoly on the “legitimate” use of violence and therefore use that as an excuse to partake in year round human hunting? The occupation of the Fourth Precinct in Minneapolis pushed many to understand that liberalism and non-profit reforms are not ridding our societies of systemic killings of black and brown people. It forced people to recognize fascism, and that white supremacists are a real threat to our existence; through the Nazi attacks, and the dissent towards those who police “protect and serve”, which police showed when not one officer protected community members from the attack and not one officer rushed to medical aid after the attack, illustrates that community self defense is a key step to self determination.

Is the time now for community self defense? Through studying historical social change movements it is evident that movements have phases. With police rapidly militarizing themselves, militant neo-Nazis such as the ones who shot five black protestors in Minneapolis, and demagogue fascist leaders like Donald gaining massive amounts of support, we have no need to ask whether the time is now. We can see that the time is now; phase one of a mass social change movement is nearing its end. It’s time – as anarchists – to take matters in our own hands; we must acknowledge that the time is now and start creating opportunities for community self defense outside of non-profits and other mainstream reformist “liberation” campaigns.

 

Sam Thompson & Norman Abraham  – South Africa 1985: The Organisation Of Power In Black And White [1985] 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Source: BM Combustion Zine

Study Guide: A reprint of a situationist-inspired article written and published in the US by exiled Black South Africans, Norman Abraham and American Revolutionary Sam Thompson talking about the tension present in the streets and townships of South Africa, describing the political landscape decade before apartheid ended. This printing by Anarchist publisher BM Combustion adds an additional quote in the UDF section.

 

“South Africa! South Africa!” – Tottenham rioters.

“Tottenham! Tottenham!” – shouted at Anti-Apartheid mini-riot, Nov.2nd.

 

“We want Johannesburg to remain the beautiful and thriving city that it is now. Therefore, we are willing to maintain separate living until there are enough new employment opportunities and new homes to allow blacks to move into Johannesburg with dignity.” – Nelson Mandella

 

Introduction: 

 

Black and white policemen, armed with automatic rifles, come in and out. There are massive vehicles; army vehicles adapted to riot conditions. There are funny looking tear-gas machines.

Many shops have gone up in smoke. Houses have been destroyed. The burnt-out shells of cars, lorries and buses litter the streets.

Black policemen no longer live in their homes. Those who have not been killed have fled, living either on police property or elsewhere in hiding. All local black councillors are objects of attack because of their collaboration with the state.

Being a town councillor is like committing suicide. Those who have not yet been killed live in constant fear. When they move around they are escorted by soldiers.

Every day there are clashes between soldiers and police on the one hand and the people on the other. Tear gas explodes in the sky. Rifles crack. Rubber bullets and bird shot fly. People are injured. People are killed. Crowds of hundreds, often thousands are scattered and dispersed. Then they play cat and mouse with the authorities; shouting slogans, throwing stones, hurling petrol bombs, looting cars, burning shops, killing anyone they suspect of collaboration with the government or even white business, or anyone who disobeys the mood of the people on the streets.

The soldiers are everywhere. So are the police. They attack people indiscriminately. They have the guns and ammunition. They ride in armoured cars. They have batons, whips and tear gas. The people are not cowed. They get angrier and angrier.

This is the situation in Langa, NewBrighton, Kwa Nobuhle, Kwazakhele, LittleSoweto, Fort Beaufort, Lingelihle in the Eastern Cape. This is the situation in Duduza, Daveyton, Sebokeng, Evaton, Tembisa, Kwathema and Katlehong in the Transvaal.

The army and the police have a massive presence in these townships. UDF(United Democratic Front) organisations are very active. Its leaders have taken a high profile and they have paid the price by being cut down left and right by the system and its paid assassins. On a lesser scale, but no less aggressively and desperately, AZAPO is taking militant steps. Even some ANC infiltrators are operating clandestinely. But in reality no one controls these townships.

The army and the police intimidate and cordon using everything from dragnets to death squads to provoke fear and uncertainty. They do not attempt to establish order. UDF and AZAPO organise tirelessly, but fail to establish these areas as zones under their leadership.

The townships are battlegrounds between the system and just about anybody who is on the streets on any given day. The people of the townships are fighting because they are bitter and angry, because they want to end their oppression, but mostly because they have to. If you are on the streets when the police and army arrive you have three choices: to collaborate with the system and then face the risk of a violent death at the hands of people in the community; or you can run away and hide in your home where you are still not safe from the bullets, the teargas, and the spies; or otherwise, you go with the flow and you fight back, in whichever way you can – with rocks and with petrol bombs, with fists and with fire.

The situation makes people defiant and courageous. They are not armed, but they are the toughest, most politicised, most rebellious proletariat in the world today. The youth are engaged in a potlatch, flaunting their fearlessness, dancing and gyrating through the ruins of their ghettoes, in an effusion of intensity, defiance and libido.

This is what is happening on the streets of South Africa’s townships. It is shaping the everyday reality of life in South Africa, of life in a country where a revolution is raging.

At the same time another war is being waged. It is a war of ideology and propaganda, It is a battle for hierarchical power, not a battle against it. At the moment there are five major protagonists. Each warrants close examination.

The State 

 

As beleaguered as it might be, the white apartheid government is still very much, in power.

Most of the faces in the government, with a few important exceptions, are the same today as they were a decade ago.

The state has effectively dealt with the military threat from outside its borders. In spite of increased terrorist attacks this year, the ANC was dealt a severe blow militarily by the Nkomati Accord signed in 1983. South Africa has rendered the ANC guerrilla war even more ridiculous than ever before. It has simply bullied into submission the frontline states, on whom the ANC is dependant for bases & for launching pads for its attacks.

Inside its borders the state has sporadically stumbled upon the path of some reforms required for the improved functioning of large capital. The expansion of a black middle class was not exclusively a political creation, but also responded to a real need for a stable skilled workforce in the private sector.

Despite obvious reluctance, complete disinclination, and having bitten off more than it could chew, the state legalised black trade unions, giving capital a more predictable context in which to operate. At the same time this answered a pressing political need from black workers who were already forming unions, legally or not.

In short, the state has adjusted its methods of control.

Internationally, the battle against external pressure has, for the most part, resolved itself in a stalemate. A stalemate is exactly what Pretoria wants, and, at any rate, is the best it can hope for. Minor statutory and social concessions are broadcast at full volume internationally, in order to promote the image of reform. But beyond this, the attitudes of foreign governments are relatively low on the state’s list of priorities. First and foremost, it must stop revolution. Satisfying the needs of domestic capital is second in line. Foreign capital already in the country is far more important than Pretoria’s popularity rating in the capitals of the western world, and is even expendable if the ‘worst comes to the worst’.

The current international outcry against the South African regime is presented to the western public as a moral reaction. Since World War II virtually every nation in the world except South Africa has rejected racism as official policy. Power has discovered that there is more mileage to be gained from criticising racism than there is from organising it. The international sympathisers, motivated by a moral outlook, sooner or later evoke the same plea as their heads of state; if something isn’t done, things will get really bad. They say they fear bloodshed, which they propose to stop by asking some authority or other to do something. What they all really fear is revolution. And not only in South Africa.

Internal revolution is the arsenic in the government’s boerwors. It can try whatever it likes. A point has been reached where just about any step the government takes, either by means of increased repression or by means of reform, merely incurs the wrath of young black South Africans. The state sets up a tricameral Parliament; all participants from the coloured and Indian communities instantly lose credibility. It gives more power to local black councillors in the townships. More power doesn’t save the government lackeys from petrol bombings and from lynchings.

The police and the army march through the townships in a show of force shooting and arresting people virtually at random. All that does is increase the anger in the black community, galvanising into action people who were previously unpoliticised.

The declaration of a state of emergency on 2Oth July did not give the police & the military much in the way of new powers. It simply gave them the go-ahead to freely use the powers they already enjoy, and which, as a necessary complement to reform have built up to an unprecedented level over the last ten years.

The mass arrests and intensified intimidation have most definitely had a serious impact on the affected black communities.

The shaky balance between reform and repression has, for the present, been tipped towards the latter.

The state of emergency also gave some foreign bureaucracies a convenient opportunity to suspend relations, and at the same stroke to expunge the bad image of having been there in the first place.

The international sympathisers, motivated by a moral outlook, sooner or later evoke the same plea as their heads of state; if something isn’t done, things will get really bad. They say they fear bloodshed, which they propose to stop by asking some authority or other to do something. What they all really fear is revolution. And not only in South Africa.

“There are, of course, two characteristic snags with which we are constantly confronted; the conflicting requirements of a total strategy and a democratic system of government. The fact is that strategy is dynamic and requires constant and continued adaptation. A ‘game-plan’ is, of course, the theoretical ideal. We are working towards something like it within the restrictions inherent in our democratic institutions…

The time for a ‘rethink’ of all our national resources is now. This ‘rethink’ definitely does not mean changes in the Constitution or social system, but it aims at a reorientation of activities within the framework of the prevailing order…For whites, moderate blacks and co-operative tribal leaders, the issue at stake is survival” – General Magnus Malan, South African Minister Of Defence.

The Clergy

Certain denominations of the church in South Africa are trying to make miracles, but no one who makes a practical difference is taking them very seriously. South Africa’s holy trinity of Desmond Tutu, Byers Naude and Allan Boesak rattle their teeth throughout the land, preaching non-violence at the daily funerals of black people killed by the police.

Strictly speaking these three clerics are enemies of the South African State. But in every crisis they exert themselves to dissuade violence, and sometimes even to prevent it. From the government’s point of view this means dissuading or preventing any effective action whatever. Besides, they are calling upon whites to repent or be damned, Tutu emphasising the repentance bit because he is Anglican, Boesak and Naude stressing damnation, a predeliction they share because of their Afrikaans background. Surely the government and the whites find these men a lot less dangerous than the people all three of them are urging to be non-violent.

“Obviously, those who advocate peaceful change will have their credibility very drastically eroded because they have nothing to show for all their advocacy. We ought to be jettisoned very quickly. We are merely saying that our people must accept they have to be victims of this vicious policy.”  -Bishop Desmond Tutu

The African National Congress (ANC)

We want Johannesburg to remain the beautiful and thriving city that it is now. Therefore, we are willing to maintain separate living until there are enough new employment opportunities and new homes to allow blacks to move into Johannesburg with dignity. -Nelson Mandela

For the past quarter century, the ANC has been the foremost surrogate government of South Africa. It has earned a name for its rhetoric and its ravings, and has been over-generous with its praises for the Russian bureaucracy. But beneath the ideological bombast, it has developed a bureaucracy more capable than any other of replacing the apartheid state and of successfully negotiating in the international corridors of power.

For decades, the ANC advocated guerrilla war as the only viable salvation for black South Africans. During the uprisings of 1976-7 and 1980, the ANC was conspicuously absent from the heat of struggle. ANC even went so far as to minimise the importance of these struggles as leaderless, anarchic and even infantile.

The events of the last year have led ANC to abruptly change its tune: it now recognises internal revolt as the threat to the white state, and the only viable avenue for an ascent to power. This recognition coincides with an admission by the State that the centre of its problems lie within the country, not outside.

A number of factors combined to allow ANC to keep its hat in the ring despite its ineffectiveness.

No small credit can be given to the South African government, which, for 20 years defined the ANC as the enemy, both for self-serving reasons and because of the government’s own illusions.

The prestige of being the oldest liberation movement, with well-known figures and martyrs, played a part.

The hope of blacks for an outside solution, similar to the hope of religious people for salvation from on high, also had a role. Along with this often went the constantly frustrated desire for arms. Weapons came not in a flood but a trickle always in the hands of loyal cadres, and mostly squandered on terrorist acts. But although desperate people saw no significant delivery of the goods, ANC remained the only potential game in town.

Though the build-up of a bureaucracy inevitably goes hand in hand with calcified, hierarchical thinking, the ANC managed to avoid the fate of the Pan-African Congress, which committed suicide by choking on its own dogma.

The ANC has not lost sight of its sole real practical objective: the seizure of power in South Africa. This is the fundamental requirement of an effective Leninist organisation. ANC has crossed many bridges but burnt very few. One example of this is that, despite its relationships with the Stalinists of the eastern bloc, it has remained foremost a nationalist group. There is no doubt that the ANC would be internally Stalinist in the unlikely event of a coup, negotiated or otherwise. But that an ANC government would become a simple Russian satelite, along the lines of MPLA in Angola, is rather implausible.

It is wrong to say that events “forced” the ANC to do anything. The new ANC outlook is an opportunistic move, notable not for being opportunistic, but for being successfully so.

The success has been spectacular. After years of hollow claims and dirty deeds, all is forgotten and ANC is very much in the running again. It is gaining confidence almost to the point of euphoria. For the first time, there is evidence among those actually fighting the Police of a significant spontaneous support for ANC. Passive support is at an all-time high. It is the only oppositional organisation with a highly developed bureaucracy and wide-scale international recognition. Best of all, it must only prescribe activities to the masses after they have already happened in order to maintain its position. The townships have become ungovernable? The ANC must only announce the slogan, “Make the townships ungovernable,” and its popularity skyrockets.

ANC will continue to conduct terrorist activities and even intensify them if it can. It must maintain a visible profile, and keep up morale and dedication amongst its armed wing. But for most of those in the ANC military camps, the future after the glorious event, if it comes, is more mundane: as the elite of the ANC police.

As is the case with the State, ANC does not know where it will be swept in the course of revolution. In spite of a definite growth in support, ANC finds events out of its control. Wild speculation abounds about navigating from London and Lusaka to Pretoria. But some basic points can and must be made.

In a particularly revealing moment, the mystical Nelson Mandela, jailed demigod of the ANC, recently said:

We want Johannesburg to remain the beautiful and thriving city that it is now. Therefore, we are willing to maintain separate living until there are enough new employment opportunities and new homes to allow blacks to move into Johannesburg with dignity.

Though bitter enemies, with profoundly opposing interests, the ANC and the white state are united in at least this: the infrastructure of the economy must be saved. Ownership, personnel and the style of administration are what is at stake here.

For the ANC to come to power in South Africa then, at some point in time & preferably somewhere, the revolution must stop.

The Black Consciousness Movement

The history of AZAPO and UDF, and the reality of what they are today cannot be understood without recalling the origins of Black Consciousness, whose legacy AZAPO claims to inherit, and whose form of organisation and whose political prominence UDF has usurped.

When Steve Biko launched Black Consciousness with the proclamation, “Black man you are on your own” he came up with a master stroke of strategy. The impasse of fifteen years of waiting for the ANC was thrust aside. Biko restored radical subjectivity to the revolutionary terrain by switching the focus from the passive waiting for liberation from outside to the realm of individual consciousness.

Clearly, this was not consciousness according to the academic notion of what you think when someone asks you. It was inseparably linked to action, on the level that is accessible to everyone: that of his or her own daily life. Political struggle was not denied, but rather, put back on its feet. Action in daily life was posed not as a substitute for political action, but as the foundation that makes contesting power conceivable. Biko posed a simple question: how can one oppose apartheid and the white State when one, everyday, gives in to the most basic humiliations? How can a person who is constantly ready to say, “Ja, my baas,” effectively confront the entire social system?

The initial Black Consciousness decision not to co-operate with white opponents of apartheid must be understood in this precise context. Though Biko and his associates recognised that certain whites had come to play a role in, for instance, the Congress of Democrats leadership far out of proportion to the Congress’s constituency, this was not the primary focus of their decision. The point was not to create an ideology, tactic or programme that was attractive to blacks, or even to create an all-black leadership. Rather, it was a by-product of the very centre of Black Consciousness thinking, its focus on the individual black man & his need to begin from a positive self-definition, based on his own situation as he himself determined it.

The early Black Consciousness organisations, e.g. SASO (South African Students Organisation), were limited in scope and were often specific to particular projects, as in BCP (Black Community Programmes). No sort of comprehensive organisation which might compete with ANC was envisaged. It is worth noting in this context that Biko himself made a continual effort to avoid any sort of personality cult, any role that would make him indispensible to the fulfilment of the outlook which he did so much to develop.

This is not to say that the partisans of Black Consciousness definitively broke with the notion of a hierarchical, Leninist-type organisation. It is more accurate to say that they proceeded not against it, but without it. This was in large part a tactical choice, to avoid leaders being singled out and eliminated by the State.

During the early 1970s, a Black Consciousness organisational framework began to take shape. The number of Black Consciousness organisations increased. Some of them grew out of the struggle itself. Existing groups increased rapidly in size. Co-ordination of these groups was loosely formalised in the notion of an ‘umbrella’ structure. Each member group was allowed to conduct its activities free of centralised control. But though explicitly not monolithic or dogmatic, the umbrella notion added a decisive new element to Black Consciousness.

One began to hear more and more of the Black Consciousness Movement. This referred at once to the general social unrest sweeping the country and to the organisations formally united in the Black Consciousness umbrella. A tension between these conceptions emerged and in time developed. On the one hand, Black Consciousness was a “way of life”, reflecting and, in some vague sense, uniting the actions of autonomous individuals in their struggles at all levels. On the other hand, Black Consciousness was becoming a separate entity, not merely the general movement but a distinct, organised part of it. The tendency became for the BCM leaders to see the unorganised movement in the terms of the organised one, where what was ‘autonomous’ was no longer the individual, but rather, the various organisations.

The duality between the two conceptions of Black Consciousness was solidified with the BCM leaders’ new ideology of “mass support”. This ideology developed something like this. First, there was the fact of parallel and even joint action between the organised and unorganised elements of the “movement”. Second, in the general upheaval, the division between formal BCM activists and the actions of others blurred to the point of invisibility, notably in the eyes of the State. Third, there was widespread popularity of the notion of Black Consciousness in the broadest sense.

The ideology of “mass support” turned these realisations upside down. While apparently reaffirming the non-authoritarian nature of Black Consciousness, it recast the “masses” in the terms of organisational forms. No longer were the actions of unorganised blacks merely distinct from the organised BCM, in importance if not administratively.

Biko said, in one of his “Frank Talk” articles, that as the struggle progresses, we need to talk more and more of blacks and less of whites. But by the time BCM was banned, the watchword had become, we need to talk more and more of organisations, and less of individual blacks!

This was roughly the situation at the time the BCM was banned in 1977. When the State cut things short, the Black People’s Convention was already setting itself up as an elite of cadres, the bureaucratic centre of BCM both administratively and in terms of establishing an implicit ideological programme.[b]

AZAPO

AZAPO was founded in 1977, after the existing Black Consciousness groups were banned. Many BCM activists joined AZAPO then. If AZAPO is in some sense what it claims to be, the inheritor of Black Consciousness, then it is in this sense: AZAPO assumed the legacy of the bureaucratic tendencies that were developing in BCM at the time of the banning.

With the gradual restoration of order in South Africa in 1977, any number of superficial critiques of What Went Wrong emerged., One of the most frequent and vocal of these was the struggles of ’76-’77 lacked organisation, and more specifically, a professional, disciplined leadership. This is a predictable response that has followed almost every proletarian explosion the world over, made mostly by aspiring bureaucrats who have at best led nothing.

The actual formation of AZAPO, with its cadres of committed and unswervingly loyal militants, was the practical crystallisation of this sad outlook.

One of AZAPO’s appeals was, no doubt, that it scrapped some of the baggage that had been awkwardly carried along in the loose umbrella structure of BCM. Whereas sheep in wolves clothing like Buthelezi and Motlana had been able to dress their sorry reformism in Black Consciousness attire, AZAPO sent them packing.

Already in 1977, the Black Consciousness philosophy had lost much of its initial practical basis. Thousands upon thousands of black South Africans had in the past two years become prepared to fight the State, angry and amazingly conscious of their situation. Today, in 1985, the black man who says “Ja baas” to the white man’s face and then curses him in the toilet belongs to an endangered species.

“Black Consciousness” in the hands of AZAPO has become a simple programmatic label. It provides a reassuring link with past struggles, with which many people identify in some sense. But, most of all, it serves to distinguish AZAPO

from other organisations with whom it is engaged in a power struggle for the imagined proprietorship of the South African revolution. AZAPO clings to black exclusiveness not from theoretical strategy but for tactical reasons: it figures this will have a broad appeal. It also counts on this exclusiveness to help maintain commitment and militancy within its ranks of believers.

AZAPO’s ideological programme, in keeping with its practical outlook, is slightly more militant and daring than those of its principal rivals ANC and UDF. It is basically an amalgam of shop-worn Leninist phraseology , heavily emphasising the working class, with the usual paeans to anti-racism and anti-imperialism. It explicitly calls for popular control of the means of production. Black Consciousness reworked into an anaemic pan-Africanist nationalism. But all this has little practical impact. AZAPO is at root an organisational form in search of a content. All in all, there are no goals in the AZAPO programme that UDF or ANC could not comfortably live with. If UDF and ANC tone down their propaganda a bit its because of different tactical approach not a different theoretical one.

The widely publicised attacks by AZAPO militants on UDF militants and vice versa initially served the interests more of AZAPO than UDF. This is simply because UDF is by far the stronger organisation, which is graphically demonstrated by the fact that the State of Emergency has seen hundreds of UDF militants rounded up by the police and almost no members of AZAPO. One on one battles give AZAPO the appearance of being on a more equal footing with UDF than is actually the case. For a period of time, the relative militancy of AZAPO cadres can, in direct battles, compensate for the far greater number of UDF supporters.

Almost everyone who has publicly commented on the matter has pointed out that the UDF v. AZAPO attacks have as their main beneficiary the white State. In the sense that this has allowed the State to murder UDF members and blame AZAPO, this is tragically true.

But in general, those who decried the attacks have done so from the point of view of a hollow black unity. This viewpoint contains a fundamental misunderstanding. The proletariat is not weak because it is divided it is divided because it is weak. Though perhaps stronger today than ever before, the South African proletariat has still not yet shown itself strong enough to throw off the chains of bureaucratic opposition to capitalism. The greatest tragedy of the UDF-AZAPO conflict & the violence that has accompanied it, is that it hasn’t brought the oppressed one millimetre closer to greater clarity, to new forms of struggle, to the critical self-evaluation that is needed so desperately. It’s all been lost in a power struggle between rival bureaucracies.

The United Democratic Front (UDF)

“The Principal of organisation does not lie in a determined accord between determined activities; it does not translate the really organisable element of individuals’ activity, but is the inversion of this point of view: it is a real and potential global activity, the very substance of individuals, working to organise the organisation”

– Daniel Denevert, 1976.

In January 1982, a steering committee was setup to establish the United Democratic Front. This had been prompted by a call from Dr. AlIan Boesak, president of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, for progressive forces to unite in resistance against the government’s constitutional plans.

In the months of May, June & July, general councils of the UDF were established in Natal, the Transvaal & the Cape Province.

The aim of the UDF was to achieve maximum unity among “all democratic peace-loving people”, as a response to the government’s plans to divide people and entrench apartheid.

At a press conference in early August, the national interim executive of the UDF emphasised that while it articulated the view point of a broad cross-section of people, it accepted that the main burden of exploitation and discrimination fell on the working class.

On August 2Oth, the UDF was launched nationally when a thousand delegates,

representing some 575 organisations, met at Mitchell’s Plain in the Western Cape. Many highly visible organisations were in attendance. These included:

AZASO (Azanian Students Organisation), T1C (Transvaal Indian Congress), COSAS (Congress of SA students), SAAWU (SA Allied Workers Union), Federation of SA women, Black Sash, Soweto Committee of Ten, DPSUC (Detainees Parents Support Committee), Release Mandela Committee, SASPU (SA student Press Union) & hundreds of youth organisations & action committees.

The UDF conference adopted a declaration which stated as its aim the creation of a united democratic South Africa, free of bantustans and group areas & based on the will of the people. The need for ‘unity in struggle through which all democrats, regardless of race, religion or colour shall take part together’ was recognised.

The UDF pledged to organise community, women’s, students’, religious, sporting and other organisations, to build and strengthen these organisations, to consult with people regularly to represent their views, to educate people about the ‘coming dangers’, and to ‘unite in action’ against the constitution and other day-to-day problems of the people.

As a front rather than an organisation UDF exerts an ephemeral control over its affiliates, and does not make them tow a particular line. Nevertheless, a common ideological thread that more or less binds all UDF groups together is the tacit acceptance of the Freedom Charter as a policy manifesto. The Freedom Charter serves several important functions for the UDF. It gives some ideological content to the UDF’s organisational form. It is sufficiently diluted to appease the moderates in its broad coalition, and just vaguely socialist enough not to be rejected by the more militant. Since the Freedom Charter was a Congress of Democrats manifesto, & the ANC belonged to the COD, by waving it as a banner the UDF enforces it image of following in the line of historical liberation movements. The UDF does not claim to be the same as the ANC simply because it isn’t. It does, however, want to make it quite clear that it is of the same pedigree, and it is true that both organisations have to some degree relied upon the image of the other for their current credibility.

Unlike its immediate historical predecessor, the Black Consciousness Movement, which was rooted in the activity of the masses at the level of their everyday life, UDF starts out at the level of the organisation. UDF is the product of a more classical form of organisation. Its specific form is a federation of active and visible mini-parties, many of whom enjoy an intimate and immediate interaction with their constituents. Superimposed upon this umbrella structure is a bureaucracy with no other reason for existing other than to supervise the unity of the front.

Since UDF has, until recently, operated in a relatively tolerant political climate, it has used ritualised symbols from an earlier epoch as an ideological glue. Much of this symbolism does not belong to the history of the proletariat as much as it belongs to the history of the ANC. UDF is not a screen for the ANC, but by trotting out old ANC symbols and by using these symbols to help set itself up as mediator between anti-government groups, the UDF has given the ANC a desperately needed shot in the arm.

The adoption, implicit or otherwise, of the Freedom Charter was not the first tie that bound together affiliates of the UDF. The first alloy was a far more pragmatic one. It was opposition to the government’s constitutional proposals. That, however, was an organisational tactic, destined at birth to be short-lived, since the issue of constitutional dispensation was to be resolved practically.

By the time the campaign against the constitutional reforms was over two of the most pathetic bunches of Uncle Toms the world has ever seen were exercising their vocal cords in the non-white Houses of Parliament, as well as the 7% [5] mandate given them by their respective coloured and Indian constituencies.

The original rationale for the creation of a united democratic front was dead and buried in two tiers of the South African government. But UDF did not dissolve. New and more permanent reasons for its self-perpetuation were already in place.

The Black Consciousness Movement was able to lay claim to all revolutionary acts during 1976/7 because all blacks who were willing to oppose the system could identify immediately with its message which was pitched at the level of daily life. UDF, on the other hand, did not have any popular philosophy which it could use to claim the right to become the liberation organisation of South Africa. What it did have was a reformist political climate in which to operate. This enabled it from the start to use symbols, tactics and allusions that no-one would have dared to use in the 1960s and the 1970s.

It is impossible not to be angered by the spine-chilling fate that UDF leaders have experienced at the hands of the State and its cohorts. There is a barbarism to the acts of detention, disappearance and death that no string of adjectives can describe. The intention is not to downplay the agony of the victims. Rather the point is to refuse to make them into something more than they are. If the State of Emergency has shown anything, it is just how dispensable UDF is. The momentum and intensity of the struggle against apartheid is not being generated by the leaders of UDF .

Out on the streets is a mass of young rebels. Growing up in the townships, they have never known a “normal existence”. Rebellion has been a way of life from the earliest years. They have little interest in ideology. They do not think of revolt as a political or economic act, but rather as a necessary and unavoidable response to the constraints imposed upon them by power.

For the past ten years the children of the townships have shown their maturity. They have zeroed in on their enemies with uncanny accuracy. They attack with equal vigour the state and its collaborators. They show no respect for private property. They do not allow leaders to control their actions. They refuse to participate in a dialogue with power. They set no goals for themselves other than their total emancipation.

Many obstacles remain. The frantic optimism expressed by the ANC, for example, is precisely the kind of attitude that must be done away with. The process of proletarian revolution is not neat and even. Mistakes are made. Hesitations occur. Impasses are met. The enemy is formidable and not only in arms. The state is being increasingly intelligent in defending its stupidity.

Criticism is needed. Not grandiose treatises or manifestos, but practical consciousness that will put the pitfalls behind; and develop forms of struggle that will overcome odds which seem to overwhelm those who gamble on freedom.

“Society does not develop in a continuous way, free from setbacks, but through conflicts and antagonisms. While the working class battle is widening in scope, the enemy’s strength is increasing. Uncertainty about the way to be followed constantly and repeatedly troubles the minds of the combatants; and doubt is a factor in division, of internal quarrels and conflicts within the workers’ movement.

“It is useless to deplore these conflicts as creating a pernicious situation that should not exist and which is making the working class powerless. As has often been pointed out, the working class is not weak because it is divided; on the contrary , it is divided because it is weak. And the reason why the proletariat ought to seek new ways is that the enemy has strength of such a kind that the old methods are ineffectual. The working class will not secure these ways by magic, but through a great effort, deep reflection, through the clash of divergent opinions and the conflict of impassioned ideas. It is incumbent upon it to find its own way, and precisely therein is the raison d’etre of the internal differences and conflicts. It is forced to renounce outmoded ideas and old chimeras, and it is indeed the difficulty of this task that engenders such big divisions.”

 

Anon – Last Night in Baltimore [2015] 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Anon – Last Night in Baltimore [2015]

Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20160308165700/http://anarchistnews.org/content/last-night-baltimore

Unsurprisingly, corporate media covering Saturday’s events in Baltimore are covering up the extent of last nights riot. In our opinion primarily due to the fact that what took place was a direct result of the State’s complete tactical failure policing the streets. Were they to acknowledge what ACTUALLY happened would be to admit to all of America (as they were watching or reading on their screens) that they have no ability to control us when we really rage. They simply don’t have enough pigs.

No doubt we will see top level reshuffling of whoever orders the pigs around in Baltimore as a result, because they fucked up big time last night. Or we will be seeing the National Guard on the streets of Baltimore by next week.

The State is terrified of the possibility of this being THE trigger. The one they can’t contain.

On Saturday April 25th, the Baltimore Police Department along with the Maryland State Troopers had no control whatsoever of the vast majority of downtown Baltimore till well past midnight.

The tactical mistake the State made was in stationing nearly all of their pigs in full riot gear (thus not very mobile) either along the ramps to the highways and interstates (thinking more like the wave of protests after Eric Garner’s murder in NYC where the tactic of blockading highways and freeways was replicated all across America), or guarding the baseball stadium where the MBA game was simultaneously taking place last night. The extent of concentration of their forces was such that the parking lots where the spectators had their cars were guarded but nothing else in the immediate vicinity. At some of the ramps, there would be one full line of pigs in riot gear when literally only 1 person was indirectly blocking the intersection because they were simply (verbally) letting the pigs know how they feel.

We have never witnessed masked protestors being able to walk up from BEHIND to a line of cops in full riot gear and being able to walk around them with not even a verbal warning from the pigs. That simply does not happen.

The images of the pigs as a seemingly all powerful military force were staged for the cameras and helicopters. It was very clear they had orders of no engagement as long as protestors either didn’t get on the highways (they were already blocked by the presence of the pigs themselves) or inconvenience the spectators at the baseball game. You would be only a few blocks away breaking every window of a bank (while some guy behind you has the time to calmly smoke a blunt) and you see dozens of Robo-cops running down in a different direction with helicopter lights only on them. Almost as if to make sure the beams were only not on us. The images you saw on TV of the police having control were greatly exaggerated.

This is why for several hours small roaming groups of protestors (majority very young teenagers) had total control of the streets.

There is no way to assess the extent of what happened everywhere in the city, there was no organization or communication between the different elements, as it was a full-on riot not a protest. All that was missing was the tear-gas. But there were no pigs around us (for the most part) for them to even need to use it.

Collectively we can confirm the following:

At least two separate series of protestors (with several smaller splinter groups associated with each one) immediately broke out in different directions, when one pig alone (in regular uniform) was trying to lead another group away from an ongoing ramp blockade. The group we became a part of started using every available trashcan, street bench, or construction barrier within site, to first blockade the streets (assuming the pigs would follow us) and then to launch indiscriminate volleys of projectiles at every window and parked car. This was not a group of typical protesters engaged in property destruction with the usual laundry lists of targets (banks, ATM’s, etc).

This was a crowd of mainly young and black teenagers who have simply had enough of the police terrorism aimed indiscriminately at them, with full immunity from any real prosecution, along with the silence and consent of the majority of people around them, white or black. It was a fucking RIOT.

Young teenage girls half the height and weight of most of the crowd within seconds of witnessing another women hammering away at cobble stones, were stockpiling so many pieces at once (to ensure EVERY window was broken), that others needed to friendly remind them that we’re breaking apart more as we move along. We promise we won’t run out.

Shout out to that young girl who despite being inadvertently left behind when those 8 undercover pigs jumped out of their unmarked cars to beat the shit out of the kids who were barraging them with bricks minutes earlier. Not only did she not run, but single handedly got the pigs to back off (and get back in their cars) despite one particularly white fat pig having to be restrained by his masters to not pull his gun on her. The photo-journalist taking pictures at this point refused to acknowledge he even took the pictures when asked to provide the evidence. Unfortunately circumstance did not allow us to get the evidence regardless. Fortunately, an hour later the same girl was busy getting her friends to head back downtown. She had no fear.

These young women are the pigs worst fucking nightmare! They are truly un-controllable.

The details can go on, but we’re not interested in listing our good deeds for the State in any particular order.

Still, there are no words which can describe that feeling when after returning for the second time to the same store (with it’s goods already re-appropriated 2 hours earlier), another group is approaching smiling about the 6 pig cruisers which were lit on fire (not simply damaged) near Camden Yard. Unlike Ferguson, these cruisers were not placed behind in the vicinity of the march as bait. This of course is beyond the dozens (yes dozens) of other private and undercover pig cars which were damaged along with all the other boutique stores, law offices, banks, and convenience stores by the earlier group itself.

(If it’s not on a tweet as a picture it’s because we’re not fucking idiots to take pictures of ourselves and enough experienced friends were around to be able to explain to our crews why both hands are far more useful for holding and throwing bricks)

The message was very clear and meant not only for the pigs but everyone in Baltimore:

No Justice, No Peace
Fuck the Police.

That’s why EVERYTHING was broken. We’re not going to nicely and “peacefully” ask the pigs to stop killing us anymore.

Of course it would be much easier to dismiss this report-back as hyperbole, but ask yourself would “1000” protestors who “damaged” some cars vaguely referred to as “police property” be able to to get the fucking State to lock down the Oriole’s stadium (while the game is going on) and tell the thousands of spectators to stay inside the stadium because they can’t guarantee their safety outside?

We know the only corporate media covering this aspect of the events keep on pushing the line that the ban of leaving the stadium was lifted before the final pitch, but they don’t tell you how many people stayed back inside for hours after the game finished, waiting for their cars to arrive before returning to their homes in the suburbs. Besides, we were back in our own neighborhoods on the west side by that point, but honestly the pigs definitely would not have been able to provide the more affluent and vast majority white spectators any sense of security and calm as they continue to remain silent and thus consenting to the police terror we are facing – walking back to their guarded parking lots across the street.

To all inside/outside agitators across the occupied lands of America this is our time to be wild!

Fuck the Police.

A.C.A.B.
4/26/2015

 

Nora & Black Flag Magazine – Black Autonomy [1997]

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Black Autonomy [1997]

Nora & Black Flag Magazine

Source: Black Flag, Issue 212, P15 https://libcom.org/article/black-flag-212-1997

Recently, we met a member of Black Autonomy visiting London. Sister Nora is a student in Atlanta. We began by asking about the lockdown of poor black communities that occurred during the 96 Olympics in Atlanta.

 

Nora: During the Olympics, thousands of homeless people were evacuated out of the city, and loads more arrested for no good reason, some spending months in jail. The police were everywhere, though people in Atlanta are used to seeing them as Georgia is a police state. Most working class people had jobs, but many in the African American community set up venues in a historic part of town. The police and city council conspired to direct traffic away from them, and many were ruined.

 

BF: Were there any protests during the Olympics?

 

Nora: There was no protesting or boycotting – the police stopped it all, using anti-terrorism laws. The city returned to normal after the Olympics, but they beefed up police security, with lots of roadblocks. People in Atlanta think this is normal, they are used to it. The police are very brutal. In 1995 they killed Brother Jerry Jackson, shot him dead in cold blood. The officer who did that hasn’t even been prosecuted or brought to trial.

 

In August 1996, Sister Olabumi Chavious was brutalised by police after someone jumped into her taxi. The police officer involved slammed her face into the pavement and refused to call a doctor despite the pleas of witnesses.

 

Police harassment is constant. There is little done to counter it, old organisations like the NAACP have a lot of meetings, banquets and so on, but they don’t DO anything. The situation for poor people is one of high rents, high gas and electric, high reconnection fees if you’re cut off.

 

BF: What sort of opposition is there to this?

 

Nora: There’s very little, none really. The middle class are very afraid of the poor working class, and the poor are caught up in materialism. Many can’t read, do math, and are so called third generation welfare. No one on the campuses is working with the poor, the only community oriented organisations are very middle class.

 

In many places the police run the communities. One particular squad, the “Red Dogs” run the drugs industry. The projects are very bad, in one a baby choked on a cockroach and died. the ghettos are starved of resources, and this is in a black run city. At my school there was no heating, and I ended up going to a white high school. The Atlanta education system is one of the worst in America.

 

BF: What about police involvement in the drugs trade?

 

Nora: They are famous for it, especially the Red Dogs who break into peoples’ homes. There are some projects where it has now been proved that the government brought crack into them, because certainly no one there could afford it. Most police are black, the whites tend to live in the suburbs. The biggest problem is the lack of education, the leftist organisations are afraid of the black working class themselves.

 

BF: What about the Nation of Islam and their drug programmes?

 

Nora: The NOI is very strong in Atlanta, and Farrakhan is a demigod to them, though they don’t do anything political here. The Million Man March was well organised by the NOI but nothing came from it. Their next plan is the Million Woman March, out of Philly. The Communist Youth Brigade are active on campuses but won’t touch the black working class. The NOI fill the vacuum that ought to be filled by leftist organisations with things like the breakfast programmes and drugs work. With the NOI, this tends to be individuals do this work, and the Nation rallies round, though some Ministers have been expelled where they did a lot of work with the working class. It is a good escapist organisation for people without self-discipline.

 

BF: Is there a way out of it?

 

Nora: It needs education, the kids feel there’s something wrong but don’t know what. There are various organisations which do literacy programmes but they don’t address where people are coming from. A lot of the kids don’t feel they can do anything for themselves, and there are a lot of measures against them, like curfews.

 

MOVE on.

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

After I published A Black Autonomy Reader several people asked me why I didn’t cover the MOVE organisation.

I didn’t cove them as they were a cult, that used the language of the Black Liberation Movement to manipulate the women and children in their community.

For more on this;

https://leavingmove2021.blogspot.com/

 

Workers Solidarity Federation (South Africa) – Race, Class and Organisation [1997] 

January 22nd, 2025 by muntjac

Race, Class and Organisation [1997]

Workers Solidarity Federation (South Africa)

 

Source: Black Flag 212, P22-25 https://libcom.org/article/race-class-and-organisation-workers-solidarity-federation

 

Study Guide: This text is a brilliant insight into what would later become the deeply deracialized politics of the Zabalaza Anarchist Communist Front (and later Federation), the WSF being a precursor organisation to the ZACF founding a few years after this piece came out. It would be wrong of me to prescribe this piece or its politics to one of the WSFs white members as the author is anonymous. However, it might be worth seeing my essay on the ZACF in this reader.  

 

INTRODUCTION BY BLACK FLAG:

 

We recently observed a very fruitful discussion on race and class on the internet, particularly around “black” anarchism, special oppressions and the desirability of separate organisation.

 

One of the best and most comprehensive posts came from a member of the Workers Solidarity Federation of South Africa, an anarchist/syndicalist group which while in a personal capacity reflects their politics and positions on these matters. Interest in anarchism is growing throughout the world. There are active groups in most parts of the world, with the exception of the Indian subcontinent, Antarctica and as far as we know the Chinese dictatorship. This process will no doubt accelerate and there is a challenge for us to make our ideas accessible. But as our South African comrades point out below, “it was the ability of anarchism to provide alternatives and to pay special attention to the specific needs of these different sections of the working class in order to unite the whole class that made the success (of the Cuban anarchists and IWW) possible,” not “a revision of anarchism to accommodate nationalism”.

 

RACE, CLASS AND ORGANISATION

THE VIEW FROM THE WORKERS SOLIDARITY FEDERATION

 

It is falsely claimed by some that Anarchism as currently constituted is unable to attract Black people, and other specially oppressed minorities. It is therefore argued that we should thus endorse separate Black-only anarchist/ community organisations that may in some (vague and unspecified) cases associate with “white” groups – “white” groups should “work among” “their own” people etc.). It is also asserted from this view point that Anarchism is “Eurocentric” and lacking an analysis of racism and imperialism.

 

IN DEFENSE OF CLASSICAL ANARCHISM

 

These arguments are wrong or lacking in clarity. They reflect a distortion of Anarchist history, and a misunderstanding of Anarchist strategy.

 

Firstly, class struggle anarchism has historically proved quite capable of attracting massive numbers of people of color. In fact, one could claim that historically most anarchist movements have been based in Third World countries. For example, anarchism dominated the revolutionary movement in China in the 1910s and early 1920s. In the First World, Anarchist movements historically attracted specially oppressed national minorities, for example, the syndicalist IWW attracted thousands of Black workers in the USA Deep South, and other movements, Jews in eastern Europe.

 

Today, there are groups such as the WSF in South Africa and the Awareness League of Nigeria.

 

The key to this success was a consistent class struggle program that combated all manifestations of oppression. For example, the Cuban Anarchists mobilized both Afro-Cubans,creoles and Spaniards in massive integrated anarcho-syndicalist unions because they opposed racist practices like apprenticeship laws, because they supported the anti-colonial struggle against Spain and because they provided a class struggle answer to the questions facing all sections of the working class. It was not a “revision” of anarchism to accommodate nationalist paradigms that made the breakthrough – it was the ability of anarchism to provide alternatives and to pay special attention to the specific needs of these different sections of the working class in order to unite the whole class that made the success possible. Anarchists did not capitulate to nationalist ideas- they combated them- they did not organise separately, they organised as Anarchists on a class struggle basis.

 

Similarly, they were key players in anti- imperialist struggles in many countries, for example, Cuba (1890s) Macedonia (1880s), Herzegovina (1900s), Nicaragua (1920s), Ukraine (1918-21) , Ireland (1916) and Korea (1920-40s). Again, class politics was the basis of this engagement.

 

Even today, the Anarchist groups emerging in Third World countries like Nigeria and South Africa base themselves on a class program- we have seen the end results of nationalism and we oppose it (although obviously we defend peoples right to choose to believe in it, and even if we recognize grassroots nationalists as progressive fighters against racism etc.).

 

This does not mean that we downplay imperialism or racism- on the contrary we pay specific attention to these key questions, but we subject them to class analysis and advocate class struggle strategies against them. This clearly shows that the claim that Anarchism is “white” or “Eurocentric” is fundamentally wrong, as Anarchism – in terms of its analysis, history and composition- has in all respects been a truly global movement against oppression in all guises. All modern Anarchists need to live up to this legacy.

 

Black nationalism and/or separatism is not the only thing that can fight racism or attract Black people and workers to organisations. Even in South Africa, the Communist Party was the main mass organisation throughout the 1930s and 1940s and dwarfed the nationalist groups like the ANC; in the 1920s the main mass organisation (aside from the Communist Party) was the quasi-syndicalist Industrial and Commercial Workers Union. In Harlem in the USA in the 1930s, the CPUSA was able to win Black workers away from Garveyism on the basis of a consistent defense of the unity of White and Black workers.

 

AGAINST SEPARATE ORGANISATION

 

**As Anarchists we call for separate organisation in one sense: we call on the working and poor people to organise separately from their class enemy, the bosses and rulers**.

 

What then of non-class based forms of separate organisation such as women-only organisation (as advocated by radical feminism) or Black-only organisation (as advocated by Black nationalists)?

 

Before dealing with this issue, we need to understand the links between racism, class and class struggle.

 

STATE, CAPITALISM AND RACISM: ONE ENEMY, ONE FIGHT

 

We would argue that racism is the product of capitalism and the State, created to justify slavery and colonialism in the Third World, and to divide workers, and super-exploit national minorities in the First World. Capitalism and the State are inherently racist: they always generate new forms of racism (e.g. against immigrants). The social inequalities created by racism can only be dealt with by the removal of capitalism and the State to allow for projects of redress, reconstruction etc.

 

[/i]*Therefore the fight against racism is a fight against capitalism and the State*

 

CLASS UNITY, CLASS STRUGGLE, CLASS POWER

 

Only the working class, poor and peasants can make the anti-state, anti-capitalist revolution because only these classes are productive (and can therefore create a non-exploitative society), and have no vested interest in the current system. In addition, as the vast majority of the world’s population they have the numbers to win, as well as the necessary social power (by virtue of their role in the workplace as producers of wealth they can hit the bosses and rulers where it really hurts- in the pocket) and organisational ability (their concentration in factories etc. facilitates mass action).

 

The Black middle class, capitalists etc. will defend capitalism and the State against the workers despite the fact that this means they are defending the system that creates racism. It is in their class interest to do so. In any case, they are shielded from the worst effects of racism by their nice houses, good schools etc.

 

*Therefore the fight against racism requires a class struggle and a workers revolution*.

 

The struggle against capitalism can only succeed if it is anti-racist. We can only mobilize the whole working class if we fight on all fronts, against all oppressions that affect us. We can only unite the working and poor people for a revolutionary victory through a consistent opposition to the divisions within the working class and poor i.e. race, nation etc.

 

Insofar as workers can only be mobilized and united on the basis of programs that oppose all oppression, insofar as working class Blacks are the most affected by racism and insofar as the majority of people affected by racism are working class, it follows that anti-racism etc. is a working class concern and issue.

 

*Therefore the fight against capitalism and the state requires a fight against racism*.[i]

 

Given that the working class is multi-national and multi-racial, it follows that its struggle must be fought on internationalist, united, integrated lines. As argued above, this unity is only possible on a principled basis of opposition to all oppression.

 

ARE WHITE WORKERS A ‘LABOUR ARISTOCRACY’?

 

No sections of the working class gain in real terms from the special oppression of Backs, colonial people etc. In the First World, White workers may have slightly less unemployment etc., but they are still the majority of the workers and the poor i.e. of the exploited classes victimized by capitalism and the State . Racism worsens conditions for all workers because it divides workers struggles and resistance and ability to destroy the system. That is why the ruling class promotes it: it would never promote something that benefited the majority of workers. Therefore it is in these workers’ direct interest to fight racism and unite with Black workers.

 

Even if these workers accept racism, they are still not its primary cause: racist-capitalism is. Nor are they its beneficiaries.

 

At the same time, doubly oppressed groups like Blacks etc. require allies amongst the White working class. Without them, they lack the numbers, strategic position, or social power to defeat the racist system and its causes for once and for all. Unity is also in their interests.

 

Similarly, the argument that the Western working class benefits materially from imperialism, is false. There is not a shred of proof, nor a sustainable economic theory to show this. Nor can any correlation be shown between the level of imperialist activity and the living standards of First World workers.

 

On the contrary, imperialism is against the interests of these workers, because it strengthens the power of their own states (e.g. colonial armies are used against workers “at home” -remember Spain 1936?), wastes resources and lives that could be spent on people on the military, promotes reactionary ideas like racism and imperialist patriotism that divide workers and strengthen the ruling class, and allows multi-national companies to cut jobs and wages by shifting to repressive Third World colonial and semi- colonial regimes.

 

SEPARATE ORGANISATION?

 

As Anarchists should unconditionally defend the rights of specially oppressed sections of the working class to organise separately because we defend the principle of free association. BUT we should separate question of the right to organise separately from the issues of the usefulness of this mode of organisation.

 

We simply cannot take it for granted that separate organisations are necessarily progressive or travelling the same road as we are.

 

Separate organisations are not necessarily progressive – in some cases they are clearly reactionary and a backward step, in others they are poor strategy.

 

Non-class based separate organisations typically fails to correctly identify the source of the special oppression faced by the group in question. For example, separatist Black nationalism calls for people of African descent to organise separately on the basis that all Whites are the source of Black oppression. Therefore they are the enemy. What such an approach fails to recognize is the primary role of capitalism and the State in causing Black oppression, and the common interests of both working class Blacks and Whites in fighting racism on a class-struggle basis (see above). Or it may be argued that capitalism is a form of racism – this again fails to recognize the common interest of both working class Whites and Blacks in fighting capitalism.

 

Separate organisation that is not on a class struggle basis almost always lays the basis for cross-class alliances as is based on non-class identities and supposed common interests between all who share that identity. As we argue, only class struggle can end special oppressions such as racism and sexism.

 

They thus became hitched to the class projects of capitalists, bosses and power-hungry would-be rulers. A case in point is the Nation of Islam in the US.

 

Separate organisations can divide the working class into competing and fragmented sections. Why stop at separate organisation for women, Blacks etc? The whole notion of separate organisation lays the basis for a continual fragmentation of identities and issues: gay versus black versus women versus lesbians versus bisexuals versus gay blacks versus white blacks versus bisexual males etc.

 

Instead of an emphasis on difference, what is needed is a search for points of agreement and common interest: divided we are weak-it is class that provides a basis for uniting the vast majority of the world’s population against the primary causes of poverty and oppression: capitalism/ the State/ the ruling class.

 

Some call for separate organisation on the basis that only separate organisation can prevent the marginalization of the concerns of a particular group. For example, Black nationalists in the US often call for Blacks to organise separately so that they are not, for example, marginalized or ignored in mainly White organisations.

 

While this is an important issue, it does not follow that separate organisation is the best solution. Not at all!

 

Separate organisation often reinforces the marginalization of a group’s concerns, for example, it can be used to as a way of ghettoizing issues. Rather than challenging racism, such organisations allow racism to be ignored by others. White workers can ignore the issue: “leave it to the Blacks, its their concern, not ours”. But should, say, illegal immigrants have to fight against racist immigration laws on their own, or should they have allies from other sections of the working class? “Self- determining” isolation can readily lay the basis for weak struggles that are easily defeated by the ruling class (see above). Finally, the claim that Blacks can never function in integrated organisations expresses a disturbing lack of confidence in Black people’s abilities.

 

Instead, we should win all sections of the working class over to a program of opposing, not ignoring all oppression. This is a more effective way of winning demands. Even if some do not have direct experience of a given oppression, it does not follow that they are unable to be won to a position of opposing it. As argued earlier, no workers really benefit from special oppressions like racism. It is in their interest to be anti- racist.

 

Separate organisation is not even progressive in some cases.

 

Separate organisation in the workplace is NOT acceptable in any case where industrial unions of all workers exist. The logic of trade-union organisation is to unify different categories of workers, who can only find strength in their unity. To set up a separate Black trade union in a situation where Blacks are a minority weakens the existing unions, but puts these workers themselves in a weak and unsustainable position due to their limited numbers, as well as in direct conflict with the existing union, thus creating a dynamic that can lead to the destruction of union organisation in the plant as a whole.

 

Maximum unity on a principled basis is always desirable, supported and fought for. Black-only unions are a recipe for failure where Black people form a minority in the working class (obviously the situation is different in South Africa where the Black working class is the majority- but more on this later). How can one even launch mild forms of industrial action without the support of most workers?

 

Furthermore, separate organisation is only admissible in cases where workers face a special oppression. We do not support Zulu-only unions like UWUSA (in South Africa) because Zulus do not face a special oppression as Zulus.

 

Separate organisation is not innately progressive. It can be used as a tactic to roll-back worker struggles and undermine the left. For example, the nationalist-minded liberal middle-class Black leaders of the mass Industrial and Commercial Workers Union in SA in the 1920s used arguments that the Communist Party was a “White” institution to expel socialists from their ranks and had the union over to (White!!) liberals like Ballinger who opposed anything other than simple bread and butter, non-political orthodox trade unionism, as opposed to the ICU’s previously semi-syndicalist positions.

 

SPECIAL ORGANISING COMMITTEES

 

Having said this, it is clear that Anarchist political organisations should be integrated. Having said this, we do recognize that it may be necessary to set up commissions/ task grippes within these organisations to focus on specific issues e.g. groups to work on immigrant support. These are not separate organisations, but working groups integrated into the overall organisation, and to which any member may belong.

 

RELATIONS WITH EXISTING SEPARATE GROUPS

 

People respond to capitalism and the State in a variety of ways, and through a variety of ideologies. How should we relate to these groups?

 

In general, the WSF apply the following “rule of thumb”. A basic distinction can be drawn between “political groups” (those which unite people on the basis of accepting a certain ideology- such as political parties), and “economic groups” (those which unite people on the basis of their common, immediate social and economic interests- such as unions, rent-strike committees).

 

We would work alongside in “political groups”, for example, around campaigns.

 

And we would work within “economic groups”. Economic groups tend to have working class bases and deal with issues relevant to working and poor people. They therefore have a class dimension. Our aim here would be to promote

 

(1) class consciousness and workers power: these grippes should be run by the working class and reject class collaboration.

 

(2) work in principled alliance with other working class formations out of recognition of the common interests of the working and poor people and the necessity of class struggle

 

(3) do not undermine the unions, but on the contrary work with them, defend them and promote them

 

(4) take up arguments about the need for anti-racism etc. with other sections of the working class

 

(5) win them to a revolutionary Anarchist program

 

Our aim here would be to unite and merge these “economic organisations”: those in the workplace should be united into “One Big (Trade) union”; those in (working class) residential areas into “One Big (Community) Union”. They would have a common struggle: against capitalism, the State and all oppression. In this way, they could provide the nucleus for the self-governing worker and community councils of the Anarchist future. Thus, we call for this unity to

 

(1) unite the working and poor masses around their common interests and needs

 

(2) provide a united basis for self-management after the revolution.

 

SOUTH AFRICA – A SPECIAL CASE

 

In South Africa, this situation is somewhat different. Clearly, the defeat of racism in South Africa does also require a class struggle and a workers revolution (as elsewhere). But here the Black working class is the majority of the population, the most radical, combative and organised force in society. Thus the question of Black workers presents itself in a different fashion here as it is obvious that the Black working class will be the force that makes the SA revolution. Since there is no left-wing or working class movement that can possibly marginalize the Black working class, the need for special committees, sections etc. to deal with racism is redundant in the South Africa case.

 

What then of White/Black worker unity? This unity was remote in the extreme in the apartheid years- it was extremely unusual for White workers to join the struggle of the Black working class under apartheid, precisely because of their extreme level of privilege (although some did, mainly from the Communist Party). So, in contrast to the situation in the West, White workers here actually did benefit from racism. Nonetheless, interracial workers unity (on an anti-racist platform) would have been advantageous even under apartheid because it would have weakened the armed power of the State (most Whites were at some or other point soldiers and were and are workers). With the demise of formal apartheid and the move to a formally non-racial bourgeois parliament, the prospects for such unity are far better. The economic crisis, the removal of job reservation and other legal privileges, the breakdown of the alliance between Whites of different classes that underpinned the racist regime all make a workers alliance and unity more feasible.

 

Thus we have a situation where literally tens of thousands of White workers and historically White unions have actually joined the non- racial integrated COSATU unions; the main historically white union federation, FEDSAL, has also begun co-operating with COSATU in negotiations and even demos (although White worker attendance is quite poor). We should support this unity, so long as it is on an anti-racist basis, and so long as the general layers of activists remain broadly representative of the mainly Black unions. In other words, workers unity is good, if only in terms of our proletarian internationalism and non-racialism, but the basis of that unity must still be the struggle against racism as well as capitalism. In any case, it is clear that the Black working class will still be the battering ram that destroys the system (the possible participation of White workers as reliable allies notwithstanding). Therefore, class unity on a principled anti-racist basis (with the provisions for special organisations outlined above) is the key to freedom.

 

This is why we say

 

“BLACK LIBERATION THROUGH CLASS WAR”

 

“STATE, CAPITALISM, RACISM: ONE ENEMY, ONE FIGHT”