On Jan. 19, there were reports of
threats and intimidation against women’s rights events in several
cities, including Boston and Orlando, Fla. According to a source,
Proud Boys and allied rightists attacked the Portland, Ore.,
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) hall and a Democratic
Socialists of America meeting in the same city. Previously, on Sept.
27, Proud Boys attacked a DSA social event in Louisville, Ky.,
spraying participants with pepper spray.
Also, on Jan. 19, a group of white
Catholic high school students, who had attended the anti-women “March
for Life,” taunted a Native American Vietnam veteran who had
attended an Indigenous Peoples March. The students wore red MAGA hats
and chanted, “build the wall!” as Omaha elder Nathan Phillips
sang and played a drum in an attempt to calm down the students.
Phillips had been one of the water protectors at Standing Rock.
Such mob behavior is encouraged in
the racist and xenophobic atmosphere that is energized by Trump’s
rhetoric against immigrants, Muslims, and other oppressed groups. In
the context of Trump’s attacks, the far right feels validated and
energized.
Counter-mobilization
Mass united-front
counter-mobilizations are the main weapon in our arsenal right now
against fascist and rightist attacks.
On Nov. 17, 2018, about 20-25
rightists rallied on Philadelphia’s Independence Mall and were met
with a spirited counter-protest of about 600 people. Because of the
public organizing for the counter-mobilization, some militia groups,
and quite a few Proud Boys, opted not to attend; they were afraid of
a large demonstration by opponents. In the aftermath, the dissension
among the rightists sowed further disunity and finger pointing.
Mass united action helps workers
and oppressed people feel their potential power—in the streets and
at the point of production. Isolated street-fighting tactics do not
impart these lessons. Quite the opposite, they teach that a small
group can substitute for the actions of workers and oppressed people.
Mass action is part of the method we use not only to build an
effective anti-fascist movement but also to build the confidence and
organizing capabilities of the working class for the major class
battles of the future.
Self-defense and physical
force
Socialists also support the right
of working-class and oppressed people to self-defense. In
the Transitional
Program, Trotsky
wrote: “The struggle against fascism does not start in the liberal
editorial office but in the factory—and ends in the street. Scabs
and private gunmen in factory plants are the basic nuclei of the
fascist army. Strike
pickets are the basic
nuclei of the proletarian army. This is our point of departure. In
connection with every strike and street demonstration, it is
imperative to propagate the necessity of creating workers’
groups for self-defense.
It is necessary to write this slogan into the program of the
revolutionary wing of the trade unions.”
The recent attacks on oppressed
peoples, including the mass shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in
Pittsburgh, provide an opportunity for socialists to the introduce
the question of workers’ defense guards, built by the unions and
other labor organizations, to defend against right-wing attacks. But
we also know you can’t get so far ahead of the masses that you lose
sight of them.
Ultimately, it’s a political
question. How do you introduce these ideas to working people and win
advanced workers to a perspective of opposing fascism? Whether we are
dealing with defense against fascists or against strikebreakers, it’s
appropriate for us to discuss the idea in a way that explains the
political importance of self-defense that is done in a collective
way, not in isolated formations.
One problem with the antifascism
that relies on “physical force” is that it relies on a tactical
response to a strategic problem. I know from personal experience in
anti-Klan and Antifa work in South Texas in the late 1970s and early
’80s that there’s a limit to that perspective. We need a response
to fascist mobilizations and attacks that can impart lessons that
advance the struggles and consciousness of working people.
Defending meetings from
attack
In the 1970s, reactionary gangs, as
well as groups of ultra-left Maoists, staged a number of physical
attacks on meetings and rallies of socialists and the antiwar
movement, which posed a grave threat to free speech. In many cases,
the movement took effective steps to build united-front defense
guards to defend their speakers’ platforms and meetings against
disruption and violence.
Today, the far right is displaying
the same kind of thuggish behavior. As reported above, the Proud Boys
have attacked political meetings in Kentucky, Oregon, and elsewhere.
We must give unconditional support to the rights of left
organizations (DSA, IWW, etc.) to meet without threats and
intimidation. It’s appropriate to build united-front defense guards
and to call on the labor movement to defend meetings as well. If the
far right is able to successfully shut down the meetings of left
groups, union meetings and picket lines will be next.
By calling for the united-front
defense of IWW and DSA meetings, or any other meetings, socialists
demonstrate our politics in action. Our defense is unconditional and
not based on any prior political agreement between groups. The
lesson, however, is profound. If the ranks of DSA, for example, see
that revolutionary socialists defend their right to meet, perhaps
they will investigate revolutionary politics further.
>> The article above was written by Steve Xavier, and is reprinted from Socialist Action newspaper.
3 comments:
Excuse me, but this entire article is fake news and your logo is a clenched fist.
Maybe you should consider changing your logo to a high five before protesting riot gear. You might look a little less like idiots. Just say'in
Is this why millions of great, honorable, respectful and hard working Americans are afraid to put a trump sticker on their car or wear a maga hat in public?
You people are extremely intellectually dishonest with yourselves
When this group says "far-right" what they mean is anything to the right of Bernie Sanders.
This sounds like a terrorist organization
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