anti-capitalism is the anti-capitalism of idiots I

Tried to submit the following on the arushandapush website (http://arushandapush.blogsome.com/) - doesn’t seem to have worked:

During and since the events around the G20 conference there have been, apparent to me, manifestations of often quite intense responses to the actions of some people, frequently and reductively identified as the actions of ‘Arterial Bloc’. Quite a few people who identify themelves as critical of the G20 and even as supporters of or participants in anti-g20 activities have gone out of their way to criticise or condemn (the actions attributed to) Arterial Bloc.

By contrast, those articulating positions either defending these actions or just not outright condemning those involved have been largely on the back foot, and have made efforts to be measured and polite in response to aggressive criticisms that did not, on the whole, reflect any parallel efforts. The public remarks of Socialist Alternative’s Mick Armstrong, happily reproducing seemingly all of the cliches of anti-protester discourse up to and including those concerning a xenophobic construction of ‘outside agitators’, are only the most extreme example of the collapse of the supposedly oppositional into reactionary and conformist choices which can only assist the state in its repressive actions against those being deemed beyond the pale.

Largely absent from all of this is any critique of the actual roles of those claiming the position and authority of ‘organisers’ of anti-g20 protests and activities, the dishonesty, manipulations and slimy interests of not merely most of the socialist groups involved, but also those constantly deploying the rhetoric of anti-hierarchical organisation, of spokescouncils and affinity groups, even of anarchism.

The Stopg20 meetings were saturated with this dishonest crap. The media spokespeople that the collective claimed it didn’t have used the authority of their relation to the stopg20 collective to falsify the form of organisation of anti-g20 activities, to outright lie about events in order to distance themelves as official and legitimate protesters from the Arterial Bloc. These creeps - hello, Marcus - acted in mainstream media interviews as if Stopg20 had some collective commitment to ‘non-violent’, ‘peaceful’ protest when the discourse of ‘diversity of tactics’ explicitly included acknowledgement that some would quite possibly be intending and/or willing to adopt a different set of political assumptions about what constitutes an acceptable action. In Stopg20 spokescouncils people were invited to some of the meetings at which it was clear that this was to be the case: the affinity group/spokescouncil process means that many organising decisions are made at meetings separate from the stopg20 meetings and the separation in this case can only be used to demonstrate some inherent and principled political separation by falsifying the way in which everything was organised, and by attributing to stopg20 decisions that were not made or even, so far as I know, proposed. This being the only way to do it, this is what was done.

The central limit on such discussion at stopg20 spokescouncils, proposed by one of the central figures of stopg20, was that caution should be used because the space might not be safe from the eyes and ears of the state.

The retrospective construction of ‘legitimate protesters’, and of mythical official commitments to non-violence, was the work of people like Marcus who used the stopg20 ‘media collective’ to very loudly and publicly bullshit. Those who identified with Stopg20 allowed the creation of media spokespeople despite claiming in meetings that there would be no spokespeople, and did not contest the lies of such spokespeople even as these lies helped to define a public rhetoric of exclusion and demonisation that went well with the arrests, charges, denials of bail, etcetera that are documented on this site.

These tendencies were evident in advance, including the use of seemingly radical rhetoric to give a particular political capital and cover to quite other practices, very conventional notions of politics and forms of organising that have distinctly unappealing content and trajectories, as we have seen yet again.

In many ways the kind of repulsive actions we have seen since the g20, by ’socialists’ and even by ‘anarchists’, were the kinds of actions the stopstopg20 affinity group suggested were likely, in comments on the Stopg20 spokescouncil which took place on the Wednesday night prior to the G20 meeting - comments which appeared on the Stopg20 website (www.stopg20.org) and on the stopstopg20 site (stopg20.blogsome.com).

Those most active in Stopg20, whether ‘media collective’ people or not - those who played these public roles after Saturday’s events or who let others do so when they could have tried to prevent it or publicly contradicted the lies being spewed out, who could have at least publicly and clearly denied the spokesperson status of those involved and not permitted the deliberate lies about Stopg20 to go totally unchallenged - those who have been silent since on the politics of these practices - these are people who should not be trusted.

We need an actual analysis of why these people lie and will lie again - the form and content of politics/activism which constitutes material interests in notions of ‘democracy’, ‘representation’, ‘community’, practices of network-building/recruitment and parallel development of political capital and authority - an entire array of assumptions and dynamics, in many ways common to the self-described ’socialists’, ‘anarchists’, ‘autonomists’, or whatever that make up such scenes (and will try to form them again for ASEAN), that should be deconstructed, or maybe I just mean pulled apart. [Correction: ASEAN should probably have been APEC…my somnabulistic approach to fact-checking and my memory like a steel sieve are taking a toll…and I posted this text on a few other sites too…]

Benjamin

‘”don’t attack iran”

A couple of months ago, at a demonstration in front of the State Library, I came across a group of Socialist Alternative members handing out leaflets and selling their magazines in front of a large sign that read “Don’t Attack Iran!”

I asked a member of Socialist Alternative whether this was merely intended to urge opposition to any US military action against Iran, or whether the slogan should be read as opposing any criticism of the Iranian regime. Both, she said - criticism of the Iranian state would only aid reactionary imperialist forces seeking to justify assault or invasion.

A predictable argument ensued quite calmly until another member of Socialist Alternative came and stood between us with her back turned to me, with an obvious desire to prevent any further discussion. In the face of this silliness, I walked away.

photo

Found at a randomly accessed blog.

http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5324/1698/1600/arkitivistpartyhell.jpg

terrorism and student unions

Last year the Monash Student Association at Monash University’s Clayton campus voted to donate a microscopic few thousand dollars to the Organisation of Women’s Freedom in Iraq, a left group which, whatever else you can say about it, is vigorously, publicly and actively opposed to both the current occupation of Iraq and to all Islamist and Baathist groups.

Though the proposed donation was tiny - the student union in question had been operating budget surpluses in the many hundreds of thousands for year after year, under Left or Right student councils - the MSA was the only student union in this country to have seriously suggested any such solidarity with specific groups or movements in Iraq opposing the occupation.

The media wasted no time in labelling the group as ‘terrorists’, and one major broadsheet daily described the MSA, not in quotes and not as a citation of anyone else, as FUNDING TERRORISTS.

Though unwilling to have the political argument within the Left on campus, or more broadly, the ‘Left’ treasurer at the time stalled on signing the cheque until the end of term of the student council ad office-bearers who had made this decision, leaving it to the new ALP administration to reverse the decision to donate this money. He was not alone in the student Left in opposing any such act of solidarity, however minor. Courageous these people are not. (The individual in question then went on the become the effective treasurer of the Australian Student Environment Network (ASEN), for what it is worth. And the Activate group, the electoral group of the Monash student Left which has occasionally represented itself as more than an electoral grouping, felt no need to have any serious discussion of the matter. Whatever.)

At the same time Monash University is deeply involved in military and intelligence related research, and also has an ongoing deal with the Victorian Police’ Counter-Terrorism Coordination Unit to help them, amongst other things, more effectively ‘work with’ community group and ethic leaders against terrorism and extremism.

At the same time the Australian Federal Police were harassing Monash students with funny names at their homes about the books they were reading i.e. books that talked about terrorism. The university administration claimed not to have handed over the relevant library records, but also stated that they would almost certainly hand over any records to police or ASIO if asked. And the AFP also tried to set up meetings with people in the Islamic Students Society on campus.

The list of such incidents, at Monash and on other campuses, could be significantly extended, and that is just the ones that came to light to people actually not spending much time attempting to find out about such state interventions.

And now this from the Sydney Morning Herald:

http://www.smh. com.au/articles/ 2006/12/07/ 1165081092060. html?from= top5

Activist reported to Hotline

Harriet Alexander Higher Education Reporter
December 8, 2006

A STUDENT activist who pounded a placard depicting the Prime Minister with water bombs has been accused of breaching terrorism laws.

Police investigated Jessica Moore, the president of the Wollongong University students’ association, after a caller to the national security hotline reported she had organised the protest in support of Hamas, the Palestinian party whose military wing is on a list of
terrorist organisations.

But Ms Moore, an anti-war activist and member of the Socialist Alliance, said the protest was against homophobia and had nothing to do with Hamas. About 20 students had gathered on a university lawn where posters reading “Target homophobia. Take out the
Libs”, were on display.

“It was an action to get attention,” Ms Moore said.

Police said the complaint had been dismissed after an officer visited the campus. “It was clear that this was in relation to homophobia,” Detective Chief Inspector Joe Mura said.

Ms Moore said the complaint had been intended to intimidate her. “That’s the incredibly scary thing about the [security] hotline,” Ms Moore said. “Anyone who doesn’t like you can accuse you of being a terrorist or a member of a terrorist organisation. ”

The students’ association has organised about 25 demonstrations this year on issues as diverse as the wars in Lebanon and Iraq and the industrial relations legislation. Liberal Club members have accused it of sympathising with terrorist organisations.

The club’s general secretary, Warren Hudson, said: “I’m sure the justification for someone to report it to the security hotline [would be] that a student organisation was financially supporting terrorism … by using student funds to support groups such as Hamas.”

Ms Moore said: “I’m a fairly outspoken anti-war activist … That doesn’t make me a supporter of terrorism.”

……

And this was the media statement of the person subject to right-wing dibber-dobbing:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
6 DECEMBER 2006

‘Anti-terror’ Laws used to Intimidate Student Union President

Wollongong police yesterday informed Jess Moore, President of the Wollongong Undergraduate Students’ Association (WUSA), anti-war activist and member of the Socialist Alliance, that under the new ‘anti-terror’ laws, she is facing a police investigation. A Senior Constable told Ms Moore that someone had made a complaint that she had organised an action in support of Hamas on October 18 of this year.

The action in question was in fact organised on campus to combat homophobia, it had nothing to do with the conflict in the Middle East, let alone the Palestinian group Hamas. At the action, students threw balloons filled with water at placards of John Howard, to
highlight their disgust with the Prime Minister’s homophobic policies. Ms Moore attended the action that was supported by WUSA, but wasn’t an organiser.

“This is a shocking case of intimidation. That anyone can ‘dob in’ anyone else merely for attending a political demonstration that opposes the Howard Government, and have the police investigate them is an outrageous attack on civil liberties,” Moore said.

“It’s really scary to be called by the police to be told you are under investigation for allegedly supporting a terrorist group. These laws are obviously designed to dissuade activists and trade unionists from speaking out against the war, injustice and against this government. It’s well known that many Muslims and people of Arabic background fear attending public demonstrations in this country - It’s obvious why!

“Free speech is under attack. In a democratic society people should have the right to speak their mind without fear of reprisal or intimidation. This incident undermines the freedom we supposedly have.

“For me this exposes the so-called ‘War on Terror’ for what it really is: inhumane and unjust foreign policy and an excuse for this government to intimidate and silence those who oppose them,” she concluded.

Ms Moore has vowed to continue demonstrating against injustice despite the harassment she is facing. She is calling on all supporters of civil liberties to do the same.

Media enquiries:
Jess Moore
President
Wollongong Undergraduate Students’ Association
0416 232 349