¶One problem apparent in the June 18th day of action was the adoption of an activist mentality. This problem became particularly obvious with June 18th precisely because the people involved in organizing it and the people involved on the day tried to push beyond these limitations. This piece is no criticism of anyone involved – rather an attempt to inspire some thought on the challenges that confront us if we are really serious in our intention of doing away with the capitalist mode of production.
§ Experts
¶By an activist mentality
what I mean is that people think of
themselves primarily as activists and as belonging to some wider
community of activists. The activist identifies with what they do and
thinks of it as their role in life, like a job or career. In the same
way some people will identify with their job as a doctor or a teacher,
and instead of it being something they just happen to be doing, it
becomes an essential part of their self-image.
¶The activist is a specialist or an expert in social change. To think of yourself as being an activist means to think of yourself as being somehow privileged or more advanced than others in your appreciation of the need for social change, in the knowledge of how to achieve it and as leading or being in the forefront of the practical struggle to create this change.
¶Activism, like all expert roles, has its basis in the division of labour – it is a specialised separate task. The division of labour is the foundation of class society, the fundamental division being that between mental and manual labour. The division of labour operates, for example, in medicine or education – instead of healing and bringing up kids being common knowledge and tasks that everyone has a hand in, this knowledge becomes the specialised property of doctors and teachers – experts that we must rely on to do these things for us. Experts jealously guard and mystify the skills they have. This keeps people separated and disempowered and reinforces hierarchical class society.
¶A division of labour implies that one person takes on a role on behalf of many others who relinquish this responsibility. A separation of tasks means that other people will grow your food and make your clothes and supply your electricity while you get on with achieving social change. The activist, being an expert in social change, assumes that other people aren’t doing anything to change their lives and so feels a duty or a responsibility to do it on their behalf. Activists think they are compensating for the lack of activity by others. Defining ourselves as activists means defining our actions as the ones which will bring about social change, thus disregarding the activity of thousands upon thousands of other non-activists. Activism is based on this misconception that it is only activists who do social change – whereas of course class struggle is happening all the time.
§ Form and Content
¶The tension between the form of activism
in which our
political activity appears and its increasingly radical content has only
been growing over the last few years. The background of a lot of the
people involved in June 18th is of being activists
who
campaign
on an issue
. The political progress that has been
made in the activist scene over the last few years has resulted in a
situation where many people have moved beyond single issue campaigns
against specific companies or developments to a rather ill-defined yet
nonetheless promising anti-capitalist perspective. Yet although the
content of the campaigning activity has altered, the form of activism
has not. So instead of taking on Monsanto and going to their
headquarters and occupying it, we have now seen beyond the single facet
of capital represented by Monsanto and so develop a campaign
against capitalism. And where better to go and occupy than what is
perceived as being the headquarters of capitalism – the City?
¶Our methods of operating are still the same as if we were taking on a
specific corporation or development, despite the fact that capitalism is
not at all the same sort of thing and the ways in which one might bring
down a particular company are not at all the same as the ways in which
you might bring down capitalism. For example, vigorous campaigning by
animal rights activists has succeeded in wrecking both Consort dog
breeders and Hillgrove Farm cat breeders. The businesses were ruined and
went into receivership. Similarly the campaign waged against
arch-vivisectionists Huntingdon Life Sciences succeeded in reducing
their share price by 33%, but the company just about managed to survive
by running a desperate PR campaign in the City to pick up prices.1 Activism can very successfully
accomplish bringing down a business, yet to bring down capitalism a lot
more will be required than to simply extend this sort of activity to
every business in every sector. Similarly with the targeting of
butcher’s shops by animal rights activists, the net result is probably
only to aid the supermarkets in closing down all the small butcher’s
shops, thus assisting the process of competition and the natural
selection
of the marketplace. Thus activists often succeed in
destroying one small business while strengthening capital overall.
¶A similar thing applies with anti-roads activism. Wide-scale
anti-roads protests have created opportunities for a whole new sector of
capitalism – security, surveillance, tunnellers, climbers, experts and
consultants. We are now one market risk
among others to be taken
into account when bidding for a roads contract. We may have actually
assisted the rule of market forces, by forcing out the companies that
are weakest and least able to cope. Protest-bashing consultant Amanda
Webster says: The advent of the protest movement will actually
provide market advantages to those contractors who can handle it
effectively.
2 Again activism can bring down a
business or stop a road but capitalism carries merrily on, if anything
stronger than before.
¶These things are surely an indication, if one were needed, that tackling capitalism will require not only a quantitative change (more actions, more activists) but a qualitative one (we need to discover some more effective form of operating). It seems we have very little idea of what it might actually require to bring down capitalism. As if all it needed was some sort of critical mass of activists occupying offices to be reached and then we’d have a revolution…
¶The form of activism has been preserved even while the content of
this activity has moved beyond the form that contains it. We still think
in terms of being activists
doing a campaign
on an
issue
, and because we are direct action
activists we will
go and do an action
against our target. The method of campaigning
against specific developments or single companies has been carried over
into this new thing of taking on capitalism. We’re attempting to take on
capitalism and conceptualizing what we’re doing in completely
inappropriate terms, utilizing a method of operating appropriate to
liberal reformism. So we have the bizarre spectacle of doing an
action
against capitalism – an utterly inadequate practice.
§ Roles
¶The role of the activist
is a role we adopt just like that of
policeman, parent or priest – a strange psychological form we use to
define ourselves and our relation to others. The activist
is a
specialist or an expert in social change – yet the harder we cling to
this role and notion of what we are, the more we actually impede the
change we desire. A real revolution will involve the breaking out of all
preconceived roles and the destruction of all specialism – the
reclamation of our lives. The seizing control over our own destinies
which is the act of revolution will involve the creation of new selves
and new forms of interaction and community. Experts
in anything
can only hinder this.
¶The Situationist International developed a stringent critique of
roles and particularly the role of the militant
. Their criticism
was mainly directed against leftist and social-democratic ideologies
because that was mainly what they encountered. Although these forms of
alienation still exist and are plain to be seen, in our particular
milieu it is the liberal activist we encounter more often than the
leftist militant. Nevertheless, they share many features in common
(which of course is not surprising).
¶The Situationist Raoul Vaneigem defined roles like this:
Stereotypes are the dominant images of a period… The stereotype is
the model of the role; the role is a model form of behaviour. The
repetition of an attitude creates a role.
To play a role is to
cultivate an appearance to the neglect of everything authentic: we
succumb to the seduction of borrowed attitudes.
As role-players we
dwell in inauthenticity – reducing our lives to a string of clichés –
breaking [our] day down into a series of poses chosen more or less
unconsciously from the range of dominant stereotypes.
3
This process has been at work since the early days of the anti-roads
movement. At Twyford Down after Yellow Wednesday in December 92,
press and media coverage focused on the Dongas Tribe and the dreadlocked
countercultural aspect of the protests. Initially this was by no means
the predominant element – there was a large group of ramblers at the
eviction for example.4 But people attracted to Twyford by
the media coverage thought every single person there had dreadlocks. The
media coverage had the effect of making ’ordinary
people stay away
and more dreadlocked countercultural types turned up – decreasing the
diversity of the protests. More recently, a similar thing has happened
in the way in which people drawn to protest sites by the coverage of
Swampy they had seen on TV began to replicate in their own lives the
attitudes presented by the media as characteristic of the role of the
eco-warrior
.5
¶Just as the passivity of the consumer is an active passivity, so
the passivity of the spectator lies in his ability to assimilate roles
and play them according to official norms. The repetition of images and
stereotypes offers a set of models from which everyone is supposed to
choose a role.
6 The role of the militant or activist
is just one of these roles, and therein, despite all the revolutionary
rhetoric that goes with the role, lies its ultimate conservatism.
¶The supposedly revolutionary activity of the activist is a dull and sterile routine – a constant repetition of a few actions with no potential for change. Activists would probably resist change if it came because it would disrupt the easy certainties of their role and the nice little niche they’ve carved out for themselves. Like union bosses, activists are eternal representatives and mediators. In the same way as union leaders would be against their workers actually succeeding in their struggle because this would put them out of a job, the role of the activist is threatened by change. Indeed revolution, or even any real moves in that direction, would profoundly upset activists by depriving them of their role. If everyone is becoming revolutionary then you’re not so special anymore, are you?
¶So why do we behave like activists? Simply because it’s the easy cowards’ option? It is easy to fall into playing the activist role because it fits into this society and doesn’t challenge it – activism is an accepted form of dissent. Even if as activists we are doing things which are not accepted and are illegal, the form of activism itself the way it is like a job – means that it fits in with our psychology and our upbringing. It has a certain attraction precisely because it is not revolutionary.
§ We Don’t Need Any More Martyrs
¶The key to understanding both the role of the militant and the
activist is self-sacrifice – the sacrifice of the self to the
cause
which is seen as being separate from the self. This of course
has nothing to do with real revolutionary activity which is the seizing
of the self. Revolutionary martyrdom goes together with the
identification of some cause separate from one’s own life – an action
against capitalism which identifies capitalism as out there
in
the City is fundamentally mistaken – the real power of capital is right
here in our everyday lives – we re-create its power every day because
capital is not a thing but a social relation between people (and hence
classes) mediated by things.
¶Of course I am not suggesting that everyone who was involved in June
18th shares in the adoption of this role and the self-sacrifice that
goes with it to an equal extent. As I said above, the problem of
activism was made particularly apparent by June 18th precisely because
it was an attempt to break from these roles and our normal ways of
operating. Much of what is outlined here is a worst case scenario
of what playing the role of an activist can lead to. The extent to which
we can recognise this within our own movement will give us an indication
of how much work there is still to be done.
¶The activist makes politics dull and sterile and drives people away
from it, but playing the role also fucks up the activist herself. The
role of the activist creates a separation between ends and means:
self-sacrifice means creating a division between the revolution as love
and joy in the future but duty and routine now. The worldview of
activism is dominated by guilt and duty because the activist is not
fighting for herself but for a separate cause: All causes are equally
inhuman.
7
¶As an activist you have to deny your own desires because your
political activity is defined such that these things do not count as
politics
. You put politics
in a separate box to the rest
of your life – it’s like a job… you do politics
9-5 and then go
home and do something else. Because it is in this separate box,
politics
exists unhampered by any real-world practical
considerations of effectiveness. The activist feels obliged to keep
plugging away at the same old routine unthinkingly, unable to stop or
consider, the main thing being that the activist is kept busy and
assuages her guilt by banging her head against a brick wall if
necessary.
¶Part of being revolutionary might be knowing when to stop and wait.
It might be important to know how and when to strike for maximum
effectiveness and also how and when NOT to strike. Activists have this
We must do something NOW!
attitude that seems fuelled by guilt.
This is completely untactical.
¶The self-sacrifice of the militant or the activist is mirrored in
their power over others as an expert – like a religion there is a kind
of hierarchy of suffering and self-righteousness. The activist assumes
power over others by virtue of her greater degree of suffering
(non-hierarchical
activist groups in fact form a dictatorship
of the most committed
). The activist uses moral coercion and guilt
to wield power over others less experienced in the theogony of
suffering. Their subordination of themselves goes hand in hand with
their subordination of others – all enslaved to the cause
.
Self-sacrificing politicos stunt their own lives and their own will to
live – this generates a bitterness and an antipathy to life which is
then turned outwards to wither everything else. They are great
despisers of life… the partisans of absolute self-sacrifice… their lives
twisted by their monstrous asceticism.
8 We
can see this in our own movement, for example on site, in the antagonism
between the desire to sit around and have a good time versus the
guilt-tripping build/fortify/barricade work ethic and in the sometimes
excessive passion with which lunchouts
are denounced. The
self-sacrificing martyr is offended and outraged when she sees others
that are not sacrificing themselves. Like when the honest worker
attacks the scrounger or the layabout with such vitriol, we know it is
actually because she hates her job and the martyrdom she has made of her
life and therefore hates to see anyone escape this fate, hates to see
anyone enjoying themselves while she is suffering – she must drag
everyone down into the muck with her – an equality of
self-sacrifice.
¶In the old religious cosmology, the successful martyr went to heaven. In the modern worldview, successful martyrs can look forwards to going down in history. The greatest self-sacrifice, the greatest success in creating a role (or even better, in devising a whole new one for people to emulate – e.g. the eco-warrior) wins a reward in history – the bourgeois heaven.
¶The old left was quite open in its call for heroic sacrifice:
Sacrifice yourselves joyfully, brothers and sisters! For the Cause,
for the Established Order, for the Party, for Unity, for Meat and
Potatoes!
9 But these days it is much more
veiled: Vaneigem accuses young leftist radicals
of enter[ing]
the service of a Cause – the
10best
of all Causes. The time they
have for creative activity they squander on handing out leaflets,
putting up posters, demonstrating or heckling local politicians. They
become militants, fetishising action because others are doing their
thinking for them.
¶This resounds with us – particularly the thing about the fetishising
of action – in left groups the militants are left free to engage in
endless busywork because the group leader or guru has the theory
down pat, which is just accepted and lapped up – the party line
.
With direct action activists it’s slightly different – action is
fetishised, but more out of an aversion to any theory whatsoever.
¶Although it is present, that element of the activist role which
relies on self-sacrifice and duty was not so significant in June 18th.
What is more of an issue for us is the feeling of separateness from
ordinary people
that activism implies. People identify with some
weird sub-culture or clique as being us
as opposed to the
them
of everyone else in the world.
§ Isolation
¶The activist role is a self-imposed isolation from all the people we
should be connecting to. Taking on the role of an activist separates you
from the rest of the human race as someone special and different. People
tend to think of their own first person plural (who are you referring to
when you say we
?) as referring to some community of activists,
rather than a class. For example, for some time now in the activist
milieu it has been popular to argue for no more single issues
and
for the importance of making links
. However, many people’s
conception of what this involved was to make links
with other
activists and other campaign groups. June 18th demonstrated this
quite well, the whole idea being to get all the representatives of all
the various different causes or issues in one place at one time,
voluntarily relegating ourselves to the ghetto of good causes.
¶Similarly, the various networking forums that have recently sprung up
around the country – the Rebel Alliance in Brighton, NASA in Nottingham,
Riotous Assembly in Manchester, the London Underground etc. have a
similar goal – to get all the activist groups in the area talking to
each other. I’m not knocking this – it is an essential pre-requisite for
any further action, but it should be recognised for the extremely
limited form of making links
that it is. It is also interesting
in that what the groups attending these meetings have in common is that
they are activist groups – what they are actually concerned with seems
to be a secondary consideration.
¶It is not enough merely to seek to link together all the activists in
the world, neither is it enough to seek to transform more people into
activists. Contrary to what some people may think, we will not be any
closer to a revolution if lots and lots of people become activists. Some
people seem to have the strange idea that what is needed is for everyone
to be somehow persuaded into becoming activists like us and then we’ll
have a revolution. Vaneigem says: Revolution is made everyday
despite, and in opposition to, the specialists of revolution.
11
¶The militant or activist is a specialist in social change or
revolution. The specialist recruits others to her own tiny area of
specialism in order to increase her own power and thus dispel the
realisation of her own powerlessness. The specialist… enrols himself
in order to enrol others.
12 Like a pyramid selling
scheme, the hierarchy is self-replicating – you are recruited and in
order not to be at the bottom of the pyramid, you have to recruit more
people to be under you, who then do exactly the same. The reproduction
of the alienated society of roles is accomplished through
specialists.
¶Jacques Camatte in his essay On Organization
(1969)13 makes the astute point that
political groupings often end up as gangs
defining themselves by
exclusion – the group member’s first loyalty becomes to the group rather
than to the struggle. His critique applies especially to the myriad of
Left sects and groupuscules at which it was directed but it applies also
to a lesser extent to the activist mentality.
¶The political group or party substitutes itself for the proletariat
and its own survival and reproduction become paramount – revolutionary
activity becomes synonymous with building the party
and
recruiting members. The group takes itself to have a unique grasp on
truth and everyone outside the group is treated like an idiot in need of
education by this vanguard. Instead of an equal debate between comrades
we get instead the separation of theory and propaganda, where the group
has its own theory, which is almost kept secret in the belief that the
inherently less mentally able punters must be lured in the organisation
with some strategy of populism before the politics are sprung on them by
surprise. This dishonest method of dealing with those outside of the
group is similar to a religious cult – they will never tell you upfront
what they are about.
¶We can see here some similarities with activism, in the way that the
activist milieu acts like a leftist sect. Activism as a whole has some
of the characteristics of a gang
. Activist gangs can often end up
being cross-class alliances, including all sorts of liberal reformists
because they too are activists
. People think of themselves
primarily as activists and their primary loyalty becomes to the
community of activists and not to the struggle as such. The gang
is illusory community, distracting us from creating a wider community of
resistance. The essence of Camatte’s critique is an attack on the
creation of an interior/exterior division between the group and the
class. We come to think of ourselves as being activists and therefore as
being separate from and having different interests from the mass of
working class people.
¶Our activity should be the immediate expression of a real struggle,
not the affirmation of the separateness and distinctness of a particular
group. In Marxist groups the possession of theory
is the
all-important thing determining power – it’s different in the activist
milieu, but not that different – the possession of the relevant
social capital
– knowledge, experience, contacts, equipment etc.
is the primary thing determining power.
¶Activism reproduces the structure of this society in its operations:
When the rebel begins to believe that he is fighting for a higher
good, the authoritarian principle gets a filip.
14
This is no trivial matter, but is at the basis of capitalist social
relations. Capital is a social relation between people mediated by
things – the basic principle of alienation is that we live our lives in
the service of some thing that we ourselves have created. If we
reproduce this structure in the name of politics that declares itself
anti-capitalist, we have lost before we have begun. You cannot fight
alienation by alienated means.
§ A Modest Proposal
¶This is a modest proposal that we should develop ways of operating that are adequate to our radical ideas. This task will not be easy and the writer of this short piece has no clearer insight into how we should go about this than anyone else. I am not arguing that June 18th should have been abandoned or attacked, indeed it was a valiant attempt to get beyond our limitations and to create something better than what we have at present. However, in its attempts to break with antique and formulaic ways of doing things it has made clear the ties that still bind us to the past. The criticisms of activism that I have expressed above do not all apply to June 18th. However there is a certain paradigm of activism which at its worst includes all that I have outlined above and June 18th shared in this paradigm to a certain extent. To exactly what extent is for you to decide.
¶Activism is a form partly forced upon us by weakness. Like the joint action taken by Reclaim the Streets and the Liverpool dockers – we find ourselves in times in which radical politics is often the product of mutual weakness and isolation. If this is the case, it may not even be within our power to break out of the role of activists. It may be that in times of a downturn in struggle, those who continue to work for social revolution become marginalised and come to be seen (and to see themselves) as a special separate group of people. It may be that this is only capable of being corrected by a general upsurge in struggle when we won’t be weirdos and freaks any more but will seem simply to be stating what is on everybody’s minds. However, to work to escalate the struggle it will be necessary to break with the role of activists to whatever extent is possible – to constantly try to push at the boundaries of our limitations and constraints.
Squaring up to the Square Mile: A Rough Guide to the City of London, (J18 Publications (UK), 1999) p. 8↩︎
see Direct Action: Six Years Down the Road in Do or Die No. 7, p. 3↩︎
Raoul Vaneigem - The Revolution of Everyday Life, Trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Left Bank Books/Rebel Press, 1994) - first published 1967, pp. 131-3↩︎
see The Day they Drove Twyford Down in Do or Die No. 1, p. 11↩︎
see Personality Politics: The Spectacularisation of Fairmile in Do or Die No. 7, p. 35↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 128↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 107↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 109↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 108↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 109↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 111↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 143↩︎
Jacques Camatte, On Organization (1969) in This World We Must Leave and Other Essays (New York, Autonomedia, 1995)↩︎
Op. Cit. 2, p. 110↩︎