REVOLUTIONARY
ANARCHISM &
THE ANTI-GLOBALISATION MOVEMENT
[This
article in Italian]
Riot
police battling youth. Armed forces locking down a major American city.
Tens of thousands under anti-capitalist banners. Western youth and workers
physically battling the WTO and imperialism. These potent images of
the 'battle of Seattle', November 30, 1999, were seared into the minds
of militants the world over, inspiring millions upon millions fighting
against the class war from above that some call 'globalisation'. Followed
by further mass protests in Washington and Davos, and two massive international
co-ordinated actions on May 1, 2000 and September 26, 2000, Seattle
marked, by any measure, an important turning point for the global working
class and peasantry.
"The
Idea That Refuses To Die"
And anarchists
were in the thick of these protests and solidarity actions, whether
in Rio, Johannesburg, Prague, Istanbul, New York or Dublin, demonstrating
an impressive organizational ability, growing credibility, and rising
popular appeal.
In the
bourgeois media, anarchists have assumed a prominence unknown since
the 1960s, amazingly receiving even more credit than was our due for
our role in the new 'anti-globalisation' movement. Anarchism was, the
New York Times exclaimed, "the idea that refuses to die." The authoritarian
left, shocked at being so outflanked and outmaneuvred by the anarchists,
suddenly found it necessary to write vicious, and often grossly dishonest,
polemics against anarchism.
It is ironic,
then, that the anarchist movement remains wracked with disagreement
about how it should orientate itself towards the 'anti-globalisation'
movement.
Orientating
To The Movement
While the
Platformist tradition of anarchism, and many anarcho-syndicalists have
strongly identified with the new movement, many other comrades seem
reluctant to become more involved in the new movement. Some are rightly
concerned about the presence of reformist and middle-class elements
such as NGOs in the movement; others point to the unexpected support
of far right groups such as fascists and Islamic fundamentalists for
'anti-globalisation'; for others, there are suspicions about the role
of right-wing trade union leaders in the movement.
These concerns
are valid. But they should not be used as reasons not to be involved
in the 'anti-globalisation' movement. The new movement represents an
important development for the international working class and a massive
opportunity for the anarchist movement at the dawn of the twenty-first
century. Seizing the moment, being involved, shaping the movement -
this is the best opportunity available today to implanting anarchism
within the working class and clawing our way back to our rightful place
as a movement of millions, a movement that can help dig capitalism's
grave.

Anti-Capitalist,
Not Just 'Anti-Globalisation'
When we
enter the 'anti-globalisation' movement, though, we must enter as conscious
anti-capitalists. 'Anti-globalisation' is a vague term that opens the
resistance to capitalism to all sorts of pitfalls.
Many aspects
of globalisation - if by this we mean the creation of an increasingly
integrated world economic, political and social system- should be welcomed
by anarchists. The breaking down of closed national cultures, greater
international contact, a consciousness of being "citizens of the world",
concern for developments halfway around the world - all are positive
developments.
We should
not line up with those who, under the banner of 'sovereignty' and 'nationality'
call for the enforcement of national culture, national foods, closing
of the borders to 'foreign' influences and so forth. This outlook -
even if dressed up in 'anti-imperialist' clothing - is xenophobic and
directly implies support for local nation-states.
We must
support the possibilities for the development of a cosmopolitan international
culture, the globalisation of labour and the labour movement that are
emerging with globalisation. We must totally oppose the religious fundamentalists,
nationalists and fascists whose problem with globalisation is that it
opens people to new ideas that challenge backward prejudices and cultural
practices. Culture is not static. It is changed and reshaped through
struggle, and we anarchists should only defend those elements of national
cultures that are progressive and pro-working class.
What anarchists
oppose are the neo-liberal, capitalist, aspects of globalisation. We
oppose attacks on wages, working conditions and welfare, because these
hurt the working class and because they are in the interests of capitalists.
These capitalist
aspects of globalisation are an international class war rooted in capitalism,
and its current crisis of profitability. Notwithstanding the hype about
the "new economy" and the "new prosperity", capitalism has been in crisis
since around 1973. Average growth rates in the West in the 1950s were
around 5% per year; by the 1970s, they fell to 2%; by the 1980s, the
figure was closer to 1%. And so, big business has been trying to restructure
itself for survival and renewed profit through the implementation of
neo-liberalism: casualization, privatization, subcontracting, welfare
cutbacks, regressive tax reform, and the deregulation of trade and money
movements. All of these policies are in the interest of the dominant
sections of the capitalist class - the giant transnational corporations.
Outside
And Against The State
The capitalist
nation state is not the victim of capitalist globalisation, as some
suggest - usually from a nationalist, state-capitalist, or reformist
perspective - when they argue that the development of large companies
and large multi-lateral institutions like the IMF and WTO leads to a
loss of 'sovereignty' by a supposedly innocent nation state, which is
then 'forced' to adapt to the 'new reality' of 'globalisation'.
These sorts
of argument have some serious political implications. They divert attention
away from the role of the nation state in driving neo-liberal restructuring.
They also tend to suggest that the nation state - 'our' nation state
- is an innocent victim that 'we' must ally with and defend against
a 'foreign' globalisation. On the contrary, anarchists recognise that
the nation state is one of the main authors of globalisation, and, in
particular, the capitalist aspects of globalisation.
The IMF,
World Bank, and WTO are organizations made up of member nation states,
as is the United Nations. It is the nation state that has implemented
neo-liberal attacks on the working class the world over. It is the nation
state that has allowed giant corporations to operate globally, by dismantling
the closed national economies of the 1945-1973 period, which were characterised
by the thinking that "what's good for Ford is good for America."
It is neo-liberal
restructuring, implemented and enforced by the nation state, which has
made it possible for international labor markets, international capital
movements, and international production chains to emerge on the scale
that has taken place (I include many Third World nation states here,
including 'my' own, South Africa: witness the fact that the South African
capitalist class government is reducing tariffs faster than the WTO
requires. When the WTO asked South Africa to open up its textile industry
over 12 years, our rulers volunteered to do the job in just eight! So
capitalist globalisation is not something simply imposed on 'us' by
the global system, imperialism, etc., although these play a role).
The nation
state is part of the problem. One is as bad as another in this respect.
Therefore anarchists do not agree with people like Ralph Nader who argued,
roughly, 'Vote me, so I can save our democracy from the big companies',
because anarchists know that the role of the State is to serve those
companies: this is what the State does! This is where we part ways with
those who think the state is an ally of labuor and the poor in the fight
against capitalist globalisation.
As such,
anarchists cannot agree with idea of a right/left anti-globalisation
coalition, or the liberal myth that we have now moved 'beyond left and
right.' (Witness the Seattle protests: the liberals gave semi-fascist
Pat Buchanan a platform, but whined when the anarchists attacked Niketown).

Against
National Protectionism
We fight
outside and against the State, trying to organize internationally. True,
cheap imported goods do threaten jobs 'at home'. But the solution is
not to call on the state to ban these goods: it is to organize workers
in all the sweatshops around the world. We fight for international labour
unity, an international minimum wage, international labor standards,
and never national protectionism and trade bans.
Anarchists
want self-managed, class-confrontational struggle, rather than 'engaging'
the system. Anarchists want to build self-managed forms of struggle
and action, rather than placing our faith in technocracy, elections,
or 'our' governments. In this picture, the use of violence is a tactical
question, not a principle: lock down or burn down are choices to be
made according to the situation. This is precisely what the liberals
and pacifists refuse to see.
Into
The Anti-Globalisation Movement
We must
enter the new anti-globalisation movement. True, it is full of reformists
and middle class elements. But this is precisely why we must be involved!
To stand back is to surrender the new movement, with its immense revolutionary
potential, to the reformists and middle class. It is to abdicate our
revolutionary duty to merge revolutionary anarchism with the struggles
of the working class, to prevent the revolt of the slaves being used
to hoist another elite into power.
It is not
a question of whether we should be involved. It is an issue of how.
The aims
of anarchist involvement are surely:
1) To
promote the self-management of struggle: at every point, anarchists
must fight for organisational forms, protest forms, and decision-making
forms that rest upon the active involvement of the working class and
provide an opportunity for the class to self-manage the struggle,
win confidence, and fight from below.
This
means:
- Occupations,
rather than elite sabotage.
- Marches
and protests and riots, rather than policy advocacy.
- Action
committees operating through mandates and accountability through
assemblies and summits, rather than the delegation of all responsibility
to a small coterie of leaders.
- Decentralised
coalitions which allow the maximum initiative from below.
- Building
the capacity of organisations through promoting horizontal linkages
between groups, and by ensuring the widest dissemination of information
to the 'base' members of the structures
- Fights
and demands that promote class polarization and expose the class
basis of neo-liberalism.
We can
raise 'reformist' demands with a class war bite. (For example, take
a company in a financial crisis. The bosses will say let's save money
by outsourcing workers and slashing jobs. Anarchist militants can
instead raise the apparently 'reformist' demand that the company can
be saved by slashing management salaries by 80%. This will expose
the unfair nature of the system, the class wage gap, and the refusal
of bosses to really consider alternatives - because they sure won't
consider this one - all of which will deepen class polarisation!)
2) Fighting
the government: anarchists must be there arguing against national
protectionism, against arguments to 'engage' the local state, against
calls for the state to 'stand up' to capital, against multi-class
coalitions and calls for nationalisation. Instead, our focus must
be on promoting the self-emancipation of the working class through
its own struggles, organizations, and efforts, on the need to mobilize
outside and against the state, and on class struggle anti-capitalism).
This
means:
- Fighting
for practical international solidarity with workers in sweatshops
and in subcontracting companies through campaigns, actions etc.,
informed by the overall perspective of winning international labor
standards (a global minimum wage, global basic conditions of employment,
etc.) and global trade unionism of the base. This is the real working
class basis for opposing cheap imports: better wages for all, rather
than a race to the bottom where we see who can earn the least, or
chauvinist protectionism.
- Labour-based
regulation of working conditions, through practical solidarity action,
rather than appeals to the WTO, etc. to enforce labour standards
through a social clause in free trade agreements etc.
- Exposure
of the class basis of neo-liberalism as an attempt to drive down
wages and working conditions, and open up the economy for privatisation
and speculation, and hence, of the need for a class response that
has no illusions in the capitalist state
- Opposing
privatisation because it harms the working class through job loss
and worsening social services, and not because we think nationalisation
is some sort of step towards socialism and workers' control. Instead
of calling for more nationalisation as an alternative to privatisation
- which won't happen and in any event won't empower the working
class - anarchists should raise demands for worker and community
self-management of social services and infrastructure, and stress
the right of the working class to a decent life.

Aims
And Objectives
The aim
of these tactics and demands is simple. These points are put forward
as means to develop a powerful, democratic, and internationalist working
class coalition centred on unions, but also involving communities, tenants,
students, etc. Further, these points are also meant to help develop
a libertarian and anti-capitalist consciousness of the international
nature of the class struggle, the opposition between the working class,
on the one hand, and the state and capital on the other, and a generalised
confidence and belief in the desirability, necessity and possibility
of self-managed stateless socialism (i.e. anarchy).
Many in
the 'anti-globalisation' movement will not accept these aims. But this
is precisely why our intervention in the anti-globalisation movement
as militants with clear ideas and tactics is so vital.
And this
is also why we need anarchist political organizations with theoretical
and tactical unity and collective responsibility, groups of the type
advocated by Nestor Makhno and Peter Arshinov in the Organizational
Platform of the Libertarian Communists in 1926. Unity, clarity, dedication
are our indispensable revolutionary weapons against an enormously powerful
and confident capitalist enemy. We can win.

Lucien
van der Walt [Bikisha Media Collective]
email: bikisha(A)mail.com
Originally
published in the North Eastern Anarchist c/o Sabate Anarchist
Collective, PO Box 230685 Boston, MA 02123 email: sabate36(A)juno.com
website: http://www.nefac.net/
