Millions of Americans and
others demonstrated against the invasion of Iraq in the last
months before it occurred, 10 million around the world on one
particular day, in what dissident intellectual Noam Chomsky
described as the most significant showing of opposition to war
at such an early stage in living memory. Yet all that failed
to stop the war or even produce a bona fide antiwar candidate
for president, at least not a major party nominee. This has
discouraged many protestors, particularly among the impressive
proportions of first-timers. When, they ask, will we ever have
a better chance to win? If we couldn't stop this one, what's
the use of even trying?
But award-winning sociologist and activist Francis Fox
Piven says the antiwar movement may have expected too much for
too little. "War-making is never determined by anything like a
democratic process," she says. "War is something that
governing elites undertake, and they don't undertake it in
response to popular opinion. If that were the case, we would
probably never go to war, because ordinary people pay for war
with blood and with their wealth."
"One kind of evidence for that is that candidates never
campaign as war candidates. Lyndon Baynes Johnson, who kept us
in Vietnam, promised not to go to war in Vietnam. You can see
that again and again. Candidates always campaign as peace
candidates.
"Another kind of evidence is that antiwar movements --
popular opinion against wars expressed in marches and
demonstrations -- has rarely succeeded at the outset. It's as
the war grinds on and people become more and more angry and
disillusioned with the war that popular opinion, popular
resistance to the war begins to take its toll on the capacity
of government to make war. So in a way the antiwar movement is
being too impatient. They expect to win too easily."
So do we just keep doing what we are doing and look forward
with bated breath for that fateful day? Hardly. What the
current antiwar movement has done so far, she says, is express
opinion. "They marched in large numbers, they rallied, and it
was a kind of voting, voting in the streets. I think a
successful antiwar movement has to act in ways that throw sand
in the gears of the war machine. Resistance has to be more
serious."
Sand in the Gears
What Piven means by "more serious" we can see in some of
her published research with political scientist Richard A.
Cloward, especially The Politics of Turmoil and Poor People's Movements, with its
subtitle "How They Succeed, Why They Fail."
"There are always lessons for movements in the history of
movements," says Piven. "And the most important lessons have
to do with the conditions under which movements exert
leverage, exert power. This is not a question that is directly
asked in most of the literature on movements." but Piven and
Cloward do address it.
In every case they examine, movements found their concerns
fell on deaf ears until they directly disrupted 'business as
usual' either in government or business operations, and then
they made significant gains. When unemployed workers sat in at
relief offices, for example, local officials somehow found the
money to pay them benefits. Also when participants created
chaos on the local level, officials noticed at the state and
federal levels and began to make concessions and even to
advocate for the protestors' causes.
Furthermore, and contrary to conventional wisdom, these
efforts lost ground quickly as soon as they changed their
methods to more acceptable means to achieve their ends:
negotiating through representatives, working with candidates,
helping them get elected, lobbying and so on. The first signs
of popular discontent had been seen at the polls, Piven and
Cloward point out, but the candidates elected as a result only
paid lip service to movement sympathies. Once in office, their
actions fell well short of needed reforms. This was true both
before and after disobedient groups created crises in which
they would be heard.
It remains to be seen what effect popular dissatisfaction
with the war will have at the polls, but it should be
abundantly clear by now that the work of the antiwar movement
will not be over with this election, no matter who wins. And
if history is any guide, it seems, things may have to get
ugly.
"There are numerous ways in which popular resistance could
express itself," Piven says. "You know, all the war material
has to be shipped overseas. And it's working people everywhere
who have to do the shipping, who have to do the hauling." Such
methods involve great personal and political risk, as Piven
acknowledges, but a "serious" antiwar movement must look at
what works and what doesn't work.
Get Out the Vote
Nor is the lesson here that we should ignore elections. At
times when voting was much more restricted, a direct challenge
to authority could easily result in massacre, lynching or
other violent or dismissive responses. But when poor and
working class people are allowed to vote and do mobilize
around their concerns and turn out to vote, Piven and Cloward
found, governments were much more responsive to social
movements.
And under the present circumstances, Piven thinks a Kerry
administration would be, too. She points out the recent surge
in voter registration in communities of color, poor
neighborhoods and among students. "Of course it could end up
that we'll get a surge of several percentage points, Kerry
will be elected, and if he disappoints these people by his
policies, then the surge will recede and we'll go back to our
fifty percent turnout rate."
Or the antiwar movement, along with the movements for
healthcare, living wage and others, could raise the stakes and
seize the opportunity to pressure the new administration into
making real progress. With this in mind, she says, "I think we
should work to get Kerry and Edwards elected, and after that,
if Kerry and Edwards are elected, we should raise hell."
Ricky Baldwin (baldwinricky@yahoo.com)
is an activist, organizer, writer and father of twins in
Urbana, IL. His articles have appeared in Dollars & Sense,
Z Magazine, In These Times, Extra!, and Labor Notes.
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