-
Modern industrial civilization is an astonishing
testament to the power and capacity of organization.
-
The world that we inhabit today is the product
of countless generations of planning, innovation
-
and collective human activity, harnessed and
channelled towards the ceaseless pursuit of
-
productivity and growth.
-
Every day, the global economy structures and
coordinates the labour of billions of people.
-
A dizzying array of commodities are engineered,
manufactured, transported to regional distribution
-
centres and shipped out to retail outlets
and people’s doorsteps all around the world.
-
International supply chains cut across borders
and continents, connecting garment workers
-
in Ho Chi Min City, Vietnam to Wal-Mart shoppers
in Scottsdale, Arizona.
-
Within this interconnected system, each metropolis forms a teeming hub of activity made up of dozens of
-
neighborhoods. These distinct regions are linked together by an intricately designed maze of
-
transportation and telecommunication
-
infrastructure, as well as the electrical,
water and sewage grids that help ensure the
-
sanitation and daily survival of millions
of people.
-
And yet despite all the meticulous planning
and the vast quantities of human skill and
-
toil marshalled towards its execution, more
than a billion people live in squalid, overcrowded
-
slums, favelas and makeshift refugee camps
– many of which lack basic access to electricity
-
or running water. This growing population
draws little benefit from the way society is organized.
-
And this is by design as their impoverishment and desperation is integral to the machine's
-
smooth functioning.To the architects of progress, they are the grease that keeps the gears moving.
-
The same could be said, to varying degrees,
for the entirety of the global working class,
-
particularly migrant labourers and all those
working in the informal, low-wage sectors
-
of the so-called “gig economy”. Because
this world is not organized around the principle
-
of satisfying people’s needs, but around
the endless accumulation of capital.
-
This organizational imperative is firmly rooted
in ruling-class institutions and in the ideologies
-
and structural violence that underpin them.
This dynamic means that sweeping social transformations
-
are contingent on political crises that can
shake and ultimately uproot the entire social
-
order. Yet even when this sort of revolutionary
change may seem far off, it’s always possible
-
to change our conditions for the better. This
is where autonomous, grass-roots organizing comes in.
-
Over the next thirty minutes, we’ll take
a closer look at what this sort of organizing
-
looks like for anarchists. Along the way,
we’ll talk to a number of individuals as
-
they share their own experiences of bringing
people together, coming up with strategies,
-
hitting the streets... and making a whole
lot of trouble.
-
When we're talking about organzing, we're
essentially talking about weaponizing human
-
relatonships. The relationships that you and I
and people in our broader community that are
-
affected by things, that live together, that
work together, that go to school together..
-
Weaponizing those relationships, and then
using those relationships to go out and do
-
something and figuring out how people can
physically put themselves together as material force.
-
With that in mind, it's important to understand
-
that this takes time, it takes a lot of trust,
a lot of love, a lot of passion. It takes
-
time for folks to kind of come together and
to start pinpointing what are the issues,
-
what are the struggles here within my neighborhood,
within my community?
-
Organizing is, it's a process of building
-
up your collective strength and your collective power
-
The first step of organizing is to sort of
-
break through that social barrier and isolation
that divides us and often this can be as simple
-
as getting a bunch of people into a room together
and starting to talk about the things that
-
we have in common, the problems that we share,
and from there through the course of talking
-
about these things we start to come to the
realization that by working together we're
-
in a better position to change things. Organizing
is a process that should be transformative.
-
During the process of organizing
new bonds of solidarity are formed through
-
the course of struggle.
-
I think the first thing is to
find a group of people,
-
a community,
-
or people in your area
-
that have a conflict in common.
-
And based on that conflict,
-
to agree to organize among
these people to achieve an objective.
-
Organizing is more of an approach to engaging in struggle
-
People talk about organizing and being an organizer more related to building relationships with
-
people and focusing on specific groups of people, it could be tenants or students or workers.
-
But in this case the central focus is more on building those relationships
-
Rather than just on one singular issue and often working to like build power with those people
-
"After every anarchist attack, a wordy communique - Anarchist graffiti - A Greek anarchist group has attacked
-
- an anarchist group - anarchist community - these are anarchists!"
-
I think there are a variety of different characteristics that differentiate anarchist organizing from other
-
types of organizing. I think some
of them entail the scope of the type of organizing
-
anarchists engage in. I think by default of
being an increadibly diverse politics that has
-
a critique of domination and systems of power
that is so total, means that anarchists focus
-
on a very broad range of different issues
and organize amongst many different people.
-
What distinguishes anarchist organizing primarily
is the goals of that organizing. So, it's
-
the type of world that anarchists are trying
to bring about. Anarchists oppose states and
-
capitalism and all forms of illegitimate authority.
So, the process of anarchist organizing is
-
one that builds opposition to the insitutions,
groups and individuals that reproduce these
-
forms of hierarchy in society.
-
Anarchists engage in a really wide spectrum
-
of different types of activities. From things
that are illegal to things that are very legal,
-
things that are very like non-violent to sometimes
things that could potentially be violent.
-
Constructive, destructive, that sort of thing.
I think, part of what makes anarchism unique
-
is there's no assumption that legality equals
morality.
-
Any party based organization
-
from the most left-leaning
to the furthest right-wing
-
utilizes a hierarchical structure
in its form of organizing.
-
They also form part of
the political circus,
-
the spectacle.
-
There's just a lot of people that are fed
up with politics as usual. They're fed up
-
with the economic system that really just
is ringing them out to dry. They're fed up
-
with elections.
-
In the face of capitalist catastrophe,
in the face of the capitalist devastation,
-
it is necessary to have this energy.
-
There are those of us who can't
-
- there are many people who can't
stay calm and continue life
-
in this "normality"
-
when it is evident that
they are exterminating our future.
-
In popular discourse, the word anarchy is
commonly used to describe the absence of organization.
-
It’s the spectre of chaos that fills the
vacuum formed by a sudden breakdown of order.
-
A violent free-for-all, where the strong take
advantage of the absence of rules to prey
-
upon the weak. This vision of anarchy has
long been a useful projection for the ruling
-
classes, and every paranoid authoritarian
unwilling to distinguish between order and
-
submission. But it’s a far cry from what
anarchists actually believe in, and the world
-
that we’re fighting for.
-
The reality is that anarchists take many different
approaches and hold a multiplicity of views
-
when it comes to the role of organization
and its relationship to struggle. This lack
-
of orthodoxy has historically set anarchism
apart from other revolutionary traditions,
-
such as Marxist-Leninism, whose multiple competing
schools of thought generally agree on the
-
need for a centrally-organized party... just
disagree about who should lead it.
-
For more than 150 years, anarchists have experimented
with a wide range of different organizational
-
forms – from syndicalist trade unions with
over a million dues-paying members, to informal
-
networks of small affinity groups; from federations,
committees and assemblies, to tightly knit
-
cells and loosely-structured associations
of autonomous individuals. This process of
-
experimentation continues to this day.
-
One of the beautiful things about Anarchism
is that there's not one set blueprint. It's
-
a tension and it's striving towards freedom.
-
Anarchists hold a lot of different views on
-
organization and the role that organizations
play in struggle. I think this relates to
-
different positions people hold and things
around thinking things happen more spontaneously
-
to folks who want a higher level of coordination.
-
The main split within anarchism over this
-
question is between individualist anarchists
or egoists and collectivists. Individualist
-
anarchists oppose most forms of organization,
their focus is on building up the autonomy
-
of the individual. and they basically see
organizations as a hinderance on individual
-
autonomy. And then collectivists basically
believe in organizing collectively and organizations
-
are often a big component of that.
-
This also goes hand in hand with different
-
opinions on the basis of how people are organizing
and interacting with each other with some
-
anarchists being in favor of more formal organizing
and organizations that sort of have a clear
-
and defined membership usually specific sort
of bylaws or different things that like govern
-
them. Other anarchists can be quite critical
of organizations and prefer more informal
-
organizing methods sometimes this can entail
still having organizations or groups but having
-
them form for only one specific purpose or
one specific type of activity then having
-
them dissolve.
-
There are obviously pluses and minuses with
-
both formal, so for instance federations or
labor unions and informal things like affinity
-
groups and cells and stuff like that. But
I think that there are also really key questions
-
for anarchists in the 21st century, how we
interact with the public and how people come
-
into anarchism beyond this supposed dynamic
of formal vs informal.
-
There are different positions.
-
So from more anti-social tendencies,
-
more insurrectionary,
-
there isn't really much of
a call or direct invitation
-
for people to join up or
to start believing in anarchist ideas.
-
More than being convinced,
-
those groups have participants
because of their own ideas and feelings.
-
But there are comrades
whose political work is more social,
-
more based in people-power,
who believe in organizing from below
-
and neighborhood organizing.
-
During the insurrectionary period in the United
States from like 2008 and 2009 on, a lot of
-
us kind of glommed on to this idea that quality
is better than quantity, which I would fundamentally
-
agree with, but at the same time, we need
to find a way to actually meet people where
-
they're at, engage them and bring them into
our projects and our movements so we actually
-
can grow. You know in the past couple decades,
people were coming into anarchism through
-
things like punk rock or other subcultures
or from different movements such as like animal
-
rights and things like that. And in the post
anti-globalization era, anarchists have also
-
- at least in the United States, have really
depended on kind of new cycles of struggle
-
to bring people in. So there's the anti-war
movement, you get a new generation of anarchists,
-
there's "Occupy" there's the Ferguson rebellion,
you get a new generation coming in. We can't
-
always depend on something popping off and
then benefiting from that wave of new people.
-
I think here in Chile,
we've had a chance to experience
-
a broad range of anarchist and
anti-authoritarian practices and tactics.
-
Between territorial assemblies,
between affinity groups,
-
between liberated spaces and squats,
-
between labor unions,
between independant workers,
-
among professionals
and among people who live on the streets.
-
Anarchism happens in subtle ways all the time.
And we may not think of it that way because
-
like it's not the concept that we're used
to thinking, but it's still anarchism. When
-
people think of anarchism they have this Eurocentric
idea of what it is, the word itself, it hasn't
-
been around for that long but if you go by
the textbook definition of what anarchism
-
is, indigenous people have been practicing
anarchism and mutual aid for fuckin thousands
-
of years.
-
In these territories we are fortunate that
many, many of us have Mapuche ancestry.
-
We also have that duality,
-
or that ability to position
ourselves politically like this.
-
From the point of view of anarchists
-
- but at the same time not forgetting
that we have our own history.
-
That we have our own individuality.
-
That we are from this territory.
-
That we come from a colonized territory.
-
That our history and our practices
and our visions of anarchism
-
aren't going to be 100% the same
as the anarchist comrades
-
from Palestine,
Rojava, or Europe,
-
or from other parts of Latin America.
-
You know when people are faced with really
horrible things in their everyday life, whether
-
it's eviction, watching people be deported,
stuff that's happening on their job, a pipeline
-
going through their land... We really want
to have people know that there's a community
-
of people in revolt that they can turn to,
that they can then organize with to fight
-
back and to really hurt their enemies to the
point at least where they're not able to do
-
what they're trying to do.
-
A good organizer has many tools in their toolbox.
The trick is to know which tool to use when,
-
and to replace them when they stop working.
This applies just as much to anarchists as
-
it does any other type of organizer. The main
difference is what we’re trying to build.
-
Anarchism is based on the principle of self-organization.
This is directly connected to the type of
-
world that anarchists seek to create. A world
in which people can come
-
to collective decisions and take action autonomously,
without waiting for orders or permission from above.
-
Anarchist organizing begins with the fostering
of self-directed struggle. It involves agitating
-
and encouraging people to to take action directly
to solve their problems. Without appealing to those
-
higher up the social ladder. From this starting
-
point, there are many different paths that
you can take. Wherever you decide to go, the
-
most important step is your first.
-
Strategy and tactics are intimately connected,
yet separate things.
-
You start off with a specific goal or a vision.
Something that you want to accomplish, or
-
achieve, or want to challenge. And then your
strategy is your plan of how you want to achieve
-
that goal. And then the tactics would be all
the specific actions, activities and approaches
-
that would sort of come together to help you
in meeting that goal.
-
The strategy that you choose will determine
the type of activity that you engage in. When
-
your tactics are successful, or if they repeatedly
fail, go back and make adjustments to your
-
strategy. Once you’ve made those adjustments
to your strategy, you will then try to come
-
up with different tactics.
-
These things have to reinforce each other,
and we have to also constantly be evaluating
-
back and forth.
-
You have to just do it. You gotta do it. You
gotta kind of be there on the front lines,
-
putting in that work.
-
On the one hand, we visualize,
theorize, develop our politics,
-
basically thinking on what it is we want
- what we're seeking.
-
On the other hand,
we start taking action
-
and we see how specifically
we can make those ideas real.
-
We're all individuals.
But everyone has their role.
-
In Chile we're lucky,
-
somewhat ironically,
-
that we have a history full of conflict.
-
A history of political persecution
-
and of riots.
-
So conflicts and objectives
have always been present.
-
The strategies and tactics
that have been used in general
-
have been pretty broad.
-
The tactics that are winning these days
can be inspired by other struggles.
-
For example the tactics
inspired by the conflict in Hong Kong.
-
The idea of using lasers
-
and of using water jugs
to put out tear gas cannisters.
-
These are internationally used
resistance and street fighting practices.
-
Then there's blocking the street.
-
There are barricades
- different kinds too.
-
There's barricades of fire,
or barricades of stones.
-
There are comrades who rescue
and help those who are injured.
-
The world that we live in, how we engage with
things, even how we come to think about things
-
is going to necessarily be influenced by the
material conditions that we exist in.
-
The kind of classic Marxist quote: “People change
history, but not in the conditions of their
-
own choosing.” That it is these conditions,
these material realities, that impact not
-
only people’s lives, but also their consciousness.
And that you can’t just think your way outside
-
of those things–or that there is no outside
of it.
-
Capitalism is constantly changing the face
of work, of social life, of the way people
-
are alienated from each other. So we need
to be constantly kind of reevaluating, y’know...
-
‘what is life like?’ And what are the
possibilities for revolt against the kind
-
of lives that we’re forced to lead?
-
How can we really get to the nitty gritty
of, like, alright... what’s going on here?
-
How are we gonna fix it?
-
People change the world around them through
their actions. And so we can have an effect
-
on our material conditions, and we can change
them—through struggle. The flip-side to
-
that is that the state can change conditions
in order to remove the fuel for struggles.
-
I think it’s important to understand how
power is organized, and the specifics of how
-
it operates.
-
The kind of world that we want doesn’t exist
yet. It can only be built on the ashes of
-
this one. But at the same time, we’re trying
to create new ways of relating to each other.
-
New ways of solving problems, new ways of
engaging in action, new ways of carrying out
-
things like work that look towards the possibilities
of new forms of life that don’t exist yet.
-
If you want a future society that is free
form hierarchy and domination, if you want
-
a future society where people have autonomy
and are treated equally, how you’re engaging
-
today has to reflect these values.
-
Sometimes we kinda have to take these chances
and these risks, and try these alternative
-
ways of doing things.
-
Follow conflicts around the world
that can also serve as inspiration.
-
So that we can have new experiences.
New ways of attacking.
-
New forms of resistance
within the territories in conflict.
-
To the extent possible, revolutionary movements
should be creating a counter-society and removing
-
themselves from state and capitalist institutions
as much as possible.
-
Basically what we can do is orient our efforts
towards building competing centres of legitimacy
-
that are communal. That exist in opposition
to the state, to the police and to capital.
-
We wanna prefigure the world that we wanna
see and the relationships that we’re building.
-
Both in terms either of, y’know, building
some sort of dual power or autonomous power
-
from the ground-up to meet our everyday needs,
but also in terms of the struggles that we’re
-
engaging in. You know, those relationships
should prefigure a different kind of mode
-
of life. And also, y’know, bring people
into new ways of engaging with each other,
-
new ways of talking, new ways of solving problems.
Insurrection and dual power of course need
-
each other. As the saying goes, ‘the force
of insurrection is social, not military.’
-
And to create a social force requires, y’know,
real infrastructure and space that we can
-
call our own. And the ability to use that
space in order to fight back.
-
On December 1st, 2019, a 55 year old resident
of Hubei province walked into a hospital in
-
Wuhan with an apparent case of pneumonia.
This was the first documented instance of
-
COVID-19, a novel strain of Corona Virus that
has since swept across the globe and turned
-
daily life upside-down for billions of people.
-
At the time these words are being written,
-
we appear to be at the precipice of a mass
social and economic breakdown on a scale not
-
seen in the past century. If nothing else,
this pandemic has exposed the myth of capitalism’s
-
infallibility and laid its weaknesses bare.
It has also demonstrated the need to be able
-
to quickly adapt our strategies and tactics
to confront rapidly changing realities. Slowly
-
at first, and then all of a sudden, our mobility
and ability to associate have been curtailed,
-
and time-honoured tactics such as rallies,
marches, door-knocking and even handing out
-
flyers have been taken away.
-
But as the saying goes, necessity is the mother
of invention. In times of social and political
-
upheaval, hold fast to your principles. Rid
yourself of dogmatism. Keep your eyes on the
-
prize. And brace yourself to meet whatever
challenges come your way.
-
Anarchism is a beautiful, amazing thing and
has done a lot of great things historically.
-
Also, it's often something that fails. And,
I think failure is okay, and there is often
-
a lot of value in things that I’ve come
to take away even in times there has been
-
big failures or struggles. Saying you’re
anarchist, and you’re getting involved in
-
anarchist organizing and struggle, whatever
that looks like, you are declaring yourself
-
to be very openly against many of the things
that currently exist, like the state, the
-
police and capitalism. And, you should just
realize from the beginning that that sometimes
-
has consequences.
-
Take yourself seriously. Once you declare
yourself an enemy of the state, the state
-
will take that very seriously as a threat.
Jail sucks and once you have a criminal record
-
it makes things more difficult for you in
the future, so you should take adequate steps
-
to try to protect yourself and avoid unnecessary
arrests.
-
What are the major things going around that
you could actually impact with people that
-
you're close to, that you have a relationship
with. And whether that’s at your workplace
-
or that’s at your school, whether that’s
in the neighbourhood, you know something going
-
with the police, something going on with massive
amounts of gentrification, whether there’s
-
a resource extraction project happening on
the land base that you’re on. From that
-
understanding that analysis, then going about
how would you begin to organize and bring
-
people together and begin to act and begin
to engage in such a way that begins to push
-
back that, you know, puts your own interest
forward and starts to attack those of the
-
dominant class.
-
The Police
-
The Judges
-
The State
-
The President
-
The oppressive state is the rapist
-
The rapist is you
-
Certain groups want to assert their power
and ownership over you, and over your body,
-
what you have to say. This is not about ownership,
this is not about who owns the revolution,
-
or who owns the struggle, like were all in
this shit together. And if somebody is not
-
willing to struggle it out, like let’s say
you’re calling them out on patriarchy or
-
whatever the fuck it is, if they’re not
willing to struggle it out with you than that
-
shows that obviously that individual or that
entity or whatever… like, they don’t give
-
a fuck. If people are truly invested in the
struggle than when shit comes about you’re
-
going to be able to struggle it out. Even
if it takes time, even if you have to stop
-
organizing for a bit until you work shit out.
-
I would invite fellow anarchist comrades
-
to realize that we have the potential
to organize ourselves,
-
to hold positions and politics
that are intersectional
-
with people who may not
necessarily be anarchists.
-
To those who embrace
anti-speciesist ideas.
-
To those who embrace
anti-patriarchal ideas.
-
To those who embrace
ideas and spirituality.
-
To those who rescue some of the ancestry
lost to these centuries of colonization
-
that European, western, white
hetero-patriarchy has imposed on us
-
- has snatched.
-
You’re saying you’re against all these
things, and you’re going to be fighting
-
against all these things. Obviously, sometimes,
there’s pushback, and there’s difficulties
-
and stuff in your life that you’re going
to have to push through.
-
After you do an action, you know, take some
time with your comrades and sit down and reflect
-
critically on what you did well, and what
you could have done better. And then, try
-
to incorporate the lessons you’ve learned
through your own experiences into your future
-
organizing.
-
And we really got to think about, like, “okay,
when we do this, how do we actually win?
-
Like, we wanna actually be able to do damage against
people that are hurting us, we wanna be able
-
hit back in such a way that expands our influence,
our confidence, you know, the spaces that
-
we hold. We need to actually find ways of
intersecting with people that are interested
-
and then bringing them on board, involve them
in struggle, and have them be forced to pick
-
a side that literally supports illegal, anti-capitalist
modes of action, and gets people thinking
-
about the possibilities of what they could
do if there was a movement behind them to
-
better their own lives and conditions.
-
We live in a time when despair comes easily.
A steady flow of bad news keeps us constantly
-
on edge. Massive fires ravage Australia for
months on end. Police departments outfit their
-
body cameras with AI-driven facial recognition
software. A family in Idlib freezes to death
-
after their makeshift refugee camp is bombed.
Emergency ordinances outlaw all public gatherings
-
of three or more people. Confronted with all
this, there’s no shortage of reasons why
-
any rational person might feel viscerally
discouraged and utterly depressed. And that
-
is especially true for revolutionaries who
consistently find our hopeful idealism swallowed
-
up by feelings of bitter resignation and defeat.
-
But when this despair comes, it is important
to remember that we are not alone. That there
-
are many other people who share our sense
of grief, anxiety... and most importantly,
-
outrage. That we are part of a long and proud
lineage of struggle. And that victories are
-
still possible. Armed with this knowledge,
and conscious of our own capabilities, opportunities
-
and limitations, we can turn our attention
back to the task at hand, which is, as always,
-
to build our collective power, and increase
our shared capacity to resist.
-
So at this point, we’d like to remind you
that Trouble is intended to be to be used
-
as a resource to promote discussion and collective
organizing. Are you interested in stepping
-
up your organizing game? Looking to launch
a new initiative, but not quite sure where
-
to begin? Consider connecting with some comrades,
organizing an online viewing party of this
-
film, and discussing where to get started.
-
Interested in running regular screenings of
Trouble at your campus, infoshop, community
-
centre, or even just at home with friends?
Well don’t! We appreciate the support, but
-
that’s probably not a great idea right now.
Instead, why not set up a discussion group
-
with some friends, each watch the episode
on your own screens at home, and then go through
-
the online screening kit on our website for
links to additional resources, and some questions
-
to help frame your conversation.
-
Also just a reminder that here at subMedia,
we depend entirely on donations from our viewers
-
to keep things going... so if you’re able
to pitch in to help support us, please do
-
so at sub.media/donate. If you can’t afford
to support us financially, no worries! You
-
can stream and/or download all our content
for free off our website: sub.media/trouble.
-
This episode would not have been possible
without the generous support of Josh, Murph,
-
Sam, Tal, La Conxa, and the good folks at
IGD.
-
Lastly, we’re sad to announce that this
will be the last episode of Trouble for the
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foreseeable future. It’s been an awesome
run, but the subMedia crew has decided that
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it’s time to move onto new projects. And
to make that possible, we’ve decided to
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pull the plug on Trouble. Given that we can’t
meet up in person for the foreseeable future,
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it seems like the perfect time to make this
change. We want to assure all you Troublemakers
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out there that we have some exciting new plans
in the works that we think you’re going
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to love... so stay tuned! And to everyone
who has organized screenings, sent us ideas
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for show topics, constructive criticism or
positive feedback about the show... thank
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you from the bottom of our hearts! Your support
has been truly humbling, and we hope that
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the 24 episodes that we’ve cranked out will
continue to serve as useful organizing tools
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for years to come.
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Now get out there…. and make some trouble!