hrothgar, on 2017-February-03, 10:41, said:
When I was a young man, my grandfather (who was a passionate Wobblie) told me that the day the American labor movement stopped killed mine owners was the day the labor movement started to die...
I am a strong believer in the social contract and prefer living in a society governed by such.
With this said and done, the decision to abide by the social contract is a voluntary one and individual can withdraw from it if they want.
If any individual choses to do so, they are acting outside the law, deserve to be punished, and should expect to be punished.
However, I'm not going to claim that I wouldn't resort to violence if the conditions seemed right.
(Nor do I believe that individual or even mob violence is outside the American political tradition. We like to whitewash this, but it happens all the time)
Richard
You and I see eye to eye on most political matters, but I do think that you are in the wrong here.
Politics is a battle for the hearts and minds of the voting public. As in many countries, the US appears to be sharply divided with an ever-diminishing persuadable centre. It is that centre that will make the difference in 2018 and 2020, along with the degree of mobilization of the base.
Violence by those identified with 'the left' will be used by the right to demonize the left. Right now, because the right is in power, the bulk of protests will be by the left, so it will be easy to spin any political violence as emanating from the left, even if (as in Seattle) the worst violence is from the right.
The sight of violent protestors hiding their faces behind bandanas and balaclavas, etc, is virtually guaranteed to stoke outrage on the right and to mobilize them to vote.
It is likely to demoralize many on the left...those who feel that violence is a betrayal....and keep them at home on election day.
It is likely to persuade those few who are persuadable that the left doesn't have the answers.
And the irony is that I suspect that the 'activists' who commit these violent protests don't vote. I am not speaking of the many peaceful protestors, merely of the minority whose goal appeared to be to create a violent confrontation.
Italy in the early 1920's and Germany under the Weimar Republic saw open battles in the streets between communists and fascists/Nazis, and look where that ended up. Violence seems to 'work', in terms of bringing about progressive change only when the bulk of the populace is supportive of the cause. When the populace is split, history seems to indicate that the authoritarian side prevails. This makes sense to me. Many people want leadership...they are attracted to authoritarians, and that attraction seems to be magnified in times of fear and uncertainty, which goes a long way to explaining trump now. In addition, the military and police forces attract and offer meaning and fulfillment to the authoritarian personality. They operate according to clear lines of command, and with great structure. So the military and police forces will tend to side with those advocating for the right.
Unless and until there is a significant shift in the way the republican base thinks about trump, political violence will likely be counter-productive for the progressive movement.
Btw, the Wobblies lost, and it wasn't because they stopped murdering people. It was because the police and army were against them, and they couldn't mobilize the middle class to share their outrage.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari