Monday, 28 September 2015

Rules For Radicals.

Where Have All The Flowers Gone? The counter-culture and anti-war movements of the 1960s put the US "Establishment" on the back foot. Saul Alinsky's Rules For Radicals was born out of the optimism and confidence of the period. But every action begets a reaction. Alinsky's rules proved  to be no match for the Establishment's 44 year fightback.
 
SAUL ALINSKY died in 1972, but his 1971 book, Rules For Radicals, has inspired thousands of activists – including Barack Obama. “Community Organisers”, from Chicago to Christchurch, have applied Alinsky’s ideas with considerable success – especially in low-income urban communities. Forty-four years on, however, the optimism and confidence that fueled the radical campaigns of the 1970s is much less in evidence, and the power of the government institutions and private corporations against which Alinsky preached his gospel of radical resistance has grown exponentially.
 
When Rules For Radicals was being written, progressivism, both in the USA and around the world, was on a roll. The “counter-culture” of the 1960s had shaken the confidence of the Establishment to the point where it had begun to question how long its ability to “manufacture consent” could endure. Mass movements from below were forcing the issues of racial and gender equality onto the political agenda. Likewise, the new environmental movement. The latter’s power was demonstrated in 1970 by the astonishing public response to the first “Earth Day”.
 
Environmentalism Surges: "Earth Day" 1970
 
Corporate America’s fears were not allayed when their Republican President, Richard Nixon, responded to the electorate’s concerns about industrial pollution by setting up the Environmental Protection Agency, and by shepherding a swag of bills designed to protect the environment through Congress.
 
By 1974, the situation was even worse. Progressive America had driven Nixon from office, and leading members of the Democratic Party were drafting a bill mandating massive federal intervention in the US economy to guarantee full employment. The year before, in the United Kingdom, the Conservative Prime Minister, Edward Heath, beset by a nationwide miners’ strike, had appealed to the British electorate for an answer to the question: “Who Governs Britain?” The response he’d been hoping for was: “You do, Prime Minister!” What he got was much closer to “The unions – you Tory git!” Clearly, something had to be done.
 
In many ways The Crisis of Democracy: On the Governability of Democracies, a 1975 report, written by Michel Crozier, Samuel P. Huntington, and Joji Watanuki, for the Trilateral Commission, was Corporate America’s answer to Alinsky’s Rules For Radicals. According to the report, the lesson to be drawn from the 1960s is that the “impulse of democracy is to make government less powerful and more active, to increase its functions, and to decrease its authority”. The result was “governments overloaded with participants and demands”. What was needed, according to Crozier et al, was for the political stage to become much less crowded: “balance is to be restored between governmental activity and governmental authority”.
 
Lewis F Powell - Author of The Powell Memorandum and saviour of the 1 Percent.
 
Complementing The Crisis of Democracy is the document which has come to be known as The Powell Memorandum. Written in 1971 by Lewis F. Powell, a corporate lawyer and tobacco industry lobbyist (later to become a Justice of the US Supreme Court) to Eugene Syndor at the US Chamber of Commerce, the document (originally entitled The Attack on the American Free Enterprise System) is, essentially, a call-to-arms to the people who ran US capitalism in the 1970s. The Left, Powell argued, had stolen a whole series of marches on the Right, and were now poised to undermine the entire system. Powell was in no doubt as to the sources of this left-wing subversion: “The most disquieting voices joining the chorus of criticism came from perfectly respectable elements of society: from the college campus, the pulpit, the media, the intellectual and literary journals, the arts and sciences, and from politicians.” If these voices couldn’t be silenced, Powell advised, then, at the very least, they should be drowned out.
 
The British geographer, anthropologist, and fierce critic of the culture of Late Capitalism, David Harvey, has argued that the advance of what we now call Neoliberalism can be traced back to The Powell Memorandum. Many of the think tanks still informing the global free market counter-revolution: the Heritage Foundation and the American Legislative Exchange Council, for example, were propelled into existence by Powell’s infamous missive.
 
 
Alinsky condensed the subject matter of his “pragmatic primer for realistic radicals” into 13 basic rules. These are listed below – accompanied by commentaries informed by the 44 intervening years of steadily expanding neoliberal hegemony:
 
 
1. “Power is not only what you have, but what the enemy thinks you have.” Power is derived from 2 main sources – money and people. “Have-Nots” must build power from flesh and blood. 
 
Still true. But activists should never forget that one of the most important things that money buys is the expertise and technology to get inside the heads of the “Have-Nots”. The “enemy” you see may not be the enemy they see.
 
2. “Never go outside the expertise of your people.” It results in confusion, fear and retreat. Feeling secure adds to the backbone of anyone.
 
Forty-four years of “dumbing down” has emptied the well of popular expertise to an alarming degree. People’s security in their own knowledge – and hence their backbone – may be harder to locate than you think.
 
3. “Whenever possible, go outside the expertise of the enemy.” Look for ways to increase insecurity, anxiety and uncertainty.
 
One of the results of The Powell Memorandum has been a burgeoning of the expertise available to the “enemy”. That’s what think tanks are for: to increase the security, confidence and certainty of the powers-that-be.
 
4. “Make the enemy live up to its own book of rules.” If the rule is that every letter gets a reply, send 30,000 letters. You can kill them with this because no one can possibly obey all of their own rules.
 
Rules? What are they?
 
5. “Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon.” There is no defense. It’s irrational. It’s infuriating. It also works as a key pressure point to force the enemy into concessions.
 
But ridicule is a two-edged sword – a weapon the “enemy” mastered long ago. Just think of the front-page headlines of The Sun, or Paddy Gower. On the other hand, you could think of John Stewart and be reassured that, in the right hands, ridicule can still be a very powerful force for Good.
 
6. “A good tactic is one your people enjoy.” They’ll keep doing it without urging and come back to do more. They’re doing their thing, and will even suggest better ones.
 
Except that, these days, the thing people enjoy doing most is clicking “Like” on Facebook and taking selfies!
 
7. “A tactic that drags on too long becomes a drag.” Don’t become old news.
 
Even more true today than it was in 1971. With a 24-hour news cycle, “dragging on” can be measured in minutes.
 
8. “Keep the pressure on. Never let up.” Keep trying new things to keep the opposition off balance. As the opposition masters one approach, hit them from the flank with something new.
 
Absolutely sound advice. Now, if we could just come up with a tactic nobody’s used before!
 
9. “The threat is usually more terrifying than the thing itself.” Imagination and ego can dream up many more consequences than any activist.
 
And Crown Law can dream up consequences that activists would rather not think about.
 
10. “The major premise for tactics is the development of operations that will maintain a constant pressure upon the opposition.” It is this unceasing pressure that results in the reactions from the opposition that are essential for the success of the campaign.
 
The problem today is that any group of activists involved in the “development of operations” will almost certainly be placed under intense surveillance by the SIS, the GCSB, ODESC and Police Intelligence. Eliciting the reaction that you want from the “opposition” is much harder when they know exactly what you’re planning.
 
11. “If you push a negative hard enough, it will push through and become a positive.” Violence from the other side can win the public to your side because the public sympathizes with the underdog.
 
Alinsky was wrong about this even in 1971. Police violence against demonstrators at the 1968 Democratic Party Convention in Chicago led to an outpouring of public support for – not against – the Chicago Police. The “Great Silent Majority” is an evil beast.
 
12. “The price of a successful attack is a constructive alternative.” Never let the enemy score points because you’re caught without a solution to the problem.
 
This was what let down the Occupy movement. They gave us the symbol of the “1 Percent”, but they didn’t give us a solution to the psychopathology of Finance Capitalism.
 
13. “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions.
 
Read Rule 13 again, and ask yourself if this hasn’t been the exact tactic employed against us by the political representatives of Neoliberalism since the late 1970s. Except that Alinsky was wrong about institutions – they’re every bit as easy to hurt as people.
 
The hardest thing for those of us who can still remember when Rules For Radicals was new, is coming to terms with the fact that the bastards beat us with our own weapons.
 
This essay was originally posted on The Daily Blog of Monday, 28 September 2015.

4 comments:

  1. When I first read the article I thought of 'Clockwork Orange' then I thought about he rise of fascism in pre-war Germany, then Stalins purges. Surely a well informed peoples in a free country with free elections on a regular basis are the answer to extremism in local and national politics or am I wrong and naïve ?.

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  2. I was trying to argue yesterday that America was a singular case, but apparently two people cannot post at exactly the same time :-). I made the point that those people who supported the violence at the Democratic convention in 1968 tended to be America's white working class, always referred to in American publications incidentally as middle-class. And to some extent quite rightly, as their membership in pretty much exclusively white and male unions had gained them some of the best working conditions and wages on earth. Nowadays the ranks of these people are thinning markedly as the US middle class is hollowed out, but they still often vote against their own best interests, because they are fooled by demagogues like Trump, and still cling to the American dream, which is pretty much dead. In fact some claim that UPWARDS social mobility in the US is almost non-existent at the moment. But it still remains a powerful influence on American thought, to the detriment of the working classes there.

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  3. thought provoking piece for those that still get out and about and do things other than lament and “clicktivise”

    the rise of the think tanks is important, it is one of the capitalist class methods of ideological battle, the development of their strategy and tactics in an era that should have seen them gone for all money, but the 1%ers have been expert at extending their reign via a combination of state force, globalisation, digitisation of finance capital and most importantly, co-option–yesterdays collectivist is todays boxing day sale attendee, commodity fetishism rules!

    but, we still live in a class struggle based world driven by various contradictions and changes as events in every country evidence, ironically if every activist and their millions of supporters pissed off home for good the capitalist class are still going to choke on it due to the state of the planet, but should the worlds people “go down with the ship”? of course not which is why fresh organisation and tactics must be developed

    how about neo consumers massively restricting their consumption in a co-ordinated way, Talleys don’t like such things up ’em, nor do companies in Israel,




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  4. Nice deconstruct Chris. Times have changed, and Alinskys "rules" have as you have noted lost much potency. It would appear that the "powers who be" have constructed deep defenses against any heresy from the masses.

    Hope must not be lost though as "new tactics" (8) do exist and are used by people whom the system tries to "monitor, infiltrate, surviel" (10). For example "Black Bloc" demonstration tactics work on the principle of known responses to police actions that don't need to be communicated, in fact the whole point is that the activists don't communicate with known people, anonymity means you cant give away your fellow activist because you don't even know him / her. You all look the same, it is hard to identify individuals post event from camera etc. They are getting very sophisticated in evolving new tactics.. http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/anti-racist-action-the-green-mountain-anarchist-collective-black-bloc-tactics-communique

    Another group who display anti establishment tactics based upon anonymity are Anonymous themselves, a hackers collective gone political. The black parts of the net allow them to keep the organs of state and commerce on their toes and hopping. Anonymous have also demonstrated the canniness to target people and institutions that also piss off the Great Silent Majority (11). This they have demonstrated by attacking ISIS web sites post Charlie Hebdo, hacking the KKK and Scientologists in the USA, actions that the authorities failed to do and objected to, but which were popular cause celebres.

    The point is, the Alinsky rules may no longer apply fully, but newer "rules" have emerged, the "establishment" has new challengers.

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