Posted on Jan 15, 2017
Mr. Fish / Truthdig
Politics is a game of fear.
Those who do not have the ability to make power elites afraid do not succeed.
All of the movements that opened up the democratic space in America—the
abolitionists, the suffragists, the labor movement, the communists, the socialists,
the anarchists and the civil rights movement—developed a critical mass and
militancy that forced the centers of power to respond. The platitudes about
justice, equality and democracy are just that. Only when power becomes worried
about its survival does it react. Appealing to its better nature is useless. It
doesn’t have one.
We once had within our
capitalist democracy liberal institutions—the press, labor unions, third
political parties, civic and church groups, public broadcasting, well-funded
public universities and a liberal wing of the Democratic Party—that were
capable of responding to outside pressure from movements. They did so
imperfectly. They provided only enough reforms to save the capitalist system
from widespread unrest or, with the breakdown of capitalism in the 1930s, from
revolution. They never addressed white supremacy and institutional racism or
the cruelty that is endemic to capitalism. But they had the ability to address
and ameliorate the suffering of working men and women.
These liberal institutions—I
spend 248 pages in my book “Death of the Liberal Class” explaining how this
happened—collapsed under sustained assault during the past 40 years of
corporate power. They exist now only in name. They are props in the democratic
facade. Liberal nonprofits, from MoveOn to the Sierra Club, are
no better. They are pathetic appendages to the Democratic Party. And the
Democratic Party, as the community organizer Michael Gecan said, is not a
functioning political party but “a permanent mobilization.” It is propped up
with corporate money and by a hyperventilating media machine. It practices
political coronations and manipulates voters, who have no real say in party
politics. There are, as the political philosopher Sheldon Wolin reminded us, no
institutions left in America that can authentically be called democratic.
But, even more ominously, the
militant movements that were the real engines of democratic change have been
obliterated by the multi-pronged assault of communist witch hunts and
McCarthyism, along with deindustrialization, a slew of anti-labor laws and
deregulation, and corporate seizure of our public and private institutions.
This has left us nearly defenseless.
The corporate state ignores
the suffering of the majority of Americans. It rams through policies that make
the suffering worse. This is about to get turbocharged under Donald Trump.
Institutions, the courts among them, that once were able to check the excesses
of power are slavish subsidiaries of corporate power. And the most prescient
critics of corporate power—Noam Chomsky, Ralph Nader and others—have been
blacklisted and locked out by corporate media, including a public broadcasting
system that depends on corporate money.
We will have to build
movements and, most importantly, new, parallel institutions that challenge the
hegemony of corporate power. It will not be easy. It will take time. We must
not accept foundation money and grants from established institutions that seek
to curtail the radical process of reconstituting society. Trusting in the
system, and especially the Democratic Party, to carry out reform and wrest back
our democracy ensures our enslavement.
“Power is organized people and
organized money,” Gecan told me when I interviewed him in New York recently.
“Most activists stress organized people and forget organized money. As
organizers, we stress both.”
“We think the issues are, in a
sense, the easy part,” said Gecan, who is the co-director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, the largest network of
community-based organizations in the United States. He is also the author of “Going Public: An Organizer’s Guide to
Citizen Action.” “When we go to a place like East Brooklyn, or South Bronx, or
the west side of Chicago, you can take a ride around the neighborhood and see
many of the issues right up front. What we can’t see is—is there a fabric of
relationships among institutions and leaders in those areas? We spend the first
year, or two, or three, building that. Identifying leaders. Identifying
institutions that are actually grounded in those communities. Doing training
with leaders. Raising money so that the organization doesn’t run out of money
right at the start.”
“We don’t take government
money,” he said. “We want independence. We want ownership. We want people to
have skin in the game. We want people to be able to walk away from any
situation they want to, to confront anyone they want to, without worrying about
having their budget being slashed or eliminated. So we stress both. Organized
people and organized money is essentially building the foundation of the
organization first. And then, once that’s fairly solid, we begin identifying
issues through a real, deliberate process of house meetings, individual
meetings, soliciting to people. And not just doing a poll in the community. [We
find out] what do you care about? What are you concerned about? By asking people
what they are concerned about and are they willing to do something about it.”
This process of institution
building permits organizers and activists to eventually pit power against
power.
“The decision-making in those situations is not about
merit, how nice you are, or how deep the need is,” Gecan said. “It’s about do
you have enough power to compel a reaction from the state or a reaction from
the corporate sector. When people say what are you building around, I say we’re
building around power. People who understand power tend to have the patience to
build a base, do the training, raise the money, so when they go into action
they surprise people.”
The corporate press echoes the pronouncements of the
power elites. It is blind to the undercurrents and moods of the wider society.
It did not anticipate the election of Trump any more than it did the financial
crash in 2008. It does not report on the lives of ordinary men and women. It
shuts out their voices and renders them invisible. And it—like the power
structure—will be among the last to know that the bankrupt social and political
systems that sustain it are collapsing. Once the ruling ideology, in our case neoliberalism, is understood by the public as a tool for corporate
and oligarchic pillage, coercion is all the state has left.
I asked Gecan what characteristics he looks for in
identifying leaders. “Anger,” he shot back. “It’s not hot anger. It’s not
rhetorical anger. It’s not the ability to give a speech. It’s deep anger that
comes from grief. People in the community who look at their children, look at
their schools, look at their blocks, and they grieve. They feel the loss of
that. Often, those people are not the best speaker or the best-known people in
the community. But they’re very deep. They have great relationships with other
people. And they can build trust with other people because they’re not
self-promotional. They’re about what the issues are in the community. So we
look for anger. We look for the pilot light of leadership. It’s always there.
It’s always burning. Good leaders know to turn it up and down depending on the
circumstance.”
If we are to succeed we will have to make alliances
with people and groups whose professed political stances are different from
ours and at times unpalatable to us. We will have to shed our ideological
purity. Saul Alinsky, whose successor, Ed Chambers, was Gecan’s mentor, argued that the ideological
rigidity of the left—something epitomized in identity politics and political
correctness—effectively severed it from the lives of working men and women.
This was especially true during the Vietnam War when college students led the
anti-war protests and the sons of the working class did the fighting and dying
in Vietnam. But it is true today as liberals and the left dismiss Trump
supporters as irredeemable racists and bigots and ignore their feelings of
betrayal and very real suffering. Condemning those who support Trump is
political suicide. Alinsky detested such moral litmus tests. He insisted that
there were “no permanent enemies, no permanent allies, only permanent
interests.”
“We have to listen to people unlike ourselves,” Gecan
said, observing that this will be achieved not through the internet but through
face-to-face relationships. “And once we’ve built a relationship we can agitate
them and be willing to be agitated by them.”
The homogenization of culture in the wake of the death
of the local press and local civic, church and other groups has played a large
part in our disempowerment, Gecan argues. We have lost connection with those
around us. We do not fully understand the corporate structures of power that
wreak havoc with our lives both nationally and in our communities. And this is
by the design of the corporate state.
“Over seventy-five years the process of community
dissolution that took place in Back of the Yards has been mirrored in thousands
of U.S. communities,” Gecan wrote of Alinsky’s first community organization, Back of the Yards Neighborhood
Council,
founded in 1939 in Chicago. “Everywhere the tightly-knit worlds of a dozen or
so blocks—where workplace, church, neighborhood, recreation, tavern, and
political affiliation were all deeply entwined—have given way to exurban
enclaves, long commutes, gathered congregations, matchmaker websites, and
fitness clubs filled with customers who don’t know one another. A world where
local news was critically important and closely followed—often delivered by
local publishers and reporters and passed along by word of mouth—has been
replaced by the constant flow of real and fake news arriving through social
media. A world of physically imposing and present institutions and
organizations has morphed into a culture of global economic dynamics and fitful
national mobilizations built around charismatic figures.”
“You have to organize who is in front of you,” Gecan
said. “Not who used to be in front of you. In places like Chicago, Cleveland or
Baltimore, the congregation used to be very robust. Congregations that were
strong are weaker. We’re still organizing with them but still looking at
different institutions. Schools are institutions. They’re more complicated, but
they’re institutions in those neighborhoods. We’re recruiting schools in many
places; sometimes it’s housing groups. Sometimes we build new institutions
called East Brooklyn Congregations or United Power for Action and Justice.
We’re recruiting the best of the existing, we’re working with the existing to
reconnect with people and expand. And we find new institutions. It has to be
institutional in some way.”
Gecan concedes that America’s future under a Trump
presidency, and amid democratic institutions’ collapse and climate change, is
bleak. But he warned against falling into despair or apathy.
“In 1980 in New York, all the liberal establishment,
the entire establishment, was saying New York would never be as strong as it
once was,” he said. “It was called benign neglect. They wrote off parts of New
York permanently in their minds.” But community groups, including Brooklyn
Congregations, which built 5,000 low-income homes, organized to save
themselves.
“Our organizations and our leaders simply didn’t
accept that judgment from the elites,” Gecan said. “Things are tough, hard, but
we’re going to build an organization. We’re going to identify things we can
correct and correct them—with government if we can, or without it. We’ll raise
our own money. We’ll figure out our housing strategy. We’ll hire our own
developer and general manager. It’s about being more flexible and plastic about
solutions. It’s not relying on what the state or market says is possible. It’s
creating your own options.”
Institution building is possible only if you “engage
institutions or create newer and better ones—whether it’s churches or civic
unions,” he said. Without these, the power in the other two sectors—corporate
and governmental—dominates.
The state, he said, has learned how to manipulate
familiar protest rituals and render them impotent. He dismisses as meaningless
political theater the kind of boutique activism in which demonstrators
coordinate and even choreograph protests with the police. Activists spend a few
hours, maybe a night, in jail and then assume they have credentials as
dissidents. Gecan called these “fake arrests.” “Everyone looks like they’ve had
an action,” he said. “They haven’t.”
He called the choreographed protests sterile
re-enactments of the protests of the 1960s. Genuine protest, he said, has to
defy the rules. It cannot be predicable. It has to disrupt power. It has to
surprise those in authority. And these kinds of protests are greeted with anger
by the state.
No movement will survive, he said, unless it is built
on the foundation of deep community relationships. Organizers must learn to
listen, even to those who do not agree with them. Only then are organization
and active resistance possible.
“Three things have to be happening in great
organizations: people have to be relating, people have to be learning, people
have to be acting,” he said. “In many religious circles, there’s some learning
going on, there’s a little bit of relating going on, but there’s no action.
There’s no external action. And it’s killed many institutions. In a lot of
activism, there’s a lot of acting but there’s not much relating or learning, so
people make the same mistakes again and again.”
“I was in Wisconsin during the [Gov. Scott] Walker
situation and
the reaction to it,” he said about the 2011 protests by union members and their
supporters. “They did 23 major demonstrations. Fifty [thousand], 70 [thousand],
100,000 people. After the second or third I said to those people, why are you
doing all this? Because as you do these, you can’t be building relationships in
local communities. And you don’t know what your own members are thinking about
this situation. It ended up being unfortunately the case.”
“Can we rebuild unions?” Gecan asked. “We can. It takes
time. And we’re doing it in some parts of the country. Can we rebuild civic
life in our cities? We have and will do more. Can we take these people on? I
know we can. But it will take different tactics. It will take some very
unconventional allies that will surprise people.”
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