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Over the top in Brussels

Brian Holmes | 30.01.2002 11:18

Scripted demonstrations are going nowhere - but it doesn't mean we can't learn from what's going on and cut a better route.

Someone held up a hand-painted red sign over the heads of the crowd at
Bockstael square in Brussels. An arrow pointed straight ahead: "Top," it
said – the Dutch word for "summit." Another curved off to the right:
"Legal
Route," it read.

It was the direct-action way to ask all the demonstrators to think about
what we were actually doing, there on Bockstael square. But when the
huge,
rolling Oxfam globe with its costumed dancers gesticulating out of the
continents finally turned right, everyone just followed without asking
too
many questions.

And from then on, the whole demonstration seemed scripted in advance.
The
words "No Red Zone," also written on the sign, were in vain. Nobody
bothered the leaders in their castle.

The protests around the EU summit in the palace of Laeken, Belgium, got
huge popular support despite the freezing wind. At least 80 thousand
people
came out for the union march on December 13, plus another 25 thousand
for
the "alternative" demo the next day and on Saturday, the anarchists and
the
Bruxxel street party met to find their own way through the city.

But the union march, which set off on a short and boring straight-line
route to finish under huge hanging video screens and a sound system
worthy
of a football match, was overflowing with painfully reformist slogans
like
"Europe – that's us." Yeah, that's us, dumped like dead leaves whenever
there's a dip in the profit rate.

As for the alternative demonstration organized by a coalition of NGOs
and
far-left political groups, not only did it take the legal road and veer
off
towards an uninhabited industrial zone, it also ended up inside a fenced
complex reached by a relatively narrow gate, which of course the
protestors
had to close when the police began provoking them with a water canon.

Result: a few thousand people were forced to submit to the humiliation
of
"selective searches" just to leave the place where they'd gathered to
talk
politics, and about 25 were arrested.

Only the street party refused to have its path preordained – but even it
had to stand still and nervous for an hour, surrounded by legions of
state
police while local burgermeisters negotiated. The entire series of
demonstrations amounted to an object lesson in control and
neutralization.

"What do you want?" people kept asking me. "More violence, like in
Genoa?"
Not at all. We had to avoid a sterile confrontation that could only be
used
against us, and we did. That's totally positive. There are no terrorists
in
the movement for egalitarian, democratic exchanges, and the whole
challenge
of the Laeken protests was to get beyond the double specter of useless
street violence and September 11.

But in a time of increasing popular support in Europe, that doesn't mean
we
should just give up all our strength. In Brussels, the different strands
of
the movement conspired among each other to separate, the better to be
identified and controlled by the coercive powers of Belgian/European
state.

Unions one day, NGOs and splinter parties the next, freaks and pinks and
anarchists on the weekend. What we didn't have was political solidarity
across the whole social spectrum, like in Genoa.

Do you ever get the feeling someone's watching every move you make? The
Rand corporation represents a typically American way of gaining the high
ground, by concentrating huge intellectual resources and then openly
publishing the results.

They've just released a new book on "social netwar," with a chapter
specifically on Seattle, which you can download for nothing
(www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR1382). The author of chapter 7 claims
that
no leftist organization has analyzed why N30 was such a great success,
but
that many law-enforcement and government agencies have done so.

So why were the actions against the WTO in Seattle so powerful? In the
broadest terms, because they achieved a kind of contamination between
the
"normally" separate movements of trade unionists, NGOs and think tanks,
and
anarchists looking to make direct democracy happen on the street.

That convergence was no accident: it was made possible by the members of
the Direct Action Network, who figured out how to non-violently
immobilize
the Seattle police at a moment when anything could happen, when union
marchers could join ecologists to go see where the smoke was coming from
(and maybe run into the Black Bloc on the way).

The DAN used precise lock-down and civil disobedience techniques,
carried
out by trained activists, to produce a strategically designed chaos that
was stronger than any order the National Guard could try to
"reestablish."

And on the ground, everyone was sharp enough to see a great chance to
actually make a difference, rather than just watching the human and
other
ecologies get stamped underfoot. In other words, the real activists in
Seattle set up the conditions for spontaneous self-organization.

Do we have to leave the Rand corporation on top today? For sure, it's
unlikely that another Seattle is going to fall ripe into our hands. Not
just the police but also the politicians have done their homework.

Everything will be done to keep the union marches as far from the
anarchists as possible, and special "negotiating tables" (with sleeping
pills in the champagne) will be laid for every NGO or union boss
gullible
enough to think that you get reform without the threat of revolution.

Divide and co-opt when you can, channel and neutralize when you can't,
arrest whatever's left over: that's the Belgian solution (I guess Freud
would've called it "a progress in civilization").

But if we analyze what their response has been, and make it public, then
we
can keep turning the tables, again and again, until substantial change
starts to appear in a world-system whose dangerous and morbid nature is
coming clearer all the time, for instance right now in IMF-battered
Argentina.

Ronfeldt and Arquilla (the Rand twins) talk a lot about "swarms." Means:
something a lot like the unpredictable but precisely motivated
self-organization of a mass-individual event, like a contemporary
demonstration.

Why not be aware of precisely the point where people power is the
strongest, and play it to the hilt? First of all, a movement that's been
based from the word go on direct action ought to admire those 50 people
who
occupied the CEFIC, that is, the European Chemical Industry Council, on
December 12.

Brussels is full of lobbies like that: the European Round Table of
Industrialists, the Trans-Atlantic Business Dialogue, UNICE (the Union
of
Industrial and Employers Confederations of Europe) and the whole life of
these organizations is a crime against democracy, it's legitimate that
they
be closed down immediately.

It's even more legitimate if union members, ecologists, leftists and
anarchists get a flyer or an email explaining exactly what's going on,
while it's happening, with an address and an arrow on the map.

We can't fall into the illusion that just having everybody queue up
separately on a different day to kiss the shields of the friendly,
public-service police is really going to stop the engines of neoliberal
globalization. But the people-swarms on the indispensable days of global
action can be doubled and tripled by idea- and action-swarms that
out-race
and out-proliferate the co-optation of those enlightened men who govern
us.

So Jospin talks about globalization with a human face? Let's display the
faces of all those French transnational companies laying off people in
Brazil while their partner companies cut the work force in Paris and
pollute the water in the Bouches-du-Rhone.

So Blair talks about education? Why don't signs on the street corners
compare what it now costs to get through college in Britain, compared to
just five years ago? So Aznar's flunkies mutter about the Moroccans
taking
away Spanish jobs? Let's see how many Andalou tomatoes are produced by
men
and women with on sub-minimum wages, under semi-legal conditions with
new
papers authorizing exploitation - and let's talk about the Universal
Embassy back in Brussels at the same time.

Traditional governing "strategy" meant looking down from the top on all
the
fools below, who could be channeled into whatever path the powerful
would
like to see them take. Networked strategy means the self-coordinated
action
of intelligent people who refuse their supposed destiny, looking up past
the leaders, past the summits, toward a better future.

The danger right now is that the last two or ten years of tremendous
effort
(depending on who you are) might just vanish into the thin air of that
cold
night when your little splinter-group finds itself all alone against the
police force and their giant tweezers.

Now the powers-that-be think they know exactly how to deal with "the new
kids on the black block": you make some into partners, some into
criminals,
and just let the others hold their carnivals under surveillance.

But the better future is that we just keep on taking the lead, learning
from our own inventions and continuing to risk every kind of crossover,
every promising and positive combination, between the religious and
ecologist NGOs, the revolutionary networks, the critical think tanks,
the
leftist workers' parties, the anarchists and all the people who don't
even
want one of those names, or neoliberal globalization either.

We have too much new knowledge at our finger- and tongue-tips to just
give
into prescripted scenarios. If we develop that knowledge, and share it
with
our neighbors – the way neighbors were talking to neighbors everywhere
last
week in Brussels – then there isn't any reason why we can't continue
turning the tables on the top-down theory of capitalist globalization.

Brian Holmes
- Homepage: www.infoshop.org

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