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Shift Mag 6: Summer of Rage?

Shift Magazine | 16.05.2009 16:10 | G20 London Summit | Analysis | Repression

Issue 6 of Shift Magazine is out! It includes articles by Steve Cohen "writing as a Jewish traitor", interviews with the Whitechapel Anarchists and with Marina Pepper, a diary of the G20, thoughts on violence and the Climate Camp, and a review of the film "Baader Meinhof Complex". This is the editorial:

On 1 April, sometime after 7pm, we happened to walk unchallenged into the area around the Royal Exchange, which was eerily deserted by protesters. A dozen or so policemen stood confused, almost dazed, at the corner of Cornhill and Birchin Lane – behind them the body of Ian Tomlinson. The death of a man at a protest that could hardly even be called a riot was certainly the most sobering aspect that we took away from that day.

The G20 protests haven’t shut down a summit nor have they been a threat to business-as-usual in the City. What they have done, however, is to kick-start a far-reaching and at times exciting discussion on the role of police during protest events. It is entirely unsurprising nonetheless that this debate is carried out within a liberal framework which does not question the role of the police as an institution or the state’s self-granted ‘monopoly of violence’.

The problem to us seems to be one of criticism and critique. We see a whole lot of criticism of policing operations, of police tactics and of the behaviour of officers on the ground. But criticism, when adequately addressed, can only serve to reinforce the image of the police as the legitimate protector of property and law and order. Outrage at police violence, while from the perspective of the peaceful protester entirely understandable (and by no means do we want to condemn the anger felt when brutalised and humiliated by a force more violent than us), can only mean that ‘proportionate’ and ‘peaceful’ policing would be acceptable (or even possible).

A critique of the police (and with it of its relationship to the state and to capital) would be something entirely different. For a start, we would have to ask questions of ourselves: how can we deal with contemporary policing of demonstrations in the UK without resorting to the help of the corporate media, the IPCC or the legal system? And in the public realm we have to push an analysis that regards the police riot on 1 April as the very self-evident and expected role of those forces of the state that try to regulate, manage and control the status quo.

We have to be careful that the good deal of bad publicity that the Metropolitan Police receives from the Guardian and other newspapers will not have a de-radicalising effect. If liberal capitalist democracy is seen to be working – i.e. media scrutiny, police accountability, judges and politicians that punish police brutality – then where is our platform for attack? By (only) criticising the actions of the police we are appealing to the status quo, not condemning it.

This response to police action was also evident when 114 climate change activists were recently arrested in Nottingham in connection with an alleged plan to disrupt a local power station. The liberal media and many activists were outraged – this kind of policing impinges on our ‘right’ to protest; rights that are granted (or should be, so the argument logically goes) by the state and facilitated by the police. If we use this appeal to ‘rights’ and the legal framework to defend our actions, where are we left when our actions are antithetical to the requirements of the state and the police?

The G20 protests also showed our strengths of course. To begin with, an anarchist movement in the UK does exist and can achieve a tremendous amount with small numbers. Also, the Climate Camp mobilised thousands of people to engage with climate change not just as an outcome of carbon emissions but as a result of capitalism (well carbon trade, at least). This move away from simply seeing climate change as a scientific problem to stressing its social and economic causes is an important step towards building an anti-capitalist environmental movement ahead of Copenhagen.

Of course, the conversation on the role of violence in movements for social change and what ‘violence’ actually entails needs to be had. The black and white picture constructed by the media, made possible by the separation of the ‘peaceful’ Climate Campers and the ‘violent’ anarchists (as if you couldn’t be an anarchist Climate Camper) - skews the discourse on violence and the reality of state oppression and forceful resistance that is, globally, a necessary part of the lives of many ordinary people.

This difference of criticism and critique is also mirrored in the political responses to the recession currently on offer. Criticism of unfettered finance capital, of bankers and speculators, is put forward by a ‘grand coalition’ ranging from the BNP (“fat-cats”) and the Tories (“stop the bonuses”) to the Labour government (“more regulation”) and the Socialist Workers (“tax the rich”). Slogans we heard on the G20 demos (“hang the bankers”) are just the more radical version of the same message.

On the other hand, a critique of the financial system requires an analysis of, say, private property, a mode of production and exchange inherently motivated by the need to make profit, economic and political hegemony, and the relationship between these processes and personal, social and environmental issues. Only then can we move away from a reductionist politics that often results in the blaming of particular social groups or institutions (bankers, migrants…). In a recession, we should not self-prescribe poverty as some protesters did (“we need to get rid of the rich”), or ask for the right to succeed on a green and fair labour market (“jobs, justice, climate”), but demand ‘luxury for all’. What this luxury could look like must emerge from our future responses to the permanent crisis of capitalism.

Shift Magazine
- Homepage: http://www.shiftmag.co.uk

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

Re: sist

18.05.2009 14:30

I thought this article was very well-written and addressed some important points. At the moment my main hope is that the G20 protests help provoke an internal debate within the "activist scene" on how we interact with both the police and the media.

Some thoughts:

Police violence at the G20, while more extreme than on some occasions, was still very much part of a spectrum - a spectrum which was similarly explored, with much less attention, at the Gaza protests earlier this year. There are a number of reasons for this - one of which being racism on the part of the mainstream media. The Gaza protests were very much portrayed as "Muslim protests," as oppose to the "white middle class protests" of the G20 (not saying this was actually the case for either, only that they wer portrayed in this way), which affected the way the violence was covered, in my vbiew.

Another reason, however, was simply the mass of footage. By the morning of 2nd April, YouTube, Flickr and various other social media websites were full of pictures and videos. The growth of cameraphones and affordable digital cameras has resulted in protests being filled with folks able to record every baton charge, every riot cop in a balaclava, every act of aggression and intimidation by the boys in blue.

On the one hand, this is incredibly positive. Again, the actual police violence was, while extreme, not extraordinary. Being able to expose this with actual video evidence (as oppose to "my mate said...") is a Good Thing.

On the other hand, however, it does raise issues of privacy. It seems a little counter-intuitive, for example, to have one group of protestors blocking police surveillance cameras when there's a hundred protestors taking photos for public consumption right next to them.

Dissuading people from bringing cameras to protests is impossible without confiscating mobile phones on entry to a demo, not to mention counter-productive (protests act as a visible display of anger and a means to attract people into getting involved in wider activity - making it so that nobody knows what happens would seem to be cutting off your nose to spite your face.)

One alternative is an increased use of masks at protests, and with it more of a willingness to tell "nothing to hide, nothing to fear" liberals - politely but firmly - to fuck off.

The role of the media - specifically the Grauniad - should not be underestimated in this. While the footage of police violence being available was a positive in my view, it would likely not have got as much attention had it not been for the media spotlight on the protests (which itself was largely a result of the death of Ian Tomlinson.) While I would put opportunism at the basis of this coverage (they are businesses out to make money, the G20 is a hot topic, the Grauniad was able to quickly carve out a spot for itself as the paper of choice), it does have its uses if seen in the right light - the media as an occasional tool to be used, rather than an ally to be sided with.

With it, however, the media were able to take a key role in framing the debate on police tactics - and in particular, in driving home the idea that their violence was acceptable against "bad protestors" (read: those who fought back, and most of the street party) but not against "good protestors" (those who didn't fight back, and most of the climate camp.)

This attitude was unfortunatley echoed in many comments I came across from people at the climate camp, whose main objection seemed to be that, unlike those nasty violent anarchists, the camp was peaceful - so why would the police possibly attack it? This attitude leads to hostility on both sides and is ultimately counter-productive, IMO.

(As a sidenote, it is if nothing else quite breathtakingly naive. If you think you can block a major road in a major part of the biggest city in the country for over seven hours and the police will just leave you be, you are an idiot.)

While recent events have opened up a space for discussion of police tactics on protests, the boundaries of that discussion (at least the public face of it) have been set - and not by us, or in our interests. How we - and the police, both as a force and as individuals - respond to this should make for an interesting summer, to say the least.

Ramble over.

anonymous


correction

18.05.2009 14:50

Agh. (a note to posters: remember to proof-read!)

In the following:

"Dissuading people from bringing cameras to protests is impossible without confiscating mobile phones on entry to a demo..."

I meant "preventing," not "dissuading" (which could be done, tho again, would seem a little pointless.)

anonymous


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