Blame Canada? Limonov & National Bolshevism

Now this is odd. Fred Weir is a reporter at the Christian Science Monitor, and he’s on the job (July 6 edition) and on the trail of Eduard Limonov…

Meeting Eduard Limonov: Correspondent Fred Weir says that he’s followed Russian politician Eduard Limonov’s career since he returned to Russia in the early 1990s. But this was the first time he’s interviewed him (see story); very few journalists seem to actually make the effort to do that.

“He was extremely amused when I told him about the Canadian anarchist blog, which cleverly quotes a slew of Moscow-based journalists defining him as everything from one end of the political spectrum to the other,” says Fred.

He cleared that up: He’s a classical left-winger, at least nowadays.

“He’s by far the most colorful character on the Russian political landscape, and I suspect he owes that to the years he spent in New York and Paris,” says Fred. “He obviously learned the value of political street theater as a way of attracting attention, even if his activists pay a high price for it. He has a way of talking in quotable sound bites, where most Russian politicians are unbearably long-winded and circuitous. And he was quite mild and likeable, not at all the fire-breathing monster he’s depicted to be in some quarters.

Which may well be the case. But as to the Canadian anarchist blog… I’m not positive, but I think that this may in fact be a reference to my own, and a post I made in April, on the subject of Bolsheviks. National Bolsheviks. In it I quoted from a number of media sources, sources (including Fred) which enabled me (perhaps cleverly) to summarise Limonov as follows: “a little enigmatic irreverent ultra-nationalist radical leftist Russian Slavophilic insect and ex-punk rocker with a provocative sense of political theatre and a militant, gangster-worshipping mentality who writes existentialist pornographic novels”.

As for the political complexion of the party which he leads, of note in this context is the work of Kevin Coogan, who makes a number of references to ‘national bolshevism’ in his biography of (good) fascist thinker Francis Parker Yockey called Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International. According to Coogan, the term ‘national bolshevist’:

was first used to describe a wing of the early German Communist Party, which supported the Russian Revolution but did not want to be under the total diktat of Moscow. It was later applied to those elements of the German right who wanted to pursue a foreign policy orientation to the East. For a discussion of national bolshevism, see Klemens von Klemperer, “Towards a Fourth Reich? The History of National Bolshevism in Germany”, in The Review of Politics, No.13, 1951.

Chapter 55 of Coogan’s biography, ‘The Mysterious Book of Vles‘, goes into some small detail regarding contemporary Russian fascism:

The most virulent fascist movement in Europe today [Coogan’s valuable work was published in 1999] exists not in Germany but in Russia. The collapse of the Soviet Union has led to a “Red-Brown alliance,” a strange ideological coalition that has united many of Russia’s fascists with powerful elements inside the old Communist party elite and Soviet national security establishment. The Red-Brown alliance has also been encouraged by Euroright supporters of Jean-François Thiriart. In August 1992, just three months before his death, Thiriart and Michel Schneider, the editor of the now-defunct national bolshevist publication Nationalisme et République, visited Moscow for talks with high-ranking Soviet officials, including current [and continuing] Russian Communist Party boss Gennadi Zyuganov.

The Red-Brown axis is supported by former GRECE member and Thiriart disciple Christian Bouchet’s group Nouvelle Résistance (publisher of Lutte de Peuple) [1991–1997] and the Milan-based journal Orion. In 1991 Bouchet helped found a new European Liberation Front in honour of Yockey. These same circles assisted Alain de Benoist in arranging his March 1992 trip to Moscow…

In Australia — not Canada — ‘national bolshevism’ finds resonances in the theoretical work of Australia First fuehrer Dr. James Saleam; both he and Holocaust denialist Welf Herfurth are attempting to popularise the work of writers such as Yockey and de Benoist, and the Sydney Forum over which both reside proclaims itself to be ‘beyond left and right’. But while Saleam is attached to a highly reactionary form of Australian nationalism, Herfurth in particular is keen to appropriate more contemporary radical imagery in order to pursue his own brand of fascist politics. In a recent article for the far right groupuscule New Right Australia/New Zealand, Herfurth writes that “The face of today’s leftism is not the hammer and sickle, and the proletarian working-man in overalls and a cap, but the black outfits of the anarchist radicals at the 1999 WTO conference in Seattle (the ‘Battle of Seattle’) or the demonstrations against the G-20 [sic] summit [in] Rostock, Germany in 2007.”

Tsk tsk.

Appendix

    ‘The Red Brown Scandal’
    REFLEXes international
    No.1 (part 2/3)
    1994[?]

    Republished in Humeurs Noires, a publication of the Humeurs Noires group, a member (1987–1998) of the French Anarchist Federation.

    __________________________________________________________________

    Earlier this year, a major scandal erupted in France over the exposed links between communists and the extreme right. Known as the Red-Brown scandal, these links sought to build the politics of national-bolshevism in France.

    The term national-bolshevism joins two very precise political concepts. “National” is of course a reference to nationalism, that is to say an over-valuation of national characters, national independence, the unity of the nation, eventually integrating racial characteristics etc. “Bolshevism” refers to two different ideas; the first, strictly meaning the majority faction (Bolsheviks) of the social-democratic workers party in Russia. Thus bolshevism refers to Leninism, or a possible interpretation of the works of Karl Marx and the organisational conclusions that the ideology draws, particularly in Lenin’s major works; the necessity of a structured and disciplined party representing the avant-garde of the proletariat and leading it during a revolution. But more generally, bolshevism refers to a political and economic system established after the taking of power by the Bolsheviks in October 1917, thanks to the progressive elimination of the workers’ council system to which they were fundamentally opposed.(1)

    Logically, these two terms do not appear to have much in common, apart from being two bourgeois ideologies from the 19th century. However, European political evolution has seen national-bolshevism become a dominant movement. Thus in Germany, national-bolshevism designated the movement led by the Strasser brothers, and represented the left-wing of the NSDAP (Nazi Party). Gregor Strasser, a trainee chemist, joined in the post-WWI period first the DAP, then the NSDAP. His first years as a militant were deeply rooted for him in the themes that he would develop later; social inequality, extreme misery after the war, the humiliation of Germany, revolutionary fervour…

    At the end of June 1993, following an enquiry by the journalist Marieue Besnard and the novelist Didier Daeninck, the French satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine revealed links that united communists and right extremists, notably concerning the collaboration of certain journals such as L’Idiot International and Le Choc du Mois.(2) The relative failure of the attempt by the new right to infiltrate the classic right, the evolution of a section of members of GRECE(3) who joined the Front National, political chances (the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of communism, the liberal consensus in Europe) led to new orientations; in 1989 Robert Steuckers(4) estimated that “the new right finds itself faced with a challenge — to renew its discourse, to monopolise the new intellectual paths (Foucault, Deleuze, Guattari, Gusdorf, Peguy etc), to create a transplant between the new ideological language and its existing body”.(5)

    The Belgian new right were the first to study the German national-bolshevik Ernst Niekisch. Following that, one saw a flourishing in the new right press of references to philosophers and leftist writers, and the sometimes pure and simple theft of libertarian slogans criticising the consumer society and the ideology of work, for example.(6) This with the aim, of course, of affirming ideas of inequality, of separate development, behind leftist terminology, but also of erasing the left-right opposition and making appear new “peripheral convergences fighting the world of merchandise and all the power of economic reason”.(7)

    On May 12, 1993, Alain de Benoist, of GRECE, pleaded for the abandonment of the left-right distinction, with him preferring the notion of a “centre” and a “periphery”, the first being composed of a “dominant ideology”, the second “regrouping all those who do not accept this ideology” (this being an adapted version of analyses on links between centre countries in the northern hemisphere and peripheral countries in the southern hemisphere). This speech would have been unremarkable if it had not taken place at a conference organised by Franceue Lazare, a member of the executive council of the French Communist Party. No one in the communist ranks found fault with any of that.(8)

    A week later, the magazine Elements (published by GRECE) invited Marc Cohen, Communist Party member and editor of L’Idiot International, to come and speak there about the “recomposition of the French intellectual landscape”. Edward Limonov,(9) editorial consultant at L’ Idiot, also collaborated on Revolution, a weekly Communist Party magazine aimed at intellectuals; like Le Choc du Mois, the extreme right monthly, it is modern, swaggering and intellectually aggressive.(10) Finally, last May, L’Idiot published the article ‘Towards A National Front’ by Jean-Paul Cruse. This communist, a trade unionist and journalist on the daily leftist newspaper Liberation, proposed “an authoritarian politics of redressment for the country” which would rally “people of spirit against people of things, civilisation against merchandise — and the greatness of nations against the balkanisation of the world… under the order of Wall street, international Zionism, the Frankfurt exchange and the dwarfs of Tokyo”.(11) Decidedly, a conspiracy theory. Because for Cruse “the destruction caused by the old left opens nothing new in the field”. It would be necessary therefore “to forge a new alliance”, a “front” to “regroup Pasqua, ll Chevenement,(12) the communists and ultra-nationalists” a new front for a “violent burst of industrial and cultural nationalism”. The national office of Cruse’s trade union responded in a press release by affirming Cruse’s right to freedom of speech and condemning his position, recalling that “these ideas are not those of the CGT” and that it fought them “with all its might”. Not by opportunism but by deep conviction.(13)

    Anti-Americanism has always been in France a value shared for different reasons by most of the political forces. From Gaullists to Communists via the extreme right and extreme left, America finds itself accused of not being a true historical nation, of taking without understanding the principles of the Lumieres(14) and the universal values of the French Revolution, and of wanting to dominate the whole of the planet. The collapse of communism and the Gulf War have revived this feeling. As Daeninck noted in his enquiry. there are strong convergences with nationalist-revolutionaries on anti-Americanism, the exaltation of nationalism, a radical critique of social democracy and the rejection of liberalism.

    It is thus certain that a current of national-bolshevism exists in France, fighting the consumer society, America, “international Zionism” and social democracy, but it is nothing new. Previously, in the 1970s, the organisation Lutte du Peuple, founded from a split in Ordre Nouveau, called on the spirit of national-bolshevism and used “a vocabulary copied exactly from that of the extra-parliamentary left, notably in its critique of capitalism and the bourgeoisie”.(15) Today, the movement Nouvelle Resistance(16) is the political expression of this line and attempts to “implement a strategic line” for the “anti-system front”. The friendships of Nouvelle Resistance with different groups which call on the spirit of national-bolshevism in varying degrees in Russia are there to prove it. In their magazine Lutte du Peuple, they often make mention of different groups and alliances with themselves.

    The “hatred” of the West, and Yeltsin who is “selling off” Russia to the profit of capitalism, serve to spearhead a rapprochement between former communists and conservatives. One can cite Alexander Dugin (deputy leader of the National Bolshevik Front), one of the correspondents of Nouvelle Resistance in Russia, who congratulates himself on the “current Russian revolution where respectively the neo-communist nationalists represent the left wing and the neo-monarchists represent the right wing”. This was also seen by Jean Thiriart(17) and Michael Schneider (editor of the magazine Nationalisme et Republique(18) during a trip in August 1992 of which the objective was to make links with the opposition to Yeltsin. At the beginning of 1992, Alain de Benoist praised the birth of the magazine Dien (Today) which, following the example of Krisis in France, introduced “non-conformism and radicalism in the red-brown world and has as a slogan the search for a Russian and national third way”. Regarding the anti-Semitism of this magazine, it is necessary, according to de Benoist, to not exaggerate the content of it. One can also find this type of discourse in the former official communist publications. On demonstrations it is not unusual to see red flags and Tsarist flags side by side. Today, the opposition is structured, supported not least by the army. Stalin has been rehabilitated and one can seen in the different publications of the extreme right (Lutte du Peuple, and the Italian magazine Orion) articles that refer to the “little father of the people”.

    Following the example of Jean-Paul Cruse, the French Communist Party has often developed a clear anti-Americanism .The great American devil on the one hand, the great Soviet brother on the other… The “communist collective of media workers” (the French cCommunist Party) complained in a communique of July 8, 1993 about the witch hunt being made against one of its members (Marc Cohen) and which aimed “to block all political debate linking the question of national sovereignty against American hegemony, and the historic values of the international workers’ movement”. It is well known that countries in eastern Europe have ardently defended these values.The red-brown rapprochement is a remake from the 1930s. Let us remember Jacques Doriot, the national-populist who split from the Communist Party in order to found the Parti Populaire Francais and went on to become a Nazi collaborator. As at this time, there is today a current inside the heart of the French communist Party which promotes a nationalist and populist discourse.

    Those who put so much effort into denouncing the convergence between reds and browns often forget the ideological wanderings of their own circle. Through the magazine Krisis many contacts have been established between intellectuals of the new right and those of the left. During the summer of 1988, Krisis, edited by Alain de Benoist, broke the intellectual isolation of the new right and established its ideological hegemony. Leftist thinkers were as much involved as the ideologues of GRECE. The beginning of this exercise was marked by manipulation, then the magazine published articles that had already appeared elsewhere, without the permission of the authors. But Roger Garaudy (also involved with Nationalisme et Republique), Jean-Michel Palmier, Andre Comte-Sponville, Jean-Francois Kahn, Regis Debray, Jacques Domenach, Jacques Julliard, Bernard Langlois or even Claude Karenooh (who pretends to be a libertarian)(19) all work with de Benoist, and have participated without batting an eyelid at the magazine. Alain Decaux, former minister of the socialist Government, doesn’t feel in the least bothered about siding with people like Jean Mabire, Jean-Jacques Mourreau and Pierre Vial, all three of whom who have passed through GRECE to the Front National.

    The ideological confusion due to a loss of political landmarks and referential marks on the left has [?] the appearance of such contacts and placed it in that of reactionary ideology. In France today, the task of the left and indeed the anti-fascist movement must be to make a clear separation of the two ideologies of nationalism and bolshevism, and to expose those members of the left who seek to make alliances with the extreme right. A new political discourse of the left needs to be created to take up this challenge. Otherwise, our next fuehrer might be wearing a red shirt.

    Notes

    1. The Soviets Betrayed by the Bolsheviks, Rudolph Rocker.
    2. The first was founded by Jean-Edern Hallier. Le Choc is a monthly fascist magazine.
    3. A new right think tank led by Alain de Benoist, who is linked to all the key fascists in France.
    4. Steuckers is a multi -lingual lecturer and has played the role, since the departure of Guillaume de Faye in 1986, of deputy leader of the new right on the intellectual plain. He edits the magazine Vouloir.
    5. Robert Steuckers, Vouloir, No.52-53, February-March, 1989.
    6. Elements pour une culture europeenne, Winter 1992, No.75.
    7. Elements pour une culture europeenne, Spring 1992, No.74.
    8. Rene Monzat, a left-wing investigative journalist who was present in the room, was the only one to speak out against this and was put in his place by Francette Lazare.
    9. Limonov has been since May 1993 the president of the National-Bolshevik Front in Moscow.
    10. A magazine for the radical and national right in France.
    11. The hardline right wing interior minister in the current [sic] French government.
    12. Socialist Minister for the army during the Gulf War, he was nevertheless opposed to this war, he resigned and left the Socialist Party. Afterwards, he made a campaign against the Maastricht Treaty. Known for his nationalism and fervent patriotism.
    13. ‘A propos d’un article publie par L’Idiot International’, communique of the SNJ-CGT, June 25, 1993.
    14. The Lumieres were the key French thinkers and philosophers before the revolution, such as Voltaire, Montesqueiu and Rousseau.
    15. A radical nationalist right wing group in France.
    16. The main Third Position group in France today.
    17. A Belgian fascist and wartime collaborator who adapted nationalism-bolshevism during the ’50s and ’60s into a philosophy which he called national-community Europeanism.
    18. No longer published today, Nationalisme et Republique attempted to be a magazine of critical support for Jean-Marie Le Pen and the Front National. Towards the end it evolved towards a position very close to Nouvelle Resistance.
    19. All key intellectuals on the French left.

Posted in !nataS, Anarchism, Anti-fascism, History, Media, State / Politics | 8 Comments

This Is My City!

The Women’s Theatre Group was my first direct involvement with the Pram Factory. I think my feminism was heavily influenced by anarchism, Emma Goldman, Alexandra Koll[o]ntai, the 1871 Paris Commune and by Franz Fanon’s Black Skin White Masks — about the internalisation of oppression. I like the group creative process; I love nutting things out, listening and talking and moving and I believe really strongly that the group is more than the sum of its parts but I also believe the stronger the people in it, the stronger the group. There was a big anarchist household at 999 Drummond St.; Paul Dixon and Ann, they were the king and queen of the anarchists, if that’s a contradiction in terms, and they moved to the UK, to Brixton. We had the Free Store in Smith St. Collingwood for a while. There was a gang of anarchists and crims who lived there… ~ Robin Laurie, ‘Some recollections of Life in the Australian Performing Group’

GREG MACAINSH, Skyhooks – ‘The songs had to be authentic, they had to be about places I’d actually been to’

“When the sun sets over Carlton
And you’re out to make a deal
Check out who you’re talkin’ to
And make sure they are real”

— Carlton (Lygon Street Limbo)

When the sun sets over Elwood, the man who put Melbourne on the songwriting map is at home, studying. Thirty years after the landmark Living In The 70s album, Skyhooks songwriter and bass player Greg Macainsh is doing a law degree.

“Really, the Trade Practices Act is just a different form of poetry,” he laughs.

Billy Pinnell, who has worked in Melbourne radio for 45 years, says Macainsh’s songs exploded the cultural cringe, opening ears to truly Australian songs.

“He broke down all the barriers,” Pinnell says, “opening the door for Australian rock ‘n’ roll songwriters to write about local places and events. He legitimised Australian songwriting and it meant that Australians became themselves.”

Macainsh wrote about his native land — the suburbs. His songs described the contemporary Australian experience without the obligatory kangaroo or wattle tree. These were songs about Carlton, not Oodnadatta. And they reflected that most of us were riding around in Valiants, not on brumbies.

Macainsh, now 54, says he didn’t really know what he was doing. “It just made sense for me to write about the things I knew.”

Greg Macainsh grew up in Warrandyte. His father had poems published in The Bulletin. His mother was a librarian. Macainsh was camping at a boy scouts’ jamboree in Dandenong when he heard The Beatles’ I Saw Her Standing There on the radio. “It was wild stuff, amazing,” he says. “I lost interest in the scouts and concentrated on music. The little tranny had just hit. I listened to a valve radio at home and then to a crystal radio set I made for my bedroom. 3UZ was the station and Stan Rofe was the man.”

At Norwood High School in Ringwood, Macainsh was captain of the softball team, “the team for wusses and misfits”. He was almost expelled because of his long hair, but he refused to cut it. He bonded with a fellow student, Freddy Strauks, who became the singer in his first band, Spare Parts, and then the drummer in Skyhooks.

Macainsh’s first “local” song documented him joining Eltham’s version of the Grateful Dead, Reuben Tice. The song was I Went Down To Eltham To Get Me A Job In A Band.

His songwriting heroes were Chuck Berry, The Kinks’ Ray Davies, and Bob Dylan. “They could all rattle off a place name, like Memphis or Waterloo Sunset or Muswell Hill. It gave their songs great mystique and the listener a sense of place. Later on, I thought I could do it in the Skyhooks, but it had to be real, it couldn’t be twee or folky.

“The only other ‘Australian’ song I knew at the time was I’ve Been Everywhere, which had every Oodnadatta/Coolangatta/Wangaratta rhyme. It was a novelty song and I definitely didn’t want to go in that direction.”

Macainsh wanted to write about places that had “ethos and an atmosphere”.

“And the songs had to be authentic, they had to be about places I’d actually been to. I was a bit sceptical about Arkansas Grass by Axiom because I’m not sure any of the guys had been to Arkansas. And the song’s about the American Civil War and I was sure they hadn’t been to the war.”

Carlton, Balwyn and Toorak were the suburbs Macainsh wrote about on Living In The 70s. “They were the places I knew something about,” he recalls. “With St Kilda, I hadn’t spent a lot of time there by 1973 and 1974, so I couldn’t really write about that.”

Skyhooks’ first gig was in Carlton, at St Jude’s Church Hall in 1973. And Macainsh remembers many early-morning trips from Eltham to Johnny’s Green Room in Faraday Street — the only place in Melbourne selling cigarettes at 2am.

Many people mistakenly thought that Balwyn Calling was about Macainsh’s girlfriend, writer Jenny Brown, who grew up in Balwyn.

“I had another girlfriend from Balwyn, for a brief moment,” Macainsh reveals. “I think the song speaks for itself. One thing you have to remember is that phone calls back then were far more significant than they are now. And not everyone had a phone. You’d ask people, ‘Have you got the phone on?’ So a phone call from someone in Balwyn was significant communication.”

“Well, she mighta looked like a princess
Why’d you have to give her your address?
‘Cause you ain’t safe when you get home
She’s gonna call you on the telephone”

Toorak Cowboy, meanwhile, which became one of six Living in the 70s tracks banned from radio, was written after one of Macainsh’s girlfriends ran off with a guy from Toorak. The song refers to the Trak Cinema’s supper show. “You could see a movie at 10 o’clock on a Friday night; it was a very groovy thing to do,” Macainsh recalls. “And get your hair cut at Marini’s.” — Jeff Jenkins is the author of the Skyhooks’ book Ego Is Not A Dirty Word ~ Shaun Carney, ‘Songs of Melbourne’, The Age, August 28, 2004.

This is my city
This is your city
This is our city now

Well I’m back in the land of second chances
And rock ‘n’ roll shows where nobody dances
Back in the land of chicken and chips
Mars Bars and roadside tips

And if you don’t like it
Then that’s too bad
Cos it’s the only city that we’ve ever had
So when the man says
That you gotta pay
You gotta cancel the cheque and you gotta say…

Well I’m back in the land of cheap incense
Where the favourite sport is sittin’ on the fence
Back in the land of pie and sauce
Drinkin’ flat beer with no third course

And if you don’t like it
Then you gotta fight it
And you gotta fight it now
Ain’t no time
For walkin’ the line
Somehow the cream’s gone sour…

Back in the land of subtle hints
Where the artists are busy painting Picasso prints
Here in the land of all time lows
You can make it big and get your own quiz show
And if you just hate it
Then that’s too bad
Cos it’s the only city that you’ve ever had
So when the cop says
Get outta town
You gotta get it together gotta stick around

This is my city
This is your city
This is our city now

I got it
You got it
We got it now

This is my city
This is your city
This is our city now

~ From the album Straight in a Gay Gay World (Mushroom, 1976)

Posted in Music | Leave a comment

Ku Klux Klowns in Townsville

    Update : Two further articles have appeared regarding the KKK in Australia. As well as being dead easy to join, the sheet-wearers are apparently raising their pointy hooded heads in Geelong in Victoria as well.

    Race-hate Klan spreads ‘poison’, Kerri-Ann Hobbs, Geelong Advertiser, July 6, 2007: “WHITE supremacists in Geelong have joined a national recruitment drive by extremist group the Ku Klux Klan. Their emergence has outraged community leaders who labelled them racists and cowards who hid behind robes of anonymity. Yet the group was not motivated by racial hate but was about empowering white Christian Australians, the Victorian president known as the Exalted Cyclops Bwian told the Geelong Advertiser… Geelong MP John Eren, who migrated to Australia from Turkey as a boy, warned there was no room in the city for extreme racist groups. “I think if they’re not afraid of what organisation they belong to and what beliefs they hold they should come out instead of hiding behind these frocks,” Mr Eren said…”

    KKK: easy as ABC, Liz McKinnon, Townsville Bulletin, July 6, 2007: “JOINING the Ku Klux Klan is as easy as sending an email to the group, filling out a basic form and purchasing a custom-tailored robe. To climb the ranks as a cell leader, all you need is two mates as klansmen to nominate you… One Melbourne reader wrote that he had been following the White Legion Knights [since their inception]. He revealed the Aboriginal community had nothing to worry about. “Across the entire state of Queensland they wouldn’t have more than 10 members,” he wrote. “And if what rival Klan leaders tell me is true, they’re not exactly the cream of the crop — apparently they’re mostly unemployed and thick as bricks.”

Local haberdashery reports minor spike in sales…

See also : The KKK took my perspective away (March 14) | White Loser Knights and Australia First (March 6) | KKK is the Australian Way?!? (February 5) | KKK is not a force in Toowoomba (Catholic News, March 9) | Qld row over Hurley trial (SBS, June 21) | Ex-KKK man guilty of 1964 murder of black teenagers (Ed Pilkington, Guardian Unlimited, June 15, 2007) | No sell out

Fear of KKK cell
Liz McKinnon
Townsville Bulletin
July 5, 2007

A KU Klux Klan cell is rumoured to be operating in Townsville.

A group is reported to be operating from a Castle Hill address, sparking fear within Townsville’s Aboriginal community. It follows reports there is a recruitment drive occurring for the white supremacist group across the state.

A Cairns-based KKK member went public on national television yesterday revealing the White Legion Knights group was operating in the city and in other parts of the State. The man appeared via phone with his voice digitally distorted but photographs were shown illustrating the group with an Australian flag.

The Townsville Bulletin discovered later in the day that a separate body known as Stormfront was allegedly meeting at a Townsville address in the upmarket Castle Hill area. It follows reports earlier this year the group was handing out leaflets across the state and that Townsville had been targeted along with Toowoomba, Rockhampton and Cairns.

The group runs under the tag `White Pride World Wide’.

Currajong Aboriginal woman Pauline Geary said it was old news and stories had been circling for a long time that they were meeting somewhere in Castle Hill. The grandmother of four said her community felt threatened by the recent rise of the group. “We want respect in our own country and we are not getting it,” Mrs Geary said. “There is not enough happening on stamping it out. I don’t have faith in the police but this is an illegal operation, isn’t it?”

Aboriginal activist Gracelyn Smallwood also wasn’t surprised by the news and revealed she was happy it had publicly come out. She argued it would bring international attention, like the Hurley case, and show that Townsville and Australia was racist. “This is what I have been fighting for 40 years, my father for 50 and the grandparents before him. It’s a 220-year fight for the very issue of racism,” Ms Smallwood said. “The thing is now what are we going to do about it? It’s not what the Aboriginal community is going to do, it’s what are non-indigenous people going to do about it? This is a positive for the black community. At least the whole world will find out what is really going on in this country.”

The racism debate is not new to Townsville.

Only last month the city was labelled the KKK capital of Australia by activist Murrandoo Yann[e]r in the wake of Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley being cleared of the manslaughter of Palm Island man Mulrunji Doomadgee. In 2000, a photograph of soldiers at Lavarack Barracks dressed as members of the KKK to humiliate their black comrades made national headlines.*

Catholic Bishop Michael Putney said he had never heard of a Townsville link and he hoped people would have more sense than to get involved. “To get tied up with something that kind of carries the name of a group that did such terrible things in the United States, it wouldn’t make sense that anyone would identify with a group with that name,” Bishop Putney said. “I find it very hard to think anyone would be so foolish. It would be very sad people who do that.” He said the track record of the group was `pure evil’.

Townsville Police Crime Co-ordinator Detective Inspector Warren Webber said he had never heard of the group and at this stage was not making any investigations. Townsville Mayor Tony Mooney and Thuringowa Mayor Les Tyrell both refused to comment on the rumoured branch.

    * ‘Extremists can serve in forces: defence chief’, The Age, December, 20, 2000

    Australia’s Defence Force chief yesterday defended the rights of soldiers to support neo-Nazism and other forms of political extremism, saying they should not be expelled over their beliefs. Admiral Chris Barrie said the community would be affronted if the forces had a system to weed out people on the basis of their political views.

    His comments followed revelations that three former members of an elite army regiment were in a hard-rock neo-Nazi band, Blood Oath. Admiral Barrie said two of the band members had left the elite 3rd Battalion of the army’s Royal Australian Regiment while the third was no longer in the army.

    He said the ADF was apolitical. ”We don’t make a statement about people’s political beliefs. Australia is a country that’s recognised throughout the world for its freedom of belief and the freedoms we give our ordinary people.”

    A racist website, Blood and Honor Australia, names the former military members of Blood Oath as Harry, Shane and Brain. The fourth member, a civilian, is Gideon McLean, revealed in 1998 as a member of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party. In an interview published on the website, the band members describe themselves as ”white power” musicians, while Mr McLean and Shane list Adolf Hitler as a hero.

Posted in Anti-fascism | 4 Comments

Poseurs laughing, dancing, “having a say” … and speaking volumes

This Saturday, July 7, locals are holding another punk fashion show at local neo-Nazi venue The Birmingham Hotel in Fitzroy. Thus, while local boneheads may have deserted The Birmy, Distorted Truth, Sewer Cider, The Boots, The Worst and Wot Rot will be holding a gig to celebrate The Worst’s five year anniversary and to launch their new EP. As the bands and their fans busy themselves having a laugh and having a say, few are expected to reflect that, on the same date in 1942, Heinrich Himmler granted permission for sterilization experiments at Auschwitz. Fewer still are expected to make the connection between neo-Nazism, Blood & Honour, the Southern Cross Hammerskins, their support for The Birmy, and events such as the following:

Bonehead victim jumps to death from cruise ship
Erik Jensen
Sydney Morning Herald
July 2, 2007

An 18-year-old who fell to his death from a cruise ship yesterday had reportedly been struggling after being identified as the victim of an horrific racial attack by [boneheads].

David Ritcheson is believed to have jumped from the cruise liner Ecstasy yesterday afternoon, with the ship’s staff retrieving his dead body from the Gulf of Mexico about 30 minutes later. The rescue was handled entirely by ship staff, the US Coast Guard said.

Mr Ritcheson had to undergo more than 30 operations after [having] been stripped naked, burnt with cigarettes and repeatedly attacked by two [boneheads] in April last year. His attackers, one of whom [David Tuck] received a life sentence while the other [Keith Turner] got a 90-year sentence, sexually assaulted Mr Ritcheson with a PVC pipe, according to the Houston Chronicle.

Although Carnival Cruise Lines, who own the ship that was sailing on a five-day round-trip to Cozumel, Mexico, would not confirm his identity, a spokesman for The League of United Latin American Citizens, Rick Dovalina, told the Chronicle that the family’s lawyer confirmed the death. “The family heard from the captain of the ship. He went overboard,” Mr Dovalina said.

In an interview in April, Mr Ritcheson said he was struggling with being identified as the victim of the [bonehead] attack. “It’s like everyone knows I’m ‘the kid.’ I don’t want to be a standout because of what happened,” he said.

Mr Ritcheson testified in the US Congress in June, supporting a hate crimes bill. He told the House Judiciary Committee that his attackers had stripped him naked before burning him with cigarettes, and beating him as they yelled anti-Hispanic slurs…

See also : ‘Anti-Latino Violence: Neo-Nazi Convicted in Savage Anti-Latino Assault’, Intelligence Report, Spring 2007:

It was attacks like this one that hate-crimes legislation was created for.

A Latino teenager attended a party in April 2006 at a housing complex just north of Houston, in a town called Spring. According to witnesses, the 17-year-old tried to kiss a white girl. She rebuffed him and told her brother about the advance. Word spread. The extreme violence that followed illustrates the savagery that can result from this country’s rising tide of anti-Hispanic hatred

Meanwhile in Russia:

Neo-Nazi Violence Reported in Chelyabinsk

UCSJ
July 2, 2007

Neo-Nazis attacked fans of punk rock music in the center of Chelyabinsk, according to a June 29, 2007 report by the news web site Newsru.com. The June 28 assault was reportedly the latest in a series of similar incidents. According to the article, neo-Nazi gangs have taken over an area of downtown Chelyabinsk, “patrolling” the territory in groups of several dozen and attacking anybody they don’t like the look of. The extremists apparently feel such a high degree of impunity that they didn’t even flee when police arrived at the scene, but instead calmly spoke to the officers about what they had done. The victims, perhaps showing an equally contemptuous attitude towards the local law enforcement agencies, refused to file a complaint, and as a result, the [boneheads] were set free without being charged.

Posted in Anti-fascism, Collingwood, Music, Sex & Sexuality | 2 Comments

The pressure foot isn’t engaging with the feed dogs!

…and all is not well in Australian fascist circles.

Following David and Lilith’s resignation from Scumfront — and with the encouragement of Nichola, another member of Newcastle AF — a teenaged Novocastrian named Rhys has assumed the wobbly helm of Don Black’s Internet business Down Under. And while Pete Campbell, Jim Perren, and the remnants of the WPCA that gather under the guise of ANN gloat, SFDU has become the near-exclusive domain of a handful of other teenaged pipsqueaks… that is, in addition to the usual, bitter, older, middle-aged racists. And er… Frank White.

Still — and commensurate with the departure of von Dog and Diamond Lil, Australia First‘s most vociferous critics — both the junior and senior White supremacysts who remain at Shitfront continue to maintain a close relationship with AF. Unfortunately for them, however, under the patronage of Dr. James Saleam in Sydney, his very close friend Diane Teasdale and some bloke called Barry in Shepparton, AF simply lurches from one increasingly bizarre crisis to another. The most recent of these incidents is the exclusion from the party of a tennis-playing patriot from Brisbane (which follows hot on the heels of Media Watch celebrity Darrin Hodges‘ expulsion). Although clearly derided by some, the tennis-player in question, John Drew, is in fact a mental and physical powerhouse, as the following extract from his wildly entertaining online diary makes abundantly clear:

At the University of Queensland tennis courts, where I mainly play and train, I continually see people not using proper tennis shoes, not drinking fluids before and during play, and not applying sunscreen lotion before playing. During a recent match in the Queensland Veterans Tennis Association annual titles I drank 1 litre of water containing Endura Magnesium Rehydration Formula powder during a singles match which lasted 2 hours and 20 minutes. I also reapplied sunscreen lotion after the second set. After I reached home I consumed 3 fish oil capsules in an effort to diminish joint stiffness. As you can see from the photograph below, I am very lean, fit and strong from the relentless playing of tennis plus general fitness and strength training since 1965.

Nevertheless, despite maintaining a very lean, fit and strong appearance since 1965, Drew has been expelled from AF. And it was for criticising the country bumpkins in the Victorian (read: Shepparton) mob that poor young/old Drew got expelled. (And though Drew’s site patrioticyouthleague.net remains up, patrioticyouthleague.org is down. Or rather, it now re-directs the browser to the distinctly unyouthful-looking Victorian AF branch.)

Not to be denied, however, and ever the wily adversary, whether on or off the court, John has decided to ditch his plans to establish a Brisbane branch of AF, and to instead proceed to Plan B: the establishment of yet another racist mob, this one called the “Southern Cross Greens (Queensland)”. As it happens, the SCG share a PO Box with the ‘National Republicans’: 314, Kew, VIC, 3101 (the other branch of which is in NSW, PO Box 245, Concord West, 2138). Curiously, until recently, the ‘National Republicans’ were known as the ‘National Republican Movement’; and prior to that they went by the name of the ‘Australian Republican Movement’.

Who says there’s no such thing as progress?

Money money money

Having skipped off with a small amount of other people’s money, Innes and Peterson are not expected to be travelling to Sydney in August, meaning that the 2007 Sydney Forum has been reduced to just four speakers, neo-Nazi MC Welf Herfurth now only to be welcoming Cassidy, Fraser, Jewell and Saleam to the 50 or so grumbling, cardigan-wearing old bigots likely to attend this “major speaking event of the Australian patriotic resistance calendar”. Oh, and ah, two foreign fascists. And er, whoever else Jim can scramble together in the remaining weeks. On the bright side, a good fascist by the name of “Cecil Roach” appears to have left money to AF — so maybe Herr Doktor can bribe someone to appear? Say, with eight dollars?

Nationalists Benefit From Deceased Estate
July 2, 2007

The Australia First Party and other nationalist associations and projects will benefit from the Estate of Mr. Cecil Roach.

The Estate was finally settled in Adelaide last week. A five figure sum of money will be transferred to an association especially established by some nationalists some time ago. Most of these persons are committed members of Australia First.

In 1988, Mr. Roach detailed a will leaving a certain part of his Estate to “Australian National Action of Grosvenor Place, Sydney.” He died in Adelaide in 1998, when it could be said that National Action – was essentially defunct.

Mr. Roach had been a strong supporter of the ‘anti immigration’ cause, working first with the Immigration Control Association in the 1970s and then passing into National Action, straight after it was founded in 1982. He never lost his fire for the fight despite advancing years.

Jim Saleam, Chairman of Australia First in New South Wales, said:

“Sweeeeeet.”

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism | 6 Comments

G20: Police condemnation over G20 riot

Just kidding.

“I thought [police] handled themselves extremely well, and I think controlled a very difficult situation and I think they deserve our praise and support… Anyone can make a complaint, doesn’t mean the complaint will be followed through, it may ultimately be thrown out.” ~ Jeff Bracks, Southern Cross Radio, January 30, 2007

Police praise over G20 riot
Kelvin Healey
Sunday Herald Sun
July 1, 2007

THE police response to Melbourne’s violent G20 riot was “effective”, but frontline officers needed better protection, an independent audit has found. The report, completed by a senior Scottish police officer who monitored Victoria Police’s planning and response to demonstrations outside the November summit, also suggested:

THE crack Force Response Unit might not have enough manpower and the unit should be equipped with new purpose-built personnel vehicles.
INCREASING the city’s closed-circuit TV camera network [beyond its current level of approximately 40,000 units] to help police with future riots.
FURTHER development of barriers to block aggressive protesters.

Protests outside the Grand Hyatt erupted in violence on November 18, when a group of hardcore anarchists, known as the Arterial Bloc, led an assault. The thugs wore jumpsuits and used bandanas across their faces to disguise their identities as they kicked, bit and spat on police, hurting 10 officers. They smashed a police van and hurled metal stakes, flares, horse manure, fake blood and urine-filled balloons.

In the aftermath, police were accused of taking a “softly, softly” approach to the demonstrators. But the official audit, by Scotland’s Dumfries and Galloway Chief Constable Patrick Shearer, backed the police action. “Overall, the policing response to the G20 was very effective,” Mr Shearer’s report said. “There were learning points arising out of the operation . . . but Victoria Police must be commended for their measured and proportionate action to this challenging event.”

Mr Shearer played a key role in security for the 2005 Edinburgh G8 summit.

His report praised frontline officers for their restraint. “The members were very effective and measured in their response . . . doing well not to respond to the goading acts of the extreme protesters,” he said in the report.

But the report said the officers — many equipped with a baton, goggles and gloves — could have had better safety gear. “The protective clothing provided to members . . . was limited,” it said. “Additionally, they would have benefited from being deployed (or) supported with purpose built personnel carriers which are suitably protected with grids that allow a 25-man unit to be transported in three vehicles and deployed quickly and effectively.”

Yes; the police officer hand-picked by Victoria Police to provide expert advice on containing the G20 protest (based on his previous role as “…the Mutual Aid Co-ordinator for the G8 Summit” in Gleneagles in 2005!), has concluded that, on balance, his employer made the right decisions. Shearer’s suggestions regarding the need for more police with more and better equipment also find an echo in the initial report by Australia’s best union, although — strangely — this report makes no specific reference to metal stakes, flares, horse manure, fake blood and urine-filled balloons raining down on police lines, merely registering concern “that our members were able to be threatened with a range of missiles, including water-filled barriers that had apparently been emptied of water by protesters”.

However, in news just to hand, another report — prepared by English, German and Swedish radicals at the request of the shadowy group of between 20 and 40 anarchists from Aotearoa believed by some local revolutionaries to have secretly masterminded the ultraviolence — has recommended:

    THE Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army might not have enough grrlpower and the unit should be equipped with new purpose-built personnel vehicles; preferably unicycles.

    INCREASING the city’s network of street artists to help police envision what a real riot looks like.

    FURTHER development of mental barriers to, like, magically block aggressive police from, like, being all heavy.

Unfortunately, an independent audit based on the views of 6,720,000 children living in extreme poverty had to be cancelled, following the terribly upsetting but belated discovery that they were all, in fact, dead.

May we all continue to have enough strength to bear the misfortunes of others.

    “Beat The Bastards”

    Slaves to the system there’s no way out
    Slaves to the system do you have a shout
    You’ve got to beat the bastards and beat ’em now
    Sick of policies putting me down

    Chorus :
    Beat the bastards, beat them now
    Beat the bastards, beat them now
    Beat the bastards, beat them now

    Just out of school don’t have a clue
    No income support for you
    Can’t get a job don’t get a chance
    Sick of politics leaving me out

    Chorus

    Money, money power and strength
    Teenage kids with nowt to spend
    Hungry homeless who gives a shit
    Sick of policies leaving me out

    Chorus

    You’ve got to beat the bastards, beat the bastards,
    Beat the bastards, you’ve got to beat the bastards,
    Beat the bastards, you’ve got to beat the bastards,
    You’ve got to beat the bastards,
    You’ve got to beat the bastards, beat the bastards

    Slaves to the system there’s no way out
    Slaves to the system do you have a shout
    You’ve got to beat the bastards and beat ’em now
    Sick of policies leaving you out

    Chorus

Posted in !nataS, Anarchism, Media, State / Politics, War on Terror | 5 Comments

No sell out

Electroclash? Pffft…

IT WAS obvious on the first day of Chris Hurley’s manslaughter trial that the police officer was unlikely to go to jail over the death of Mulrunji Doomadgee.

No matter that it wouldn’t have taken much for the 200-centimetre, 115-kilogram senior sergeant with the short fuse to fell the drunk, barefoot 74-kilogram Aboriginal man. No matter that three doctors testified that a knee to the abdomen most likely split Mr Doomadgee’s liver in two and caused him to bleed to death. No matter that Mr Doomadgee had provoked Hurley by resisting arrest and punching him.

With no other witnesses to the event, it was always going to be difficult for the jury to decide beyond reasonable doubt that Senior Sergeant Hurley deliberately caused Mr Doomadgee’s fatal injuries. ~ A predictable result three years in the making, Cosima Marriner, The Age, June 21, 2007

Brothers and sisters, if you and I would just realize that once we learn to talk the language that they understand, they will then get the point. You can’t ever reach a man if you don’t speak his language. If a man speaks the language of brute force, you can’t come to him with peace. Why, good night! He’ll break you in two, as he has been doing all along. If a man speaks French, you can’t speak to him in German. If he speaks Swahili, you can’t communicate with him in Chinese. You have to find out what does this man speak. And once you know his language, learn how to speak his language, and he’ll get the point. There’ll be some dialogue, some communication, and some understanding will be developed.

You’ve been in this country long enough to know the language the Klan speaks. They only know one language. And what you and I have to start doing in 1965 — I mean that’s what you have to do, because most of us already been doing it — is start learning a new language. Learn the language that they understand. And then when they come up on our doorstep to talk, we can talk. And they will get the point. There’ll be a dialogue, there’ll be some communication, and I’m quite certain there will then be some understanding. Why? Because the Klan is a cowardly outfit. They have perfected the art of making Negroes be afraid. As long as the Negro’s afraid, the Klan is safe. But the Klan itself is cowardly. One of them will never come after one of you. They all come together. Sure, and they’re scared of you.

And you sit there when they’re putting the rope around your neck saying, “Forgive them, Lord, they know not what they do.” As long as they’ve been doing it, they’re experts at it, they know what they’re doing! ~ After the Bombing / Speech at Ford Auditorium, Malcolm X, transcribed and edited by the Malcolm X Museum and Noaman Ali, February 14, 1965

Posted in History, Music | Leave a comment

Gavrilo Princip: Serbian national-anarchist

Gavrilo Princip (1894–1918) is the man widely blamed for starting WWI (and thereby kickstarting the short twentieth century). How? Apparently, by shooting dead an Austrian aristocrat (and his missus) in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914.

Long story.

Odd thing is, for some, Princip has gone down in history as an anarchist. For example, successful white filmmaker Michael Moore writes in Stupid White Men (HarperCollins, 2001, p.188) of the former Yugoslavia:

This godforsaken corner of the world has been the source of much of our collective misery for the last century. Its residents’ inability to get along — with Serbs fighting Croats fighting Muslims fighting Macedonians fighting Albanians fighting Kosovars fighting Serbs — can be traced to the following single event: in 1914 a Serb anarchist by the name of Gavrilo Princip assassinated the Archduke Ferdinand. This incident kicked off World War I. Which led to World War II. Over fifty million people died from both wars.

More recently, an observant Peter Sain ley Berry comments (The criminal heirs of 28 June 1914, EUobserver.com, June 29, 2007) that “The popular myth is that a young anarchist, Gavrilo Princip, fired the shots that triggered the First World War. As with all such myths, the truth is more complex.” An interesting version of which may be found in John Zerzan’s essay ‘Origins and Meaning of World War I’, Telos, No.49 (Fall 1981); as it happens, the first essay of his I ever read (also available in Elements of Refusal).

    “I am the son of peasants and I know what is happening in the villages. That is why I wanted to take revenge, and I regret nothing.” ~ Gavrilo Princip, reply when interviewed in court (October, 1914)

    See also : Museums in Sarajevo: Princip’s footsteps, The Economist, June 28 2007

Posted in Anarchism, History | 12 Comments

They got the $ | We got the soul

The G8 protests. Along with the Green Scare, one of the things I was gonna blog about before my machine stopped going ping! As it stands, Indymedia is, to my knowledge, probably the best source for a basic account of events, (largely) unhindered by ideological commitments and (usually) unburdened by editorialising.

Which is quite unlike, say, the efforts of the World Socialist Web Site, who seem determined — despite flimsy evidence and a fair number of accounts to the contrary — to depict the clashes between police and protesters at the G8 as the result of the presence of a significant number of agents provocateurs among the ranks of the black bloc; a political formation which the quasi-Trotskyists in David North‘s mob, a/k/a The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), find highly suspect in any case. See Marius Heuser and Ulrich Rippert, Anti-G8 demonstration violence in Rostock: questions and contradictions, June 7, 2007; “By our reporter”, Four days after the G8 summit: German police raid eleven premises on suspicion of “terrorism”, June 14, 2007; Marius Heuser, Huge security operation exposed in wake of G8 summit, June 20, 2007.

In the first account, Marius and Ulrich ask:

How is one to account for the fact that the police had warned weeks before of “autonomous rioters,” but then allowed a closed formation of “black bloc” anarchists to parade unmonitored on one of the two demonstrations? Why wasn’t this “black bloc” accompanied by experienced police units, as is usually the case? Why was a police vehicle then parked provocatively in the middle of the area leading up to the final rallying point? According to several eye-witness reports, the attacks carried out by some members of the “black bloc” on this vehicle were the trigger for the intervention by police. Why was no attention paid to repeated calls by the organisers of the rally for the removal of the vehicle by the large numbers of police escorting the demonstration?

Who gave the order to obstruct photo journalists from taking pictures during the peaceful phase of the demonstration? Why were the authorities so keen that photos not be taken?

It is well-known that at the start of the year the German authorities intensified the infiltration of undercover agents into the “violent autonomous movement.” In its May 14 edition, Der Spiegel magazine wrote, “At the beginning of the year the Federal Intelligence Service (BND) declared globalization critics to be an ‘operational focal point.’ All preparatory meetings are observed, the groups involved are infiltrated” by undercover agents.

[Markus Deggerich, Markus Dettmer, Holger Stark and Andreas Ulrich, Securing the G8: A Taste of the Coming Showdown: “At the start of 2007, Germany’s domestic intelligence agency labelled globalization opponents an “operative focal point.” Organizational meetings for protests at the summit were infiltrated by government informants, and in March authorities agreed to take preventative measures with other EU governments to keep a hard core of anarchists from Spain, Italy and Greece under control.”]

Just one week before the demonstration, on 29 May, the Bild newspaper reported on “secret police plans” in preparation for the G8 summit. According to Bild, the first point of a three-point plan reads, “Undercover agents who were infiltrated a long time ago by the intelligence services are to provide early evidence of planned disruptive actions.”

The question therefore arises: how many undercover agents were operating in the “black bloc”? What information about acts of violence were communicated to the police command by these undercover agents, and why was nothing undertaken to prevent these acts of violence? Moreover, were undercover agents involved in the outbreak of violence, and to what extent?

These are urgent questions that need to be investigated. In view of the large number of casualties, it is necessary to clarify the role played by undercover agents. Until this information is made available, it is impossible to rule out the use of undercover agents as agents provocateurs on the demonstration.

*sigh*

In the meantime, here’s Ross Clark’s entry in The Upper Class Twit of the Year Essay Writing Competition for 2007, published in Uncle Rupert’s The Australian as ‘Left battling with envy’, June 23, 2007. Incidentally, whichever upper class twit edits The Australian appears to have been inspired enough by Clark’s batshit rant to attempt one of their own just a few days later. Titled ‘Reality bites the psychotic Left’ (June 11, 2007), its appearance also appears to have been a response to the publication in The Monthly of an article about Uncle Rupert’s wife, Wendi Deng.

Anyway, onto fashion.

Hatred of the rich is back in fashion
Ross Clark
The Spectator
June 9, 2007

One of the little-remarked side effects of 9/11 was the eclipse of the anti-globalisation movement. It is not easy to remember that in the summer of 2001, the year in which protestor Carlo Giuliani died during rioting at the G8 summit in Genoa, the growing venom of anti-capitalism protestors was seen as such a threat to society that, briefly, on the afternoon of 11 September commentators on the live radio and television coverage discussed the possibility that the attacks could have been carried out by enemies of globalisation.

    If, by “little-remarked”, Clark means “subject to prolonged public debate”, then he’s quite right; the apparent demise of “the anti-globalisation” movement following the terrorist attacks of 9/11 was indeed “little-remarked” upon. As for this movement (‘of movements’) constituting a threat to ‘society’, it’s certainly true that, in the months and years previous to 9/11, there was evidence of growing concern, if not panic, among segments of the transnational ruling class regarding the threat to the ideological hegemony of neoliberal doctrines that this movement was widely interpreted as bearing (for further discussion on the concept of a transnational ruling class, see Science & Society, Vol.65, No.4, Winter 2001–2002). And if by “society”, one actually means “society’s rulers”, then on this point he is also correct. And as for commentators on radio and TV initially blaming those ‘against globalisation’ for the attacks, this may be true — as Clark provides no further details, it’s difficult to say — but anti-summit protest and terrorism had already begun to merge in the state and corporate sector’s counter-propaganda campaign in any case, especially in regards to those who, for example, ‘convert storefront windows into vents to let some fresh air into the oppressive atmosphere of a retail outlet’ (see, for example, Anarchists to be targeted as “terrorists” alongside Al Qaeda, Statewatch, February 2002).

After 9/11, however, the movement suffered a precipitous decline. The Mayday riots which had shaken London in 2000 and 2001 were not repeated. With the war on terror swinging into action, taunting the police in street battles seemed a rather less good idea. With security services twitching with the threat of suicide bombers, suddenly there was the possibility that water cannons might be replaced with semi-automatic weapons.

    In this context, the first major casualty of 9/11 were the protests scheduled to take place in Washington in September 2001. Chuck Munson writes: “In order to understand why the North American anti-globalization movement disappeared from the media spectacle in 2001 it is important to know that large anti-globalization protests had been organized for the Fall meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, which were scheduled to meet in Washington, DC in late September 2001. There was a six month gap between the March 2001 anti-G8 protests in Quebec City and the scheduled protests in Washington, DC. After 9/11 happened, some protest groups cancelled their plans while others simply changed theirs. The media characterization of the movement as petering out was understandable given the lack of another “Seattle” in late 2001, but it was unfair given the circumstances that activists had to deal with after 9/11.” And despite massive interference from New York police and other authorities, major protests against the WEF meeting did in fact take place in February 2002, barely five months after the Twin Towers were destroyed.

    As for May Day, our Anglophilic critic may not realise it, but this day is celebrated around the world, and has been for over a century. That there were no ‘riots’ in London in 2002 should not obscure the fact that semi-automatic weaponry has replaced the use of water cannons in many of these places, and has for some time. Further, the family and friends of Jean Charles de Menezes (1978–2005) are unlikely to be the only group of people rueing the placement of such weapons in the hands of those immune from prosecution for their use.

In Rostock this week, however, the anti-globalisers wanted us to know that they are back in business. A rally involving 25,000 protestors quickly erupted into violence, leaving a reported 400 police officers and 520 demonstrators injured. The violence followed protests in Hamburg the previous week. And that was even before a single G8 delegate had touched down in Germany.

    Despite being an obviously keen-eyed observer of current affairs, Clark has unfortunately managed to avoid noticing a number of massive social struggles to have taken place in the post-911 world, or that much of the time and energy that was previously dedicated to sabotaging meetings of the ruling class and its representatives was transformed into attempting to throw a monkeywrench in the Western war machine.

    (Boofhead’s wrong about the extent of injuries to police too.)

It is no accident that the revival of anti-globalisation protest coincided with the visit of the G8 summit to Germany. It is in the German Autonome — anarchist groups of the 1960s and 1970s — that the anti-globalisation movement has its origins. It was Ulrike Meinhof, the journalist turned terrorist who lent her name to the Baader-Meinhof Gang, whose justification of vandalism as a political tool still rings in the ears of German anarchists: ‘If I set a car on fire that is a criminal offence. If I set hundreds of cars on fire that is political action.’

    An interesting thesis, but one completely unsupported by evidence. One might consider, for example, the fact that the G8 summit in Germany was one of the first major international summits of the kind to have taken place in a Western country for some years. After the Seattle summit in 1999, the WTO met in Doha, Qatar in 2001, in Cancun, Mexico in 2003 and in Hong Kong, China in 2005. Annual G8 summits, on the other hand, have been forced to take place in either remote locations and/or repressive conditions; following Genoa in 2001, the rulers of the eight states have met in Kananaskis, Alberta (Canada) in 2002, Évian-les-Bains (France) in 2003, Sea Island, Georgia (United States) in 2004, Gleneagles (Scotland) in 2005 and St. Petersburg (Russia) last year. And Clark’s observations about the political complexion of the Autonomen are as fatuous as his claims that Ulrike Meinhof’s words still ring in the ears of anarchists.

    Making Clark something of a dummkopf, really.

The difference is that whereas the Autonome were underground organisations, today’s anarchists are increasingly open about their methods. You didn’t exactly need to be a spy to find out what protest groups were planning for the G8 summit: anyone with an internet connection would have been able to read the detailed plans of where and how protestors were planning to strike — such as outside the Rostock-Lichtenhagen branch of the budget supermarket Lidl, where on Monday 4 June at 10 p.m. a group called the Dissent! Network, along with the Andalusian union of agricultural workers, were planning to gather in protest against Lidl’s ‘lousy working conditions’ and its ‘ruinous price dictates’.

    Hmmm. On the other hand — and notwithstanding the fact that yeserday’s Autonome(n) were not necessarily anarchists — perhaps the reason yesterday’s Autonome(n) didn’t publicise their activities on the Internet was ‘cos, like… there was no Internet? (You don’t exactly need to be a genius to work that one out, but not being an idiot probably helps.) And through the wonders of the Internet — Praise Capital! — I can read that the dastardly anarchists planned to ‘strike’ as part of a day of action on ‘Flight and Migration’:

    “10 p.m.: protest action in front of a Lidl-supermarket — with the participation of activists from the Andalusian union of agricultural workers SOC: Lidl has not only become known because of its lousy working conditions. Lidl (together with other supermarket chains) also stands out due to its ruinous price dictates. As a result of this the prices for agricultural products have gone down dramatically. Often it is mainly migrants (without papers) who find themselves being forced to accept the lousy conditions for wage and work in agriculture — be it as day labourers in the plastic sea of Almeria or as someone cutting asparagus in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.”

Anyone who imagines what happened in Rostock was caused by a small rabble disrupting a larger peaceful protest and being picked upon by over-reacting police, should have a look at the Dissent Network’s website. For a self-professed anarchist group, it is remarkably well-organised. Long before the G8 summit it had set up two camps, one in Rostock and one outside, for a total of 11,000 protestors, complete with soup kitchens and medical tents. Prospective protestors were told that the object was to close all entry points to the G8 summit and were given detailed advice as to the most effective way of doing it: you might consider, for example, linking arms with the aid of metal pipes set into concrete blocks which you prepared earlier, and then lying down in the street. ‘There is little you can do against armoured police vehicles,’ it goes on to advise, ‘but they do for example hate paint on their windscreens.’

    Jesus wept.

    Clark imagines that mass protest, anarchist organisation, protest camps, soup kitchens, medical tents and tactical advice for protesters began with his discovery of it last month. Further, that his indignation at the mere existence of protest networks constitutes evidence of ‘what really happened at Rostock’. Suffice it to say that German police are not expected to be calling him as an expert witness at any forthcoming trials.

At Heiligendamm, too, eager members of the ‘Black Bloc’ were expected — another German-born-and-bred anarchist outfit which was active in Genoa five years ago and which has its roots in the Baader-Meinhof/Red Army Faction era. Unlike the Dissent! Network, the Black Bloc doesn’t have a website proclaiming what trouble it intends to cause at G8. Neither does it have a press spokesman. But to give us a flavour of its ideology, one of its top brass, calling herself ‘Mary Black’, posted the following on the internet:

It is not just that police abuse their power, we believe that the existence of the police is an abuse of power …many of us believe in revolution and within that context, attacking the cops doesn’t seem out of place.

In other words, not much point in sending Commander Brian Paddock [sic] out to Heiligendamm to advise on community policing techniques: as far as the Black Bloc is concerned, cops are there to be beaten up and that is that. It isn’t just the cops, either. Mary Black goes on to offer her thoughts on capitalist enterprise:

I believe that using the word violent to describe breaking the window of a Nike store takes meaning away from the word… It is true that some underpaid Nike employee will have to clean up the mess, which is unfortunate, but a local glass installer will get a little extra income.

The vacuity of Ms Black’s self-justification defies belief. How does she know that Nike is going to employ a local glass installer, rather than give the work to a hated multinational construction outfit? And if Nike is going to employ the small man, what on earth is Ms Black moaning about anyway? Presumably, if there is any consistency in her philosophy, she ought to be praising a company which smiles upon the small man, not breaking its windows.

    Clark is here referring to a text published on AlterNet almost six years ago (July 25, 2001) called ‘Letter from Inside the Black Bloc’, which the editors note “was sent to us anonymously (Mary Black is a psuedonym [sic]) two days after a violent protester [ie, Carlo Giuliani] was killed [shot dead by police] in Genoa, Italy”.

    Vacuous and unbelievable (or not), it’s worth examining Mary’s remarks more fully. Thus, firstly:

    “It is not just that police abuse their power, we believe that the existence of police is an abuse of power. Most of us believe that if cops are in the way of where we want to go or what we want to do, we have a right to directly confront them. Some of us extend this idea to include the acceptability of physically attacking cops. I have to emphasize that this is controversial even within the Black Bloc, but also explain that many of us believe in armed revolution, and within that context, attacking the cops doesn’t seem out of place.”

    In other words, Clark consciously and deliberately distorts Mary’s message. For Mary, most — but not all — of those who form black blocs believe that confronting police is legitimate if police get in the way of their activities; further, some of this number — but not most — take this ‘right’ further, to the extent that physically assaulting police is considered to be a potentially legitimate course of action. Finally, Mary feels compelled “to emphasize that this is controversial even within the Black Bloc“, but what makes it relevant is the apparent belief of some in “armed revolution”, which fact renders “attacking the cops” less heinous than it might otherwise appear.

    Secondly:

    “I believe that using the word violent to describe breaking the window of a Nike store takes meaning away from the word. Nike makes shoes out of toxic chemicals in poor countries using exploitative labor practices. Then they sell the shoes for vastly inflated prices to poor black kids from the first world. In my view, this takes resources out of poor communities on both sides of the globe, increasing poverty and suffering. I think poverty and suffering could well be described as violent, or at least as creating violence.

    What violence does breaking a window at Nike Town cause? It makes a loud noise; maybe that is what is considered violent. It creates broken glass, which could hurt people, although most of the time those surrounding the window are only Black Bloc protesters who are aware of the risks of broken glass. It costs a giant multi-billion dollar corporation money to replace their window. Is that violent? It is true that some underpaid Nike employee will have to clean up a mess, which is unfortunate, but a local glass installer will get a little extra income too.”

    Again, one simply needs to compare Mary’s actual words to Clark’s spin to find her meaning is quite contrary.

    Finally, Clark thinks it remarkable that the ‘black bloc’ emerged in Germany in the Baader-Meinhof/Red Army Faction era; but then again, so did Kraftwerk. Does this mean krautrock should be banned?

    Yes.

    Yes it does.

The rise of violent protest on the Left is not wholly a European phenomenon. Back in 1998, Ward Churchill, Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado, published an influential book, Pacifism as Pathology, in which he castigated the Left for being too weak in its methods, and implored protestors to turn violent. It was at the meeting of the World Trade Organisation in Seattle the following year that the tradition whereby anti-globalisation protestors target international political meetings was born: 50,000 protestors rioted, causing $3 million of damage and elevating Starbucks into an object of hate on the Left.

Since then, Churchill — who claims Native American descent — has moved up a gear. [Churchill is a Creek and enrolled Keetoowah Band Cherokee.] Shortly after 9/11 he published an essay entitled ‘Some People Push Back: on the Justice of Roosting Chickens’, in which he suggested that the ‘Little Eichmanns’ who worked at the World Trade Center were not ‘innocent civilians’ but a legitimate target: ‘True enough they were civilians of a sort. But innocent? Gimme a break. They formed a technocratic corps at the very heart of America’s global empire — the “mighty engine of profits” to which the military dimension of US policy has always been enslaved.’ Although little noticed at the time, Churchill later expanded his essay into a book, which at one point reached 100 on Amazon’s bestseller list — suggesting he has a fair number of fans. Recently, attempts to have him removed from his teaching post at the University of Colorado have been blocked by his supporters citing the First Amendment.

It would be easy to dismiss the resurrected anti-globalisation movement as a bunch of incoherent nutters. But that would be to underestimate the influence of anti-globalisation on left-wing thought generally — and not just on the fringes. It has become such a commonplace to blame the oil industry for any meteorological-induced hardship in the Third World that no one seems to protest any more — even though such cheap jibes are polluting serious debate over climate change. Likewise, no one seems to mind any more that Western clothes manufacturers — in adverts by once respectable aid charities — are blamed for creating poverty in the Third World: when the reality is that they only attract workers to their factories by paying higher wages than any other local employers.

A dozen years after Tony Blair ditched Clause Four and declared an end to the politics of envy, it has suddenly become fashionable again to bash big business and attack people for being too wealthy. Last week’s Newsnight debate between the candidates for the Labour deputy leadership exposed a general leftwards shift in the party’s outlook. But what was most remarkable about it was that the most rabidly left-wing remarks came not from Jon Cruddas, the mild-mannered ‘old’ Labour candidate who wants Britons to return to living in council houses, but from Harriet Harman, the former social security secretary and middle-class paragon. Demanding a return of the Royal Commission on Distribution of Income and Wealth, the body set up by Harold Wilson in the days when the government thought it its duty to squeeze the rich until the pips squeak, she complained: ‘You can’t have proper equality of opportunity with a huge gap between rich and poor… Do we want a society where some struggle and others spend £10,000 on a handbag?’

Like so many of Ms Harman’s utterances, her appeal to the Left doesn’t bear analysis. What about the people who sew the £10,000 handbags together — surely the more that the wealthy spend on their handbags, the more they earn? I don’t think, somehow, that Ms Harman would be any happier if the price of handbags was capped at £100 and as a result handbag-stitchers were on subsistence wages.

It is certainly a contrast from the remark made by Ms Harman’s soon to be ex-boss, Tony Blair, when challenged on equality, also in a Newsnight interview, in 2001: ‘It’s not a burning ambition for me to make sure that David Beckham earns less money.’ But it is a sign of the direction in which Labour is going: away from championing opportunity for the many and not the few — and towards straightforward envy of those who have wealth. It wasn’t just Harriet Harman: Peter Hain too was tempted to take a pop at City bonuses — what he intended to do about them he didn’t quite say, but if he thinks they should be taxed punitively, he perhaps ought to make clear the effect on the British economy were its single largest export industry — financial services — to be driven abroad.

It is a long way, of course, from playing to the left-wing gallery in a debate over the deputy leadership of the Labour party to throwing bricks through windows at the G8 summit. But before respected government and former government ministers start showing contempt towards a particular group of people — in this case the wealthy — they might just care to consider whom they are influencing. A month ago Ségolène Royal, the socialist candidate in the French presidential election, made one of the most disreputable remarks uttered in recent times by a leading mainstream Western politician when she implored the French to vote for her or, in the event of a Sarkozy victory, face the prospect of seeing their country explode into anger and rioting. Fortunately, in the event her implied threat not only backfired on her: her prediction failed to materialise.

One imagines that she was not really egging on her countrymen to indulge in the orgy of car-burning which struck urban France in 2005 following the electrocution of two immigrants in a Parisian suburb [sic]. She may even have been horrified at re-hearing her remarks. But there is little doubt: there are elements of the Left that are getting nastier. Having regrouped after the distraction posed by al-Qa’eda, the rich-haters are back on the march.

Ross Clark is the author of The Great Before, a satire on the anti-globalisation movement, published by www.greatbefore.com

    The site in question claims Clark’s hilarious self-published scribblings first appeared online on December 1, 2005. As of June 28, the site has received less than 10,000 visitors… which I think means that, while Clark may be deeply in love with the market, the market isn’t exactly infatuated with him. In a rather hopeful note, Clark informs readers that “You can order The Great Before through any UK bookshop for £7.50. Or, save money and buy direct through [Ross Clark] for the special price of £5.00 plus postage & packing.” As for Clark himself, the only trace of recognition I can find of his work is his nomination for an award for journalism in 2004 by a British-based corporate propaganda unit called the International Policy Network.

More later…

Posted in Anarchism, State / Politics | 4 Comments

Monkeywrenching the Yartz Industry

On the one hand, The Controversial Artist Banksy™ sells Barely Legal & Yet Extremely Lucrative product to Aguilera, Jolie and Moss; on the other hand, motherfuckers in New York put street art up against the wall…

As Street Art Goes Commercial, a Resistance Raises a Real Stink
Colin Moynihan
The New York Times
June 28, 2007

The covert campaign targeting street art began about seven months ago, with blobs of paint that appeared overnight, obscuring murals and wheat-pasted art on walls in Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. Arcane messages were pasted at the sites, but it was difficult to ask for an explanation. The author was never identified…

Yeah well, that’s ‘cos he’s dead right? Funny thing is, unlike Uncle Ted, The Splashers didn’t need to engage in a bombing campaign in order to get their manifesto published. Well, not a real one anyway.

See also : Cynical Picture Emerges In ‘Splasher’ Mystery: Some Smell an Ad Campaign in the Case Of New York City’s Serial Graffiti Defacer, David Segal, Washington Post, March 10, 2007: “Avant-Garde: Advance Scouts for Capital reads the headline. Most [of] the copy is mumbo jumbo like this: “A fetishized action of banality, your work is a trough for the gallery owners and critics”. Who would deface graffiti, of all things? And what is “fetishized action” anyway?”

In a series of essays and in text that appeared under the headline “Interview With Myself” the anonymous authors said that the splashings were committed not by an individual but by a group of men and women, and offered some explanation of their motives.

The authors wrote that street art was “a bourgeoisie-sponsored rebellion” that helped pave the way for gentrification, and called it “utterly impotent politically and fantastically lucrative for everyone involved.”

Posted in !nataS, Anarchism, Art | 1 Comment