"Action Will Be
Taken":
Left Anti-intellectualism and Its Discontents
Liza Featherstone, Doug Henwood,
and Christian Parenti
"We can't get bogged down in analysis," one activist told us at an
anti-war rally in New York last fall, spitting out that last word like a
hairball. He could have relaxed his vigilance. This event deftly avoided
such bogs, loudly opposing the U.S. bombing in Afghanistan without
offering any credible ideas about it (we're not counting the notion that
the entire escapade was driven by Unocal and Lockheed Martin, the
"analysis" advanced by many speakers). But the moment called for doing
something more than brandishing the exact same signs - "Stop the Bombing"
and "No War for Oil" - that activists poked skywards during the Gulf War.
This latest war called for some thinking, and few were doing much of that.
So what is the ideology of the activist left (and by that we mean the
global justice, peace, media democracy, community organizing, financial
populist, and green movements)? Socialist? Mostly not - too state-phobic.
Some actvisits are anarchists - but mainly out of temperamental reflex,
not rigorous thought. Others are liberals - though most are too
confrontational and too skeptical about the system to embrace that label.
And many others profess no ideology at all. So over all is the activist
left just an inchoate, "post-ideological" mass of do-gooders, pragmatists
and puppeteers?
No. The young troublemakers of today do have an ideology and it is as
deeply felt and intellectually totalizing as any of the great belief
systems of yore. The cadres who populate those endless meetings, who bang
the drum, who lead the "trainings" and paint the puppets, do indeed have a
creed. They are Activismists.
That's right, Activismists. This brave new ideology combines the
political illiteracy of hyper-mediated American culture with all the moral
zeal of a nineteenth century temperance crusade. In this worldview, all
roads lead to more activism and more activists. And the one who acts is
righteous. The activistists seem to borrow their philosophy from the
factory boss in a Heinrich Böll short story who greets his employees each
morning with the exhortation "Let's have some action." To which the
workers obediently reply: "Action will be taken!"
Activists unconsciously echoing factory bosses? The parallel isn't as
far-fetched as it might seem, as another German, Theodor Adorno, suggests.
Adorno - who admittedly doesn't have the last word on activism, since he
called the cops on University of Frankfurt demonstrators in 1968 -
nonetheless had a good point when he criticized the student and antiwar
movement of the 1960s for what he called "actionism." In his eyes this was
an unreflective "collective compulsion for positivity that allows its
immediate translation into practice." Though embraced by people who
imagine themselves to be radical agitators, that thoughtless compulsion
mirrors the pragmatic empiricism of the dominant culture - "not the least
way in which actionism fits so smoothly into society's prevailing trend."
Actionism, he concluded, "is regressive...it refuses to reflect on its own
impotence."
It may seem odd to cite this just when activistism seems to be working
fine. Protest is on an upswing; even the post 9/11 frenzy of terror
baiting didn't shut down the movement. Demonstrators were out in force to
protest the World Economic Forum, with a grace and discipline that buoyed
sprits worldwide. The youth getting busted, gassed and trailed by the cops
are putting their bodies on the line to oppose global capital; they are
brave and committed, even heroic.
But is action enough? We pose this question precisely because activism
seems so strong. The flipside of all this agitation is a corrosive and
aggressive anti-intellectualism. We object to this hostility toward
thinking - not only because we've all got a cranky intellectual bent, but
also because it limits the movement's transformative power.
Our gripe is historically specific. If everyone was busy with bullshit
doctrinal debates we would prescribe a little anti-intellectualism. But
that is not the case right now.
The Real Price of Not Thinking
How does activist anti-intellectualism manifest on the ground? One
instance is the reduction of strategy to mere tactics, to horrible effect.
Take for example the largely failed San Francisco protest against the
National Association of Broadcasters, an action which ended up costing
tens of thousand of dollars, gained almost no attention, had no impact on
the NAB, and nearly ruined one of the sponsoring organizations. During a
post-mortem discussion of this debacle one of the organizers reminded her
audience that: "We had three thousand people marching through [the
shopping district] Union Square protesting the media. That's amazing. It
had never happened before." Never mind the utter non-impact of this
aimless march. The point was clear: we marched for ourselves. We were our
own targets. Activism made us good.
Thoughtless activism confuses the formulation of political aims. One of
us was on a conference panel during which an activist lawyer went on about
the virtues of small businesses, and the need for city policy to encourage
them. When it was pointed out that enthusiasm for small business should be
tempered by a recognition that smaller businesses tend to pay less, are
harder to organize, offer fewer fringe benefits, and are more dangerous
than larger businesses, the lawyer dismissed this as "the paralysis of
analysis." On another panel, when it was pointed out that Alinsky-style
community organizing is a practical and theoretical failure whose severe
limitations need to be recognized, an organizer and community credit union
promoter shut down the conversation with a simple: "I just don't want to
discuss this."
The anti-war "movement" is perhaps the most egregious recent example of
a promising political phenomenon that was badly damaged by the
anti-intellectual outlook of activistism. While activists frequently
comment on the success of the growing peace movement - many actions take
place, conferences are planned, new people become activists, a huge
protest is scheduled for April in Washington, D.C. - no one seems to
notice that it's no longer clear what war we're protesting. Repression at
home? Future wars in Somalia or Iraq? Even in the case of Afghanistan, it
turned out to be important to have something to say to skeptics who asked:
"What's your alternative? I think the government should protect me from
terrorists, and plus this Taliban doesn't seem so great." The movement
failed to address such questions, and protests dwindled.
On some college campuses, by contrast, where the war has been seen as a
complicated opportunity for conversation rather than sign-waving, the
movement has done better. But everywhere, the unwillingness to think about
what it means to be against the war and how war fits into the global
project of American empire, has also led to a poverty of thinking about
what kind of actions make sense. "How can we strategically affect the
situation?" asks Lara Jiramanus of Boston's Campus Anti-War Coalition. "So
we want to stop the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan - what does it mean
to have that as our goal? I don't think we talk about that enough."
We're not arguing for conformist ideologies. The impulse to resist
hierarchy and mind-control is one of the more appealing and useful facets
of the new activism. Consider the campus anti-sweatshop movement, which
includes members of the International Socialist Organization, SDS-type
radical democrats, anarchists and plain-vanilla liberals. This movement's
willingness to embrace radicals and non-radicals alike has been a
strength, attracting both policy wonks and people who like to chain their
throats to the dean's desk. Such flexibility is usually commendable. What
bothers us about activistism as an ideology is that is renders taboo any
discussion of ideas or beliefs, and thus stymies both thought and action.
Many activists agree. Jiramanus, who is also involved in the Harvard
Living Wage Campaign, says that some in that group believe that the fight
for a living wage is part of a "larger ideal" while others don't. "But if
your analysis is not broad enough," she points out, "you're not much
different from those groups that do charity work." In her campus labor
solidarity group, "people will say, 'I'm not progressive, I just care
about this issue.' There's a failure to think of our work in a larger
context, and a reluctance to ask people what they believe. There needs to
be a venue for talking about alternative economic systems." But she says
these questions don't get talked about, and people who do think about them
are afraid to bring them up in meetings. "It's like, 'there's no time for
it, we need to win the living wage campaign right now.'"
Thoughtful people find this censorious hyperpragmatism alienating and
can drop away from organizing as a result. But that's not the only
problem. It's important to encourage better thinking, says Jiramanus, "so
hippie-to-yuppie doesn't happen again." As she points out, without an
analysis of what's really wrong with the world - or a vision of the better
world you're trying to create - people have no reason to continue being
activists once a particular campaign is over. In this way, activist-ism
plus single-issue politics can end up defeating itself. Activistism is
tedious, and its foot soldiers suffer constant burnout. Thinking, after
all, is engaging; were it encouraged, Jiramanus pleads, "We'd all be
enjoying ourselves a bit more."
Increasingly, there are activists who treat ideas as important. "We
need to develop a new rhetoric that connects sweatshops -- and living wage
and the right to organize -- to the global economy," says the University
of Michigan's Jackie Bray, an anti-sweatshop activist. Liana Molina of
Santa Clara University agrees: "I think our economic system determines
everything!" But about the student movement's somewhat vague ideology, she
has mixed feelings. "It's good to be ambiguous and inclusive," so as not
to alienate more conservative, newer, or less politicized members, she
says. "But I also think a class analysis is needed. Then again, that gets
shady, because people are like, 'Well, what are you for, socialism?
What?'"
The problem is that activists, like Molina, who are asking the
difficult questions that push into new political terrain are very often
forced to operate in frustrating isolation, without the support of a
community of fellow thinkers.
From Whence Came This Malady?
Steve Duncombe, a NYC-DAN activist, author, and NYU professor, says his
fellow activists "think very little about capitalism outside a moral
discourse: big is bad, and nothing about the state except in a sort of
right wing dismissal: state as authoritarian daddy."
Activistism is also intimately related to the decline of Marxism, which
at its best thrived on debates about the relations between theory and
practice, part and whole. Unfortunately, much of this tradition has
devolved into the alternately dreary and hilarious rants in sectarian
papers. Marxism's decline (but not death: the three of us would happily
claim the name) has led to wooly ideas about a nicer capitalism, and an
indifference to how the system works as a whole. This blinkering is
especially virulent in the U.S. where a petit-bourgeois populism is the
native radical strain, and anti-intellectualism is almost hard-wired into
the culture. And because activistism emphasizes practicality,
achievability, and implementation over all else, a theory dedicated to
understanding deep structures with an eye towards changing them
necessarily gets shunted aside.
Marxism's decline isn't just an intellectual concern - it too has
practical effects. If you lack any serious understanding of how capitalism
works, then it's easy to delude yourself into thinking that moral appeals
to the consciences of CEOs and finance ministers will have some effect.
You might think that central banks' habit of provoking recessions when the
unemployment rate gets too low is a policy based on a mere
misunderstanding. You might think that structural adjustment and imperial
war are just bad lifestyle choices.
Unreflective pragmatism is also encouraged by much of the left's
dependency on foundations. Philanthropy's role in structuring activism is
rarely discussed, because almost everyone wants a grant (including us).
But it should be. Foundations likefocused entities that undertake specific
politely meliorative schemes. They don't want anyone to look too closely
at the system that's given them buckets of money that less fortunate
people are forced to bay for.
Activistism is contaminated by the cultural forms and political content
of the non-profit sector. Because nonprofits are essentially businesses
that sell press coverage of themselves to foundation program officers,
they operate according to the anti-intellectual logic of hyper-pragmatism
and the fiscal year short-termism generated by financial competition with
their peer organizations. When nonprofit business lead, the whole left
begins to take on the same obsessive focus with "deliverables" and "take
aways" and "staying on message." For many political nonprofits, actions -
regardless of their value or real impact - are the product, which in turn
promise access to more grants.
Nonprofit culture fosters an array of mind-killing practices.
Brainstorming on butcher paper and the use of break out groups are
effective methods for generating and collecting ideas and or organizing
pieces of a larger action. However when used to organize political
discussions these nonprofit tools can be disastrous. More often than not,
everybody says some thing, break out groups report back to the whole
group, lists are complied - and nothing really happens.
What is to be done?
Our point is not that there should be less activism. The left is
nothing without visible, disruptive displays of power. We applaud activism
and engage in it ourselves. What we are calling for is an assault on the
stupidity that pervades American culture. This implies a more democratic
approach to the life of the mind and creating spaces for ideas in our
lives and political work.
We're not calling for leadership by intellectuals. On the contrary, we
challenge left activist culture to live up to its anti-hierarchical
claims: activists should themselves become intellectuals. Why reproduce
the larger society's division between mental and physical labor? The
rousing applause for Noam Chomsky at the World Social Forum in Porto
Allegre was hardly undeserved, but ideas don't belong on pedestals. They
belong in the street, at work, in the home, at the bar and on the
barricades.
We put out this call - to indulge a bit of activist-ism lingo - because
the current moment demands some thinking. With overwhelming approval for
Bush and his endless war, waving one's "Stop the Bombing" sign from ten
years ago won't build a mass movement. Nor will bland moralism win the
day: "War is Not the Answer" is little better than "War is the Answer" --
as read a counter demonstrator's placard recently spotted in Manhattan.
The Movement is also undergoing a fascinating rhetorical shift, as
activists reject terms like "antiglobalization," which emphasized - not
very lucidly - what they're against, in favor of slogans like "Another
World is Possible" which dare to evoke the possibility of radically
different economic arrangements. What would that other world look like?
Activists must engage that question - and to do so, they have to do a
better job of understanding how this world really works. Intellectuals
briefing activist groups on some aspect of how things are often face a
tediously reductive question: "That's all very interesting, but how can we
organize around that? What would be the slogans?"
None of us were in Genoa or Porto Alegre, but we're told that there was
plenty of serious discussion of both this world and the better one. But
Americans shouldn't have to go all the way to Brazil or Italy to talk and
think about this stuff. Unfortunately here at home, those with the
confidence to discuss such questions are too often the ones with the
silliest ideas: at the "Another World Is Possible rally" during WEF
weekend, speakers waxed hopefully of a world in which all produce will be
locally grown. That's absurd, unless you're planning to abandon cities,
give up on industrial civilization, and reduce the world's population by
95%. But we're barely acknowledging these issues, much less debating them.
The spirit we wish to inspire was expressed a few years ago by a Latin
American graduate student. Seeing one of us holding a copy of Aijaz
Ahmad's In Theory, he exclaimed with all seriousness: "That book is like
having an intellectual grenade in your hand. Hasta la Victoria." In many
other countries, activists' tiny apartments are stacked with the
well-thumbed works of Bakunin, Marx and Fanon. We'd like to see that kind
of engagement here. And judging at least from the European experience, it
would pay off even in activistism's own pragmatic terms: protests in major
European cities routinely dwarf our own, and activists there have far more
influence on mainstream discourse and even government policy. In the long
run, movements that can't think can't really do too much either.
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