“Rage Against the War Machine” Rally: Pros and Cons
Yesterday’s Rage Against the War Machine rally
in front of the Lincoln Memoria in DC was spirited, with the vast majority of
people and speakers supporting progressive positions on war, NATO, free
Assange, etc. The rally was controversial due to the fact that it counted among
its sponsors the Libertarian Party, and its right-wing faction known as the
Mises Caucus. The progressive organizers of the rally supported the idea of
uniting the left and the right on grounds that the urgency of the anti-war
cause necessitates unity above ideological and other differences.
My feeling is that working with a party like
the Libertarian Party would only be justified if the blatantly racist remarks
of the far-right faction of the big tent Libertarian Party as well as those who
make those remarks not be present at the rally. I arrived a little after the
first speakers spoke and stayed throughout, and saw no overt evidence of
racism, homophobia, sexism, etc. Nearly all the speakers were progressives
identified with progressive positions. Ron Paul, Tulsi Gabbard (both of whom
delivered the closing speeches) and Scott Horton were exceptions. But you would
never know what Gabbard’s positions are on domestic issues and indeed in my
opinion delivered one of the best addresses. The same could be said for Horton.
Paul did call for getting rid of the Fed, but as a speaker he was amusing more
than effective.
Indeed, I had no intention yesterday of
staying long or even joining the rally, but I ended up doing just the opposite.
To my pleasant surprise, the speakers and the mood of the crowd were
invigorating.
I have mixed opinions about the rally and its
organizers. The organizers of the rally located on the left side of the
political spectrum should have been more careful to draw a line in the sand.
Those associated with the Lyndon LaRouche movement (including LaRouche’s wife)
and several others should have been excluded from the roster of speakers. The issue
in my mind is not whether or not to plan events with the Libertarian Party. The
issue is that of excluding anyone associated with hateful ideas from the list
of speakers.
In addition, I criticize some of the rally
promoters for employing a discourse that lashes out against rivals on the left as
much as against Trump and others on the right. Jimmy Dore is an example of
this. He attacks AOC and Bernie Sanders as if they were the enemy. They’re
obviously not.
On the other hand, the strategy of
incorporating those on the right end of the political spectrum into the
anti-war movement leadership is a potentially productive strategy, though not
without its downsides. Strangely, the only congresspeople who have voted
against military spending in Ukraine are Republicans; other rightists like Fox
News also sometimes question the war effort. What does that mean? That Republicans
and Fox News are the good guys? Obviously not. They’re the bad guys. But their occasionally
critical opinions reflect tremendous discontent among their followers over the
war machine and the permanent war that the U.S. is engaged in around the world.
Those are the people the anti-war movement needs to try to reach out to. Allowing
some of their leaders (the non-racist ones, of course) to speak at rallies is a
means to achieving that ends.
I believe the arguments of both those who
organized the rally and leaders of groups that refused to participate are
compelling. Although that sounds contradictory it should not be surprising.
Society, and particularly that of the U.S. over the last half a century, is
imbedded with deep contradictions. Politics of all stripes, as any political
scientist or politician will tell you, is about uniting disparate groups
(Ernesto Laclau with his concept of populism and empty signifiers would say the
same). So we need to grow accustomed to the ideas that different groups on the
left with different constituencies will assume different positions. Mao called
it “contradictions among the people.” And as Althusser pointed out, the
so-called “proletariat” position is not tantamount to an absolute truth. It’s
only the reflection of one class, which doesn’t even represent a majority of
the population.
Those who opposed participation, for instance,
presented a particularly cogent argument: How will we be able to go back to
those who we purport to represent when we are holding hands with those who denigrate
those sectors of the population? I get it. They have a perfect right to say, no
we won’t participate because we don’t want to undermine the very work that we
are carrying out.
My position is not one of wholehearted support
for one of the two sides in this dispute, but rather to show that neither
position is preposterous. Thus, I criticize arguments that overstate positions
and in doing so question the sincerity and commitment of those on the other
side. Example: the term “Red-Brown alliance.” Ron Paul, the most prominent member
of the Libertarian movement is hardly a fascist. Compare that with the “browns”
of Germany. Hitler was the undisputed head of the Nazi party almost from its
beginning. The more popular elements within the party like the Strasser
brothers who made common cause with the Communists in the 20s (on the
confiscation of royal property) were hardly dominant figures (and one was
jailed and killed by Hitler upon reaching power while the other – Otto –
escaped). The Nazi’s could hardly be characterized as a big tent party, unlike
the Libertarians.
More than taking sides on this knotty issue, I wanted to make
a point that is almost more philosophical or sociological than political.
Diversity has a material base and that includes diversity on the left. There
are no easy answers to the controversy raised by the February 19 rally, but
while we grapple with these issues, there has to be a sense that other currents
on the left hold the positions they do because they represent in some way
(through condensation, to use a Poulantzas concept) real sectors of the
population whose values and opinions can’t be ruled out.
I firmly criticize leaders on both sides of
the divide on this issue who lashed out against those on the other side.
Denouncing and even mocking groups like Code Pink, Veterans for Peace and
Answer for refusing to participate is nothing short of sectarian. I am equally
critical of those who labeled the organizers of the rally unprincipled. The
left in this country can’t afford to go at each other’s throat. There are many issues on the
left which in my mind are fairly black and white, but this is not one of them.
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