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Right-wingers with a left-wing guise

Raúl Zibechi

ALAI AMLAT-en, 19/03/2014.- Recent mass demonstrations, instigated by 
the right-wing in a variety of countries, indicate their capacity to 
co-opt symbols that they used to scorn, to the confusion of many on the 
left.

Patrick Tyler, writing in a New York Times column for February 17, 2003, 
about what was happening on the streets across the world, noted that 
“…the huge antiwar demonstrations around the world this weekend are 
reminders that there may still be two superpowers on the planet: the 
United States and world public opinion”.

“Take a look around and you’ll see a world at the boiling point” writes 
Tom Engelhardt, US editor of [the online] Tomdispatch. In effect, ten 
years after the famous Times article, which circled the globe on the 
back of the anti-war movement, there is hardly a corner of the world 
that is not at the boiling point of popular unrest, especially since the 
crisis of 2008.

One could mention the Arab Spring that overthrew dictators and swept 
through a good part of the Arab world; Occupy Wall Street, the greatest 
critical movement in the United States since the 1960s; the Greek and 
Spanish indignados that marched against the social disasters provoked by 
mega-speculation. Right now, Ukraine, Syria, South Sudan, Thailand, 
Bosnia, Turkey and Venezuela are scenes of protest, mobilizations and 
street actions under the most diverse banners.

Countries that had not seen social protests for decades, such as Brazil, 
expect demonstrations during the World Cup, after 350 cities have 
witnessed significant unease in the streets. In Chile, there is a strong 
students’ movement that shows no signs of losing strength, while in Peru 
the conflict over mining is still very much alive after more than five 
years.

When public opinion has the force of a superpower, governments have 
attempted to understand what is happening in order to dominate, 
manipulate, and lead it into areas that are more easily controlled than 
street uprisings, aware of the fact repression alone does not achieve 
much. Because of this, know-how that was once a monopoly of the left, 
from political parties to trade unions and social movements, has now 
been taken up by others, capable of moving masses but with goals 
diametrically opposed to those of the left.

Activist Style

 From March 20 to 26, 2010, there was an event in the Uruguayan 
Department of Colonia called the Campamento Latinoamericano de Jóvenes 
Activistas Sociales (“Latin American Encampment of Young Social 
Activists”. http://alainet.org/active/37263). The convocation promised 
“a space for horizontal interchange” to work for a “more just and 
solidary Latin America.” Among the hundred or so activists who 
responded, no one suspected the source of funds for travel and living 
expenses, nor who in reality had called for the meeting (Alai, April 9, 
2010).

A young militant pursued an investigation as to who exactly were the 
“Young Social Activists” who had organized a participative encounter to 
“begin to create a live memory of the experiences of social activism in 
the region; to learn the difficulties, identify good local practices 
that could be adopted at regional levels, and to maximize the scope of 
creativity and the engagement of their protagonists.”

The result of his investigation in web pages allowed him to ascertain 
that the event was supported by the Open Society Institute of George 
Soros and other institutions connected with it. The surprise was even 
greater because in the encampment there were round tables, campfires and 
collective work with flipcharts, against a background of whipala 
pennants and other indigenous flags. The decor and the style gave the 
impression of a meeting not unlike the Social Forums and many other 
activist events that employ similar symbols and ways of acting. Some of 
the workshops employed methods identical to those of Paulo Freire’s 
popular education which, habitually, have been employed by movements 
against “the system”.

It is clear that a certain number of activists were coopted 
“democratically”, since all indicated that they could freely express 
their opinions, for objectives opposed to those of the organizers. This 
learning experience of the Soros Foundation was applied in various 
former Soviet Republics, during the “revolt” in Kyrgyzstan in 2010 and 
in the “orange revolution” in Ukraine in 2004.

It is a fact that many foundations and widely varied institutions send 
money and instructors to similar groups to mobilize and work to 
overthrow governments opposed to Washington. In the case of Venezuela, 
on a number of occasions such agencies have been denounced, such as the 
National Endowment for Democracy (NED) created by the US Congress during 
the Presidency of Ronald Reagan. There is also the Spanish Fundación de 
Análisis y Estudios Sociales (FAES) associated with ex-President José 
María Aznar.

Now we are faced with a more complex reality: how the art of street 
demonstration, above all that which is directed toward the overthrow of 
governments, has been learned by conservative forces.

The art of confusion

The journalist Rafael Poch describes the deployment of forces in the 
Maidan square in Kiev: “In the most massive moments there were some 
seventy thousand gathered in this city of four million people. Among 
them there is a minority of several thousand, perhaps four or five 
thousand, equipped with helmets, iron bars, shields and bats to confront 
the police. And within these groups there is a hard nucleus of perhaps 
one thousand or fifteen hundred individuals who can only be described as 
paramilitaries, people who are ready to kill those who represent another 
category, or to die. This hard nucleus has made use of firearms” 
(Vanguardia, Februry 25, 2014).

This disposition of combat forces on the streets is nothing new. 
Throughout history it has been employed by a variety of antagonistic 
forces to achieve objectives that are also opposed. What we have seen in 
Ukraine is repeated in part in Venezuela where armed groups mingle with 
demonstrations in order to overthrow a government, generating situations 
of chaos and ungovernability to achieve their goal.

The right has learned from the vast insurrectional experience of the 
working class, principally European, and from the popular uprisings in 
Latin America since the Caracazo of 1989. A comparative study of these 
two moments should reveal the enormous differences between the workers’ 
insurrections of the first decades of the Twentieth Century, led by 
parties and solidly organized, and the uprisings of popular sectors over 
the last years of this same century.

In any case, the right has been able to create a “people’s” mechanism, 
such as that described by Rafael Poch, to destabilize popular 
governments, giving the impression that these are legitimate 
mobilizations that have managed to overthrow illegitimate governments, 
even though these governments were in fact elected and still have the 
support of an important segment of the population. Here confusion is a 
decisive tactic, as was the tactic of insurrection that in other times 
was employed by revolutionaries.

Riding the wave

A very similar tactic was displayed by conservative groups in Brazil 
during the June demonstrations. While the first marches were hardly 
covered by the media, except to point to the “vandalism” of the 
demonstrators, from June 13, when hundreds of thousands appeared on the 
streets, there was a variation.

The demonstrations made headlines, but there was something that the 
Brazilian sociologist Silvia Viana defines as a “reconstruction of the 
narrative” towards other goals. The theme of bus fares moved to second 
place, while Brazilian flags and the slogan “down with corruption”, 
which had not featured in the original calls for action, took the 
headlines (Le Monde Diplomatique, June 21, 2013). The mass media also 
buried the originators of the call for action and emphasized social 
networks in their place, criminalizing the more militant sectors for 
their supposed violence, even as police violence was played down.

In this way, the right, that in Brazil has no capacity for mobilization, 
attempted to take over mobilizations whose objectives (denouncing real 
estate speculation and the huge construction projects for the World Cup) 
they were far from sharing. “It is clear that there is no political 
struggle without a dispute over symbols,” said Viana. In this symbolic 
dispute, the right, which now attempts to paint their assaults as 
“defence of democracy”, learned faster than did their opponents.
07/03/2014

(Translated for ALAI by Jordan Bishop)

- Raúl Zibechi, Uruguayan journalist, writes in Brecha and La Jornada 
and is a collaborator with ALAI.

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