The movement needs to kick it up a notch - part 2Print Email to a Friend
by: John Case
March 3 2010
tags: communists, strategy and tactics

Part 2 of a two-part dialogue. For part 1, see here.
I think John Rummel has touched on what could usefully be on every
political/community/workplace agenda - from the left to the center:
how to kick it up a notch. (John has clearly been on the Food Channel
with Emeril Legasse!).

I agree with John - a transformational era, including a
transformational presidency, is made from many streams and directions.
The great labor, populist and political mobilizations and conflicts of
the great depression and World War II, alongside a personal struggle
with polio, are said to have been pillars upon which Roosevelt founded
his supreme confidence in his own judgment, a feature of his character
that permitted him to weather heavy opposition and even let loose the
NLRA upon his adversaries - who were from his own class in society.
Favorable and unfavorable biographers are united on this record. One
cannot waver, tack, retreat if necessary to advance, but never stand
still or be moved backwards from progress. On the other hand,
presidents must contend directly with the forces and interests at hand
NOW. If the forces behind your position are not sufficiently in
motion, they won't be seen, and a well-intentioned presidents could
not invite them to the table even if he wanted to.

Kicking it up a notch means an order of magnitude increase in
activity. If you brought only yourself to the last meeting, bring one
more. If you brought two before, bring four. If you brought four, then
16 this time.

It turns out that talking to friends explicitly about political
activity works better at "kicking it up a notch" if the activity can
be concentrated, that is, focused, however small the starting group
may be. Getting it right is many times a trial and error process, a
process that does not work unless groups are sharing experiences
toward a common objective.

So selecting focus is first. If you do not already have focus, its
clear that jobs is first. But moving the country in a progressive
direction is a multi-sided process. We can't get there on jobs, or
anything else, if health care is left behind and a year's sweat on
that results in NO BILL. That is a prescription for disaster in the
mid-term November elections.

Other than political junkies and professionals, most folks get in
motion around local issues. Of course more and more local issues are
directly connected to broader questions in the economic crisis, so
fully developing their potential naturally leads to convergence.
Despite ACORN's recent difficulties, or because of them, the
right-wing focus on neutralizing Obama's most grassroots
voter-turnout-oriented base tells a tale in itself on how important
this level of participatory democracy is becoming in determining the
fate of the Obama coalition.

The right has responded to the their electoral defeat in 2008 with at
first a guerrilla, and now frontal, counterattack. The consequences of
their actions on the current economic crisis are not really considered
at all, beyond a few hat tips. They are keeping the gasoline pouring
on the coals they know are heating up in working class communities
across this land. If folks become enraged someone sure enough will fly
an airplane into an IRS building; and many more are likely barely able
to keep their hats on from frustration much of this time.

The focus on China, Toyota, the attentions lavished on the Blue Dogs,
the coordinated attack on Greece by stock speculators, are indications
the political fallout from the wreckage still ongoing from the
financial crisis may be just beginning. Stiff conflicts between
different business sectors reflects the global and national
restructuring processes under way, and that are hardly complete.

Extensions to unemployment may soon run out - at which point
unemployment will start to become the leading not lagging indicator of
our economic future.

It's easy to be distracted - you have to be willing to test yourself:
is there a neighbor-to-neighbor aspect to political activity you
engage in? Is there money at stake in what you are doing? You have to
answer yes to both.

Having said this, and liking John's focus, I do not agree that the
slogans should focus primarily on "defeat of the ultra-right," any
more than I think Gus Hall was correct in a main slogan like "the all
people's front against Reaganism". Why? Because both are defensive
slogans. Gus's was then, too. Obviously I am not saying there is not a
defensive aspect to mobilizations - people get into motion usually
EXACTLY to defend themselves, not primarily to attack. And such
slogans are appropriate for getting people into the street - but it's
not the basis for sustainable organizations or coalitions, nor honest
and truthful election campaigns. There, the forward vision - from
where we are now to where we all (mostly) want to be, and our skill at
navigating it - is what counts!

Key to that is a positive - and realistic - spelling out of
specifically what a sustainable, significantly more democratic society
can practically achieve in terms of an improved standard of living,
and greater peace, for our people.

This article is part of the discussion leading up to the Communist
Party USA's 29th National Convention, May 21-23, 2010. The People's
World takes no responsibility for the opinions expressed in this
article or other articles in this discussion. To read other
contributions to this discussion, visit the site of the Pre-Convention
Discussion period.

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