Radical students in changing times 

http://dailycollegian.com/2011/09/15/radical-students-in-changing-times-by-max-calloway/
 

By: Max Calloway | September 15, 2011 

Today, only some seniors and juniors remember the days of the Radical Student 
Union. Unfortunately for current first-years, the organization disbanded in 
2009. 

But the group – originally founded in 1969 as a chapter of the Students for a 
Democratic Society –helped leave a left hand print on the University of 
Massachusetts student body. Today, the RSU’s spirit survives through the 
International Socialist Organization, Students for Justice in Palestine, Food 
Not Bombs, Students for a Free Tibet, Students Against the War, Bikes Not Bombs 
and, of course, the famed Cannabis Reform Coalition. 

Granted, UMass is one of the better places for such radical roots to flourish. 

The valley has been fertile ground for community organizing of a humanitarian 
bent for generations. But it’s not just the result of a large concentration of 
educated, wide-eyed, idealistic youth looking for any excuse to “expand minds” 
or naively rail against perceived social problems in a relatively small area – 
it’s just the area. 

Despite boasting one of the premier business and management programs in the 
country, UMass is also known for housing one of three east coast economics 
departments that lean towards the theories of a certain heavily bearded, German 
philosopher whose name, in select circles, was taboo during the Cold War. 
Yes, UMass’ economics department is Marxist. 

The University also boasts its own student-run critical theory department: 
Social, Thought and Political Economy. Its insignia is the Red Star: 
terrifying. And the University is also home to a number of cooperatively-run 
student businesses whose goals, at times, seem to be anything but turning 
profits. 

Even graduate students at the University have a history of social justice 
activism and radical action. The massive student strike that occupied the 
bunker-like Whitmore Administration Building during the late fall of 2007 
demanded a lowering of student fees, more financial support for graduate 
students with families and a general increase in student voice. The police 
presence that ultimately brought the sit-in to a dramatic close, however, 
served to illustrate the state of contemporary student action here at UMass and 
in college cultures at large. 

After occupying the building for over an hour, Massachusetts State Police 
officers in full riot gear came knocking at the front door. They offered an 
ultimatum: get out or get arrested. Unless my understanding of the issue is 
misinformed, isn’t the definition of civil disobedience to knowingly break the 
law of your own volition as an expression of social, political or economic 
dissent? Isn’t arrest a common reaction to meaningful protest in the 
contemporary police state? 

The old stories of police action against steadfast civil rights and campus 
activists during the Vietnam War are, at this point, ingrained in the American 
psyche. But, much to my surprise, rather than embrace the purest tradition of 
civil disobedience and accept institutional punishment for unabashed expression 
of citizen grievance, protest organizers in the aforementioned 2007 Whitmore 
demonstration decided that the sit-in got the point across and that arrest just 
wasn’t worth it – better to show flexibility than fanaticism. 

In the end, many of the demands were met and the protest was a success in terms 
of its immediate goals but I was still left with a pang of doubt. Why hadn’t 
anyone been willing to give blood, metaphorically, for the cause? This giving 
of blood in the name of some “noble goal” is an honorable tradition of civil 
disobedience. Why was it not honored that day in Whitmore? 




Max Calloway is a Collegian columnist. He can be reached at 
mcall...@student.umass.edu. 

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