Silence is Consent
A report back of the Summer 2006 Students for a Democratic Society National Conference
“Who are our enemies? Who are our friends? This is a question of the first importance for the revolution. The basic reason why all previous revolutionary struggles in China achieved so little was their failure to unite with real friends in order to attack real enemies.”- Mao Tse-Tung.
This is an attempt to accurately report my own observations and experiences as a participant of the first national conference of the newly revived Students for a Democratic Society. I hope this won’t be the only written account of a participant for broader consumption, but I felt I had to write this to answer the people who have called me asking how it went. There was to much to simplify in a few simple sentences over the phone. I had to write this to at least touch upon the nuances, if not dive completely into them.
There were a lot of people watching this event hoping to see a phoenix rise again. They have their doubts and reservations though. The last 30-40 years have seen a lot of radical groups rise and fall. While people are hopeful for a revolutionary organization to end all revolutionary organizations, they aren’t ready to devote their time and energy into a group that has a name, but no action. I know many people who are waiting to see what this new SDS will do before they become involved with it.
But they are watching. While some might brand the new SDS as something which is a throwback to the 60’s, as just a bunch of history nerds trying to relive the mythical days of yore, I thought that using the name was a brilliant tactical move for several reasons. For one, you have the name recognition. Around 40 years of students have been involved with, or studied SDS. It has name recognition that reaches beyond many comparable left student organizations of today. For another the name implies the core of what I feel every socialist, anarchist, communist, pacifist and other left activist has been striving for. Not bourgeois democracy but real democracy- in the workplace, in our communities, in our personal relationships with each other. Also, the name is something that multiple sectors of the left can unite around- provided no single leftist trend monopolizes their hold on the organization. Almost every trend of the left, from Trotskyists to Anarchists to Maoists and even some progressive liberals has a history in SDS, and would be interested in being a part of the new SDS.
With that said, I felt that there were two contradicting directions the conference went in. On one hand it was very unorganized on the other, there was a sense of being a part of history. Everyone there knew that activists who weren’t there would be interested in it. Everyone knew the previous history and the impact that SDS had on national (and international) politics. It’s just a shame that the conference was so half-assed.
The organizing for the conference was mainly handled by Nick Kreitman, who by the time the conference happened had reserved rooms at the University of Chicago and found a Unitarian church that would provide crash housing. A miscommunication with Chicago Food Not Bombs led to FNB being unable to provide food. By the end of the conference, Nick had gone something like four or five days without sleep. Despite the lack of organization, about 200-300 people attended and on average I would say 100 people were there throughout the conference. Not bad, but not great. I’ll comment more in a bit.
Friday night was fun because different chapters gave report backs from their various schools and locals. One of the highlights was Olympia SDS, which had attempted to shut down a Navy port which was shipping out military supplies and troops to Iraq.
Saturday, there were a number of workshops. I arrived late, but was still able to have a few people come to a workshop/discussion on researching the radical history of students’ school’s. I’ve been working on a history about DePaul and was able to chat with students from CUNY about the riots there that led to open admissions there. In the next block of workshops I decided to skip the anarchist revolution workshop to go to the white privilege workshop. The person who was supposed to moderate it was not there so the group went around and discussed their experiences of white privilege especially in organizing. I heard later that the anarchist revolution workshop had a debate between those who were more down with Crimethinc style drop out of society, crusty lifestyle as sustaining anarchist revolution and those who were more into organizing in communities and workplaces.
Then during the lunch break, a number of Chicago activist held a Chicago SDS meet. One of the ideas we discussed was focusing on a victory campaign. To have the whole city zero in on a particular reactionary element, and defeat it. Chase it off a particular campus, shut it down for good.
This would be decided at an assembly in early September. Invites to the assembly would be sent out not just to SDS chapters but one student is compiling a list of all student/youth left groups in the Chicago area. We discussed how this list would be more than just anti-war and anti-sweatshop groups but would include groups with sympathies for SDS or would be obvious allies of SDS- Black student groups, Latino groups, Socialist clubs, Queer groups, Feminist groups and others.
The Chicago meet went long and cut into the speech by Micheal Albert. What I did hear him talk about was basically about not alienating the people we’re trying to organize and win over to the revolutionary movement. He used the example of a sports bar. How many people have gone into one and tried talking to people there and getting them to get active in some way? I found myself agreeing with him on this point. How often have leftist groups in the US broke apart, over some esoteric historical tidbit that happened 100 years ago in a country on the other side of the planet. I’m sorry but debating whether the Kronstadt rebellion was an imperialist invasion or an Anarchist revolt doesn’t prevent immigrants from being deported. Doing a sit in or week long occupation of an INS (or is it Homeland security now?) office does.
I was the moderator for a workshop in the next block, but felt shorted because of the way it was printed on the program. It was supposed to be a workshop on drafting a proposal for a national action. However the way it was printed on the program, it read like DePaul students were talking about some sort of action. One of the SDS veterans I know told me later that if I wanted to get SDS to adopt a national action, I should have just written up a proposal of my own and handed out copies. Next time I will, but I thought it would be more democratic to have a workshop draft a proposal. Anyway, the workshop turned into more of a brainstorm, a productive and exciting one though. We discussed how SDS was different than other student left groups because it could be multi-tendency and multi-issue. We also discussed how it had the potential to be more militant than other student/youth left groups. A lot of the actions we brainstormed were borrowed from the animal rights movement and SHAC such as house demos and other forms of disruption and making politics personal for the various profiteers of death.
Saturday night, there was a silent vigil on the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, on the site where the Atom was first split at the U of C. Later that night there was a more militant protest against gentrification and Hyde Park. I didn’t really like how either of them turned out. I made it to the Hiroshima vigil a few minutes late, I was unaware that it was planned to be a silent vigil. There was a lot that went wrong. For one, SDS didn’t have it’s own flier explaining why they were all sitting there. Second, Chicago’s most well known anti-semitic crack pot, Jeoffrey, was there handing out his ridiculous fliers. Third, how are you supposed to confront someone like Jeoffrey at a silent vigil? A number of Jewish students (who were all vigorously opposed to the racism that is Zionism), were offended by Jeoffrey, one of which told me that this was the first time that he ever felt attacked as a Jew. This same student, Dan, would go up to every person Jeoffrey gave a flier to, in order to explain that all the people sitting there were not affiliated with such drivel. Those Jewish students weren’t just mad at Jeoffrey though, they were frustrated that other students didn’t step in to escort Jeoffrey out of there.
I had heard about the late night march against gentrification, but decided not to go. Something about it didn’t jive with me. There was a community forum near U. of C. on gentrification earlier in the day, but none of the organizers of the late night march attended it. It seemed to me to be like the days of rage- rash, imprudent and impulsive. This critique is not to take away from the need for militancy, or the occasional impulsive action. I think that Dostoyeski has a great point in Notes from the Underground in that sometimes it’s better, when you are hit, to hit back without thinking about it, because once you think about it, you rationalize why you shouldn’t hit back. But the night march didn’t seem to have a clear focus, target or point. It seemed like it was trying to create a militant protest that wasn’t possible under those circumstances. Anyway, I’ll defer to people who were actually there to further discuss what happened or debate the merits or this particular action.
The next morning I attended the counter-recruitment workshop, which went over a number of ways recruiters lie to people and ways to prevent them from meeting their quotas.
One of the big disorganized failures of the conference was it’s ability to have neat and orderly caucuses. At first, all the caucuses, six of them, were scheduled for the same time slot. However, some people rightly attempted to redo the schedule so that, for example, a Latino woman wouldn’t have to choose between one or the other caucus. However I was frustrated that the Marxist and the Anarchist Caucuses were both scheduled to be held at the same time. Also, the People of Color caucus was unable to meet in the morning, and ended up being at the same time as the Anarchist and Marxist caucuses, a scheduling disaster. I went to the Marxist caucus, where there were all unaffiliated communists. There were far more people in the Anarchist caucus though.
Following that, was a workshop that was supposed to be a brainstorm on the national structure of SDS. All hell broke loose. First of all, the people of color caucus had not ended, which a number of white activists didn’t realize. Then the conversation broke down as the stack became long, and a few people made motions in terms of voting. There was general confusion as no one was sure what was taken care of first- stack or motions? No one was sure if Roberts rules of order were being used. Where the motions for voting in that session? For a voting structure for the next year of SDS? Where the 100 some people there really supposed to make decisions on how SDS would run? The woman who was moderating and taking stack was shouted down as people abused the direct response.
Part of the issue was that SDS had not adopted any sort of decision making structure. Which became an issue organizing this Chicago conference. When groups like the International Socialist Organization, Revolutionary Communist Party and World Can’t Wait asked to reserve tables, anarchists and others on the organizing e-mail list stated that they didn’t want this various self-proclaimed vanguard groups to “dominate” or “take-over” SDS the way the Progressive Labor Party did in the 1960’s. They didn’t want to give them tables. Myself and a few others said that it was silly to exclude those groups because they often evolved out of SDS, not all the members of those groups buy into “the cult of bob” or whatever, and most importantly, we need to unite with our friends and allies against the real monsters. There was no consensus, how were we supposed to decide? Those groups in dispute were sent a letter stating that we have no way to decide such disputes and to come as individual members and/or try reserving a table next year.
While I’ll admit, there is a serious issue at stake. All these various “vanguard” parties (an even certain anarchists) are convinced they have the truth and thus treat every coalition, ally, etc as something to recruit for their organization. I feel that none of these groups has the perfect and correct strategy/program/etc., by the simple fact that if they did, the revolution would have happened all ready, or we would at least be farther along than we are. But the point is how does SDS balance it’s need to bring these people into the fold of a broad revolutionary umbrella group so we can all work together on stopping the capitalist system with the concern that these groups don’t give a fuck about SDS or umbrella groups as they already have the truth/correct revolutionary strategy.
I mean how many groups are convinced that they alone can lead the revolution? It’s silly really. It seems like many groups are content to make a theory and bash it into people’s heads, and blame everything on “why won’t people just accept our truth!” That’s not how science, or Marxism, is supposed to work though. It supposed to be a process of tests, competing theories (different strains of the left) are worked out through scholarly debate, more tests (actions, protests), while sharing information. Eventually, the different schools of thought are able to agree. But the scientists are not supposed to act uncomraderly, or sectarian. In other words, prove your theory by making the revolution, not by convincing us.
Anyway, I’m going off on a tangent from the SDS conference. So in this workshop, there was a push to adopt some sort of temporary voting structure to make decisions like who gets to table, etc. However, I felt that the most vocal spokesperson for this move, Nick, was so wigged out from not sleeping, that the way he was presenting the proposal was condescending and not helpful.
While all of this was happening, the People of Color Caucus was writing a statement. They filed into the room everyone else was in, and read it. The statement mentioned that members of the Caucus had felt alienated at certain points by the overwhelming white conference and that the history of SDS was that of a predominantly white (sometimes a white-ally to POC) group. The statement challenged the new SDS as to whether it would continue to be a white dominated group or if it would attempt to be a multi-racial group. I thought that the statement was good and constructive. I also though that this SDS conference had integrated a lot of the ideas about multi-racial organizing that the original SDS found controversial, today it was standard to have caucuses, and workshops on privilege. Back in the 60’s, you would have had some dogmatic Marxists who declared that such things diverted attention from the class conflict. I couldn’t disagree more, they add different dimensions to our analysis and action against the class system.
The time came for the next block of workshops to begin. There were a number of workshops I wanted to go to. John Wilson’s defending academic freedom seemed like a good one, as did the Participatory Economics workshop which featured Micheal Albert. I decided to go tot he National Guard Civil Disturbance Techniques workshop though with my friend Robert Austin. Austin had been in the National Guard, but applied for Conscience Objector status. I thought that Robert did a great job with it, he showed different formations, with diagrams, and he had us do some practice runs with PVC pipes as billy clubs in different formations. Then we did a test riot control with some other SDSers where they faked a riot and we contained it. I felt the workshop had a downside in that it was overwhelmingly male and not everyone took it seriously. Still I felt that such a workshop was a good step towards more militant and organized actions.
Next day, Monday, there were a few workshops, but it was the closing plenary that was most productive. The first thing the plenary did was to decide upon rules for that meeting. Roberts rules of order were adopted, an older Movement for a Democratic Society member was selected to moderate, while one woman kept time and another kept stack and track of motions. We also decided that anything this meeting decided would be labeled as being decided by the 2006 SDS conference, not SDS as a whole. As for voting it was to attempt consensus, failing that, there would be a brief discussion followed by another vote that would require ¾. Among the things decided, were to have at least 2 regional conferences in the next year and a national constitutional convention in a year. Attempts to create a committee and a temporary voting structure were voted down due mainly to time concerns. MDS stated that they were planning on fund raising among older SDS veterans and that the money would be managed by a committee with MDS and SDS members on it. The money would be used for bail, travel scholarships to conferences and other things. There was discussion about how to make the website more interactive. The easiest decision was to support the IWW Starbucks union and to take action of some sort against the firing of union organizer Daniel Gross. Also we heard a brief report back from the womens caucus. The queer caucus was unable to meet as far as I know.
There was also talk about how the next conference might not be a national conference, but an international one as there were chapters in Germany, Nigeria and Mexico already. There was some discussion on what membership would look like, the difference between chapters, affiliates, allies, etc.
I asked some of the older generation SDS activists who were there, like Carl Davidson and Alan Haber, what they thought about this conference compared to the 1960’s SDS. They seemed optimistic, pointing out that at Port Huron there were only 40 people and that the political level of the people at this was much higher. However I worked on housing for the first Campus Anti-War Network conference at Loyola. There were far more people at that in January 2003 than at this SDS conference. While some would like to point to the anti-war movements size at the time and that demonstrations have gotten smaller since then, I felt there were really two things to blame as to why this conference wasn’t bigger. The lack of organization was crucial. How late was it before we knew it would be at the U. of C.? The workshops didn’t get arranged until a week before, we had no way to decide controversial issues (and still don’t). Also people were unsure what this SDS was about. Who was behind it, what’s their motive for bringing it back? Will it be worth my time as an activist or will I accomplish more with other groups? The other thing I think prevented people from attending- there were far more anarchists there than any other tendency. While I probably identify with the anarcho-syndicalists and anarcho-commies than any other tendency, I think that the attitude many of the anarchists at this event took intimidated and blew off our obvious allies in the struggle. I feel that SDS will die of ideological inbreeding and lack of new bodies if it remains so overwhelmingly anarchist. I’m less concerned that the ISO or some other socialist group will “co-opt” SDS than I am of the experts of co-optation- the democratic party. No other group has the potential to lead the student and youth movement down a non-revolutionary path than the hope of Hillary, Obama or Blagovich for President bandwagons. Especially now that You have the Clinton and Soros funded Center for American Progress is pouring millions of dollars into training “student activists” the same way the right wing has in the last few decades. We need millions of dollars for radical activism, but Soro’s group isn’t calling for the immediate end of the Iraq war, it sure as hell isn’t anti-imperialist and capitalism? Soros is the definition of global capital, look it up in a dictionary and you will see his face.
Like I said, there have been a lot of people asking me about this conference. There was one activist who recorded the whole thing on cassette and promised to put it up on Indymedia. So if I missed any important points, the tapes should have them covered.
I felt that the conference had a mixed result. I think the greatest failure of it was that it didn’t decide on organizing some sort of national action- whether it be a major march/mobilization or a day of autonomous actions. However I felt that there were important contacts and networking done. Looking back 5 years from now, I hope that we’ll be able to point to this conference as being the seed of something more historic and exciting. The success of SDS, like the success of the Left, won’t come from conferences, but will come from actions that not only shut down the system, but inspire others to take part and join the struggle.
Comments
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
Re: Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
not true.
Re: Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
All said, I think they have a real organization that will grow. They're radical, anti-imperialist, earnest, civil, humane, committed to participatory democracy as they will define it, pluralist, open to both socialism and anarchism, and full of audacity and willingness to fight for just causes.
What more could you want from a youth group?
As for the 'structure debate,' I asserted a 'veterans privilege' and avoided it. I've suffered through more than my share of them. I also think they could have done with less of Michael Albert, but then, I'm a David Schweickart fan. Maybe next time they'll invit him.
But I enjoyed the workshops. I heard Ra Chaka did well in the one on the prison industrial complex, and the antiwar one at the end was pretty good, too.
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
YES.. RIGHTON!
"While I’ll admit, there is a serious issue at stake. All these various “vanguard” parties (an even certain anarchists) are convinced they have the truth and thus treat every coalition, ally, etc as something to recruit for their organization. I feel that none of these groups has the perfect and correct strategy/program/etc., by the simple fact that if they did, the revolution would have happened all ready, or we would at least be farther along than we are. But the point is how does SDS balance it’s need to bring these people into the fold of a broad revolutionary umbrella group so we can all work together on stopping the capitalist system with the concern that these groups don’t give a fuck about SDS or umbrella groups as they already have the truth/correct revolutionary strategy."
They are all wrong. Every single one of those groups/ individuals are blind. No one needs to have a table. What are tables for? They are for sales and marketing efforts. Are you having a flea market? or, are you organizing. Are you having a mall? or, are you having a brainstorm.
People who want to sell things can go to zillions of outlets and sell and market their wares. People who want to organize come to organize.
The solution is: No Tables.
Workshops and coalescence: yes. Tables: NO.
"I’m less concerned that the ISO or some other socialist group will “co-opt” SDS than I am of the experts of co-optation- the democratic party. No other group has the potential to lead the student and youth movement down a non-revolutionary path than the hope of Hillary, Obama or Blagovich for President bandwagons."
There is no question thet the Domocratic Party is watching your pants, and would like to eat them for lunch. Please however do beware of the ISO, if they cannot control you, they will attempt to destroy you. First they will say you are bad at organizing, and that you need guidance, then, if that does not work they will say you are violent and they will create a create a crisis where there does not need to be one. They will find the weakest minds among you and seek to influence them. Please be equally aware of both of these vulture clans.
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
16 Aug 2006
'They are all wrong. Every single one of those groups/ individuals are blind. No one needs to have a table. What are tables for? They are for sales and marketing efforts. Are you having a flea market? or, are you organizing. Are you having a mall? or, are you having a brainstorm.'
Goodness, RZ, speaking of marketing, you seemed to have cornered the market on pronouncments of what's proper and improper, correct and incorrect, needed and un-needed, not to mention 'right' and 'wrong.'
Flea markets, by the way, are a great place to meet ordinary working class folks and do some organizing, too.
So if you don't like tables selling political books at political meetings, there's a very simple solution.
Just don't visit them, don't talk to those working at them, and don't buy anything.
Anyone else who wants to do otherwise is best left at liberty to make up their own minds without you 'shielding' them from what you consider boring, irrevelevant of counter-revolutionary, don't you think?
Lighten up a bit.
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
17 Aug 2006
If it's necessary to create a movement devoid of the usual Chicago splintering, co-opting attempts and male dominance, then it would be important to create the conditions that would be unattractive to those usual suspects.
Create conditions that will attract people who want to organize with other people. Do not create conditions that will atract competive people who want to control the agenda and other people to their own ends.
If that is intimidating to people who need to operate from a position of alleged/ assumed power and control, then GOOD! and hopefully, good RIDDANCE!
BTW, tell us about all those times you went to flea markets to organize the people. Also, the next time you go to a flea market or a mall to organize the people, let us know how it turns out.
Can't wait to hear about it.
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
17 Aug 2006
But whatever you think of Joffrey Stewart (the correct spelling), who I have know since 1965 (some 40 years now), he is NOT an "anti-semite." He is strongly anti-Zionist, and an anarchist. I don't agree with him on a lot of things, but he is a consistent principled person, and has been for many years. You are free to disagree with him, which I do, but please don't slander him. He also was involved in some important struggles here in Chicago over a barbershop in downtown Chicago in the late 50s or early 60s which would not give him a haircut because he is African-American.
Re: Re: Report Back from SDS conference
18 Aug 2006
Re: Re: Report Back from SDS conference
18 Aug 2006
one can argue that folks like hitler and stalin were "consistent and principled". those aspects or characteristics alone don't make one progressive...one can be consistent about bad principles
Re: Re: Report Back from SDS conference
18 Aug 2006
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
18 Aug 2006
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
19 Aug 2006
How about more SDS discussion though?
Re: Report Back from SDS conference
20 Aug 2006
well what does he propose? massive extermination of jews so that Palestinians can have their land back? Yeah i am sure that will solve everything.
All his writings are filled with bling hate against all jews in israel. Thats anti-semitic since he all lumps them in one category. there are jews who oppose military strikes against palestinians.
出会い
25 Mar 2008