From:
 http://www.seattleweekly.com/features/9935/features-parrish.shtml

 THE NEW ANARCHISTS
 By Geov Parrish
 Published September 2 - 8, 1999
 � 1999 Seattle Weekly. All rights reserved.


 In Eugene, a youth-fueled movement breaks windows to ask the big questions.

 "Morality is just another form of social control." --Feral Faun, in the
 Eugene-based 'zine Revolt!

 It is a Friday night in Eugene, Oregon. I'm in a converted warehouse that
 now houses an organic drink bottler and the epicenter of Eugene's new
 anarchist movement: a coffeehouse called Out of the Fog.

 Contrary to the stereotype of menacing, bomb-toting anarchists, the place is
 friendly and it's hopping. Out on the patio, a DJ spins records while a
 young man with dreads dances wildly, oblivious to tables inches away.
 Inside, with the obligatory caffeine, juice, and pastries, the walls are
 lined with tributes to our decaying, unjust society: articles on irradiated
 food and nearby tree sits to stop clear-cut logging; petitions to stop the
 execution of death row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal; a tableau on cooperative
 coffee growing in rural Mexico; flyers for imprisoned anarchist activist Rob
 Thaxton and for a community-wide nonviolence training; schedules for an
 anarchist free school; and much more.

 At our table, a young adult--who doesn't want to be identified for fear of
 reprisal from Eugene's police--animatedly describes working as an
 alternative media reporter and being arrested in Eugene's now-infamous June
 18 riot. A call is put in to three teens who might want to talk--they were
 among the rock-throwers that day. It turns out two are not home--they're off
 at a Friday night meeting of a martial arts class at the new anarchist free
 school that's been organized this summer. Back at the table, we're drawing a
 crowd; everyone knows someone there, and everyone has a story. To properly
 describe the anarchist cause, a young man named Exile dashes home to get his
 copy of the 'zine Black Clad Messenger ("Actualizing industrial collapse!").
 Another young man, Kook, offers his own 'zine, a tract ranting about the
 outrage of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. It's a scene unlike anything in
 Seattle, a place where societal outcasts are at home, a sort of politicized
 Cheers for folks with tattoos, dreads, or facial piercings.

 Eugene--Oregon's second largest city--has been a countercultural haven for
 at least the last 30 years. Home of the University of Oregon and a large
 contingent of resettled ex-hippies from California, it is a sometimes uneasy
 mix of loggers, southern Willamette Valley hay farmers, university
 professionals, Hyundai workers, and young idealists of all stripes. And it
 is a mostly tolerant city that, in the last year, has been polarized by a
 relatively small group of anarchists advocating intentional, targeted
 property destruction as a response to gentrification and the ills of modern
 society.

 Seattle, like Eugene and most other cities, has always had at least a few
 anarchists. Here, there are some visible anarchist institutions: Left Bank
 Books, Books to Prisoners, Copwatch, the late Black Cat Cafe. Dating back to
 the early-century heyday of the Wobblies, the Northwest has always been one
 of the country's strongest bases of anarchism. At its core, anarchism is
 neither intrinsically violent nor disorganized. It has a relatively simple
 premise: government, all government, is inherently coercive and violent, and
 like all institutions will act primarily to expand its own power. Anarchism
 is, in its purest form, hostile both to the left, with its reliance on
 government social programs, and the right, with its emphasis on military
 spending and government social control. All government has got to go.
 Ambiguity over how, and what it's to be replaced with, is one reason there
 are so many subsets of anarchism.

 In the last year, a new, more militant anarchist strain asserted itself in
 Eugene. A movement of at least several dozen, mostly young--teenagers and
 people in their early 20s--activists emerged around John Zerzan, longtime
 local anarchist writer and theoretician. Zerzan is the author of books that
 are deeply controversial in anarchist circles: Elements of Refusal, Future
 Primitive, and others. He is a leading advocate of primitivism, which goes
 far beyond matters of how the state is or isn't constructed, considering
 technology and most of what we consider civilization to be deeply
 pathological and needing to be eliminated. This short-on-details passage
 from Elements is typical: "Upon the utter destruction of wage-labor and the
 commodity, a new life will be situated and redefined, by the moment, in
 countless, unimagined forms. Launched by the abolition of every trace of
 authority . . . concepts like 'economy,' 'exchange,' [and] 'production' will
 have no meaning. (What is worth preserving from this lunatic order?)"

 Last fall, primitivist anarchists hijacked an antisweatshop demonstration,
 romping through a downtown Eugene Nike store, breaking windows and
 overturning displays. A campaign of random minor property
 destruction--graffiti, broken windows, and the like--plagued new upscale
 businesses in the lower-income Eugene neighborhood of Whitaker. One of the
 upscale businesses, the Blair Island Cafe, closed, prompting anarchists to
 declare victory. And then came the June 18 "riot."

 The June 18 disturbance grew out of a scheduled "Reclaim the Streets"
 protest coinciding with demonstrations around the world against G-7 economic
 powers meeting in Cologne, Germany. The idea was to occupy a downtown Eugene
 intersection for a couple of hours with a block party: music, dancing,
 speeches. What happened was that after a while the crowd got bored and a
 faction of it took off. Some 200 people started roaming from business to
 business in downtown Eugene, with rocks being thrown through the windows of
 particularly reviled businesses (such as a local bank associated with
 underwriting clear-cutting). In a few cases, cars were jumped on, and one
 frustrated motorist in the blocked traffic attacked a protester with a
 wrench. Police essentially followed the crowd but did not interfere until it
 began to disperse in a park near Whitaker. Then police launched volleys of
 tear gas and began arresting people--20 arrests in all. The police action
 prompted another couple of hours of marching and looting before the whole
 thing played itself out.

 As riots go, it was relatively mellow. One African-American transplant to
 Eugene from back east notes, "Where I come from, riots have body counts."
 All told, there was about $20,000 in property damage. But the event sparked
 outrage among local politicians and in the local paper and talk shows, and
 revealed a deep split within Eugene's normally inclusive activist community.

 "They've pissed a lot of people off," says Cindy Noblitt, one of the city's
 most visible left activists. Referring to the anarchists' campaign of
 low-key property destruction, she continues: "John Zerzan is a very divisive
 and negative fellow." Noblitt sees the specter of anarchists forcing others
 to toe their line or face their consequences as not only hypocritical, but
 ultimately ineffective: "I don't believe they can pull off a revolution
 that's going to destroy the system without some level of popular support. I
 don't believe that using coercion to build a noncoercive society is going to
 work."

 The anarchists, for their part, are not only unapologetic about the events
 of June 18, they are positively giddy. An article in Black Clad Messenger
 describes how ". . . [protesters] took it upon themselves to engage in an
 offensive attack against capitalist domination of humans and nature. . . .
 The unity and cohesion of the marchers, and their feral embrace made them
 unstoppable by local authorities."

 In person, John Zerzan is surprisingly mild-mannered and friendly. The day
 before we met, he held court for four hours for a recon crew from 60
 Minutes; CNN, the BBC, The Wall Street Journal, and the LA Times had all
 called the 55-year-old Zerzan hoping to find a story about the next big
 youth movement. His idealism sounds almost Republican. "The question is," he
 asks, in advocating destruction of modern civilization, "what sort of a
 world do we want for our children?"

 To the extent that there is sympathy among Eugene's activist community for
 the anarchists' tactics, it comes because of fear and anger over the
 gentrification of Whitaker. To Zerzan, the revolution is local. He not only
 defends property destruction as necessary and inevitable--and relatively
 minor compared to the organized violence of Eugene's police--but points out
 that without it, the anarchists and the issues they raise would be ignored.
 Insofar as the effectiveness of property destruction in preventing
 gentrification is concerned, Zerzan's response is simple: "Show me something
 else that works."

 Noblitt doesn't buy it. "I don't think [the anarchists campaign of property
 destruction] had that much of an effect. I think gentrification [happens]
 less because nice businesses move in than because of general good economic
 times." And she then dismisses gentrification as not that important an issue
 anyway, not like the loss of old growth forests.

 Throughout the last year, Eugene's police have been the anarchists' best
 recruiting tool, repeatedly proving their point about the oppressiveness of
 the state. Resentment dates from an infamous incident in June 1997 when
 nonviolent downtown tree sitters had can after can of pepper spray emptied
 on them.

 Brenton Gicker, a 15-year-old anarchist whose fingerprints were on a flyer
 left at last fall's Nike protest, had his family's house subsequently raided
 by 13 EPD officers who searched the house for seven hours, seizing
 computers, literature, clothing, school work, and personal items of all of
 the family members as "evidence" for participation in a protest where nobody
 was hurt and nothing was stolen. The family is considering a lawsuit against
 the city.

 How does a 15-year-old--or dozens of teens--become involved in a radical,
 angry political movement? "Just taking a look at the state of the world,"
 Gicker says, "anarchy is appealing. [The last years' police response] has
 totally validated my anti-authoritarian perspective."

 Why Eugene? This summer's anarchist resurgence comes in part from the recent
 history of radical forest encampments and tree sits to prevent old growth
 clear cuts. A network of such encampments has sprung up throughout the
 Northwest; the most visible is just outside Eugene, at Fall Creek, and is in
 its 15th month.

 At the Out of the Fog coffee shop, activist Dean Rimerman proudly narrates
 how the "new school" of working class youth from the streets of Eugene got
 their first exposure to the woods and to anarchist, decentralized community
 and decision-making at Fall Creek. He contrasts it with the "old school"
 tree sit of middle-class hippies at Warner Creek, also near Eugene, way back
 in 1995-96. The combination of street youth and woods warriors, according to
 Rimerman and others, has made both for tougher forest protests and helped
 account for Eugene's unique position in spawning an antitechnology anarchist
 movement.

 It's fairly clear what's next: Seattle. Just as the June 18 protest was
 inspired by the international economic order, the World Trade Organization
 talks in Seattle in November will be drawing the anarchists as well as
 busloads of others from Eugene. Anarchist contingents for the WTO protests
 are already being organized, and they will be heavily influenced by
 primitivism. The visibility of the Eugene movement and its success in
 raising the question of how best to respond to the desensitizing march of
 techno-progress has galvanized anarchists across the nation, including here
 in Seattle. Wesley Everett of Left Bank Books says that "Many anarchists and
 everyday working people sympathize with the actions of Eugene's
 anarcho-ecoteurs. They understand the gesture."

 While the Eugene movement has spawned community institutions like the free
 school and a new cable access TV show, it is primarily oppositional. For
 Zerzan, the issue of what should replace our techno-civilization is almost
 irrelevant: "What do you replace cancer with?" he asks. "The bottom line is,
 how bad do you think it is?"

 The presence of a tolerant university community and a radical environmental
 movement helped spawn primitivism, but the questions it raises and its
 appeal to young idealists are just as relevant in a larger city like
 Seattle. In an alienating society, what do we have to offer youth that's
 more constructive than breaking windows? Answers to that question aren't
 easy, but we had better learn to articulate them soon.


 =====


From:
http://www.seattleweekly.com/features/9935/features-parrish.shtml

THE NEW ANARCHISTS
By Geov Parrish
Published September 2 - 8, 1999
� 1999 Seattle Weekly. All rights reserved.


In Eugene, a youth-fueled movement breaks windows to ask the big questions.

"Morality is just another form of social control." --Feral Faun, in the
Eugene-based 'zine Revolt!

It is a Friday night in Eugene, Oregon. I'm in a converted warehouse that
now houses an organic drink bottler and the epicenter of Eugene's new
anarchist movement: a coffeehouse called Out of the Fog.

Contrary to the stereotype of menacing, bomb-toting anarchists, the place is
friendly and it's hopping. Out on the patio, a DJ spins records while a
young man with dreads dances wildly, oblivious to tables inches away.
Inside, with the obligatory caffeine, juice, and pastries, the walls are
lined with tributes to our decaying, unjust society: articles on irradiated
food and nearby tree sits to stop clear-cut logging; petitions to stop the
execution of death row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal; a tableau on cooperative
coffee growing in rural Mexico; flyers for imprisoned anarchist activist Rob
Thaxton and for a community-wide nonviolence training; schedules for an
anarchist free school; and much more.

At our table, a young adult--who doesn't want to be identified for fear of
reprisal from Eugene's police--animatedly describes working as an
alternative media reporter and being arrested in Eugene's now-infamous June
18 riot. A call is put in to three teens who might want to talk--they were
among the rock-throwers that day. It turns out two are not home--they're off
at a Friday night meeting of a martial arts class at the new anarchist free
school that's been organized this summer. Back at the table, we're drawing a
crowd; everyone knows someone there, and everyone has a story. To properly
describe the anarchist cause, a young man named Exile dashes home to get his
copy of the 'zine Black Clad Messenger ("Actualizing industrial collapse!").
Another young man, Kook, offers his own 'zine, a tract ranting about the
outrage of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. It's a scene unlike anything in
Seattle, a place where societal outcasts are at home, a sort of politicized
Cheers for folks with tattoos, dreads, or facial piercings.

Eugene--Oregon's second largest city--has been a countercultural haven for
at least the last 30 years. Home of the University of Oregon and a large
contingent of resettled ex-hippies from California, it is a sometimes uneasy
mix of loggers, southern Willamette Valley hay farmers, university
professionals, Hyundai workers, and young idealists of all stripes. And it
is a mostly tolerant city that, in the last year, has been polarized by a
relatively small group of anarchists advocating intentional, targeted
property destruction as a response to gentrification and the ills of modern
society.

Seattle, like Eugene and most other cities, has always had at least a few
anarchists. Here, there are some visible anarchist institutions: Left Bank
Books, Books to Prisoners, Copwatch, the late Black Cat Cafe. Dating back to
the early-century heyday of the Wobblies, the Northwest has always been one
of the country's strongest bases of anarchism. At its core, anarchism is
neither intrinsically violent nor disorganized. It has a relatively simple
premise: government, all government, is inherently coercive and violent, and
like all institutions will act primarily to expand its own power. Anarchism
is, in its purest form, hostile both to the left, with its reliance on
government social programs, and the right, with its emphasis on military
spending and government social control. All government has got to go.
Ambiguity over how, and what it's to be replaced with, is one reason there
are so many subsets of anarchism.

In the last year, a new, more militant anarchist strain asserted itself in
Eugene. A movement of at least several dozen, mostly young--teenagers and
people in their early 20s--activists emerged around John Zerzan, longtime
local anarchist writer and theoretician. Zerzan is the author of books that
are deeply controversial in anarchist circles: Elements of Refusal, Future
Primitive, and others. He is a leading advocate of primitivism, which goes
far beyond matters of how the state is or isn't constructed, considering
technology and most of what we consider civilization to be deeply
pathological and needing to be eliminated. This short-on-details passage
from Elements is typical: "Upon the utter destruction of wage-labor and the
commodity, a new life will be situated and redefined, by the moment, in
countless, unimagined forms. Launched by the abolition of every trace of
authority . . . concepts like 'economy,' 'exchange,' [and] 'production' will
have no meaning. (What is worth preserving from this lunatic order?)"

Last fall, primitivist anarchists hijacked an antisweatshop demonstration,
romping through a downtown Eugene Nike store, breaking windows and
overturning displays. A campaign of random minor property
destruction--graffiti, broken windows, and the like--plagued new upscale
businesses in the lower-income Eugene neighborhood of Whitaker. One of the
upscale businesses, the Blair Island Cafe, closed, prompting anarchists to
declare victory. And then came the June 18 "riot."

The June 18 disturbance grew out of a scheduled "Reclaim the Streets"
protest coinciding with demonstrations around the world against G-7 economic
powers meeting in Cologne, Germany. The idea was to occupy a downtown Eugene
intersection for a couple of hours with a block party: music, dancing,
speeches. What happened was that after a while the crowd got bored and a
faction of it took off. Some 200 people started roaming from business to
business in downtown Eugene, with rocks being thrown through the windows of
particularly reviled businesses (such as a local bank associated with
underwriting clear-cutting). In a few cases, cars were jumped on, and one
frustrated motorist in the blocked traffic attacked a protester with a
wrench. Police essentially followed the crowd but did not interfere until it
began to disperse in a park near Whitaker. Then police launched volleys of
tear gas and began arresting people--20 arrests in all. The police action
prompted another couple of hours of marching and looting before the whole
thing played itself out.

As riots go, it was relatively mellow. One African-American transplant to
Eugene from back east notes, "Where I come from, riots have body counts."
All told, there was about $20,000 in property damage. But the event sparked
outrage among local politicians and in the local paper and talk shows, and
revealed a deep split within Eugene's normally inclusive activist community.

"They've pissed a lot of people off," says Cindy Noblitt, one of the city's
most visible left activists. Referring to the anarchists' campaign of
low-key property destruction, she continues: "John Zerzan is a very divisive
and negative fellow." Noblitt sees the specter of anarchists forcing others
to toe their line or face their consequences as not only hypocritical, but
ultimately ineffective: "I don't believe they can pull off a revolution
that's going to destroy the system without some level of popular support. I
don't believe that using coercion to build a noncoercive society is going to
work."

The anarchists, for their part, are not only unapologetic about the events
of June 18, they are positively giddy. An article in Black Clad Messenger
describes how ". . . [protesters] took it upon themselves to engage in an
offensive attack against capitalist domination of humans and nature. . . .
The unity and cohesion of the marchers, and their feral embrace made them
unstoppable by local authorities."

In person, John Zerzan is surprisingly mild-mannered and friendly. The day
before we met, he held court for four hours for a recon crew from 60
Minutes; CNN, the BBC, The Wall Street Journal, and the LA Times had all
called the 55-year-old Zerzan hoping to find a story about the next big
youth movement. His idealism sounds almost Republican. "The question is," he
asks, in advocating destruction of modern civilization, "what sort of a
world do we want for our children?"

To the extent that there is sympathy among Eugene's activist community for
the anarchists' tactics, it comes because of fear and anger over the
gentrification of Whitaker. To Zerzan, the revolution is local. He not only
defends property destruction as necessary and inevitable--and relatively
minor compared to the organized violence of Eugene's police--but points out
that without it, the anarchists and the issues they raise would be ignored.
Insofar as the effectiveness of property destruction in preventing
gentrification is concerned, Zerzan's response is simple: "Show me something
else that works."

Noblitt doesn't buy it. "I don't think [the anarchists campaign of property
destruction] had that much of an effect. I think gentrification [happens]
less because nice businesses move in than because of general good economic
times." And she then dismisses gentrification as not that important an issue
anyway, not like the loss of old growth forests.

Throughout the last year, Eugene's police have been the anarchists' best
recruiting tool, repeatedly proving their point about the oppressiveness of
the state. Resentment dates from an infamous incident in June 1997 when
nonviolent downtown tree sitters had can after can of pepper spray emptied
on them.

Brenton Gicker, a 15-year-old anarchist whose fingerprints were on a flyer
left at last fall's Nike protest, had his family's house subsequently raided
by 13 EPD officers who searched the house for seven hours, seizing
computers, literature, clothing, school work, and personal items of all of
the family members as "evidence" for participation in a protest where nobody
was hurt and nothing was stolen. The family is considering a lawsuit against
the city.

How does a 15-year-old--or dozens of teens--become involved in a radical,
angry political movement? "Just taking a look at the state of the world,"
Gicker says, "anarchy is appealing. [The last years' police response] has
totally validated my anti-authoritarian perspective."

Why Eugene? This summer's anarchist resurgence comes in part from the recent
history of radical forest encampments and tree sits to prevent old growth
clear cuts. A network of such encampments has sprung up throughout the
Northwest; the most visible is just outside Eugene, at Fall Creek, and is in
its 15th month.

At the Out of the Fog coffee shop, activist Dean Rimerman proudly narrates
how the "new school" of working class youth from the streets of Eugene got
their first exposure to the woods and to anarchist, decentralized community
and decision-making at Fall Creek. He contrasts it with the "old school"
tree sit of middle-class hippies at Warner Creek, also near Eugene, way back
in 1995-96. The combination of street youth and woods warriors, according to
Rimerman and others, has made both for tougher forest protests and helped
account for Eugene's unique position in spawning an antitechnology anarchist
movement.

It's fairly clear what's next: Seattle. Just as the June 18 protest was
inspired by the international economic order, the World Trade Organization
talks in Seattle in November will be drawing the anarchists as well as
busloads of others from Eugene. Anarchist contingents for the WTO protests
are already being organized, and they will be heavily influenced by
primitivism. The visibility of the Eugene movement and its success in
raising the question of how best to respond to the desensitizing march of
techno-progress has galvanized anarchists across the nation, including here
in Seattle. Wesley Everett of Left Bank Books says that "Many anarchists and
everyday working people sympathize with the actions of Eugene's
anarcho-ecoteurs. They understand the gesture."

While the Eugene movement has spawned community institutions like the free
school and a new cable access TV show, it is primarily oppositional. For
Zerzan, the issue of what should replace our techno-civilization is almost
irrelevant: "What do you replace cancer with?" he asks. "The bottom line is,
how bad do you think it is?"

The presence of a tolerant university community and a radical environmental
movement helped spawn primitivism, but the questions it raises and its
appeal to young idealists are just as relevant in a larger city like
Seattle. In an alienating society, what do we have to offer youth that's
more constructive than breaking windows? Answers to that question aren't
easy, but we had better learn to articulate them soon.



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