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Port Huron Statement of the Students for a Democratic Society, 1962
can be read at

http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~hst306/documents/huron.html


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at 40
FEATURE STORY | August 5, 2002
The Port Huron Statement at 40
by Tom Hayden & Dick Flacks



 n the movie The Big Lebowski, the aging, stoned hippie played by
Jeff Bridges announces that he helped write the Port Huron Statement.
We don't remember the "dude" being there, but it's gratifying that
the founding manifesto of Students for a Democratic Society still
lives in the nostalgia and imagination of so many.
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MORE ABOUT...
Tom Hayden
Dick Flacks
Student Movements
THE PORT HURON STATEMENT
Read the statement, issued by Students for a Democratic Society in
1962, in its entirety. Tom Hayden was the principal drafter of the
Port Huron Statement and Dick Flacks his closest associate.


A glance at the web will show tens of thousands of references
to "participatory democracy," the central focus of that document,
which still appears as a live alternative to the top-down
construction of most institutions. Participatory democracy has
surfaced in the campaigns of the global justice movement, in utopian
visions of telecommunications, in struggles around workplace and
neighborhood empowerment, in Paulo Freire's "pedagogy of the
oppressed," in grassroots environmental crusades and antipoverty
programs, in political platforms from Green parties to the
Zapatistas, in participatory management theory, in liberation
theology's emphasis on base communities of the poor and even in the
current efforts of most Catholics to carve out a participatory role
for laity in their church. The Port Huron Statement appears in
numerous textbooks and has been the subject of thousands of student
papers. This continued interest is the more impressive, since the
statement was never marketed or even reissued as a book. It was
produced only as a mimeographed pamphlet in 20,000 copies, which sold
for 35 cents. We were jaundiced toward the very notion of public
relations.

Recent celebrants of the Port Huron Statement include authors Garry
Wills and E.J. Dionne, who see in its pages a bright promise of
rational reform that was later lost, when they say SDS became too
radical. At the other end of the political spectrum, Robert Bork says
the "authentic spirit of Sixties radicalism issued" from Port Huron
in "a document of ominous mood and aspiration" because it embodied a
millennial vision of human possibility. The former radical David
Horowitz reads the statement as encoding a "self-conscious effort to
rescue the Communist project from its Soviet fate." At different
moments, both Democrats and Republicans (under Richard Nixon) have
invoked the rhetoric of participatory democracy in campaigns. This
perplexing spectrum of reaction reflects, we believe, the statement's
attempt at a new departure from the conventional dogmas of left and
liberal thought.

Did we succeed, and if so, how? This year's occasion of the Port
Huron Statement's fortieth anniversary provides a chance to ask
whether its importance today is primarily symbolic and nostalgic, or
whether, as we believe, the core of the statement is still relevant
for all those trying to create a world where each person has a voice
in the decisions affecting his or her life. It remains, as we
described it then, "a living document open to change with our times
and experiences."


The original idea, conceived at a winter meeting in Ann Arbor in
1961, was modest: to produce an organizing tool for the movement we
were trying to spread through SDS. Then the statement became more
audacious. The roughly sixty young people who finalized the statement
during a week at a United Auto Workers retreat in Port Huron,
Michigan, experienced what one could only call an inspirational
moment. As the words flowed night and day, we felt we were giving
voice to a new generation of rebels.

The two of us had arrived in Port Huron from different paths that
symbolized the cultural fusion that happened at the beginning of the
1960s. Tom was a Midwestern populist by nature, rebelling
apolitically against the boring hypocrisy of suburban life--until the
Southern black student sit-in movement showed him that a committed
life was possible. Tom was drawn to the mystique of citizen action
and away from left ideologies based on systems far different from
America, with its vast middle-class status system. Many others at
Port Huron were mainstream student leaders inspired by the civil
rights movement, the South African antiapartheid movement and even
the youthful ideals of John Kennedy's New Frontier. Dick, on the
other hand, was a New York "red diaper baby" whose parents had been
fired as schoolteachers during the McCarthy period. Disillusioned by
both Stalinism and the conformity of cold war America, he and his
wife, Mickey, questioned whether an effective left could be built at
all from its quarrelsome subculture of factions. The fusion of these
paths yielded a vision informed by a democratic American radicalism
going back to Tom Paine, one that attempted to transcend the stale
dogmas of the dying left as well as the liberal celebration of the
New Frontier as Camelot.
PAGES | 1  2  3


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