Published on Tuesday, January 21, 2003 by Wired News
Internet Stokes Anti-War Movement
by Leander Kahney
This weekend's anti-war protests were the first mass demonstrations in
memory to occur before a conflict, a testimony to the organizing power of
the Internet, observers say.
While the Vietnam-era anti-war movement took years to gather momentum,
hundreds of thousands of protestors turned out in dozens of U.S. cities on
Saturday to protest a possible war in Iraq.
The two biggest gatherings took place in San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
Estimates of the turnout are contentious -- authorities cited 100,000 for
both cities, while organizers say crowds topped 850,000 -- but it's
probably safe to say the marches were the biggest since the anti-Vietnam
War protests of the 1960s.
The rallies attracted a broad spectrum of protestors, from campus
firebrands to elderly Republicans. Many religious groups were involved
("Who Would Jesus Bomb?" read one banner), as well as trade unions, a wide
range of political groups and a lot of ordinary citizens.
The disparity of protestors is a sign the anti-war movement has gone
mainstream, observers said, and it's thanks not to the media, but to
hundreds of anti-war websites and mailing lists.
"Never before in human history has an anti-war movement grown so fast and
spread so quickly," wrote historian and columnist Ruth Rosen in the San
Francisco Chronicle. "It is even more remarkable because the war has yet to
begin. Publicized throughout cyberspace, the anti-war movement has left
behind its sectarian roots and entered mainstream culture."
Howard Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution, also
believes the Internet played a defining role in bringing the movement
together.
"The last time the U.S. contemplated war -- 1991 -- the Internet was still
an isolated phenomenon, confined to a relatively small population of
enthusiasts," he wrote in an e-mail. "Now, not only are most of the
citizens online, but online activism has had years to mature and perfect
its techniques."
"Saturday's rallies were unique in the long history of anti-war activism in
the U.S. in that, to my knowledge, never before have hundreds of thousands
of people protested a possible war," wrote Peter Rothberg, who is associate
publisher of The Nation and maintains the ActNow weblog, in an e-mail.
However, Rothberg said people took to the streets not because of the
Internet per se, but because of their shared opposition to a pre-emptive,
unilateral strike against Iraq.
"There's no question that the Internet has provided a terrific new tool for
organizers who are growing increasingly adept at employing the medium to
best advantage," he wrote. "I hesitate to give all or even preponderant
credit to the medium, though. I think the message, and the very real fact
that lots of folks oppose an invasion of Iraq, are what got people out on
the streets."
Nonetheless, protest organizers said the Net played a key role in
disseminating the anti-war message, motivating and mobilizing people, and
efficiently communicating details like travel plans.
"The Internet played a very significant role," said Sarah Sloan, an
organizer with International ANSWER, the group that planned the rallies.
"It made a major difference in getting our message out there, especially
because the mainstream media isn't covering the anti-war movement."
Sloan said for many people, joining the movement was as simple as typing
"anti-war" into Google and being directed to hundreds of anti-war websites.
The United for Peace website, for example, one of the anti-war movement's
major clearing houses, includes news, contacts, background information,
fliers, printable posters, contacts for scores of local activist groups and
comprehensive travel arrangements to the protests from 300 different U.S.
cities.
"Without that resource, it's hard to find out how to get involved," Sloan
said.
Sloan said the Internet also allowed the Sunday protests to go
international. Protestors in 32 countries held street demonstrations.
"There's no way the event would have been international without the
Internet," she said.
Of the hundreds of different groups involved, almost all have websites and
e-mail lists. As well as inspiring, organizing and mobilizing people, the
Internet gives protestors the sense they are part of a larger movement.
"Before the Internet, people felt blacked out by the media, because it
doesn't represent their views," said Andrea Buffa, a spokeswoman for United
for Peace. "Now, because of the Net, they feel like they're part of a
movement. They're no longer isolated. It helps mobilize people, gets them
to move."
United For Peace is organizing an Oil and War protest action on Feb. 4 at
local gas stations around the United States. Activists are encouraged to
print out the Web page and hand out copies at the pumps. "There's no way we
could get that information out all over the country without e-mail and the
website," said Buffa.
The range of online anti-war resources is big and growing. MoveOn.org, a
political website based in Silicon Valley, recently raised $400,000 through
10,000 or more individual donations to remake the 1960s "Daisy"
anti-nuclear-war ad.
MoveOn has proven adept at fundraising and lobbying politicians, and has
built a mailing list 600,000 strong.
A good example of the Internet's power to reach many people is the Protest
Posters website. Thrown up late last week, the site attracted 2,400
visitors and 1,155 poster downloads by the weekend on the strength of a few
e-mails and links from other websites.
"I saw some of the posters at the San Francisco march," said Frank Leahy,
who helped create the site. "I thought that was pretty cool. Word gets
around fast."
http://www.infoshop.org/inews/stories.php?story=03/01/21/4007503
