Commentary on Seattle from Chris Crass, Anarchist and organizer with the 
Seattle Direct Action Network.

Shawn

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 09 Dec 1999 03:20:22 PST
From: Chris Crass <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Seattle - the highwater mark of our resistance

Shutting Down the WTO and Opening Up a World of Possibilities
-an open letter to my comrades

"The people, quite simply, spoke.  A wide fusion of radical 
environmentalists, labor activists, human rights advocates, and 
social justice workers made the WTO listen when for five years it 
had adamantly refused.  The terms of the free trade debate have 
forever been changed; no amount of tear gas or police harassment 
of demonstrators after the fact changed the bottom line.  For one 
day, a ragtag army of nonviolent global citizens spoke - and the 
world listened." - Seattle Weekly 12.02.99.  

I had been standing, arms linked, with members of my affinity 
group by my side in a street blockade for several hours on Tuesday 
afternoon, when word was passed along that all WTO meetings for 
the day had been cancelled.  

The day had started early - 5:30am - my affinity group joined 
hundreds of people at the park to begin actions that truly felt 
historic.  We were part of the Cowborg cluster - clusters of affinity 
groups had been formed to take specific actions to use non-violent 
direct action to shut down the WTO. The city had been divided up 
into 13 wedges - pieces of pie A-M and ours was Key lime.  The 
Cowborg cluster was one of several clusters in our wedge alone.  
There were hundreds of affinity groups and dozens of clusters, 
organizing on such a scale that I had never before participated in, 
the excitment was intoxicating.  

The cowborg cluster had a large cow puppet with BGH written on 
its side representing the grotesque use of hormones and chemicals 
in factory farming. We were to take an intersection and a dozen 
people would lock-down while 30-40 of us would protect them with 
our bodies and hold the intersection as long as we could to help tie 
up downtown and prevent any movement into the convention center 
where the WTO ceremonies were to begin.  We marched with 
thousands into the downtown and then moved to our location.  We 
took our intersection and within minutes we could see other 
intersections occupied as well.  Communications people on 
bicycles zoomed by announcing which intersections had been 
taken - the hotels are surrounded, clusters are taking there 
sections everywhere, the police are disoriented and can't keep up 
with us - we were told.  

We danced, we chanted, we sang, we celebrated.  A street party 
had begun several blocks up from us.  I went to check it out and 
soon found myself helping blockade the delegates from China.  An 
organizer began speaking to the delegates in Chinese and there in 
the street, international talks were taking place between activists 
and representatives from 135 nations around the world about 
human rights, social and environmental justice.  

The cowborg cluster - recognizing our utter (no pun intended) 
success left our intersection and marched triumpantly around 
downtown joining other blockades and street parties.  Downtown 
was ours - everywhere you looked, the beautiful faces of activists 
realizing their dreams shined brightly.  

The first announcement came - the morning cessions had been 
cancelled, the opening ceremonies were off.  

I could hardly believe it - we shut down the WTO!  We hugged each 
other, we shouted, we cheered.  One of the most powerful 
organizations on the planet had been brought to a stand-still.  

We rested and then returned to the blockades for the afternoon.  
Groups of activists were everywhere holding intersections.  We 
joined a blockade a stood in solidarity with thousands of other 
activists working to keep the WTO shut down and then again the 
messages came that the entire day had been cancelled - shortly 
thereafter we hear the concussion grenades and saw the tear gas.  

A group of hundreds several blocks down from us was being fired 
upon with rubber bullets and tear gas.  What I saw would continue 
and get worse. The police were relentless.  The defenders of power 
and privilege had to punish us for what we had accomplished.  The 
next few days were consumed in marches, blockades and military 
action by the police.  A state of emergency was declared by the 
Mayor, the national guard was called in and the tear gas was flying 
everywhere, the pepper spray was indiscriminate, the sound of the 
concussion grenades and helicopters flying above was a constant - 
echoing in my mind long after they stopped.  

We marched on Wednesday with the Steelworkers and thousands 
of unionists - alongside grassroots activists from all over the world, 
organizing around multiply causes.  We were fired upon by the 
police and my affinity group was consumed in tear gas.  As we 
tried to get out of there, I looked back and saw a comrade from our 
affinity group buckled over on the street completely surrounded by 
tear gas.  We carried each other, each in a different state of trama 
and pain.  We regrouped and made decisions - as we had been 
throughout all of the actions - as an affinity group using concensus 
process.  

Being tear gassed in the streets with thousands of amazing 
activists brought so many emotions to the forefront - anger and 
profound sadness seeing people you love squirting lemons in their 
eyes to get the pain out, tears running down their face, an 
undeniable sense of solidarity with everyone who is struggling in 
the streets to resist corporate tyranny and standing up to state 
violence.  

As a movement of people we were unstoppable.  The lock-downs, 
the blockades, the marches, the organzing continued until finally 
the WTO ended is total disarray - the negotiators of corporate 
power and profit oriented policy were left bankrupt by a movement 
of people who represented a radical coalition of activists that came 
from around the world and mounted an unprecedented campaign of 
non-violent resistance.  

*on organizing*

People were amazing well organized.  Everynight there was a 
spokescouncil meeting where all of the affinity groups sent a 
spokesperson to discuss and agree on strategy for the next day.  
These meetings and others that took place regularly were excellent 
examples of what we can do - of how we can operate as a strong 
yet decentralized movement that can come together in mass and 
still operate as small groups.  The organizing demonstrated how 
effective it is to operate under the principle that we are all leaders, 
we are all organizers, we are all participants in this struggle.  

The actions were creative, the jail solidarity was brilliant, the 
collectives doing jail support, media, and much other important work 
operated well and allowed people to focus, share common work and utilize 
skills and recources effectively.

*on anarchist involvement*

while the media obsesses over anarchists who destroyed property - 
the real story was that anarchists were simply everywhere doing a 
hundred different things.  Anarchists were doing jail support, media 
work, making meals for thousands, doing dishes, facilitating 
strategy meetings, leading workshops and discussion groups.  
Anarchists were doing medical support work, security at the 
warehouse space, communications between affinity groups and 
clusters, organizing marches and blockades and lock downs and 
tripod sits and forming human chains.  Anarchists were making 
puppets, banners, signs, leaflets, press releases, stickers, and 
customes (like the lovable sea turtles). Anarchists were starting 
chants, designing posters and newspapers, playing music, 
negotiating with the police and jailers to get our comrades out of 
jail.  Anarchists were squaters occupying an empty building and 
attracting national media to the issues of property, poverty and 
homelessness.  Anarchists were held in solitary confinement for 
being such effective organizers of mass non-violent civil 
disobediance that rocked Seattle and ignited the imaginations of 
the world.  And yes anarchists targeted corporate chainstores.  

*on property and resistance*

As a movement we need to think critically about how our actions 
and our messages get interpreted by the rest of society.  Some of 
the people who engaged in property destruction were very clear and 
left messages "anti-sweatshop" that were easily understandable - 
however, there were also people who genuinely looked like they 
were just lashing out randomly and unthoughfully (which might be 
justifiable, but not necessarily effective in making social change).  

However - as a movement we also need to recognize the difference 
between property destruction and violence.  I remember watching - 
years ago - thousands of people hammering away at the Berlin 
Wall that stood as such an obviously symbol of political 
oppression.  I did not once think that those who were smashing the 
wall were violent.  It was a jubilant and inspiring moment.  Nor do I 
think that those who were toppling statues of Stalin in Eastern 
Europe are violent. Again another obvious symbol of oppression.  In 
the United States, under corporate capitalism, the symbols of 
oppression are the golden arches of McDonalds and other 
corporate stores that are destroying the planet and amassing 
enormous power at our expense.  While we need to think 
strategically about our tactics and be open to debate and dialogue, 
we also need to put things into perspective.  While I advocate non-
violent direct action, I understand where others are coming from 
and hope that we can discuss these issues as a movement that is 
diverse and vibrant.  

The issue of violence is squarely upon the state as it attacked 
protesters and people in the neighborhoods and demonstrated an 
uncompromising willingness to aggressively assualt non-violent 
demonstrators.  

*the future

Seattle was truly amazing and it was made possible because of all 
of the organizing that we do day-to-day, the often unglamorous 
work that makes social change happen.  Our ideas of what is 
possible have been greatly expanded.  I have heard many people 
say that it will take them a while to process all that has happened, 
and I feel the same way.  Hopefully we can share our ideas and 
think hard about what we did and what we can do so that our 
movement will grow.  

I want to thank all of the people that did so much to make so many 
amazing things happen - shutting down the WTO while the whole 
world is watching, makes you happy to be alive and inspired to 
dare to dream higher.  

in solidarity,
chris crass

------- End of forwarded message -------
------- End of forwarded message -------


@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
LA Anarchist List
Commands: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Help: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@



Reply via email to