Posted on 03/29/2004 7:18:25 AM PST by chance33_98
Editorial: Anti-War Movement Needs to Reinvigorate Supporters
This week is critical for the movement opposing the U.S.-Iraq War. The one year anniversary of the invasion presents the opportunity to see whether the same groups that coordinated last years demonstrations still have the influence to do it again. A year ago, as bombs were beginning to fall in Iraq, millions of people filled the streets of the worlds major cities condemning the militarys action. In San Francisco more than a hundred thousand people marched through downtown. There was a palpable anger in the air. It was an unmistakable conflagration of disappointment that weapons inspections had been abandoned and disgust at the presidents failure to make the case for war to either at home or in the international community.
Police arrested more than 1,000 demonstrators in San Francisco las t March 20 and at UC Berkeley 119 people were arrested for closing down Sproul Hall. At that time the anti-war sentiment was visiblethere were times when it felt as though it was truly possible to affect the decision making process.
By the numbers of people mobilizing, the new anti-war movement seemed poised to be more effective than the movements of the 1960s. Whereas it took several years of troop deployments in Vietnam before a significant opposition arose in the U.S., the new anti-war movement was active and mobilized months before the first troops were sent into harms way.
Demonstrations in the Bay Area, the West Coast and across the country were invigoratingpart rock concert and part political rally.
In the year since the war began, however, tempers have cooled significantly. Despite the efforts of a few dedicated organizations like Moveon.org, the anti-war movement has been largely invisible.
Last years anger, which pushed people off their sofas and into the streets, has mostly been replaced with grudging resignation. The war has become a part of the contemporary political landscapean ugly blemish to be tolerated and exploited this election year.
Clearly the circumstances of the opposition have changed. Before coalition troops moved into Iraq there was hope that war could be stopped before it had begun. The fundamental question posed to demonstrators was the easiest to answer: should there be a war at all?
There are no clear choices in the occupation phase of the war. The questions are more complex. Bringing the troops home too quickly could lead to civil war in Iraq and even more violence. Simultaneously, it seems incompatible with American ideal of self-determination to maintain an occupying force abroad.
If there is another way to oppose this war then the spokesperson to articulate it has yet to emerge. Todays movement lacks central figures to rally around. Instead of instantly recognizable leaders we have only loosely connected affinity groups with so many ancillary concerns that protesting the war is only one item on a slate of grievances.
During last years Sproul demonstration activists made three demands: first, to stop the war, second, to to halt fee increases and staff reductions and third, to declare the University of Baghdad a sister school. By adding demands other than an ending the war many demonstrators felt as if they were being used to forward causes other than the one for which they were willing to be arrested.
Despite the problems, mass protest and coordination between activists and everyday folks remains one of the few sources of power that citizens in a democracy wield. Its vital to remind our leaders that just because the streets arent flooded with protesters everyday it does not mean that a seething rage does not exist just below Americas apparently calm demeanor.
"Activists" just want to organize themselves as a separate ruling class, able to call upon sheeple to attend mass rallies. There is nothing democratic about this. The masses are assumed to be dumb followers of the activists.
Rallies organized by conservatives are different; they tend to be meetings of equals committed to a greater cause.
Karl Rove (looking up from CIA briefing paper): "Good God, Mr. President! Berkely just made the University of Baghdad a sister school! What can we do?!? We're DOOMED!!!"
President Bush (somberly): "Nothing, Karl. It's all over. Call Mayflower and have them send over the moving van..."
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