Democracy
does not come from the government, from on high, it comes from people
getting together and struggling for justice. – Howard Zinn, Spelman
College commencement address, Atlanta, 2005.
Politicians are elected and selected, but mass movements transform
societies. Judges uphold, strike down, or invent brand new law, but
mass movements drag the courts, laws and officeholders all in their
wake. Progressive and even partially successful mass movements can
alter the political calculus for decades to come, thus improving the
lives of millions. Social Security, the New Deal, and
employer-provided medical care didn’t come from the pen of FDR. The
end of separate but equal didn’t come from the lips of any judge, and
voting rights were not simply granted by the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
All these were hard-won outcomes of protracted struggle by progressive
mass movements, every one of which operated outside the law and none of
which looked to elected officials or the corporate media of those days
for blessings or legitimacy. It’s time to re-learn those lessons and
build a new progressive mass movement in the United States.
Mass movements are against the law
Mass movements exist outside electoral politics, and outside the law,
or they don’t exist at all. Mass movements are never respecters of law
and order. How can they be? A mass movement is an assertion of
popular leadership by the people themselves. A mass movement aims to
persuade courts, politicians and other actors to tail behind it, not
the other way around. Mass movements accomplish this through appeals
to shared sets of deep and widely held convictions among the people
they aim to mobilize, along with acts or credible threats of sustained
and popular civil disobedience.
Not all mass movements are progressive. The legal strategy of massive
resistance to desegregation on the part of southern whites, in which
local governments across the south threw up thickets of lawsuits,
evasions and new statutes, closing whole school systems in some areas
rather than integrate, was implemented in response to and backed up by
the historically credible and ever-present threat of armed, lawless
white mobs long accustomed to dishing out violence to their black
neighbors and any white allies with impunity. They operated in a
context of popular belief in white superiority and black inferiority
that was widespread among whites of that region and time. Undeniable
proof of the existence of a violent, white supremacist mass movement
was broadcast around the world when thousands of local white citizens
showed up to trade blows, insults, and gunfire with federal marshals in
places like Little Rock, Arkansas in ‘57 and Oxford, Mississippi in
’62.
Likewise, courts and public officials who enforced desegregation orders
were under relentless pressure from a civilly disobedient mass movement
for equality and justice. 89 leaders of the 1956 Montgomery Bus
Boycott could not have been surprised when they earned conspiracy
indictments for their trouble. Tens of thousands of mostly southern,
mostly black citizens defied unjust laws and were jailed in the waves
of mostly illegal sit-ins, marches, freedom rides and other mostly
illegal actions that swept the South for more than a decade. This
movement in turn relied on the deep convictions of all African
Americans and growing numbers of whites that segregation and white
supremacy were evils that had to be fought, regardless of personal
costs. For many, those costs were very high. Some are still paying.
Mass movements are politically aggressive
Mass movements are kindled into existence by unique combinations of
outraged public opinion in the movement’s core constituency, political
opportunity and aggressive leadership. The absence of any of these can
prevent a mass movement from materializing. In a January 20, 2005 BC
article occasioned by the death of visionary James Foreman, one of the
masterminds of the mid-century movement for civil and human rights,
which contains many useful insights on the characteristics of mass
movements, David Swanson recalled a recent lost opportunity in the wake
of the 2000 presidential election:
Various small groups did act, and Rev. Jesse Jackson became a leading
spokesman for those objecting to a stolen election. The coalition
cobbled together was surprisingly successful in moving Congress Members
and Senators to at least give lip service to the matter. The seeds of
something may have been sown. But a mass movement was not organized.
Civil disobedience was not used.
Democratic party leaders instructed Jesse and the crew to go home and
await the results of court decisions. The black leadership acquiesced,
and a chance to galvanize a civilly disobedient mass movement around
issues of voting rights was missed.
Mass movements are based on widely held beliefs, reinforced by dense
communications networks. Mass movements are nurtured and sustained not
just by vertical communication, between leaders and constituents, but
by lots of horizontal communication among the movement’s constituency.
This horizontal communication serves to reinforce the constituency’s
and the movement’s core values. It emboldens ordinarily non-political
people to engage in personally risky behavior in support of the
movement’s core demands, and builds support for this kind of
risk-taking on the part of those who may not be ready to do it
themselves.
Forty and fifty years ago, African American print media like the
Chicago Defender, the California Eagle, Baltimore Afro-American and the
Pittsburg Courier carried news of resistance to Jim Crow to millions of
black readers. Like white communities of that era, black neighborhoods
supported and were supported by a dense network of voluntary and social
organizations. Large numbers belonged to fraternal societies such as
Masons and the Eastern Star, and many more blacks than today belonged
to labor unions. Within these networks, the freedom struggle was on
everyone’s lips as far down the chain as youngsters at Boy Scout
meetings in church basements on the south side of Chicago in 1964. It
was in places where these networks were weakest, or where institutional
gatekeepers like pastors could not be persuaded to take part that the
mass movement was slowest to take hold, as this passage from the
January 20, 2005 Cover Story of BC illustrates:
Contrary to current mythology, the Black church was never a great
fountain of social activism. More often, suspicious and small-minded
clergy shut their doors against the winds of change
In the years following the 1955 Montgomery bus boycott, church doors
were slammed shut in King’s face throughout the South. As a
preacher-led organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
(SCLC) required a local church base in order to set up operations. The
same problems of Jim Crow and brutality existed in every southern city,
yet in town after town, King could not find a single church that would
open its doors to the SCLC. The ‘movement’ was sputtering. Rather than
mounting a grand sweep through the region, King found himself hemmed in
by the endemic fear and even hostility of Black clergymen.
The current environment presents a different set of challenges to those
who would build the dense horizontal communications networks needed
support a mass movement. Far fewer Americans belong to social, civic
and voluntary organizations now than 50 years ago. Sprawl forces us to
live further from and travel more hours getting to and from work,
school and shopping than ever before. To lift a revealing quote from
www.bowlingalone.com, the web site of Robert Putnam’s highly
recommended book of the same name,
we sign fewer petitions, belong to fewer organizations that meet, know
our neighbors less, meet with friends less frequently, and even
socialize with our families less often. We're even bowling alone. More
Americans are bowling than ever before, but they are not bowling in
leagues.
If a progressive mass movement is to be built in this era of sprawl and
locked down media monopolies, organizers must develop and deploy
alternative communications strategies to get and keep the movement’s
message into a sufficient number of ears to sustain its influence and
momentum.
No mass without masses and no movement without youth
Mass movements don’t happen without masses. A mass movement whose
organizers cannot fill rooms and streets, and sometimes jails on short
notice with ordinarily non-political people in support of political
demands is no mass movement at all. Organizers and those who judge the
work of organizers must learn to count.
A progressive mass movement is inconceivable without a prominent place
for the energy and creativity of youth. The finest young people of
every generation have the least patience with injustice. SNCC was the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, after all, and included high
school and college students across the South. The average age of rank
and file members of the Black Panther Party was 17 to 19. SCLC’s
leading ministers in the early 60s were mostly under 30. The 1960s
movement for civil and human rights was spearheaded, and often led by
young people. Neither Martin Luther King nor Malcolm X lived to be
forty. Fred Hampton was only 21.
Any mass movement aiming at social transformation must capture the
enthusiasm and energy of youth, including the willingness of young
people to engage in personally risky behavior.
What is a mass movement?
Mass movements are creations of the political moment, rooted in the
shared values of their core constituencies, nurtured by dense
communications networks among a supportive population. They are
sustained by aggressive leadership, and youthful enthusiasm. Mass
movements inevitably employ civil disobedience, and the civilly
disobedient components of mass movements must be carefully calculated
in such a way as to maintain support from broad sectors of the
population it aims to mobilize, and to increase support if they are
violently repressed.
To enumerate some of the typical qualities of mass movements:
Mass movements have political demands anchored in the deeply shared
values of their core constituencies.
Mass movements look to themselves and their shared values for
legitimacy, not to courts, laws or elected officials. A mass movement
consciously aims to lead politicians, not to be led by them.
Mass movements are civilly disobedient, and continually maintain the
credible threat of civil disobedience.
Mass movements are supported by lots of vertical and horizontal
communication which reinforces the core values of the constituency and
emboldens large numbers of ordinarily nonpolitical souls to engage in
personally risky behavior in support of the movement's political
demands.
Mass movements capture the energy, enthusiasm and risk taking spirit of
youth. Nobody ever heard of a mass movement of old or even middle aged
people.
In the absence of any of these characteristics, no mass movement can be
said to exist.
Applying the mass movement yardstick to real-life cases
Reparations? The reparations movement undoubtedly speaks to widespread
beliefs among African Americans. But the last big reparations
demonstration in Washington, DC might not have drawn ten thousand
souls. A mass movement should be able to fill rooms in neighborhoods,
not just in whole cities. With no broad masses in motion over
reparations, no civil disobedience, and not much traction among black
youth, it’s safe to say that there is no mass movement for reparations.
The anti-war movement? With the ability to put hundreds of thousands in
the streets several times a year in New York City, in DC, and the Bay
Area, one to twenty thousands in scores of other US cities and towns,
and hundreds more vigils, demos and meetings still happening each week
the antiwar movement passes the numbers test. But in contrast to a
generation ago, today’s antiwar movement has so little respect for
itself and so much reverence for the two-party system that it
practically shut down months before the presidential election to allow
most of its leading lights to actively campaign for a pro-war
candidate. There is not much evidence of broadly popular antiwar civil
disobedience yet, either.
When the antiwar movement loses its reverence for judges and elected
officials, and discovers some creative and popular ways to break the
law, it will be a mass movement.
The Million Man March and the Millions More Movement?
While certainly big enough, the 1995 MMM was only a single day’s event.
Although the still-existing policy of selective mass incarceration of
black men was in full swing, the MMM made absolutely no demands for the
transformation of society. It was, its leader said, all about
atonement. There was no civil disobedience, and no intent to sustain
any militant action. Organizers of the MMM remembered to collect
money, but somehow neglected to pass around a signup sheet, something
even the most amateurish organizer knows must be done. What an
organizing tool a million man mailing list might have been!
The organizers of the 1995 affair who are driving the bus again this
year, haven’t criticized themselves for not taking attendance, or for
coming to Washington to ignore political issues like health care,
voting rights and mass incarceration, or for excluding gays and women.
What kind of mass movement excludes women? Neither version of the MMM
looks like a mass movement.
Labor? Union rights, pensions, Social Security and health benefits were
won by a struggle with all the hallmarks of a mass movement. But that
was two or three generations ago. Today’s labor movement isn’t
capturing youth, doesn’t do civil disobedience, is unsure of what its
core values are, and collects dues to give to the least worst
politician instead of trying to make politicians follow its lead.
Whatever else it is, labor is not a mass movement any more.
The women’s movement, pre-Roe v. Wade
Both in 1970 and a hundred years ago, this had all the characteristics
of a mass movement. Political demands, big numbers, leaders not afraid
to call politicians to account, and a fair amount of public, popular
civil disobedience. They eventually forced courts and politicians to
follow them rather than the other way around, and with some of their
key demands met, creative civil disobedience ceased, replaced by
reliance on courts, elected officials and corporate sponsorship. Right
now, there is no mass movement for the full equality of women. A new
Supreme Court, if it overthrows Roe v. Wade will make the re-emergence
of such a movement much more likely.
The religious right
The religious right possesses a mass base, along with ambitious and
profoundly scary leaders. With corporate support it has been
successful in building its own communications networks and influencing
or seizing outright control over many civilian and military
institutions. The religious right does not follow politicians.
Politicians pander to it. Whenever the religious right starts being
civilly disobedient, we will see a mass movement with the potential to
take us far down the road toward fascism.
The Black Consensus, the next progressive mass movement, and Gary
There is only one place America’s next progressive mass movement can
come from. There is only one identifiable constituency with a bedrock
majority of its citizens in long term historical opposition to our
nation’s imperial adventures overseas. This is America’s black
one-eighth. While majorities of all Americans do believe in universal
health care, the right to organize unions, high quality public
education, a living wage, and that retirement security available to
everyone ought to be government policy, and many even believe America
is locking up too many people for too long, support for these
propositions is virtually unanimous among African Americans.
More than two years ago, Black Commentator named this phenomenon the
Black Consensus:
African Americans remain in remarkable, consistent agreement on
political issues, a shared commonality of views that holds strongly
across lines of income, gender and age. The Black Commentator's
analysis of biannual data from the Joint Center for Political and
Economic Studies confirms the vitality of a broad Black Consensus. Most
importantly, the data show that Black political behavior has not
deviated from recent historical patterns, nor is any significant Black
demographic group likely to diverge from these patterns in the
immediate future.
In newspaper terms, there is no "split" among African Americans on
core political issues...
The original article, from which the above paragraph is lifted, is well
worth reviewing in its entirety. It is the statistical persistence of
the Black Consensus over decades of polling data and across classes,
generations and regions which marks out America’s black one-eighth as
the likely origin, and the first indispensable core constituency of any
progressive mass movement to transform American society. If such a
mass movement is to succeed, it must not allow itself to be contained
within the black community. But that’s where it has to begin, around
the core political demands of the Black Consensus.
Hence African American elected officials and candidates for office on
every level, from the Congressional Black Caucus to local sheriffs and
prosecutors must be forced to address themselves to the Black
Consensus. They must be summarily judged for their positions on such
issues as racially selective mass incarceration, the unjust war in
Iraq, American complicity in the apartheid-like policies of Israel,
universal health care, equality of educational opportunity, and voting
rights, and these judgments made to stick. Mass movements do not and
cannot follow political office holders. A mass movement is an
assertion of popular leadership by the people themselves. It makes
politicians into followers.
The Black Consensus, and the cohesive communities of color from which
it arises must give birth to America’s next progressive mass movement.
Laying the intelligent groundwork for such a movement will be the task
before us in our next historic meeting – Going Back to Gary.