Here's another short post that is a follow-on to the post I wrote yesterday. My encounter with the protest march in Portland yesterday got me so agitated that I actually went back to watch a YouTube video that was made by the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict in 2013. As long-time readers of my blog know, I believe the ICNC went seriously off the rails from 2017 to 2020, and that as a result they gave some advice that was seriously flawed, both morally, tactically, and strategically. So in my posts from 2020 onward, I have scrupulously avoided referring to any materials or videos published by the ICNC. However, I must admit that the materials they published and released up to 2016 are actually quite good. Their Fletcher Summer Institute video series is a particular example of this. Also, I've grown to strongly dislike YouTube for reasons which I have mentioned on this blog, yet to this day YouTube remains the best place to find videos of talks and lectures by people such as Srdja Popovic, Jamila Raqib, Marshall Ganz, Zeynep Tufekci, and other scholars of people power, community organizing, and strategic nonviolent resistance. So to use an analogy, even though I hate the taste of cheese, because I'm hungry and there's nothing else to eat, I guess I'll have to eat this cheese sandwich...
Anyway, the video I am referring to is "
FSI 2013: Why Skills Can Make Civil Resistance 'A Force More Powerful'" and it is a recording of a talk which was given by Peter Ackerman, who was one of the founders of the ICNC. (By the way, Peter Ackerman passed away around three years ago. I'm sorry to hear of his passing.) In his talk he makes the point that the development of skills and wise strategy among the participants in a nonviolent liberation struggle is the key to winning the struggle. He has some interesting things to say about the lack of effectiveness of mass protest marches when those protest marches are nothing more than an expression of collective outrage:
"Well..you know, again, we're always talking about probabilities. But a strategy to go to the street because you're angry - to let off steam - recognizing you probably have a finite amount of steam - that's probably a not good use of your steam. [Sic] And I don't believe you should...even consider a tactic without understanding its strategic context. Why would you just go out and do something without thinking it through?...Tactics are not a strategy. [Emphasis added.] "What makes a tactic have a strategic context is the forethought that comes to it. [Emphasis added.]
"And the military gets this...as some of you know, I have a son who was in the military and...as a combat officer before he went out on any activity he had to write a 40-page paper about what was the purpose, what were the risks, and on and on and on! We should submit ourselves to that same kind of discipline. If you don't do it, you're gonna lose!"
To those who want to craft an effective resistance to the autocrats who have taken over their countries (as Trump and the Republican Party have done in the United States), I say the same thing. Educate yourselves in the theory and practice of effective strategic nonviolent resistance. Read some books - especially the books published by the Albert Einstein Institution. Learn to craft an effective strategy of resistance, an effective theory of change. If you don't do it, you're going to lose!
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