Thursday, October 29, 2020
A Constellation Of Alarm Lights
Sunday, October 25, 2020
The Cheating Elephant, Part 2
The Cheating Elephant
Friday, October 23, 2020
Thoughts Upon An Emergent Occasion
Sunday, October 18, 2020
From D to D, Chapter 3 (Continued): Centers of Democratic Power
In the previous post in this series, we looked briefly at the mechanism by which the power of an oppressive regime is destroyed: the mass application of defiance and noncooperation by the citizens or subjects of the regime. This was illustrated by the 14th century Chinese fable titled, Rule By Tricks (renamed "The Monkey Master fable" by Gene Sharp in his book From Dictatorship to Democracy which I have shortened to From D to D in my posts), which described how an old man fed himself by enslaving a troop of monkeys, and how the monkeys killed the old man - not by a violent physical attack, but by escaping from him. For in enslaving the monkeys to serve him, the old man had become dependent on them - thus granting them a certain power over him, a power which they applied in refusing to serve him any longer.
We then moved on to a discussion of the institutions and groups which comprise an oppressor's institutional base of power, as well as those institutions and groups which comprise the base of power of those who resist oppression. Obviously, these two bases of power are in opposition to each other. And each of these is engaged in a contest to strengthen itself and to dissolve its opponent. In the oppressor's base of power, there are three groups of people. The first group consists of those who are so ideologically, socially or psychically wedded to the oppressor's cause that they are unreconstructable - they will never repent of their desire to oppress and dominate, and they will never abandon the oppressor. The second group consists of those who may side with the oppressor as long as the oppression is personally beneficial to them and their associates - yet who can be persuaded to abandon the oppressor when their allegiance to the oppressor begins to seriously cost them. As an example of this second group, many "Red" state Republicans in the U.S. who have decided to vote for Biden did so because their allegiance to Trump began to seriously cost them - especially as a result of the trade war with China and the spread of COVID-19 into Trump country. The third group consists of those supporters of the oppressor who are sincerely deluded, yet who can be persuaded by moral arguments to withdraw their support.
Similarly, the society ruled by an oppressor is composed of three groups of people. The first consists of the oppressor's base of support. The second consists of those who are neutral as far as their actions are concerned - who, regardless of how they feel about the oppressor, continue to obey him due to social inertia or unquestioned, unexamined submission to the oppressor's authority, the long-standing subconscious conditioning by psychological and ideological factors which produces that submission. The third consists of those who have been activized to resist the oppressor and to disintegrate his regime in order to replace it with something better. These activized people comprise what is known as the struggle group. In order to disintegrate the oppressor's regime by nonviolent means, the struggle group must work through the society's independent institutions and groups to persuade a critical mass of people to withdraw their cooperation from the oppressor's regime. That noncooperation can be social, political, or economic, yet when it reaches a certain critical mass (and is accompanied by a compelling "vision of the future" articulated by the struggle group), it causes members of the formerly neutral population to take notice and to begin to join the movement of noncooperation. As the noncooperation movement begins to gather strength, it causes the pragmatists and the sincerely deluded who are members of the oppressor's pillars of support to begin to question their allegiance. This is especially true as the support provided by members of the oppressor's base begins to get costly for the supporters. It is by this means that the psychological and ideological factors which cause people to grant authority to the oppressor are neutralized.
Let me repeat: it is through the society's independent social groups and institutions that mass noncooperation must be applied. (Note: the word "independent" means free from dependence on or control by the oppressor's regime or its agents.) As Gene Sharp says in Chapter 3 of From D to D, "Isolated individuals, not members of such groups, usually are unable to make a significant impact on the rest of the society, much less a government, and certainly not a dictatorship." So let's examine these independent institutions and groups in more detail. In addition to such obviously political organizations as political parties, trade unions, and human rights organizations, Sharp mentions a number of other types of such groups, including those which are not obvious change agents such as families, sports clubs, religious organizations, gardening clubs, and musical groups. Yet the existence of such groups and institutions - even when they are independent of the oppressor - does not automatically guarantee the emergence of a successful movement for liberation. In other words, the existence of these groups is a necessary, but not sufficient condition.
To see what more is needed, we need to turn to another social movement scholar, namely, feminist scholar Jo Freeman, who wrote two essays that describe additional necessary ingredients. The name of one of these essays is "On the Origins of Social Movements," and the other is "The Origins of the Women's Liberation Movement." In these two essays, Freeman delves more deeply into the subject of how a movement is constructed from pre-existing conditions. For a movement to emerge from pre-existing independent groups and institutions which are not necessarily "movement" organizations as far as their origins, three things must be present:
- A preexisting communications network or infrastructure within the social base of the organizations. If such a network does not exist or only partially exists, then an organizer or team of organizers must create that network.
- The network must be "co-optable to the new ideas of the incipient movement." To co-opt a group is to turn that group from its original purpose and agenda to the agenda of the co-opters. As Freeman says, "To be co-optable, [the network] must be compsed of like-minded people whose background, experiences, or location in the social structure make them receptive to the ideas of a specific new movement." These like-minded people must also be able to imagine channels for social action which can realize movement goals. Or, as Freeman says, "A co-optable network, therefore, is one whose members have had common experiences which predispose them to be receptive to the particular ideas of the incipient movement and who are not faced with [or, my note, who know how to overcome] structural or ideological barriers to action. If the new movement as an 'innovation' can interpret these experiences and perceptions in ways that point out channels for social action, then participation in social movement becomes the logical thing to do."
- This network must find itself in a situation of strain in which action can be precipitated - either by a crisis or by an organizer or organizers who "begin organizing... or disseminating a new idea." The organizers' job is easiest when they have "a fertile field in which to work". This fertile field is characterized by emerging spontaneous groups who are acutely aware of the issue around which the organizer seeks to organize. If these spontaneous groups do not exist, the organizer's first job is to create them by bringing together the people most affected by oppression, to begin to talk about their common experience, or, in other words, to "raise the consciousness" of the people most affected.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
From D to D, Chapter 3: Whence Comes The Power?
This is the third installment of my commentary and "study guide" on the book From Dictatorship to Democracy by Gene Sharp. (In my series, I am shortening the title of the book to "From D to D.") In the last post of this series I made the following statement:
The goal of the organizers of effective resistance against a dictator is to turn a large number of their fellow sufferers into a coherent, focused source of effective non-cooperation, and to focus that non-cooperation on one or more of the dictator's pillars of support until the pillars start to shatter.
The key to effective resistance against a dictator is therefore a strategy of focused, coherent non-cooperation and defiance by a large number of the citizens of a country against its ruling dictator and the dictator's institutions of power. The question therefore that arises from this realization is how to persuade that large number of oppressed citizens to withdraw their cooperation from the dictator. Chapter 3 of From D to D begins to answer that question. But the chapter starts first with showing the reader what that noncooperation might look like - and the devastating effect that such noncooperation would have on the power and survival of anyone who might wish to live by oppressing others.
Sharp presents a fourteenth-century Chinese fable titled, Rule By Tricks, about an old man who made his livelihood by enslaving a group (pack? tribe? barrel? Ah, it is a troop!) of monkeys. Without spoiling the fable for you, let me just say that in exchange for his exploitation of the monkeys, the old man became dependent on the service they provided. Therefore, the monkeys were able to kill the old man - not by a violent attack against him, but simply by withdrawal of their service. This illustrates a principle stated by community organizing scholar and teacher Dr. Marshall Ganz - namely, that systems of oppression always depend on those whom they exploit. The Monkey Master fable (as Sharp calls it), has become very popular among those who study and seek to bring about the disintegration of dictatorships, as can be seen here, here, and here, for instance.
Every state or polity has institutional bases of power which enable its leaders to foster the cooperation of the citizens or subjects of that polity. In addition, in free societies, the citizens or subjects have bases of power which are separate from the leaders of the polity and which can potentially act as a curb or brake on excesses committed against the subjects or citizens by the leaders of the polity. To quote Dr. Sharp, the ruler's bases of power include the following:
- Authority, the belief among the people that the regime is legitimate, and that they have a moral duty to obey it;
- Human resources, the number and importance of the persons and groups which are obeying, cooperating, or providing assistance to the rulers. (Not: these obedient persons and groups cannot exist at all unless there is a base of the population who believe that the regime is legitimate, and that they have a moral duty to obey it.)
- Skills and knowledge, needed by the regime to perform specific actions and supplied by the cooperating persons and groups;
- Intangible factors, psychological and ideological factors that may induce people to obey and assist the rulers. (Note: it is vital to understand the psychological and ideological factors which underlie the loyalty of the dictator's human resources noted above. These may vary from regime to regime. This is why opponents of the dictator's regime must learn to study their opponent. Or, as a character in a mildly interesting 1990's action movie once said, "Полезно знать что думает противник, не правда ли?")
- Material resources, the degree to which the rulers control or have access to property, natural resources, financial resources, the economic system, and means of communication and transportation; and
- Sanctions, punishments, threatened or applied, against the disobedient and non-cooperative to ensure the submission and cooperation that are needed for the regime to exist and carry out its policies.
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
Apologies for a Delay
This past weekend I had fully intended to post my third installment of my commentary and "study guide" for Gene Sharp's book From Dictatorship to Democracy. But last Friday, I allowed my computer to perform an operating system upgrade that broke more things than it fixed. So I spent a number of sleepless hours over the weekend trying to figure out what was wrong. Finally I gave up in disgust and loaded a fresh copy of the latest version of Linux Mint. I like troubleshooting computers almost as much as I like working on cars - which is to say, not very much. At least things work now.
While I was thus occupied, it seems that Donald Trump was hospitalized because of a COVID-19 infection. I just found this out yesterday. Although the situation is still quite fluid, I believe that the study of strategic nonviolent resistance is still relevant for those who are members of oppressed and marginalized peoples. Regardless of what happens to Trump (and I hear that he "released" himself from the hospital yesterday and returned to the White House), we must remember that Trump himself is merely a symptom of a larger disease. Therefore, I will publish that third post this upcoming weekend, God willing.
In the meantime, please check out the following recent posts of mine: