{"id":12048,"date":"2010-01-25T09:01:50","date_gmt":"2010-01-25T16:01:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/?p=12048"},"modified":"2010-03-08T11:43:58","modified_gmt":"2010-03-08T18:43:58","slug":"andrej-grubacic-on-organizing-in-the-age-of-obama","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/2010\/01\/25\/andrej-grubacic-on-organizing-in-the-age-of-obama\/","title":{"rendered":"Andrej Grubacic on Organizing in the Age of Obama"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><ul class=\"inline-playlist playlist\" title=\"\"><li><a href=\"http:\/\/www.archive.org\/download\/DailyDigest-012210\/2010_01_22_grubacic.mp3\">Listen to this segment <\/a><\/li><\/ul>| <a href=\"http:\/\/www.archive.org\/download\/DailyDigest-012210\/2010_01_22_uprising.MP3\"> the entire program<\/a> <\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" align=right width=45% src=\"http:\/\/fallforthebook.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2009\/09\/Grubacic-300x225.jpg\" alt=\"Andrej Grubacic\" \/>A new poll by USA Today and Gallup found that a majority of Americans want President Obama and the Democrats to suspend their work on the healthcare bill and consider alternatives being suggested by the Republican Party. With the late Senator Kennedy\u2019s seat being lost to Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts this week, the political landscape is looking grim for Democrats who just a year ago felt victoriously invulnerable. The tide of support for President Obama seems to have been replaced by a new wave of reactionary rightwing populism that is palpably shifting the electoral dynamic. Some see it as a pattern similar to what is seen when any Democrat sweeps into office after a particularly game-changing Republican. Others feel vindicated in organizing outside of the electoral system. But how do progressives learn to effectively organize? How do people in other parts of the world organize? Joining us to help answer such questions is radical historian Andrej Grubacic, a lecturer at the San Francisco Art Institute, the Z Media Institute and until recently a Professor at the University of San Francisco. He is also the co-author with legendary activist and historian Staughton Lynd of the book Wobblies and Zapatistas: Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History. He is well known as an anarchist theorist, and is also the co-founder of Global Balkans network of Balkan anti-capitalists in diaspora.<\/p>\n<p><em>GUEST: Andrej Grubacic, lecturer at the San Francisco Art Institute, co-author of Wobblies and Zapatistas: Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History<\/em><\/p>\n<p>L.A. Anarchist Bookfair: Actions + Conversations + Intersections 2010 is happening this Sunday January 24th : 11AM-7PM at the Barnsdall Art Park 4800 Hollywood Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90027. <\/p>\n<p>Andrej Grubacic will speak on the author\u2019s panel which is from 1-2 pm. <\/p>\n<p><strong>Rough Transcript: <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>SK:  So, first, how do you as a theorist but also an activist, as somebody who has lived in the United States but is from another part of the world \u2013 how do you analyze this reactionary right-wing populism that we\u2019re seeing in the United States today, just within a year of  President Obama being elected?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Well, I\u2019m not surprised.  I mean, I\u2019m a member of the Industrial Workers of the World or the Wobblies.  From 1905 to 1917, there was a tremendous effort of the Wobblies and the Socialist Party to organize people in rural Oklahoma and it was  incredibly successful efforts.  What Wobblies did was to organize so-called evangelical encampments, which was taken from religious evangelists, and they organized these beautiful encampments where people could come and they could learn political economy of Marxism, people\u2019s history, different things and thousands of people would come.  Only 1915, I think, there were 252 separate encampments.  The idea was to go to rural Oklahoma, to leave Chicago, to leave New York, to leave all of these places, to leave L.A., to go to places like rural Oklahoma and to organize with people there and it was so successful that in 1917 you had a wonderful rebellion called the Green Cone Rebellion which was an interracial rebellion of 1500 native Americans, white people and African-Americans which was absolutely fantastic in rural Oklahoma &#8211; first time in United States history that anything like this happened.  The thing is you need to go where people are, you need to embrace a form of critical populism, you need to meet people, you need to, in the words of Staughton Lynd and myself, you need to accompany people and you need to leave universities, you need to leave big cities, you need to go to places like Oklahoma, you need to talk to people who are asking very reasonable questions and the only answers that these people are getting are from the right-wing.  You have this whole AM radio phenomenon, you have many different right-wing extremely successful grassroots networks, right-wing mobilizations.  They\u2019re absolutely splendid in terms of how they\u2019re organizing.  They\u2019re using Sol Lewinsky\u2019s methods.  I mean they\u2019re superb.  But they\u2019re doing exactly the thing that the left-wing movement is not doing in the United States \u2013 they\u2019re approaching people, they\u2019re going where people are and they\u2019re trying to answer very interesting and, I think, very intelligent questions that people are posing:  Who is really ruling this country?  Why?  Where is our money going?  And so on and so forth.  The only people willing to give them any kind of response are right-wing lunatics.  But this is not the fault of the people.  We should stop blaming the people.  This is the fault of the left movement that is practically non-existent in the United States, which is absolutely stunning if you think that we now live in the midst of the probably worst crisis in the history of Capitalist system in the last 500 years.  So, in this particular moment we don\u2019t have any functional fighting left in the United States and that\u2019s absolutely embarrassing.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  How do you explain organizing in the United States today, modern contemporary organizing?  And put it in the context of how people are organizing in other parts of the world.  You\u2019ve had a lot of experience with and organized with the World Social Forums over the years and you\u2019ve been into, met with the way in which progressive movements in other countries organized.  Is the U.S. unique, if you will?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  The U.S. is very different.  The U.S. is very specific.  The U.S. was designed to be very specific by the founding fathers.  The year when the United States capitalist republic was formed it was to create such a big, huge, vast space that it would be extremely difficult for the meddlesome outsiders, as they were called, to organize.  So, the U.S. is very specific.  There are also differences in political culture in the United States because the working class, oppositional culture, has been completely demolished in a very long class war that has been waged against the working class in the United States.  Beautiful book has just been re-released, Louie Adamic (sp.) who is from the same country I am, from Yugoslavia, book called Dynamite: History of Class Violence in the United States, which captures this moment of destroying the working class culture which was astonishing back in the 20s.  So, United States is very specific and organizing in the United States is very different.  That doesn\u2019t mean that we should embrace some kind of United States exceptionalism in terms of building a strong movement.  I think that we should look, for example, at the Zapatistas in Mexico who are absolutely useful as an example of how to organize.  We have a group of students in Mexico City, Ulam, who are leaving the world, beginning a massive sect, who leaves the university, goes to Lacondonian Jungle in Mexico, in Chiapas, and spends ten years learning from the indigenous, learning from the Indians, learning from the Mayans and they emerge as protagonists of this major revolution from the below that sends shocks all over the world and becomes a truly global uprising, if you will.  So, there are ways of thinking about and looking at other movements.  For me, the most interesting movement right now is the movement of indigenous people in South America, the Andean Confederation of Struggles in Bolivia and in other countries of South America, which is absolutely brilliant.  Basically, they are direct democracy, self-organization, self-government, communal democracy and decolonialization and I think we should do the same thing in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  What do things like participatory democracy, which you\u2019ve talked a lot about, participatory education, what do those things mean in a U.S. context where, it seems as though we are very much stuck in a particular way of doing things and the American mainstream can be rigidly fundamentalist, if you will, about things like representative democracy, republic vs. real democracy and participatory democracy could be something that most Americans would just sort of frown and say well I don\u2019t even know what that is?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  I don\u2019t too.  I actually don\u2019t know what participatory democracy is.  Democracy is either participatory or it\u2019s not a democracy.  That\u2019s one of the tricks that came out after the American Revolution.  The idea was to create something that was called a democracy but it actually is a republic.  We don\u2019t have democratic forms of government in the United States, we have republican forms of government.  So, democracy\u2019s either direct or, as you would say, participatory democracy, or it isn\u2019t a democracy.  And the United States definitely is not a democracy.  Whenever you have a situation like this that we have in the United States, parliamentary democracy, whenever we have a situation where the complete economic and political system is being owned by people who call themselves managers, owners, whatever their name is, whenever we live in a situation like this, we are not free and that is not a democracy.  What democracy is?  We need to look at Bolivia, we need to look at Mayan assemblies in Chiapas, we need to look at the past of the United States \u2013 beautiful movements!  Like Haymarket Movement, the movement of Chicago anarchists, Industrial Workers of the World \u2013 IWW \u2013 and other movements and we are going to discover amazing glimpses of what democracy is or should be in those movements.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  So, how to go from there &#8211; from the U.S.\u2019s past or from examples in Bolivia and Chiapas to this place that we need real democracy?  Is it going to take left movements doing what the right is doing right now?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Absolutely\u2026<\/p>\n<p>SK:  \u2026reclaiming, if you will, their own history?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Absolutely.  We need to recover the amazing history of United States left.  Not too many countries have IWW, not too many countries have movements like this.  We need to recover the strength of what Lynd and myself call the \u201cHaymarket synthesis\u201d of this libertarian socialist alternative to both state socialism and state capitalism that we live in.  We need to create a movement that\u2019s going to be rooted in a very wide strata of society and it\u2019s going to be against both private and state institutions, repressive institutions \u2013 a truly revolutionary libertarian socialist movement and we can do this only \u2013 and this is why I began by mentioning Oklahoma \u2013 only by actually through this process of accompaniment, of accompanying people, of fighting, of being with people who are not usually in Berkeley, New York and other places, going to this place in-between, to the real, to the so-called \u201creal America\u201d between the two coasts and creating a truly revolutionary movement by approaching people, learning how to swim in the sea of the people, as German socialists used to say back in the day, all of these skills that we have forgotten in United States and we need to recover this.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  I\u2019m speaking with Andrej Grubacic, radical historian, co-author with Staughton Lynd of the book, Wobblies and Zapatistas: Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History.  He\u2019s going to be speaking at Sunday\u2019s L.A. Anarchist Book Fair, happening from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Barnsdall Art Park, 4800 Hollywood Blvd. in L.A.  Andrej\u2019s on the author\u2019s panel from 1 to 2 p.m.  <\/p>\n<p>Now, you talked about libertarian socialism.  In the United States, there\u2019s one fairly leading form of libertarianism which is libertarian capitalism and you\u2019ll find that strain of libertarianism in a lot of the conservative movements, the so-called \u201ctea party movements\u201d.  Not too many Americans are familiar with libertarian socialism.  How do you explain that?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Well, we used to joke that in Soviet Union it was electricity plus socialism.  Libertarian socialism is socialism plus freedom and it\u2019s an interesting strain of socialism that developed out of anarchism and different radical trends in Marxism, left-wing Marxism of Athol Pentacoch, the so-called council communism but also Luxembourg and many other protagonists of this particular kind of thought and it was suppressed by the Soviet Union and of course in the United States.  But it was a powerful movement and I see Haymarket anarchists as one of the prime protagonists of this kind of political orientation.  The basic idea is to replace the state and to replace the other mechanisms of control and repression to truly democratic organization of the workplace, of the community, to organize the industrial society along democratic lines and this has been done in history \u2013 in Spain in 1936 in Catalonia and before that in Italy and in Germany and there were many glimpses of possible society organized along libertarian socialist lines.  So, it is something that is completely feasible, something that is very efficient and something that is truly the only alternative to this contemporary barbarism we\u2019re living in.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  You know, part of the reason why the right-wing in the United States does have success is because they rely on people\u2019s ignorance of American history, right?  They rely on people\u2019s ignorance of even the word \u201csocialism\u201d which they have helped to conjure up all sorts of misinterpretations of history \u2013 socialism they have equated to facism, if you listen to what they say!  So, tell me, how does one counter \u2013 you know, you\u2019re an academic \u2013 how do you counter this type of ignorance with the real history of what happened and how does one bring history back to the people, if you will?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  By stop being an academic.  First of all, academic is an awful thing to be\u2026<\/p>\n<p>SK:  I didn\u2019t mean to insult you\u2026<\/p>\n<p>AG:  You have succeeded.  (Laughs.)<\/p>\n<p>SK:  (Laughs.)  I\u2019m sorry.<\/p>\n<p>AG:  No, academic, to work in the university should only be a way that one should make his or her living.  The real thing, the real political and educational work happens outside of the universities.  There has been a most unfortunate retreat to the universities after 1968 and we need to break this.  We need to get the left and the left today in the United States is either concentrated in these idiotic sects that we have all over the place\u2026<\/p>\n<p>SK:  \u2026sectarianism\u2026<\/p>\n<p>AG:  like (unintelligible), different Trotskyists, crazy political groups or in the universities and we need to get the left outside of the universities, outside of these crazy political parties and get to the people by creating local institutions, by participating in creating different immigrant centers, workers centers, popular education centers, different kinds of things that have been done in the United States not so far ago.  I mean, SDS \u2013 that was the beginning of Students for Democratic Society \u2013 they would go to places like Youngstown or Cleveland and they would build different (unintelligible), different economic action research programs and centers and they would bring people together.  The only movement that we need to be thinking of creating in the United States is an interracial movement which is based on the working class and this kind of movement can be made only through active interaction with people.  And these are the same people that people are accusing of being fascist.  I was actually having a debate recently on KPFA with a well-known leftist figure who told me that older people who are the tea party people and all of those people \u2013 there was some march in Washington or something, a big right-wing mobilization \u2013 that they\u2019re all fascist.  And I was completely shocked!  First of all, I\u2019m coming from a country that was a victim of fascism for 5 years \u2013 my father was born in a concentration camp.  I know what fascism is.  This is not fascism.  Secondly, these people are, again, asking really good questions and there is no left wing to answer those questions.  Of course the right wing is going to be there!  So, we need to stop doing this.  We need to go there and we need to start talking to the people.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  Well, they may not be fascists but there are many dangerous strains of racism and other sorts of reactionary politics in those movements.  Let me ask you what you make of the Obama phenomenon, where one year into this interesting person\u2019s presidency \u2013 I mean, the most interesting thing about him is his background.  The thing that distinguishes him most from other presidents is where he came from.  But the tide of people that organized to elect him have been characterized as a movement.  How do you respond to that?  <\/p>\n<p>AG:  Well, they were a sort of a movement.  I was very optimistic about Obama because as somebody who is not from the United States, who is learning American history, it\u2019s a tremendous civilizational effect\u2026<\/p>\n<p>SK:  \u2026you mean somebody whose father was an immigrant.  I mean he is from the United States, he was born here\u2026<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Yeah!  It\u2019s interesting.  But, to understand American history through Obama is very interesting.  And I think it\u2019s a great thing that he was elected and I think there was some kind of a movement behind him, right?  The problem is that we should not expect too much from presidents and we should not expect too much from movements that are created only in order to elect somebody to the presidency.  The thing is to create a serious grassroots movement which is going to be anti-capitalist and which is going to be not focused only on Obama, not only on presidents.  So, I do think it was a movement, but I agree with Noam Chomsky, for example, who said that it became more of a brand than a movement and, again, this is where the left is not participating.  What the left should have been doing &#8211; and I don\u2019t think that it\u2019s too late &#8211; is to go and talk to these people who are involved in the Obama campaign and try to reason with them and try to see what kind of conversation can emerge out of this.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  Let\u2019s talk a little bit about capitalism. Given that we\u2019re in this economic recession, it seems as though even if the right may be asking the right questions, their answers aren\u2019t necessarily alternatives to capitalism.  Their answers are going back to a certain form of capitalism that they see as purer, etc.  But, it seems as though there is this big vacuum, this space for the left to fill in real alternatives to capitalism.  How is it that Americans are buying the right-wing\u2019s questioning on the crisis of capitalism because they\u2019re answering the crisis of capitalism with more capitalism?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Mm-mm.  Well, it\u2019s a good question and it\u2019s probably impossible to answer why are Americans not socialists, as somebody asked in the beginning of the century.  But the thing is capitalism in and of itself is a completely irrational system.  Globally speaking, capitalism is a global system from its inception in the 15th or 16th century.  Capitalism is a completely irrational system predicated on the endless accumulation of profits.  What we have today is inability of capitalism and capitalists who accrue profit in this way.   So, I think there\u2019s going to be a huge reorganization of the system.  I actually believe and I agree with Immanuel Wallerstein and other economists and sociologists who believe that this is the end of capitalism as we know it.  This is the end of historical capitalism.  A new system will emerge and what kind of system it\u2019s going to be depends on us.  I think the capitalist class, the ruling class has its own plans and they\u2019re trying to develop a new kind of system.  Could be some kind of corporate fascism, could be some kind of neo-feudal system, it could be something much worse than capitalism.  Or it could be something far better but that really depends on us.  I think that it\u2019s really a crucial time right now because it is a time of crisis, time when we need to decide what kind of society we\u2019re going to live in, either capitalist society that\u2019s going to become increasingly worse and it\u2019s going to become something else or a society built on leftist, democratic positive values which, I believe, can be only a libertarian, socialist society.<\/p>\n<p>SK:  Finally, Andrej Grubacic, do you see any glimmers of hope in American left movements, any emerging groups of young people organizing that you think are promising and that you think might be going in the right direction that could seize this moment?<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Absolutely.  I see a group called SEASOL &#8211; Seattle Solidarity Network &#8211; an extremely interesting group.   These are the people who organize and who defend people who lose their homes, who lose their jobs.  I see Wobblie, IWW Starbucks campaign as an example of fantastic solidarity unionism that\u2019s bringing a lot of people back to the union.  I see anarchists in North Carolina doing excellent work with immigrants.  There are many, many exciting examples.  The thing is that these examples are mostly unknown and they\u2019re uncoordinated so we need to find a way of making them visible, putting them in touch with each other, of networking them and, again, creating a movement.  The thing that we need to do right now, the crucial, the most dominant questions and challenge before us is to create a serious, social movement in the United States that\u2019s not going to be party-based, that\u2019s not going to be dominated by NGOs, but it\u2019s going to be controlled and led by working-class people.  <\/p>\n<p>SK:  Andrej Grubacic, I want to thank you very much for joining us today.<\/p>\n<p>AG:  Thank you.<\/p>\n<p>SK:   Andrej Grubacic, radical historian and, until recently, a professor at the University of San Francisco.  He\u2019s currently a lecturer at the San Francisco Art Institute.  He is the co-author with Staughton Lynd of the book, Wobblies and Zapatistas: Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History.<\/p>\n<p><em>Special Thanks to Julie Svendsen for transcribing this interview<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>| the entire program A new poll by USA Today and Gallup found that a majority of Americans want President Obama and the Democrats to suspend their work on the healthcare bill and consider alternatives being suggested by the Republican Party. With the late Senator Kennedy\u2019s seat being lost to Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"nf_dc_page":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[2,11],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-12048","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-daily-program","category-transcripts"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12048","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=12048"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12048\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=12048"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=12048"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/uprisingradio.org\/home\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=12048"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}