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Fantastic Anarchist

(7,309 posts)
Tue Apr 28, 2015, 01:25 PM Apr 2015

On the Destruction of Property to Affect Change: [View all]

This is an old Rolling Stone article, but does seem apt for today's circumstances. Of course, there are way more than nine examples, but this should get people to think of the desperation when people do resort to violence:

1. The Boston Tea Party

Go figure: The 2010 libertarian-conservative insurgency claimed historical lineage from an act of property destruction. In 1773, British Parliament adopted the Tea Act, which encountered resistance across the Atlantic not, as is so often supposed, because it hiked taxes (it effectively lowered them), but because it imposed the supremacy of a capitalist monopoly, the East India Company, over the political rights claimed by colonists – as Englishmen. Some wildcat radicals left a Boston political meeting over the objections of a frustrated Samuel Adams, dressed up as Mohawk warriors (the better to preserve their anonymity – perhaps prefiguring a black bloc), and destroyed 342 chests of tea in Boston Harbor as an act of protest. Workers had produced that tea, capitalists had risked investment on it, and it was not the colonists' to destroy, but they said "fuck property rights" and did it anyway. Today's conservatives don't seem bothered by this inconvenient history, though, because think of the dress-up opportunities!

2. Smashing Columbus' Ship

In 1502, Christopher Columbus arrived in what is now Panamá to a people who were suspicious of his intentions, even though they didn't know about his ambitions for conquest, or his history of cutting off appendages of Arawak and Taino people in the drive for gold. When local Ngäbe leader el Quibian began to trade with and house Columbus and his brother Bartolomeo, he made the colonialists commit not to overstaying their welcome or go too far down the rivers. Eventually the Columbus brothers tried to trick and execute el Quibian, but he escaped, organized an alliance with his neighbors, and destroyed Bartolomeo Columbus' ship as it attempted to stray further down a river than was agreed upon. The ship didn't stand a chance, and neither did the Columbus brothers. Over 500 years later, the Ngäbe people are still free and largely autonomous, and still having to destroy the property of colonialists who try to steal their land. We recommend taking a shot of seco herrerano to el Quiban next Columbus Day.

3. Slave Uprisings

There is a longtime debate among historians about why Black subjects of chattel slavery in the U.S. had fewer major rebellions than their counterparts in the Caribbean and Brazil. Many major rebellions were prevented before they began, and others were suppressed too quickly, but much has been written on the other forms of class war waged by slaves, from work slowdowns, to escape, to the sabotage of the property of the planters. Samuel, a slave under prominent Natchez, Mississippi, politician John Quitman, broke an expensive new plow. Another slave injured some of Quitman's family by driving a carriage into an embankment on the way to a wedding. The number of these incidents are countless, and most went unrecorded, but the property was always fair game to those people who themselves were considered property.

4. The Molly Maguires

The word "sabotage" itself comes from an old form of property damage used for class struggle. If bosses tried to get one over on workers, the workers would respond by chucking a shoe (or sabot) into the machinery of production. This tradition was carried on by the Irish immigrants in Pennsylvania's coal mines in the 1870s, who had experience with class struggle against landlords back in the homeland. After emigrating across the Atlantic Ocean, they found that in order to demand safety in a very deadly workplace, fight wage theft, and gain basic labor rights, they had to create secret societies like the Molly Maguires to bomb train tracks and destroy coalmines. If they couldn't work in the mines safely, no one should be working in them.

5. Venus In Shreds

On March 10th, 1914, in response to the arrest of suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst a day prior, Mary Richardson brought a meat cleaver into the National Gallery in London, and slashed up the shoulders, back, and neck of Venus, as painted by Diego Velazquez. Richardson later explained that she objected to "the way men visitors gaped" at the nude body, prone on a bed and admiring her reflection in a cherub-held mirror. "If there is an outcry against my deed," Richardson said, "let every one remember that such an outcry is an hypocrisy so long as they allow the destruction of Mrs Pankhurst and other beautiful living women." In the end, the painting was restored, Richardson's political leanings took a sharp right-hand turn, and British women obtained the right to vote.

6. Mandela's Guerrilla Force

After the passing of Nelson Mandela last year, there was an all-too-typical attempt to whitewash his past – but the Apartheid regime was not defeated by Western rockstars demanding Mandela's freedom alone. In the early 1960s, Mandela organized the Umkhonto we Sizwe (the MK) guerrillas alongside the South African Communist Party. The MK bombed the communications, transit and energy infrastructure that helped run the Apartheid economy. Mandela considered the sabotage a necessary method of escalation that would hopefully preempt the need for guerrilla warfare (which he and his associated did not take off the table). For this, Mandela was branded a terrorist by Western governments, which have in the intervening decades gotten no better at accurately applying that label.

7. The Plowshares Eight

Trespassing onto a Pennsylvania General Electric Nuclear Missile facility in September 1980, a group of eight pious Christians, among them priests and nuns, took hammers to the nose cones of two Mark 12A warheads and poured their own blood on the facility's papers in a call for peace. The Biblical injunction for such destruction can be found in the Book of Isaiah's prophesy that the people of many nations "shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks: national shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." The "Plowshares Eight" did prison time for their activism, but today remain unrepentant. Hallelujah.

8. Tear Down This Wall

The dismantling of the border dividing Berlin happened in phases. First, over the course of the fall of 1989, as sweeping border reforms precipitated a refugee crisis throughout the Soviet bloc, East Germans withdrew their political consent for the division of Germany, with rallies reaching the hundreds of thousands in East Berlin by early November, forcing the government to loosen the border. Owing to a botched announcement, people gathered in enormous numbers on the evening of Novermber 9th, overwhelming the border-enforcing soldiers. Having effectively destroyed the legal/social border, the East Germans took it upon themselves to physically destroy its concrete representation, showing up with renegade sledgehammers and, woodpecker-like, creating new crossing points, leading to more official action. It seems now that over half of East Germans miss communist party rule, but don't let that mitigate the badassery of literally smashing an oppressive border – a model Palestinians have tried to emulate with the land-grabbing separation wall that encloses the West Bank.

9. Frack The Police

Indigenous resistance in the Americas is not a story that ends centuries ago with the survivors of genocide left in poverty on reservations – it is still being written. The M'ikmaq people of the Elsipogtog First Nation took a stand against corporate resource extraction in 2013 when they spent months sabotaging efforts to start fracking near their land. When they blockaded the Southwestern Energy subsidiary's exploratory trucks, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police moved in with overwhelming force, pointing snipers at areas with small children and M'ikmaq elders. Someone in the community responded by setting five RCMP vehicles on the scene afire, and other police vehicles were damaged in later clashes. The fracking still hasn't begun, and at least one Canadian province has since banned fracking, proving that, once again, direct action gets the goods.



Read more: Rolling Stone

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In the King of Prussia: The Trial of the Plowshares Eight stone space Apr 2015 #1
Thank you for posting. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #2
It was a powerful act of non-violence, which seems to be getting a bad name these days. (nt) stone space Apr 2015 #5
Nobody paid attention to the Baltimore protests until they started breaking stuff. Cheese Sandwich Apr 2015 #3
And I'm castigated from hell to back from making that point ... Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #4
Even if I were to completely disagree with all or any particular thing you say, Hissyspit Apr 2015 #6
Yep ... Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #7
First - thank you for this post JustAnotherGen Apr 2015 #31
Thank you for understanding! Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #36
Hell, the NeoCons themselves embrace a philosophy of 'creative destruction,' but only KingCharlemagne Apr 2015 #40
Very good points! Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #47
No people who suffered under long time oppression ever succeeded in gaining rights without sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #10
The terms "looting and rioting" are empty phrases ... Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #11
Seems to be the case. backscatter712 Apr 2015 #17
The common thread of each of these examples... brooklynite Apr 2015 #8
Who owned all the property the US 'looted' when they staged a massive riot in Iraq? sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #12
I wasn't aware the United States Government had killed anyone in Baltimore... brooklynite Apr 2015 #13
A government has ... Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #14
I said the US staged a riot, which they seem to be condemning in Baltimore, in several other sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #15
Well, it's easier to blame the victim, sabrina 1. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #20
Sons of Liberty were protesting the East Indies Tea Company? ieoeja Apr 2015 #18
Excellent! nt stevenleser Apr 2015 #9
The major difference pipi_k Apr 2015 #16
Yup. The East Indies Tea Company absolutely had it coming. n/t ieoeja Apr 2015 #19
So, you support the people that destroyed that elder assisted living facility under comstruction? Adrahil Apr 2015 #21
It's quaint that you put words in my mouth. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #23
I think you're being too cute by half. Adrahil Apr 2015 #28
"I can see no other reason you'd post this stuff." Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #30
From the TOS Adrahil Apr 2015 #22
I'm glad I didn't break any rules then. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #24
I think you're dancing on the line... n/t Adrahil Apr 2015 #26
I'm glad you have an opinion on the matter. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #29
Effect, not affect Recursion Apr 2015 #25
Um, no. It's "to affect change." Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #27
Nope. Look it up Recursion Apr 2015 #32
You have it backwards. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #33
Yes, effect is a noun and verb. So is affect. Recursion Apr 2015 #34
My apologies ... Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #43
He's right, actually. Erich Bloodaxe BSN Apr 2015 #38
Yes, today, I learned. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #44
I learn new things every day here. Erich Bloodaxe BSN Apr 2015 #48
Dude. You have obviously have access to the internet. So there's no excuse for this. nt Romulox Apr 2015 #39
I have apologized. Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #45
Don't forget the hypocrisy of the media. Erich Bloodaxe BSN Apr 2015 #35
The Bastille was government property at the time too. hobbit709 Apr 2015 #37
So was the Armory at Harper's Ferry. I wonder how many of those condemning KingCharlemagne Apr 2015 #41
When you stop to think about it, this whole fucking country was built on KingCharlemagne Apr 2015 #42
"Stealing the life and labor of Africans ..." Fantastic Anarchist Apr 2015 #46
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