12 Myths About Direct Action
by anonymous
Direct action, ”that is, any kind of action that bypasses established political
channels to accomplish objectives directly”, has a long and rich heritage in
North America, extending back to the Boston Tea Party and beyond.
Despite this, there are many misunderstandings about it, in part due to the
ways it has been misrepresented in the corporate media.
1. Direct action is terrorism.
Terrorism is calculated to intimidate and thus paralyze people. Direct
action, on the other hand, is intended to inspire and thus motivate people
by demonstrating the power individuals have to accomplish goals
themselves. While terrorism is the domain of a specialized class that seeks
to acquire power for itself alone, direct action demonstrates possibilities
that others can make use of, empowering people to take control of their
own lives. At most, a given direct action may obstruct the activities of a
corporation or institution that activists perceive to be committing an
injustice, but this is simply a form of civil disobedience, not terrorism.
2. Direct action is violent.
To say that it is violent to destroy the machinery of a slaughterhouse or to break windows belonging to a party that promotes war is to prioritize
property over human and animal life. This objection subtly validates
violence against living creatures by focusing all attention on property rights
and away from more fundamental issues.
3. Direct action is not political expression, but criminal activity.
Unfortunately, whether or not an action is illegal is a poor measure of
whether or not it is just. The Jim Crow laws were, after all, laws. To object
to an action on the grounds that it is illegal is to sidestep the more
important question of whether or not it is ethical. To argue that we must
always obey laws, even when we consider them to be unethical or to
enforce unethical conditions, is to suggest that the arbitrary
pronouncements of the legal establishment possess a higher moral
authority than our own consciences, and to demand complicity in the face
of injustice. When laws protect injustice, illegal activity is no vice, and law-
abiding docility is no virtue.
4. Direct action is unnecessary where people have freedom of speech.
In a society dominated by an increasingly narrowly focused corporate
media, it can be almost impossible to initiate a public dialogue on a subject
unless something occurs that brings attention to it. Under such conditions,
direct action can be a means of nurturing free speech, not squelching it.
Likewise, when people who would otherwise oppose an injustice have
accepted that it is inevitable, it is not enough simply to talk about it: one
must demonstrate that it is possible to do something about it.
5. Direct action is alienating.
On the contrary, many people who find traditional party politics alienating
are inspired and motivated by direct action. Different people find different
approaches fulfilling; a movement that is to be broad-based must include a
wide range of options. Sometimes people who share the goals of those
who practice direct action while objecting to their means spend all their
energy decrying an action that has been carried out. In doing so, they
snatch defeat from the jaws of victory: they would do better to seize the
opportunity to focus all attention on the issues raised by the action.
6. People who practice direct action should work through the established
political channels instead.
Many people who practice direct action also work within the system. A
commitment to making use of every institutional means of solving
problems does not necessarily preclude an equal commitment to picking
up where such means leave off.
7. Direct action is exclusive.
Some forms of direct action are not open to all, but this does not
necessarily mean they are without worth. Everyone has different
preferences and capabilities, and should be free to act according to them.
The important question is how the differing approaches of individuals and
groups that share the same long-term goals can be integrated in such a
way that they complement each other.
8. Direct action is cowardly.
This accusation is almost always made by those who have the privilege of
speaking and acting in public without fearing repercussions: that is to say,
those who have power in this society, and those who obediently accept
their power. Should the heroes of the French Resistance have
demonstrated their courage and accountability by acting against the Nazi
occupying army in the full light of day, thus dooming themselves to defeat?
For that matter, in a nation increasingly terrorized by police and federal
surveillance of just about everyone, is it any wonder that those who
express dissent might want to protect their privacy while doing so?
9. Direct action is practiced only by college students/privileged rich kids/desperate poor people/etc.
This allegation is almost always made without reference to concrete facts,
as a smear. In fact, direct action is and long has been practiced in a variety
of forms by people of all walks of life. The only possible exception to this
would be members of the wealthiest and most powerful classes, who who have no need to practice any kind of illegal or controversial action
because, as if by coincidence, the established political channels are
perfectly suited to their needs.
10. Direct action is the work of agents provocateurs.
This is another speculation generally made from a distance, without
concrete evidence. To allege that direct action is always the work of police
agent provocateurs is disempowering: it rules out the possibility that
activists could do such things themselves, overestimating the powers of
police intelligence and reinforcing the illusion that the State is omnipotent.
Likewise, it preemptively dismisses the value and reality of a diversity of
tactics. When people feel entitled to make unfounded claims that every
tactic of which they disapprove is a police provocation, this obstructs the
very possibility of constructive dialogue about appropriate tactics.
11. Direct action is dangerous and can have negative repercussions for
others.
Direct action can be dangerous in a repressive political climate, and it is
important that those who practice it make every effort not to endanger
others. This is not necessarily an objection to it, however--on the contrary,
when it becomes dangerous to act outside established political channels, it
becomes all the more important to do so. Authorities may use direct
actions as excuses to terrorize innocents, as Hitler did when the Reichstag
was set afire, but those in power are the ones who must answer for the
injustices they commit in so doing, not those who oppose them. Likewise,
though people who practice direct action may indeed run risks, in the face
of an insufferable injustice it can be more dangerous and irresponsible to
leave it uncontested.
12. Direct action never accomplishes anything.
Every effective political movement throughout history, has made use of
some form of direct action. Direct action can complement other forms of
political activity in a variety of ways. If nothing else, it highlights the
necessity for institutional reforms, giving those who push for them more
bargaining chips; but it can go beyond this supporting role to suggest the
possibility of an entirely different organization of human life, in which power
is distributed equally and all people have an equal and direct say in all
matters that affect them.
You believe in violence, well we do too.
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