Perhaps you have seen the old antiwar placard, “I can’t believe we still have to protest this crap”. If not, you’ve certainly seen some more recent, more vulgar variation. As Trump sets about fulfilling each one of his election promises, save for those to “bring the jobs back”, the protest slogan has ascended again to become a minor art form.
As funny as many of the new signs are, I always enjoy the descendants of this progressive original. First, its exhausted tone makes me believe that there has long been great resistance to US foreign and border policy, which, of course, there hasn’t. Obama was able to slaughter and deport millions without inciting much Western disapproval at all. Second, its hubris is nice. It makes me think that we are all individually powerful. Again, a lovely delusion.
The terrible trick of liberal democracy has been to promise us that we can do anything, including upturn the terms of liberal democracy itself, if only we try. If we work hard enough, we can achieve anything! This is, of course, no truer for a minimum-wage worker seeking to purchase a luxury vehicle than it is for the noble individual who seeks, by means of personal virtue, to end all the manifestations of racism. There’s a handful of individuals powerful enough to “be the difference”, and their names are all on this list.
For those of us who do not have net worth comparable to the GDP of, say, the Slovak Republic, our power to act meaningfully alone is zip. This, by no means, is to disdain protest, or to say that it has never changed a thing. It is, however, to consider not just the multiplicity of signs, many bearing individual stories and thoughts, at recent rallies, but the many declarations found in social and traditional media about the political power of personal virtue. It is not enough to love gays, praise multiculturalism and give the wife a night off from the dishes. Really, it’s not much at all.
[Rundle: liberal howls of outrage over Muslim ban play into Trump’s tiny hands]
But personal “nuance” has become key for columnists and protesters, especially those at the recent women’s rallies. Women now bear signs describing their own experiences and their own particular objections. And, sure, such heterogeneity is inevitable, and even good, in protest. At one big rally for women I attended as a kid, I stood before two gals dressed like uteri who were protesting enforced hysterectomies, behind one bearing a photograph of David Gundy, a young Aboriginal man slain in his bed by police, and next to some chicks from school who were very keen on banning all forms of penetrative sex.
The effect for a young protester is to see that, yes, we can be very different; to see we all have different social experiences and sometimes, the political priorities we have as their result may be inimical to others. When you stand shoulder to shoulder with these others, especially the Ingsoc Anti-Sex League, what can unfold is the work of deciding on a common goal. Eventually, you need to answer the woman with the megaphone when she demands, “What do we want?” with a single answer.
The thing about the present, both on the streets and in the news, is the fact of individual difference itself becoming protest’s alpha and omega. The marches of the present seem to have a lot in common with Hillary Clinton’s campaign tactic of presenting as a rainbow coalition. You get a sign and you get a sign and everybody gets a sign and, if we all hold enough signs boldly proclaiming our difference, the hope is, I guess, that there is sufficient nuance to change the world.
This is pretty American, of course, and recalls the old Coke ad, or Disneyland’s animatronic dolls of the It’s A Small World ride. It’s also the stuff that magical kingdom philosopher Juergen Habermas is keen on; the guy believes that deliberation is the way to democracy. It’s also now taken quite a hold in Australia, once a nation full of people that disliked the unabashed flowering of poppies, except on Remembrance Day, but now the sort of place that makes TV positioning statements about how we’re all very different, but all very unified in our difference, which, after all, is what it means to be human.
Obviously, human difference is inevitable. The only people who really think it isn’t belong to One Nation, a party with a false memory of a nation at monocultural peace before “they” came and not, as was the actual case, one deep into some serious class warfare. Just as obviously, no productive modern moment of resistance can be fought without cross-cultural deliberation that is tireless and true — look, for example, what happens when white people try to fight racism on their own.
But, protests and columns now go beyond even considering the interests of different identity groups, and dig down into their data where we have a movement which is now seen to consist entirely of individual interests. There’s little hope for a coalition statement when the statement is difference itself.
We can see this doubling down on the idea of the liberal individual rev up. Every other day, there’s an article on “self-care” and how you can make yourself individually happy in time for the revolution, or one listing reasons to be individually cheerful. Articles about inspiring individuals abound, and I have lost count of the number of white Australian men who have written on how embarrassed they are to be white Australian men. Guilt for one’s identity category is not only useless indulgence, but another statement about how the individual can overcome hardship — in this case, the terrible pain of being an oppressor — and make the world a better place.
[Razer: yes, it is OK to punch a Nazi, but not with your fist]
If you follow the peculiar logic of this progressive liberal individualism to its end, you find yourself somewhere quite peculiar. Somewhere, really, in the salons of the 18th century where philosopher-kings spoke about the need to be individually good, while, all around them, Europe’s peasants were herded into factories, poorhouses and mines. I am quite certain that the new slaves of the Global South don’t give any more of a shit about my personal virtue than a guy who works at Walmart for 11 bucks an hour. I am quite certain that the old Kantian idea of acting from good will produce the same result it always has: blindness to political reality.
My personal appreciation of difference. My white guilt. My experience of oppression as a woman, a tenant, a low-wage worker. These are all things that I have and all things I could, if I chose, mistake for political statements. But where does that get anybody?
Clinton’s granular rainbow coalition didn’t win an election. It won’t win a world back from the now malfunctioning liberal democracies, those that gave us the fiction of the powerful individual in the first place. If we are going to organise against these new powers — racism, nationalism, and their close cousin, wealth accumulation — perhaps we should choose for every action just one theme at a time. Smash the shadow state on Wednesdays, use Fridays to protest black incarceration rates. Why not? The multiplicity message isn’t working and the expression of our identity difference gives no serious pain to a totalising force, even if it remains a great pleasure.
Solidarity requires, from each of us, a temporary revulsion for the individual self. But people have written this before. Frankly, I can’t believe I still have to tell you this crap.
it drives me insane but the worst is by fighting Trump as an individual we are in danger of playing the “who is more oppressed by Trump” game & losing focus. The system that facilitated Trump is the enemy – at the end of the day fukt over is fukt over (except for the big 8 – they’re okay). Smash the system or #WorldisTrulyFukt
Ok, so the preferred “cause” that we should all get behind is to “smash the system”. As dictated by the authoritarian regime of the “Socialist Worker” I presume?
Whis is it any more ridiculous to believe that a fundamental change to the way in which we organise our economies is possible than in the power of the virtuous individual to overcome everything?
May as well have a shot at treating the disease rather than the symptoms.
Of course I meant fight the disease rather than just the symptoms. I also agree with Helen and Rundle – too many disparate voices all with their own causes will not give us solidarity in the fight. Nor will the belief that bad outcomes are the result of bad individuals in charge so a good individual will save us.
People can protest or not protest. It would be useful however if the protests had more meaning than Trump did this, Trump bad, Fight just Trump. Being in government because the alternative is really awful has not lead to better outcomes for the people in the past and I can’t see it doing so in the future. Yes I would love to immediately “smash the state” and have a new organisation of our economies. I am also not silly enough to think this will happen overnight nor that the economy alone is the answer but a good start is to not forget the disease and to unite against it in thought, protest and action against it
Helen, frankly I can’t believe you’re still telling us this crap either. In case you hadn’t noticed, the women’s march on Washington and the current mass protests at airports around the country against Trump’s new racist immigration laws were and are acts of group solidarity, not individual acts of protest. How do you think the civil rights movement in America achieved what it did? Or are you going to tell me that it didn’t achieve anything either? Unless you’re seriously suggesting the we all put our feet up and do nothing, I look forward to a genuine alternative strategy beyond some nostalgic Bolshevik daydream about storming the Winter Palace, joining the anti-liberal anti-Obama anti-Democratic chorus of Internet-bubble factoids about Obama ‘slaughtering and deporting millions’, or caricaturing philosophers like Kant, Habermas and Foucault, whom you show no evidence of having actually read. Me: I’ll put my faith with the protesters, the State Attorneys and ultimately the electorate (a two-million majority of whom voted for Hilary, lest we forget) to resist power and bring about change.
Darling Humphrey (honestly thats such a lovely experience to write…it feels like I’m in a BBC period piece) in case you (sweet man) have not noticed writing some comment on the inter web thingy is JUST the thing for wasting time and energy. Imagine! You and I are making any impact at all be talking at a journalist/ commentator! Delicious. I’ll put my faith (what a masterful double entendre!) in someone else’s protest any day. Oh look Nigel! Over there. Social change is happening!!!
The protesters and state attorneys aren’t ‘resisting power’ though, HB, they’re resisting Trump’s abuse of power. There’s a very important difference. Similarly, Hillary’s majority wasn’t about resisting power, it was in truth about getting a share of it. I sympathise with your frustration at Helen’s general silence on alternative strategy, but I actually think her article today made a very valuable strategic point: resisting power requires genuine solidarity.
Hi, Humphrey.
I say clearly in the piece that individualism is a new phenomenon. I also say, outright, that protest has previously won results. It would be quite something to say that the civil rights movement achieved nothing, so I did not say that.
This movement’s leader was murdered at a workers’ strike. MLK was struck down while talking to sanitation workers about their labour rights. They had, like many in the movement, an automatic form of solidarity.
I have “noticed” the women’s and anti Trump protests. I have spoken with people who attended. The messages within these are incompatible. See, for example, people who prominently protested against both Comey and the “KGB”. There were many people protesting the vague idea of Russia and its imagined collusion with the FBI. These people had nothing to say to, and therefore no solidarity with, those who marched for something a bit more specific than “Trump is awful”.
At the women’s march, many were representing for “I’m Still With Her”. They saw Clinton as the expression of feminism. Many other groups of women did not. There was unity only among those who were liberal Clinton voters. The organisers said this was a “big tent”. It was, from what I have heard in firsthand accounts, many tents placed on many different sites.
This is not to say that protest is useless. It is to say that a genuine solidarity, in which the self is diminished for the greater goal upon which you have previously agreed, was absent. This is both an effect of the cultural and economic conditions (intimately connected conditions, in my view. Which is the view of someone who apparently has never read or understood Habermas).
I do understand you can read this stuff as provocation. It’s not. It’s an observation about how the means to connect and find a binding solidarity have been denied us. We’re not in unions anymore. We are resorting to the idea of the primacy of our identity as a binding force. Which is difficult, because what does a hedge-funded lady from Connecticut really have to say to a black woman from DC? “We are all women” doesn’t cut it, as we learned in the second wave of the women’s movement, unless we decide to answer the questions “what do we want?” with some demands.
There needs to be new forms of dissent. Proclaiming our diversity and having faith that diversity alone is tantamount to a demand is nothing like solidarity. It’s an emotional walk.
You can disagree. Please try to disagree in the terms set out. I have seen this knee-jerk, “you’re just a cynic” a million times, and it is annoying, because I’m not. I am desperately sad for the present and I see all chances for true solidarity and articulated demands that might actually slay this banana wither. DIagnosing the problem and placing it within its historical context is part of a solution. Being wistful about all protest and saying that they represent solidarity when they actually represent confusion and individualism is not much more of a help.
But what would I know. I read nothing and understand even less.
So Helen is now saying we need to suspend our individuality and get behind a cause?
Like supporting Hillary as the least-worst candidate despite all the baggage she carried into the election, knowing full well that the alternative really represented.
Whoops, too late for that now…
Hillary was not a cause. Hillary represented a way of organising economies that produced exactly this kind of monster. SHe is not the antidote. She represents the disease.
FFS. Are we not aware that there is a crisis? We are still in the middle of the second greatest recession, and we are managing it in the opposite way to FDR. Racist right wing nut jobs are being voted into power all over the world. Whatever I say about it, people are, in any case, rejecting centrism.
To force them into centrism, your “cause”, is simply not possible. They are not voting for these parties in such great numbers any more. They’re just not.
So, what’s next?
Thanks Helen, you DO have to tell us this crap. Again, and again. It’s very worthwhile to have the opportunity to reassess one’s own response/s to external happenings, especially when it’s so easy to very quickly join a new bandwagon-to-somewhere as we live through this constant scatter-gun of protest-worthy decrees from ‘our leaders’.
That said, I do think mass protests right now are important to allow to happen, but given the numbers involved and the apparent lack of ‘success’ or positive impact they are having (so far), they do seem somewhat impotent and bereft of focus. But then, if protests were going to really fix anything, that would have happened 50-odd years ago…
Protests will happen either way. I am hardly in a position to allow them, or to issue a permit!
But, yes. We are agreed. Their efficiency must be reassessed. I tend to agree with Rundle, who I see was also called a cynic for his failure to believe that a whole lot of people arguing with a hundred ideas is “solidarity”.
I recall literally millions of Australians marching against Howard’s ditching us in Iraq II with Bush, prior to the event (which Howard assured us he hadn’t made the decision in spite of committing to Bush months before). I read opinion polls saying that over 90% were against us getting involved in Iraq II. Didn’t stop Howard.
But then most of those protesting buggers thought it was ok to vote Howard back in. Either you carry your protest into the voting booth or it’s worth nothing. No experience in my life demonstrated more to me that protest marches are not particularly useful.
FWIW, I’m doing my best to de-identify myself, for the cause of humans! I’ll remain male, don’t have much choice about that and besides I quite like that about myself and did nothing to achieve it, but otherwise I have no brand, no identity, and as a male will happily subsume that identity for solidarity. For the humans!
Did we get taken over by Lizard people aliens and I’m the last to find out?
The problem with the Iraq protests was that they only happened once. If a million people had taken to the streets every sunday for a couple of months Ol’ Eyebrows might have got a different message.
Helen – I’m a bit thick and would appreciate some guidance. As a white male, should I recognize the centuries of oppression of the white male of women, minorities etc. Should we support equal pay, and end to racism, sexism, whatever(ism)? You seem to denigrate anyone who is middle class or better from actually giving a shit. Please tell us what we should do to assuage our white male, middle class guilt / actually make a difference to those that are oppressed. Please don’t respond with something snarky and facetious – respond with something practical. Or FFS stop throwing stones at people who want to make a difference.
For fucks sake Bretto grow some some balls and stop being yet another BOY asking women what to do. Decide for yourself you sick dickhead. Name and mobile supplied on request if you could give a stuff and actually want to talk about this. Which I assume you do not. Come on. Eyedareya!
Oh, fun. First, you affect the air of a concerned feminist ally, then you call me a silly little lady who is throwing her toys out of the pram.
This is win-win for a sexist.
Read the article. I said your guilt was pointless. So is your fumbling condescension.
No – was simply suggesting some practical actions that would meet your approval – as all you seem to do is denigrate people that actually give a shit.
Mark – “sick dickhead” – wow, way to have a grown up conversation.
Does the widdle liberal want a pat on the back for his good feelings?
There’s no denigration in my piece. There’s just no applause for good intentions. Which you clearly crave.
Here you go. You’re wonderful. You care very deeply.
My question is: does personal virtue change the world?
I have a friend who works in overseas aid. I asked them the best charities to donate to. They told me.
I’m now asking you how best to get past good intentions and actually make a difference. Fairly straight forward question, and I’m sure many people would be interested in your answer.