"Fascists are divided into two categories, the fascists and the anti-fascists”
~ Ennio Flaiano
ANTIFA: Self-Appointed Radical Revolutionaries or Neoliberal Thought Police?
Diana
Johnstone
17
October, 2017
In
recent weeks, a totally disoriented left has been widely exhorted to
unify around a masked vanguard calling itself Antifa, for
anti-fascist. Hooded and dressed in black, Antifa is essentially a
variation of the Black Bloc, familiar for introducing violence into
peaceful demonstrations in many countries. Imported from Europe, the
label Antifa sounds more political. It also serves the purpose of
stigmatizing those it attacks as “fascists”.
Despite
its imported European name, Antifa is basically just another example
of America’s steady descent into violence.
Historical
Pretensions
Antifa
first came to prominence from its role in reversing Berkeley’s
proud “free speech” tradition by preventing right wing
personalities from speaking there. But its moment of glory was its
clash with rightwingers in Charlottesville on August 12, largely
because Trump commented that there were “good people on both
sides”.
With exuberant Schadenfreude, commentators grabbed the
opportunity to condemn the despised President for his “moral
equivalence”, thereby bestowing a moral blessing on Antifa.
Charlottesville
served as a successful book launching for Antifa:
the Antifascist Handbook,
whose author, young academic Mark Bray, is an Antifa in both theory
and practice. The book is “really taking off very fast”, rejoiced
the publisher, Melville House. It instantly won acclaim from leading
mainstream media such as the New
York Times,The
Guardian and
NBC, not hitherto known for rushing to review leftwing books, least
of all those by revolutionary anarchists.
The
Washington Post welcomed
Bray as spokesman for “insurgent activist movements” and observed
that:
“The
book’s most enlightening contribution is on the history of
anti-fascist efforts over the past century, but its most relevant for
today is its justification for stifling speech and clobbering white
supremacists.”
Bray’s
“enlightening contribution” is to a tell a flattering version of
the Antifa story to a generation whose dualistic, Holocaust-centered
view of history has largely deprived them of both the factual and the
analytical tools to judge multidimensional events such as the growth
of fascism. Bray presents today’s Antifa as though it were the
glorious legitimate heir to every noble cause since abolitionism. But
there were no anti-fascists before fascism, and the label “Antifa”
by no means applies to all the many adversaries of fascism.
The
implicit claim to carry on the tradition of the International
Brigades who fought in Spain against Franco is nothing other than a
form of innocence by association.
Since we must revere the heroes of
the Spanish Civil War, some of that esteem is supposed to rub off on
their self-designated heirs. Unfortunately, there are no veterans of
the Abraham Lincoln Brigade still alive to point to the difference
between a vast organized defense against invading fascist armies and
skirmishes on the Berkeley campus. As for the Anarchists of
Catalonia, the patent on anarchism ran out a long time ago, and
anyone is free to market his own generic.
The
original Antifascist movement was an effort by the Communist
International to cease hostilities with Europe’s Socialist Parties
in order to build a common front against the triumphant movements led
by Mussolini and Hitler.
Since
Fascism thrived, and Antifa was never a serious adversary, its
apologists thrive on the “nipped in the bud” claim: “if only”
Antifascists had beat up the fascist movements early enough, the
latter would have been nipped in the bud. Since reason and debate
failed to stop the rise of fascism, they argue, we must use street
violence – which, by the way, failed even more decisively.
This
is totally ahistorical. Fascism exalted violence, and violence was
its preferred testing ground. Both Communists and Fascists were
fighting in the streets and the atmosphere of violence helped fascism
thrive as a bulwark against Bolshevism, gaining the crucial support
of leading capitalists and militarists in their countries, which
brought them to power.
Since
historic fascism no longer exists, Bray’s Antifa have broadened
their notion of “fascism” to include anything that violates the
current Identity Politics canon: from “patriarchy” (a pre-fascist
attitude to put it mildly) to “transphobia” (decidedly a
post-fascist problem).
The
masked militants of Antifa seem to be more inspired by Batman than by
Marx or even by Bakunin.
Storm
Troopers of the Neoliberal War Party
Since
Mark Bray offers European credentials for current US Antifa, it is
appropriate to observe what Antifa amounts to in Europe today.
In
Europe, the tendency takes two forms. Black Bloc activists regularly
invade various leftist demonstrations in order to smash windows and
fight the police. These testosterone exhibits are of minor political
significance, other than provoking public calls to strengthen police
forces. They are widely suspected of being influenced by police
infiltration.
As
an example, last September 23, several dozen black-clad masked
ruffians, tearing down posters and throwing stones, attempted to
storm the platform where the flamboyant Jean-Luc Mélenchon was to
address the mass meeting of La
France Insoumise,
today the leading leftist party in France. Their unspoken message
seemed to be that nobody is revolutionary enough for them.
Occasionally, they do actually spot a random skinhead to beat up.
This establishes their credentials as “anti-fascist”.
They
use these credentials to arrogate to themselves the right to slander
others in a sort of informal self-appointed inquisition.
As
prime example, in late 2010, a young woman named Ornella Guyet
appeared in Paris seeking work as a journalist in various leftist
periodicals and blogs. She “tried to infiltrate everywhere”,
according to the former director of Le
Monde diplomatique,
Maurice Lemoine, who “always intuitively distrusted her” when he
hired her as an intern.
Viktor
Dedaj, who manages one of the main leftist sites in France, Le
Grand Soir,
was among those who tried to help her, only to experience an
unpleasant surprise a few months later. Ornella had become a
self-appointed inquisitor dedicated to denouncing “conspirationism,
confusionism, anti-Semitism and red-brown” on Internet. This took
the form of personal attacks on individuals whom she judged to be
guilty of those sins. What is significant is that all her targets
were opposed to US and NATO aggressive wars in the Middle East.
Indeed,
the timing of her crusade coincided with the “regime change” wars
that destroyed Libya and tore apart Syria. The attacks singled out
leading critics of those wars.
Viktor
Dedaj was on her hit list. So was Michel Collon, close to the Belgian
Workers Party, author, activist and manager of the bilingual site
Investig’action. So was François Ruffin, film-maker, editor of the
leftist journal Fakir elected recently to the National Assembly on
the list of Mélenchon’s party La
France Insoumise.
And so on. The list is long.
The
targeted personalities are diverse, but all have one thing in common:
opposition to aggressive wars. What’s more, so far as I can tell,
just about everyone opposed to those wars is on her list.
The
main technique is guilt by association. High on the list of mortal
sins is criticism of the European Union, which is associated with
“nationalism” which is associated with “fascism” which is
associated with “anti-Semitism”, hinting at a penchant for
genocide. This coincides perfectly with the official policy of the EU
and EU governments, but Antifa uses much harsher language.
In
mid-June 2011, the anti-EU party Union
Populaire Républicaine led
by François Asselineau was the object of slanderous insinuations on
Antifa internet sites signed by “Marie-Anne Boutoleau” (a
pseudonym for Ornella Guyet). Fearing violence, owners cancelled
scheduled UPR meeting places in Lyon. UPR did a little investigation,
discovering that Ornella Guyet was on the speakers list at a March
2009 Seminar on International Media organized in Paris by the Center
for the Study of International Communications and the School of Media
and Public Affairs at George Washington University. A surprising
association for such a zealous crusader against “red-brown”.
In
case anyone has doubts, “red-brown” is a term used to smear
anyone with generally leftist views – that is, “red” – with
the fascist color “brown”. This smear can be based on having the
same opinion as someone on the right, speaking on the same platform
with someone on the right, being published alongside someone on the
right, being seen at an anti-war demonstration also attended by
someone on the right, and so on. This is particularly useful for the
War Party, since these days, many conservatives are more opposed to
war than leftists who have bought into the “humanitarian war” mфantra.
The
government doesn’t need to repress anti-war gatherings. Antifa does
the job.
The
Franco-African comedien Dieudonné M’Bala M’Bala, stigmatized for
anti-Semitism since 2002 for his tv sketch lampooning an Israeli
settler as part of George W. Bush’s “Axis of Good”, is not only
a target, but serves as a guilty association for anyone who defends
his right to free speech – such as Belgian professor Jean Bricmont,
virtually blacklisted in France for trying to get in a word in favor
of free speech during a TV talk show. Dieudonné has been banned from
the media, sued and fined countless times, even sentenced to jail in
Belgium, but continues to enjoy a full house of enthusiastic
supporters at his one-man shows, where the main political message is
opposition to war.
Still,
accusations of being soft on Dieudonné can have serious effects on
individuals in more precarious positions, since the mere hint of
“anti-Semitism” can be a career killer in France. Invitations are
cancelled, publications refused, messages go unanswered.
In
April 2016, Ornella Guyet dropped out of sight, amid strong
suspicions about her own peculiar associations.
The
moral of this story is simple. Self-appointed radical revolutionaries
can be the most useful thought police for the neoliberal war party.
I
am not suggesting that all, or most, Antifa are agents of the
establishment. But they can be manipulated, infiltrated or
impersonated precisely because they are self-anointed and usually
more or less disguised.
Silencing
Necessary Debate
One
who is certainly sincere is Mark Bray, author of The
Intifa Handbook.
It is clear where Mark Bray is coming from when he writes (p.36-7):
“…
“Hitler’s
‘final solution’ murdered six million Jews in gas chambers, with
firing squads, through hunger an lack of medical treatment in squalid
camps and ghettoes, with beatings, by working them to death, and
through suicidal despair.
Approximately two out of every three Jews on the continent were killed, including some of my relatives.”
Approximately two out of every three Jews on the continent were killed, including some of my relatives.”
This
personal history explains why Mark Bray feels passionately about
“fascism”.
This is perfectly understandable in one who is haunted by fear that “it can happen again”.
This is perfectly understandable in one who is haunted by fear that “it can happen again”.
However,
even the most justifiable emotional concerns do not necessarily
contribute to wise counsel. Violent reactions to fear may seem to be
strong and effective when in reality they are morally weak and
practically ineffectual.
We
are in a period of great political confusion. Labeling every
manifestation of “political incorrectness” as fascism impedes
clarification of debate over issues that very much need to be defined
and clarified.
The
scarcity of fascists has been compensated by identifying criticism of
immigration as fascism. This identification, in connection with
rejection of national borders, derives much of its emotional force
above all from the ancestral fear in the Jewish community of being
excluded from the nations in which they find themselves.
The
issue of immigration has different aspects in different places. It is
not the same in European countries as in the United States. There is
a basic distinction between immigrants and immigration. Immigrants
are people who deserve consideration. Immigration is a policy that
needs to be evaluated. It should be possible to discuss the policy
without being accused of persecuting the people.
After all, trade union leaders have traditionally opposed mass immigration, not out of racism, but because it can be a deliberate capitalist strategy to bring down wages.
After all, trade union leaders have traditionally opposed mass immigration, not out of racism, but because it can be a deliberate capitalist strategy to bring down wages.
In
reality, immigration is a complex subject, with many aspects that can
lead to reasonable compromise. But to polarize the issue misses the
chances for compromise. By making mass immigration the litmus test of
whether or not one is fascist, Antifa intimidation impedes reasonable
discussion. Without discussion, without readiness to listen to all
viewpoints, the issue will simply divide the population into two
camps, for and against. And who will win such a confrontation?
A
recent survey* shows that mass immigration is increasingly unpopular
in all European countries. The complexity of the issue is shown by
the fact that in the vast majority of European countries, most people
believe they have a duty to welcome refugees, but disapprove of
continued mass immigration. The official argument that immigration is
a good thing is accepted by only 40%, compared to 60% of all
Europeans who believe that “immigration is bad for our country”.
A left whose principal cause is open borders will become increasingly
unpopular.
Childish
Violence
The
idea that the way to shut someone up is to punch him in the jaw is as
American as Hollywood movies. It is also typical of the gang war that
prevails in certain parts of Los Angeles. Banding together with
others “like us” to fight against gangs of “them” for control
of turf is characteristic of young men in uncertain circumstances.
The search for a cause can involve endowing such conduct with a
political purpose: either fascist or antifascist. For disoriented
youth, this is an alternative to joining the US Marines.
American
Antifa looks very much like a middle class wedding between Identity
Politics and gang warfare. Mark Bray (page 175) quotes his DC Antifa
source as implying that the motive of would-be fascists is to side
with “the most powerful kid in the block” and will retreat if
scared. Our gang is tougher than your gang.
That is also the logic of US imperialism, which habitually declares of its chosen enemies: “All they understand is force.” Although Antifa claim to be radical revolutionaries, their mindset is perfectly typical the atmosphere of violence which prevails in militarized America.
In
another vein, Antifa follows the trend of current Identity Politics
excesses that are squelching free speech in what should be its
citadel, academia. Words are considered so dangerous that “safe
spaces” must be established to protect people from them. This
extreme vulnerability to injury from words is strangely linked to
tolerance of real physical violence.
Wild
Goose Chase
In
the United States, the worst thing about Antifa is the effort to lead
the disoriented American left into a wild goose chase, tracking down
imaginary “fascists” instead of getting together openly to work
out a coherent positive program. The United States has more than its
share of weird individuals, of gratuitous aggression, of crazy ideas,
and tracking down these marginal characters, whether alone or in
groups, is a huge distraction. The truly dangerous people in the
United States are safely ensconced in Wall Street, in Washington
Think Tanks, in the executive suites of the sprawling military
industry, not to mention the editorial offices of some of the
mainstream media currently adopting a benevolent attitude toward
“anti-fascists” simply because they are useful in focusing on the
maverick Trump instead of themselves.
Antifa
USA, by defining “resistance to fascism” as resistance to lost
causes – the Confederacy, white supremacists and for that matter
Donald Trump – is actually distracting from resistance to the
ruling neoliberal establishment, which is also opposed to the
Confederacy and white supremacists and has already largely managed to
capture Trump by its implacable campaign of denigration. That ruling
establishment, which in its insatiable foreign wars and introduction
of police state methods, has successfully used popular “resistance
to Trump” to make him even worse than he already was.
The
facile use of the term “fascist” gets in the way of thoughtful
identification and definition of the real enemy of humanity today. In
the contemporary chaos, the greatest and most dangerous upheavals in
the world all stem from the same source, which is hard to name, but
which we might give the provisional simplified label of Globalized
Imperialism. This amounts to a multifaceted project to reshape the
world to satisfy the demands of financial capitalism, the military
industrial complex, United States ideological vanity and the
megalomania of leaders of lesser “Western” powers, notably
Israel. It could be called simply “imperialism”, except that it
is much vaster and more destructive than the historic imperialism of
previous centuries. It is also much more disguised. And since it
bears no clear label such as “fascism”, it is difficult to
denounce in simple terms.
The
fixation on preventing a form of tyranny that arose over 80 years
ago, under very different circumstances, obstructs recognition of the
monstrous tyranny of today. Fighting the previous war leads to
defeat.
Donald
Trump is an outsider who will not be let inside. The election of
Donald Trump is above all a grave symptom of the decadence of the
American political system, totally ruled by money, lobbies, the
military-industrial complex and corporate media. Their lies are
undermining the very basis of democracy. Antifa has gone on the
offensive against the one weapon still in the hands of the people:
the right to free speech and assembly.
***
Diana
Johnstone is
author of the introduction to her father’s memoir, From
MAD to Madness: Inside Pentagon Nuclear War Planning,
by Paul H. Johnstone (Clarity Press).
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