2021-01-07
Broken windows fascism
1. When Donald Trump was first running for president in 2015-16, a lot
of alt-rightists supported him not because they thought he could win,
but because they hoped he would help destroy the Republican Party. He
hasn’t quite done that, but he has created a serious crisis within the
party, which is now deeply divided between those who accept and those
who reject the legitimacy of the existing electoral system. A broken GOP
might sound like cause for celebration, but it’s likely to benefit the
far right most of all. Today’s physical assault on the houses of
Congress was the militant edge of a much larger movement, and while it
will alienate or frighten some sympathizers it will galvanize and
embolden others.
2. In broader terms, Trump’s insistent denial of the November
election results has spurred a massive political shift within the U.S.
right, as millions of people have moved—at least temporarily—from
system-loyalty into system-opposition, as symbolized by Proud Boys stomping
on a Thin Blue Line flag. We should expect this oppositional right to
remain active and violent long after the current fight over the
presidency has died down, as Natasha Lennard argued yesterday. And as Robert Evans documents,
the oppositional right is a meeting place where different rightist
currents and ideologies—such as neonazism and QAnon—converge and
interact. It remains to be seen how unified or well organized the
oppositional right will be, what kind of strategies and tactics they
will use, and whether or not Trump himself will continue to play an
active role.
3. The attack on the U.S. Capitol is, as many have described it, an attempted coup.
It dramatizes Donald Trump’s authoritarianism, demagoguery, and
repudiation of the electoral system that put him in the White House, but
it also highlights one of the key limitations that separated the Trump
administration from fascism. Fascism
requires an independent mass organization in order to carry out its
attack on the established political order. Trump has never tried to
build such an organization. He has skillfully used social media and
rallies to mobilize supporters, but organizationally he has relied on
existing institutions, above all the Republican Party, which is part of
why his administration was a coalition between America Firsters and
conventional conservatives of various kinds. Now that coalition is
falling apart. And Trump’s control over the federal security apparatus
also proved to be quite limited. He could mobilize Homeland Security
agents and U.S. Marshals to crack down on Black Lives Matter protesters
last summer, but he failed to deploy any federal agents to help him
overturn the results of the 2020 election. Today's mob of Trump
supporters never had a chance of seizing power, but they did bring
Congress to a complete standstill for hours. With better organization
and leadership, the movement they represent could quickly turn into
something far more dangerous.
4. A question for the coming months and years is: to what extent will
the state repressive apparatus be used to crack down on the
oppositional right? Certainly, cops aren’t likely to go after MAGA
activists and Proud Boys the way they go after Black Lives Matter and
antifa, but there’s a long history of federal security forces targeting
far rightists, especially through covert operations.
Joe Biden likes to talk about unity, but it’s not hard to imagine his
administration reviving and expanding FBI and Homeland Security
capabilities for tracking white supremacists and other far rightists.
It’s also not hard to imagine some conventional conservatives actively
supporting this effort. Let’s remember that the federal government’s
most serious and systematic effort to crack down on oppositional
rightists in the past 40 years—from The Order to the Lyndon LaRouche
network—took place under Ronald Reagan. And let’s remember, too, that in
the hands of the capitalist state, antifascism can be a powerful
rationale for building the repressive apparatus—which ends up getting
used mainly against oppressed and exploited groups. Even when the cops
and the Klan don’t go hand in hand, neither one is our friend.
5.
Instead of looking to the state to bring things under control, there's
an urgent need for broad-based militant action on two fronts: to combat
both the openly supremacist forces of the oppositional right and the
less blatant but still deadly systems of established privilege and
power. The past four years have been nightmarish in lots of ways, but
they've also been a time of dynamic liberatory activism on a large
scale. There are a lot of powerful examples of militant, creative
organizing we can look to for lessons and inspiration.
Three Way Fight
Länk: https://threewayfight.blogspot.com/2021/01/broken-windows-fascism.html