Escalate Strategically (Beautiful Trouble - Essay 1)

by: Jonathan Matthew Smucker

Tue Apr 10, 2012 at 07:30 AM EDT


There is a tendency within highly cohesive political groups to want to turn up the heat. It seems to be written into the social DNA of oppositional political groups: when group members' level of commitment increases, they want to go further. They want to be a little more hardcore. This tendency toward escalation and increased militancy can be a good thing — but not inevitably. It all depends on how hardcore is defined within the culture of the group. It can either move a cause forward — or send it into a dangerous or dysfunctional downward spiral.

Compare the trajectories of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) — two of the most important radical youth organizations of the 1960s. Students for a Democratic Society imploded in 1969 and the Weather Underground was born because some leaders succeeded in defining hardcore to mean immediate armed guerrilla struggle against the U.S. government — an absurd prospect for their context. In the case of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), on the other hand, some very astute leaders defined hardcore to mean acts such as going into the most segregated areas in the south and organizing some of the poorest, least educated, and most disenfranchised people in the entire country. SNCC engaged in other more visible "hardcore" tactics as well.

In both cases, hardcore really was HARDCORE. (You can't satiate the desire for hardcore with anything less!) Members of both groups demonstrated overwhelming levels of commitment to the values of the groups they belonged to. Members of both groups risked their lives, were imprisoned and brutalized, and some lost their lives. But hardcore was defined strategically in the case of SNCC, and tragically in the case of the Weather Underground.

Good leaders anticipate the emergent desire for hardcore—for escalation—and they own it. They model it themselves. And they make sure that the expression of hardcore is designed to strengthen bonds between the group's core members and its broader political base. It should feel hardcore to the participants, and it should look like moral leadership to the political base and to a broader public.


This is one of several pieces by Jonathan Matthew Smucker published in the new book Beautiful Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution. Assembled by Andrew Boyd, the book includes short concept pieces about grassroots action, activism and organizing, contributed by more than 70 authors. Order it here!
Jonathan Matthew Smucker :: Escalate Strategically (Beautiful Trouble - Essay 1)
Tags: , , , , , , , (All Tags)

User Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Search




Advanced Search


Twitter


Contributors
Beyond the Choir
Astra Taylor
Bob Wing
Cheyenna Weber
clenchner
Ellie-Xolo
Eric Stoner
Harmony Goldberg
Holly Hammond
Jonathan Matthew Smucker
Joshua Kahn Russell
Mary Elizabeth King
Michael Bader
Michael Premo
Paul Rosenberg
Phil Aroneanu
smartMeme
Yotam Marom
YOU? (click to start an account.)

Blog Roll
350.org
Action Mill
AlterNet
Avaaz
Bradley Manning Support Network
Beautiful Trouble
Center for Story-based Strategy
Cognitive Policy Works
Common Dreams
Colorlines
Crooks and Liars
Daily Kos
Democracy: a journal of ideas
Democracy for America
Democracy Now
The Democratic Strategist
Devoke the Apocalypse
Dissent Magazine
Grist
Fire Dog Lake
In These Times
Iraq Veterans Against the War
Left Turn
Merge Left
Midwest Academy
Mother Jones
Movement Strategy Center
MoveOn.org
The Nation
New. Clear. Vision.
New Organizing Institute
Occupy.com
Occupy.net
Occupy Homes
Occupy Together
OccupyWallSt.org
#occupyWINNING
Organizing Upgrade
Peace Action Peace Blog
Presente.org
The Progressive
Ruckus Society
TomDispatch
Tools for Change
Training for Change
Truthout
Verso
War Times
Yes! Magazine
ZNet

Powered by: SoapBlox