Since the ascent of Trump to the White House, more attention
has been paid to the hateful rhetoric and terrifying violent attacks of the
alt-right, white supremacists and fascists, against minorities. More attention
has also been paid to Antifa, a loose confederation of groups that organize
against those forces. Though the acts and photos of Antifa members have been
ubiquitous in the media, who they are and what they stand for is not generally
understood. Antifa. The Anti-Fascist Handbook will supply a reader with
an insider’s perspective on their history, their members’ differing views and
their activities.
Mark Bray, an Antifa activist, begins his elucidation by
saying “I wish there were no need for this book. But someone burned down the
Victoria Islamic Center in Victoria, Texas, hours after the announcement of
the Trump administration’s Muslim ban”
(Bray, p. xi). He continues with a now familiar, record of the hundreds of
attacks against minorities that have occurred since the inauguration of Trump. This
is followed by a fascinating, and rarely taught, series of three chapters on
the history of anti-fascist organizing. After a chapter summarizing historical
lessons about the rise of fascism in different nations, the author spends the
rest of his book on strategy and tactics for anti-fascist activists.
Before discussing the more controversial aspects of Antifa
activism, namely their opposition to freedom of speech for fascists and their
violent tactics of preventing speaking engagements and rallies from occurring,
it is important to briefly examine their non-violent methods that are more in
alignment with constitutional republican values. Antifa expends a great deal of
effort on doxxing (photographing and otherwise identifying fascists at rallies
and meetings, then presenting their activities to their employers, parents and
communities, which results in pressure, and firings, for their fascist
activities). They also teach self-defense, form neighborhood committees to
protect targeted populations, create propaganda, recruit people to outnumber
fascists at events, research far-right organizations, infiltrate fascist groups
with spies, and carry-out creative non-violent actions like singing outside
right-wing offices (Bray, pp. 168 & 188). The handbook can be a useful tool
for groups who wish to organize against fascism, but are opposed to violent
tactics and censorship. Since these are the majority of anti-fascists, Bray
provides a useful service.
However, one cannot ignore the violent acts that Bray proudly
depicts. In addition to organized campus actions that prevented right wing
speakers (Bray, p. 176), he portrays individual acts of violence “in the
Atlanta punk scene…someone walk[ed] into a show wearing a No Remorse [fascist
music group] shirt…a black skinhead punched him four times, knocked him out,
and dragged him outside by his feet completely unconscious…we completely made
it so that these people are not accepted” (Bray, p. 70). He even presents
overseas anti-fascist riots proudly, which occurred on a scale the US has not
seen. In Greece, 2008, the police murdered an anarchist, triggering “a month of
unparalleled insurrection…when the smoke cleared, approximately 200 million
euros of property destruction had been committed” (Bray, p. 100). These are presented
as anti-fascist successes; so presumably, we will see similar occurrences in
the US if Antifa is successful here.
Now, on to Bray’s ideological support for violently
suppressing freedom of speech. This is the section in which most people,
regardless of political affiliation, are interested. This is where the line
exists between Antifa and everyone who thinks that the Bill of Rights is a good
idea. For Bray to get readers past reservations about violent censorship and
recruit more activists, it was the place where he really needed to shine; to
make his most cogent, thoughtful arguments. His explanation amounts to a
disappointing failure of rationalizations for depriving those with whom one
disagrees of their constitutional rights. Bray begins reasonably enough,
arguing that “the American government already seriously limits what can be
expressed…It restricts false advertisement, libel and television commercials
for tobacco.” So there is a false assumption that “anti-fascism is the only
threat to an otherwise pristine state of free speech” (Bray, p. 144). He warms
to his discussion, following the history of censorship from our two Red Scares,
through the brutal suppression of Occupy and Black Lives Matter protesters
today (Bray, p. 145). The bedrock of his argument is that freedom of speech is
imperfectly applied in the US. Incarcerated prisoners do not have the same
level of freedom of speech as the rest of us. Corporations are considered by
the Supreme Court to be people and have more than the rest of us. It is a poor
argument for violent vigilante censorship. Most readers who are not driven by
their fear of fascism, or caught-up in the crass emotionalism that replaces
rational thought in such times, will conclude that permitting increased freedom
of speech to those who need it, and curtailing corporate domination, are more
reasoned courses of action. Freedom of Speech is an ideal, therefore imperfect
by definition. The Constitution will always require deliberation and the US
will always require vigilance around the protection of rights. There are more
convolutions and rationalizations in the author’s argument, but a
point-by-point refutation is beyond the scope of this review. Readers will
undoubtedly make-up their own minds. Unlike Antifa’s goal, the purpose of this
review is to inspire thought & discussion, not shut them down.
The next chapter is a continuing explication of tactics,
both violent and non-violent. Where the previous chapter addressed freedom of
speech, this one is designed for those who have misgivings about violence.
“There are three main arguments that anti-fascists use to justify their occasional
use of violence…First…‘rational debate’ and the institutions of government have
failed to consistently halt the rise of fascism…Second, they point to the many
successful examples of [using violence in]…shutting down…far-right
organizing…Third, fascist violence often necessitates self-defense” (Bray, p.
169). Aside from self-defense, the other two arguments undermine our
Constitution. They also undermine the anti-fascist movement. Though most
anti-fascist activists are non-violent, everyone gets tarred with the Antifa
brush. Since the media focuses upon the most violent scenes, even peaceful
protesters who have shown-up to outnumber the fascists are thought to be
violent and/or anti-Freedom of Speech. Antifa thereby provides a service for
the fascists, who can deflect from their own brutality by arguing that they’re
just good Americans defending themselves and their rights. US citizens watching
the news will conclude that Antifa are also fascists because, they use the
tactics traditionally associated with fascism. Fascism is actually a form of
state rule by an elite group. That elite has a specific ethnic identity which,
they assume, makes them superior to other ethnic groups. So Antifa is not
literally fascist. But if they act like fascists, pedantic subtleties of
definition will be lost on the average citizen watching TV or reading news
accounts.
Bray does effectively counter that public sympathy is not
the measure of a movement’s success and that “shifting spectrum of sympathy
must be weighed against specific movement goals” (Bray, p. 185). It is
important for the public, individuals working alongside Antifa and those
considering joining Antifa, to know that their goal is not simply turning-back
racism in a democracy. Their goal is a successful revolution to create a
post-capitalist society. This is not a hidden agenda. Bray clearly states that
“most American Antifa have been anarchists or antiauthoritarian communists”
(Bray, p. 148), and that “anti-fascism is but one facet of a larger
revolutionary project” (Bray, p. 159). He sees anti-fascism as “a stepping
stone toward promoting revolutionary socialist consciousness more broadly”
(Bray, p. 162). Liberal anti-fascists must recognize that the reason that our Constitution,
methods and values, are not important to Antifa is because they are not
dedicated to liberal democratic principles. When they employ violent and
censorious behavior, they are not sacrificing something they value. Those of us
who are not revolutionary communists, anarchists and socialists, will need to
be judicious about where we work with them and what our vision is without them.
Bray presents “the liberal formula for opposing
fascism…reasoned debate…police to counteract fascist violence…parliamentary
government to counteract fascist attempts to seize power.” He honestly admits “there
is no doubt that sometimes this formula has worked” (Bray, pp. 129-130). There
is also no doubt that violent opposition, as in the case of Germany, Italy and
Spain, has sometimes not worked. These
facts are important to those of us who value democratic process and critical
thought over violent solutions. If one thinks that the Constitution, equitable
precepts and rational thought, are important to preserve, one employs
constitutional methods against fascism to the very end. If the fascists do win,
and the Constitution is then invalidated by authoritarian leaders and their
mobs, then it’s time to physically defend one’s self against their excesses.
But we should give our values every chance of success before tossing them aside
and reaching for the nail-studded baseball bat.
Bray would no doubt argue that, by the time the fascists
gain power, it will be too late to defend one’s self; and he may be right. As
one whose Eastern European Jewish relatives, on both sides of my family, died
in gas chambers, and one who is likely to be among the first dumped into a
concentration camp, I am willing to risk a late violent response. I would only
pick-up a gun when all hope of the Constitution working is lost. Our Constitution,
and its freedom of speech, is that important to civilization. Everyone else can
read and decide for themselves where they will draw their line. Readers still
have the freedom to use their own minds; that is one of the best things about
our Constitution.
Bray, Mark. Antifa. The Anti-Fascist Handbook.
Brooklyn: Melville House Publishing, 2017.
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