On
a regular basis, whether through email blasts or through news
stories, we–the growing majority in the USA–are exposed
to the same story: the political Right has more wealth than King Tut!
I don’t know about you, but I receive dozens of emails a day,
mainly though not exclusively from the Democratic Party, reminding me
of the money in the coffers of the Republican Party and the funds
that nefarious forces, e.g., the Koch brothers, are bringing to the
table, especially as the 2018 midterm elections approach.
To
be clear, movements need resources. We cannot operate on magic or
air, nor can we defeat our opponents with emails, Tweets, poetry or
fine rhetoric. But there is something deflating, if not
demoralizing, about the constant reminder of how much money our
opponents have. Just the other day there was a news story about
local Democratic Party officials complaining that they may not have
enough money to take advantage of the anti-Trump/anti-Republican wave
that seems to be building towards the midterm elections.
It
is critically important that we all stop and remember something that
should be fundamental for any resistance movement or any movement
fighting for justice: the
oppressed have never, in history, had more wealth or resources than
the oppressor.
Think about it for a moment. When was the last time that you can
remember a history lesson where someone pointed out that, at least at
the beginning of a struggle, the oppressed had more resources…more
access to funds…more wealth, than the oppressors?
Once
you remember that every struggle waged by the oppressed against the
oppressor class and their allies is asymmetric, it is possible to
construct a strategy that holds the potential to win. When you
assume that you are fighting the oppressor on, more or less, equal
terms, you are guaranteeing your own defeat.
Thus,
when I saw the news story about the local Democratic Party officials
complaining about lack of funds I was not unsympathetic. At the same
time I started thinking about the strategic implications.
Specifically, given the resource challenge, how do campaigns need to
be organized to tap into greater volunteer bases? How should
campaigns tap into the now iconic small donors? What are the issues
that need to be raised in campaigns? What coalitions need to be
established to maximize the possibility of victory? What should be
the platforms and messages of the candidates? What are the key
weaknesses of our opponents that can be exploited? What wedges can
be driven between opponents?
In
other words, we start with a recognition that we are not fighting our
opponents on conventional terms. We are not going to head to head.
We are, or should be, maximizing our own advantages in order to
overcome our weaknesses and, as a result, checkmate the other side.
It
reminds me of a story that I once read about the American Revolution.
The British, dressed in their red uniforms and fighting out in the
open, were furious with the colonists who insisted on hiding in the
bushes and conducting what we would now call guerrilla warfare. The
British thought that the colonists lacked dignity and honor.
No,
the colonists wanted to win.
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