“Democracy… does not come from the government,
            from on high, it comes from people getting together and struggling
            for justice.” – Howard
            Zinn, Spelman College commencement address,
            Atlanta, 2005.
        Politicians are elected and selected, but mass movements transform
          societies.  Judges uphold, strike down, or invent brand new law, but
          mass movements drag the courts, laws and officeholders all in their
          wake.  Progressive and even partially successful mass movements can
          alter the political calculus for decades to come, thus improving the
          lives of millions.  Social Security, the  New
          Deal, and employer-provided
          medical care didn’t come from the pen of FDR.  The end of “separate
          but equal” didn’t come from the lips of any judge, and voting rights
          were not simply granted by the Voting Rights Act of 1965.  All these
          were hard-won outcomes of protracted struggle by progressive mass movements,
          every one of which operated outside the law and none of which looked
          to elected officials or the corporate media of those days for blessings
          or legitimacy.  It’s time to re-learn those lessons and build a new
          progressive mass movement in the United States.
        Mass movements are against the law
        Mass movements exist outside electoral politics, and outside the law,
          or they don’t exist at all.  Mass movements are never respecters of
          law and order.  How can they be?  A mass movement is an assertion of
          popular leadership by the people themselves.  A mass movement aims
          to persuade courts, politicians and other actors to tail behind it,
          not the other way around.  Mass movements accomplish this through appeals
          to shared sets of deep and widely held convictions among the people
          they aim to mobilize, along with acts or credible threats of sustained
          and popular civil disobedience.
        Not all mass movements are progressive. The legal strategy of “massive
          resistance” to desegregation on the part of southern whites, in
          which local governments across the south threw up thickets of lawsuits,
          evasions
          and new statutes, closing whole school systems in some areas rather
          than integrate, was implemented in response to and backed up by the
          historically credible and ever-present threat of armed, lawless white
          mobs long accustomed to dishing out violence to their black neighbors
          and any white allies with impunity.  They operated in a context of
          popular belief in white superiority and black inferiority that was
          widespread among whites of that region and time.  Undeniable proof
          of the existence of a violent, white supremacist mass movement was
          broadcast around the world when thousands of local white citizens showed
          up to trade blows, insults, and gunfire with federal marshals in places
          like  Little
          Rock, Arkansas in ‘57 and  Oxford, Mississippi
          in ’62.  
        Likewise, courts and public officials who enforced desegregation orders
          were under relentless pressure from a civilly disobedient mass movement
          for equality and justice.  89 leaders of the 1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott
          could not have been surprised when they earned conspiracy indictments
          for their trouble.  Tens of thousands of mostly southern, mostly black
          citizens defied unjust laws and were jailed in the waves of mostly
          illegal sit-ins, marches, freedom rides and other mostly illegal actions
          that swept the South for more than a decade.  This movement in turn
          relied on the deep convictions of all African Americans and growing
          numbers of whites that segregation and white supremacy were evils that
          had to be fought, regardless of personal costs.  For  many, those
          costs were very high.  Some are still paying.
        Mass movements are politically aggressive
        Mass movements are kindled into existence by unique combinations of
          outraged public opinion in the movement’s core constituency, political
          opportunity and aggressive leadership.  The absence of any of these
          can prevent a mass movement from materializing.  In a  January
          20, 2005 BC article occasioned by the death of
          visionary  James
          Foreman, one of the masterminds of the mid-century
          movement for civil
          and human rights, which contains many useful insights on the characteristics
          of mass movements, David Swanson recalled a recent lost opportunity
          in the wake of the 2000 presidential election:
       
        
          If a progressive mass movement is to be built in this era of sprawl
            and locked down media monopolies, organizers must develop and deploy
            alternative communications strategies to get and keep the movement’s
            message into a sufficient number of ears to sustain its influence
            and momentum.  
          No mass without masses and no movement without youth
          Mass movements don’t happen without masses.  A mass movement whose
            organizers cannot fill rooms and streets, and sometimes jails on
            short notice with ordinarily non-political people in support of political
            demands is no mass movement at all.  Organizers and those who judge
            the work of organizers must learn to count.
          A progressive mass movement is inconceivable without a prominent
            place for the energy and creativity of youth.  The finest young people
            of every generation have the least patience with injustice.  SNCC
            was the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, after all, and
            included high school and college students across the South.  The
            average age of rank and file members of the Black Panther Party was
            17 to 19.  SCLC’s leading ministers in the early 60s were mostly
            under 30.  The 1960s movement for civil and human rights was  spearheaded,
            and often led by young people.  Neither Martin Luther
            King nor Malcolm X lived to be forty.  Fred
            Hampton was  only
            21.
          Any mass movement aiming at social transformation must capture the
            enthusiasm and energy of youth, including the willingness of young
            people to engage in personally risky behavior.
          What is a mass movement?
          Mass movements are creations of the political moment, rooted in
            the shared values of their core constituencies, nurtured by dense
            communications networks among a supportive population.  They are
            sustained by aggressive leadership, and youthful enthusiasm.  Mass
            movements inevitably employ civil disobedience, and the civilly disobedient
            components of mass movements must be carefully calculated in such
            a way as to maintain support from broad sectors of the population
            it aims to mobilize, and to increase support if they are violently
            repressed.
          To enumerate some of the typical qualities of mass movements:
          Mass movements have political demands anchored in the deeply shared
            values of their core constituencies.
          Mass movements look to themselves and their shared values for legitimacy,
            not to courts, laws or elected officials.  A mass movement consciously
            aims to lead politicians, not to be led by them.
          Mass movements are civilly disobedient, and continually maintain
            the credible threat of civil disobedience.
          Mass movements are supported by lots of vertical and horizontal
            communication which reinforces the core values of the constituency
            and emboldens large numbers of ordinarily nonpolitical souls to engage
            in personally risky behavior in support of the movement's political
            demands.
          Mass movements capture the energy, enthusiasm and risk taking spirit
            of youth. Nobody ever heard of a mass movement of old or even middle
            aged people. 
          In the absence of any of these characteristics, no mass movement
            can be said to exist.
          Applying the mass movement yardstick to real-life cases
          Reparations? The reparations movement undoubtedly speaks to widespread
            beliefs among African Americans.  But the last big reparations demonstration
            in Washington, DC might not have drawn ten thousand souls.  A mass
            movement should be able to fill rooms in neighborhoods, not just
            in whole cities.  With no broad masses in motion over reparations,
            no civil disobedience, and not much traction among black youth, it’s
            safe to say that there is no mass movement for reparations.
          The anti-war movement? With the ability to put hundreds of thousands
            in the streets several times a year in New York City, in DC, and
            the Bay Area, one to twenty thousands in scores of other US cities
            and towns, and hundreds more vigils, demos and meetings still happening
            each week the antiwar movement passes the numbers test.  But in contrast
            to a generation ago, today’s antiwar movement has so little respect
            for itself and so much reverence for the two-party system that it
            practically shut down months before the presidential election to
            allow most of its leading lights to actively campaign for a pro-war
            candidate.  There is not much evidence of broadly popular antiwar
            civil disobedience yet, either.
          When the antiwar movement loses its reverence for judges and elected
            officials, and discovers some creative and popular ways to break
            the law, it will be a mass movement.
          The Million Man March and the Millions More Movement?
          While certainly big enough, the 1995 MMM was only a single day’s
            event.  Although the still-existing policy of selective mass incarceration
            of black men was in full swing, the MMM made absolutely no demands
            for the transformation of society.  It was, its leader said, all
            about “atonement.”  There was no civil disobedience, and no intent
            to sustain any militant action.  Organizers of the MMM remembered
            to collect money, but somehow neglected to pass around a signup sheet,
            something even the most amateurish organizer knows must be done.  What
            an organizing tool a million man mailing list might have been!
          The organizers of the 1995 affair who are driving the bus again
            this year, haven’t criticized themselves for not taking attendance,
            or for coming to Washington to ignore political issues like health
            care, voting rights and mass incarceration, or for excluding gays
            and women.  What kind of mass movement excludes women?  Neither version
            of the MMM looks like a mass movement.
          Labor? Union rights, pensions, Social Security and health benefits
            were won by a struggle with all the hallmarks of a mass movement.  But
            that was two or three generations ago.  Today’s labor movement isn’t
            capturing youth, doesn’t do civil disobedience, is unsure of what
            its core values are, and collects dues to give to the “least worst” politician
            instead of trying to make politicians follow its lead. Whatever else
            it is, labor is not a mass movement any more.
          The women’s movement, pre-Roe v. Wade
          Both in 1970 and a hundred years ago, this had all the characteristics
            of a mass movement.  Political demands, big numbers, leaders not
            afraid to call politicians to account, and a fair amount of public,
            popular civil disobedience.  They eventually forced courts and politicians
            to follow them rather than the other way around, and with some of
            their key demands met, creative civil disobedience ceased, replaced
            by reliance on courts, elected officials and corporate sponsorship.  Right
            now, there is no mass movement for the full equality of women.  A
            new Supreme Court, if it overthrows Roe v. Wade will make the re-emergence
            of such a movement much more likely.
          The religious right
          The religious right possesses a mass base, along with ambitious
            and profoundly  scary leaders.  With
            corporate support it has been successful in building its own communications
            networks and 
            influencing or
            seizing outright control over many civilian and  military institutions.  The
            religious right does not follow politicians.  Politicians
            pander to it.  Whenever the religious right starts being civilly
            disobedient, we will see a mass movement with the potential to take
            us far down the road toward fascism. 
          The Black Consensus, the next progressive mass movement,
              and Gary
          There is only one place America’s next progressive mass movement
            can come from.  There is only one identifiable constituency with
            a bedrock majority of its citizens in long term historical opposition
            to our nation’s imperial adventures overseas.  This is America’s
            black one-eighth.  While majorities of all Americans do believe in
            universal health care, the right to organize unions, high quality
            public education, a living wage, and that retirement security available
            to everyone ought to be government policy, and many even believe
            America is locking up too many people for too long, support for these
            propositions is virtually unanimous among African Americans.
          More than two years ago, Black Commentator named this phenomenon
            the “Black Consensus”: