7 Reasons to Blockade the 2008 RNC

April 8th, 2008 | by Crash the Conventions |

The RNC Welcoming Committee just published an explanation of why they are organizing around a blockading strategy. Their goal is to shut down the RNC by clogging the streets, blocking the bridges, locking down intersections, biking around downtown en mass, etc, etc. Why? Well, they have 7 reasons.

From the RNC Welcoming Commmittee website:

1. Geography

The geography of the 2008 RNC lends itself quite readily to a blockading strategy- unlike conventions of past years, this one is being held in a city without the capacity to sustain it alone. St. Paul is not big enough. Thus, convention-related events are happening all over the Twin Cities metro area, bringing Minneapolis into the fold. And between Minneapolis and St. Paul, there are still not enough hotel rooms to house the thousands of conventioneers who’ll be descending on our cities for four days. So, delegates, media, staff and extras will be housed throughout St. Paul, Minneapolis and the surrounding suburbs, requiring that they all be transported to and from their hotels en masse (mostly on several hundred city buses contracted specifically for that purpose). Thanks to the mighty Mississippi, they’ll mostly have to be funneled across a small number of bridges, and thanks to the car culture we live in, they’ll only have a limited number of entrances to downtown St. Paul from which to choose. Few conventions have presented such clear transportation vulnerabilities, and we would be foolish to pass up the opportunities those vulnerabilities present. The 2008 RNC is begging to be blockaded.

2. We already have blocking skills

Blockading is something that we as anarchists have put a lot of energy into over the past couple decades, meaning we have a lot of experience and technical know-how to apply to this sort of situation, and have a chance to share those skills with all kinds of folks just getting into things. It’s a strategically prudent choice to identify the skills- like blockading- that we have, and to use them where they’re most fitting. Our movement definitely suffers for being small and stretched-thin, and doing that is simply a more efficient use of our energy. This is an especially positive thing when you take into account that organizing mass mobilizations has historically been quite a drain on our radical communities. Simply put, the blockading strategy takes less from our movement by utilizing a skill we’ve already put lots of energy into developing.

3. Diversity of Tactics, Diversity of Participants

Calling for “blockades” sets a radical tone for the day without dictating the forms of resistance that people engage in. Anything from a lockdown, to a pile of gathered materials, to a yoga bloc in an intersection, to a good, old-fashioned traffic jam, helps create the desired effect, and the more diverse the actions, the less likely the cops will be prepared to deal with them all. Last summer’s G8 protest in Germany created a change in the landscape of our organizing. Dissent! and Block G8 were able to mobilize huge amounts of people because of the open and participatory manner in which it was organized. The blockading strategy provides ways for large numbers of people who would likely be excluded from other strategies to plug in, through such things as public blockades- large, effective, accessible actions that meet people closer to their comfort level and provide clear avenues of participation for folks who aren’t experienced or aren’t already a part of strong militant networks.
And simultaneously, there is ample room for small affinity groups with the capacity to plan and execute their own actions to do so. But, breaking with the recent trend in mobilization planning of calling for a “day of decentralized direct actions” and strategizing no further, the pReNC framework creates a way for all of these actions to complement each other, resulting in an output greater than the sum of its parts.

4. Opening up space

Not everyone is into blockading, and that’s cool, but a lot of other tactics- the more mobile and offensive sorts, for example- are hard to do well in a space where large numbers of cops have easy access to any sites of potential interest and there’s little else going on to hold their attention. Successful execution of the blockading strategy, however, will actually create spaces more conducive to “other tactics” than we’d otherwise see.

5. Direct Opposition

The most “direct” way to oppose a dog-and-pony show is just to stop it. It’s worth recognizing that the RNC is a symbolic event- we all know who the nominee is, and the convention is just a chance for his party to gather and toast themselves at our expense. Stopping the convention won’t stop the election, but it throws a big fuckin’ wrench in the GOP’s PR machine, and they need that machine to survive.

6. Time + Investment = Pretty Good Shot

It’s the plan we have, it’s the plan we’ve been working on for months. One of our best assets in RNC preparation is time. Organizing started almost two years in advance of this convention, and when we have the opportunity to execute a strategy with two years’ worth of organizing behind it (half of that explicitly around this blockading strategy), we don’t see the logic in throwing that away in favor of another strategy that simply doesn’t exist and, at this point in the game, could only be haphazardly organized.

7. Little Engines Can

Any strategy we come up with and have the resources to execute is bound to have its weaknesses- we are, after all, human- but one major recurrent weakness that we have the opportunity to alleviate in this round is that created by a lack of internal cohesion. Obviously, as anarchists, it is not our intention or our desire to see the homogenization of our movement; we do believe that our strength rests quite heavily on the diversity of thought and tactics found on our side of the barricades. But our strength rests as heavily on a shared understanding that diverse tactics are most effective when they are implemented in complement to each other.

In touring the country and discussing the strategy with anarchists all over, it’s become quite apparent to us that lots of people are pretty damn into it. They’re organizing, seriously and in big numbers, and willing to put in the requisite work to make this specific strategy successful. Given any two plans of equal strategic merit, the plan that incites broader enthusiasm, energy and support, is the plan more likely to succeed- and we believe the three-tiered strategy is such a plan.

Read the full post on the RNC Welcoming Committee website.

  1. 7 Responses to “7 Reasons to Blockade the 2008 RNC”

  2. By Tempe Anarchists Affinity Group on Apr 8, 2008 | Reply

    We look froward to dancing with you on the free streets of St. Paul!

    In struggle and Solidarity,
    Tempe Anarchists Affinity Group

  3. By Adam on Apr 11, 2008 | Reply

    This may not be something you’d like to hear, but it must be said:
    You anarchists are selfish, thoughtless jerks to implement a large scale blockade strategy like that. Even if you don’t like Republicans and want to make some kind of demonstrative action, don’t think for even a tenth of a second that the only people you’ll be hurting by blockading the streets will be those associated with the RNC. What if, say, a local construction worker gets badly injured on the job and is in desperate need of medical attention? He’d need to get to the hospital, but wait, the ambulance can’t get him to the hospital because your protest blockades have backed up all traffic, so he’ll be just stuck there bleeding for hours, thanks to you! How about if a woman wanted to visit her dying mother one last time, but was unable to get to her in time because of, again, massive traffic backups caused by YOUR blockades?
    Try, for once, thinking about other people besides yourselves, people with their own needs who’ve never done anything to you who will be negatively affected by your inconsiderate actions.

  4. By Jeremy on May 18, 2008 | Reply

    8. Barricading roads is fun. Boring protests are always counter-revolutionary.

  5. By Peacenik on Jun 9, 2008 | Reply

    This is in response to the the first comment by Adam… It is not the people who want to blockade the streets and stop the Republicans are selfish, it’s they who would plot and allow this war party to continue promoting war around the world (which causes immeasurable suffering every day). General strikes have a long time-honored history and this is merely an extension of that. Emergency vehicles like ambulances or fire trucks can often be made way for and the hospitals in Minneapolis aren’t that far in case of an emergency. But stopping traffic actually reduces the need for intensive care because high-speed accidents are less likely. In any case, the real need for medical treatment will probably be outside the Xcel Energy Center where the police are likely to use teargas and bust heads. It seems to me, if you are concerned at all about the necessity of protest, then you be a little more worried about the protesters who the police have a long history of abusing with excessive force. By spreading out and blocking traffic the protesters are less likely to get hurt AND slowing down traffic will also reduce the likelihood of high-speed collisions while the city is effectively shut down.

  6. By steve on Jun 10, 2008 | Reply

    Protest is supposed to be disruptive,claiming space in a performative display of bodies in motion.The RNC however will be more disruptive for a longer period of time than any protest.
    Security perimeters will be established around hotels and gathering places excluding those regular folks deemed a threat to order–including youth, homeless, and people of color generally. The geography of a fearful elite will be imposed on the cities hosting either convention, exposing the logic of power. Power exposed in its most concrete form of barricades, cameras, robo-cops and checkpoints. These every-four-year gatherings are critical junctures in time and space. An election is a crisis,reflecting the fissures in the ruling class making the conventions a key point of vulnerability. As such, they
    are a spatial-temporal envelope where the multitude can express itself in the streets and be echoed in the media-scape.
    Given that global ecological crises, the economic crises are an outcome of the logic of capital accummulation and its attendant consumer culture based most strongly in the USA,and given that these concurrent crises are coming to head right now it is imperative that citizens of the Empire stand in solidarity with all those in resistance to the neo-liberal order and say no in venues where our voices will be heard and our bodies felt. The conventions are exactly such venues where power becomes visable outside the boardrooms and corridors where it typically hides.

  7. By cop on Jun 10, 2008 | Reply

    I can’t wait to knock one of you assholes out with my wooded stick. After I knock you out, I’m gonna pepper spray you and kick you in the head. Then, I’m gonna drag you off to the booking area for processing. Then, to the transport van to jail. You may get me with something but as long as I get one of you little assholes, I’ll have a smile on my face.
    The Police. Not the leaders but the ones on the front line.

  8. By Hurricane23 on Jun 18, 2008 | Reply

    Hey cop, knocking people out is what you do best right. Probably do the same to your wife and kids right? I know I’m bringing my motorcycle helmet and motocross gear and would like to tell others to do the same. Mopeds and scooters are effective means to get around in these types of actions and with a helmet on you stand a much better chance of avoiding serious injury. In Europe and Asia this is coomon knowledge and practiced often, plus it hides your face effectively from long range pepper and cameras

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