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A Conversation About Nonviolence

Eric Stoner responds to Stephen Zunes: Yes, nonviolent movements have achieved important democratic and political reforms. But if they fail to address the divide between rich and poor, are they really success stories?
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Despite the amazing string of victories that “people power” movements have chalked up over recent decades, it’s surprising how little-known many of these stories still are, even to folks who are politically aware in many other respects.

Salt march

Mahatma Gandhi, left, during the 1930 salt march. Before departing on the 240-mile journey, Gandhi sent a letter to Lord Irwin, the Viceroy of India: "If my letter makes no appeal to your heart, on the eleventh day of this month I shall proceed with such co-workers of the Ashram as I can take, to disregard the provisions of the Salt Laws. I regard this tax to be the most iniquitous of all from the poor man's standpoint. As the Independence movement is essentially for the poorest in the land, the beginning will be made with this evil."

That is why "Weapons of Mass Democracy," Stephen Zunes’ article in the Fall 2009 issue of Yes! Magazine, is so important, especially for those just discovering the hidden history and potential of nonviolence. He cogently lays out why nonviolent tactics—such as strikes, boycotts, sit-ins, and demonstrations—are the most effective way to resist oppressive regimes, and backs up his case with considerable evidence.

Lately, however, my thinking about how we should most honestly discuss many of the success stories that are regularly cited by advocates of nonviolence has been evolving.

Whether we’re talking about Gandhi and Martin Luther King, about the nonviolent movements that brought down dictators or repressive governments in South Africa, Poland and many other countries, or about the recent “color revolutions” in Georgia and Ukraine, the stories are actually far more complicated than we often admit.

While these nonviolent campaigns were undeniably successful at kicking the British out of India, gaining civil rights for blacks in the United States, and installing governments that were, at least on the surface, more democratic, we tend to overlook the economic effects of these victories.

The sad truth is that when it comes to fundamentally changing the distribution of resources or wealth in a society, these nonviolent movements were less successful.

In each of these cases, the economic elite that controlled the country before the nonviolent movement gained power continued to do so afterwards, and the plight of those at the bottom was in many cases exacerbated.

Both Gandhi and King sincerely fought for radical economic change, but their lives were cut short before their full vision could be realized.

Gandhi famously called poverty “the worst form of violence,” and stridently advocated for economic self-sufficiency. More than just about anyone in history, he struggled to practice what he preached, by spinning his own clothes and living a life of material simplicity.

After Gandhi’s assassination, however, his beloved homeland whole-heartedly embraced capitalism, which has forced two-thirds of India’s population to now survive on $2 or less a day.

Towards the end of his life, Martin Luther King began to connect the war in Vietnam to poverty at home. During his famous speech at Riverside Church, a year to the day before he was killed, King challenged the very foundations of our economic system. “True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar,” he declared. “It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.”

Though the civil rights movement succeeded in ending Jim Crow and earning the right to vote in the 1960s, the racial economic divide in the United States has barely budged. “Since 1968, the year Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, the income gap between blacks and whites has narrowed by just three cents on the dollar,” wrote Dedrick Muhammad last year in The Nation. “At this slow rate of progress, we will not achieve income equality for 537 years.”

Even more troublesome, in The Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein documents in extensive detail how leaders of other nonviolent movements—in various ways and for various reasons—effectively sold out as they gained power during the transition to democracy in their countries.

Solidarity rally

A Solidarity rally in Warsaw draws thousands of people. August 31, 1984.

Photo by Thomas Hedden

For example, the Solidarity movement that Lech Walesa led in Poland abandoned its long fight for the progressive economic program of worker ownership, and enacted economist Jeffrey Sachs’ neo-liberal recommendations—a 15-page plan which he literally drew up in one night. That meant eliminating price controls, slashing subsidies, and selling off state mines, shipyards and factories to the private sector. Not surprisingly, the results of this embrace of the “free market” have been grim.

“Most dramatic,” Klein writes, “are the number of people in poverty: in 1989, 15 percent of Poland’s population was living below the poverty line; in 2003, 59 percent of Poles had fallen below the line.”

A very similar and tragic story unfolded in South Africa as well. For 35 years, the African National Congress (ANC) advocated for radical economic change, including the nationalization of much of the country’s wealth and industry as well as protecting the right to work and to decent housing. As Nelson Mandela assumed the presidency, however, the ANC effectively caved on these aspects of their platform. They made concessions when negotiating over the new constitution, signed on to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)—the precursor to the World Trade Organization—which severely constrained their economic policy, and let the old apartheid bosses keep control of the central bank. As Klein notes, the results have again been heartbreaking:

As for the “banks, mines, and monopoly industry” that Mandela had pledged to nationalize, they remained firmly in the hands of the same four white-owned megaconglomerates that also control 80 percent of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. In 2005, only 4 percent of the companies listed on the exchange were owned or controlled by blacks. Seventy percent of South Africa’s land, in 2006, was still monopolized by whites, who are just 10 percent of the population. Perhaps the most striking statistic is this one: since 1990, the year Mandela left prison, the average life expectancy for South Africans has dropped by thirteen years.

So while these nonviolent movements were able to nominally gain power, the folks who actually owned these countries only grew richer.

Acknowledging that these transitions to democracy have so frequently failed to democratize wealth will only help us stop such scenarios from playing out again in the future.

In the former Soviet satellites, another phenomenon has emerged over the last decade. During the nonviolent “color revolutions” in Georgia and Ukraine, there wasn’t even a pretense that poverty and inequality would be addressed with redistributive economic policies. The leaders of these movements did not hide the fact that they would reorient their countries towards the West, and Washington openly supported them for it. After emerging victorious, they promptly followed through on their promises.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, for example, is conducting what Newsweek called “the world's most radical experiment in economic reform,” which has included privatizing virtually every state-owned industry, firing tens of thousands of civil servants, eliminating tariffs on almost all imported goods, and instituting a flat income tax of 12 percent.

As has happened with every other country that has swallowed this toxic mix of “free market” reforms, the number of unemployed in Georgia has swelled, prices have risen, and the standard of living for most of the population has gotten worse.

Now to be clear: I’m not making the argument that we shouldn’t reference these examples as victories for nonviolence. In all of these cases and many more, everyday people employing nonviolent techniques were able to win substantial political freedoms and rights that have unquestioningly made their lives, and those of millions of others, better.

But these stories should not end there. Even as dictators or repressive regimes bow to public pressure, the economic elite will do everything in its power to maintain control during the wave of democratization. They will give the illusion of democracy, while holding firmly on to the reigns of the economy, if at all possible. And if history is any guide, attaining real economic justice is a far more elusive goal than nonviolently bringing down a dictator.

Therefore, the best way to gauge how genuine any democratic transition has been may be to critically examine the extent to which economic relationships have changed since the nonviolent revolution—and, most importantly, how those at the bottom have fared under the new government.


Eric StonerEric Stoner wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit magazine that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Eric is an adjunct professor at St. Peter’s College and an editor at Waging Nonviolence. His articles have appeared in The Guardian, Mother Jones, and The Nation, among other publications.

Eric Stoner is responding to Stephen Zunes article: Weapons of Mass Democracy.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Stoner, E. (2009, November 12). A Conversation About Nonviolence. Retrieved September 09, 2010, from Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/peace-justice/a-conversation-about-nonviolence. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License

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Reader Comments

Eric Stoner's "A Conversation About Nonviolence"

Posted by Judith Mahoney Pasternak at Nov 13, 2009 03:09 PM
You're right, Eric, when you say that no nonviolent revolution has yet succeeded in redistributing wealth, but I think that point could be rephrased to put the failure where it belongs: In the hands of those who hold the world's economic power. Nonviolent revolutionaries have succeeded in wresting power away from the oppressive governments of their own nations; they haven't YET figured out how to wrest it from global Capital. That task may well require a global movement, without which global corporate capitalism has been able to squeeze every new government between the rock of starvation and the hard place of neoliberalism.

But as far as you've taken it, you've made an important point. Thanks.

Judith Mahoney Pasternak

a conversation about nonviolence.

Posted by razia at Nov 15, 2009 11:14 AM
in the west it is romantically and idealistically believed that it was gandhi's nonviolence that kicked the british out of india. what is less known is that riots, mass killing and wide spread unrest all over the country preceded gandhi's famous salt march. british knew their days in india were numbered. for sure, gandhi's nonviolent civil disobience hastened their departure.

and your point?

Posted by Tom Hastings at Nov 21, 2009 04:24 PM
Critiques of nonviolence ought to be critiques of the methods of waging conflict, not the future avoidance of conflict. By this I mean that Stoner somehow expects nonviolent conflict management to either produce total permanent change for his notion of what is best or it is a suspect method. This is fatuous. Zunes analyzes how a conflict was managed, not whether it achieves aims it never articulated, and he ignores the effects of violence in the mix of resistance. Gandhi was so disenchanted with the Indian leadership he didn't even attend independence ceremonies. Nehru and others immediately formed an army from what they inherited. It was not a nation devoted to nonviolence upon liberation and neither was any other. But I think the deeper research that waits to be done is, for example, a look at the Gini before and after liberation and correlate to methods generally used to wage the conflict on the part of successful challengers. I think we'd see some interesting results, just as the Freedom House study showed metrics of civil rights, human rights and democracy five years out from liberation for 67 examples.

you misread the article

Posted by Eric Stoner at Nov 24, 2009 08:57 AM
Sorry Tom, but I'm afraid you misread the article, or misunderstood my point. I don't expect nonviolent movements to effect "total permanent change," or be rendered meaningless. I never said that. In fact I said exactly the opposite. I said these are still victories for nonviolence that benefited millions of lives. But we simply can't ignore how these movements affected the economic situation in their countries, and should extend our analysis to that realm as well. I simply think it would be more honest to say that these movements were sucessful at bringing important political changes, but not so sucessful at affecting economic change. Is that so tough? And by admitting that, hopefully we can be more vigilant about that issue in the future.

Moreover, these nonviolent movements did have well-articulated economic ideas that they were promoting, which I very briefly describe in the article. And during the transition to democracy in both Poland and South Africa, the leaders of the movements changed directions without the public being aware of what was going on. Like I said, Klein goes into great detail on each of these cases in her book. Therefore, I think critiquing this is absolutely valid and important if we're going to keep our eye on economic justice as well as political freedom.

Facts are different

Posted by Maciej Bartkowski at Nov 24, 2009 02:52 PM
It may be a simple error to get the figures wrong the first time (as Klein apparently did) but it is an ignorance or a deliberate misinterpretation to refer to them to support questionable assumptions about a complex phenomenon such as civil resistance.

A poverty line in Poland (leaving aside a more elaborated analysis of poverty based on income, expenditures and consumption) increased from around 10% in the 1980s to 14.5% in 1990. Between 2003-20005 it oscillated between 18%-19%. Four years later, after Poland joined the EU, it decreased to 17%. The actual poverty line in Poland is thus more than 3 times lower than what Klein and the author of this article claim to be. Another dubious linkage between the impact of civil resistance and economic and social situation a decade later was made in the context of South Africa. A sudden decline in life expectancy in South Africa between 2005-2010 quoted by the author has more to do with the demographic impact of AIDS epidemic and not with the civilian-led nonviolent transition. AIDS is estimated to have decreased the life expectancy to 45 years in contrast with 66 years in the absence of the epidemic.

Furthermore, a more in-depth study of Solidarity in Poland shows that it was not a monolithic movement. It combined a number of intellectual and philosophical debates and views on the organization of society and governance. The movement brought together cultural and religious conservatives, corporatists as well as social and economic liberals. One might have been less surprised by the economic neoliberalism in Poland after 1989 if only our understanding of Solidarity had not been reduced merely to the workers and society’s expectations linked only with political freedom – in both cases, a desire for greater space to practice entrepreneurial creativity and economic freedoms were as important. The fact that the Polish society has not rejected liberal reforms – there was a surprising continuity in the implementation of neoliberal reforms by the subsequent governments regardless of their right, left or center political affiliations – but rather embraced the emerging economic opportunities served to strengthen Poland’s position (both in political and economic terms) in its difficult negotiations with the European Union that began in earnest in 1998.

By overemphasizing the role of external advisors the author of this text bestows on them undeserved recognition and plays into their egos– the very thing they want. It was the first democratically elected Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki, his government and the pacted Parliament not Jeffrey Sach that decided to implement the economic package in the form of a Shock therapy and lead Poland through the neoliberal economic reforms.

A legacy of civil resistance in Poland has been much more positive than the author of this text wants us to believe.
1. After the round table discussion that ended in April 1989, opposition had only two months to prepare for the first democratic elections since 1945. It was a self-organizing experience gained during the underground civil resistance in the 1980s, a well developed underground (already legal by that time) opposition press, and an extensive network of volunteers that gave Solidarity important advantage over the government and allowed it to lead a breathtaking election campaign between May and June 1989 and eventually win the pacted elections.
2. Major decentralization reforms implemented in the second half of 1989 by the democratic government had all the trademarks of Solidarity: decentralized governance and civic organizations involved in training local officials.
3. The ‘rebellious civil society’ that Ekiert and Kubik wrote about in their book when they analyzed Poland’s social and political landscape between 1989-1993 was a direct result of a civil resistance culture. Contrary to a common belief, a rebellious civil society strengthened a young democracy in its crucial years and served as a safety valve for expression of interest by the social and economic groups at a time when political parties were weak and interest groups forming.
4. Finally, Poland’s foreign policy during the first years after 1989 was grounded in the worldviews of civil resisters that prevented it from being hijacked by more jingoistic voices. Good neighborly relations with Germany, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania oftentimes despite difficult history and problems with the Polish ethnic minorities were established surprisingly quickly and as a direct result of a philosophical/ethical reevaluation of international relations and Poland’s place in Europe that occurred within the Polish opposition movement during decades-long civil resistance struggle.

These facts suggest that civil resistance is a force more powerful not only during the time of political oppression but long after this oppression is crashed.
  

Bad policies by democratic governments don't discredit democratic transitions

Posted by Jack DuVall at Nov 23, 2009 04:40 PM
There is little logic in blaming a nonviolent civilian-based movement that helped achieve a nation's transition from authoritarian to democratic government for the social and economic policy choices of the subsequent democratically elected government. The same electorate that chose James Buchanan, widely regarded as America's worst president, turned around four years later and elected Abraham Lincoln, usually regarded as America's best president. The people make mistakes, and the people are brilliant -- both are true, as every democracy discovers. And that's why Naomi Klein's analysis of Poland's experience, cited above, is especially wrong. Lech Walesa did not seize power and "sell out". He was democratically elected as Poland's president and served one term -- and was succeeded by a handsome, articulate former communist politician who served for two terms. Contending that that makes Walesa, much less the Solidarity movement that propelled Poland's nonviolent transition to democracy in the 1980s, responsible for Poland's poverty rate in 2003 defies logic. I spent two days last week in Poland, meeting and talking with progressive-minded Poles who had long since come to terms with Walesa's legacy. Their criticism of his policies as a democratically elected president did not inhibit their admiration of his earlier leadership of a nonviolent movement that was the critical factor in creating the democracy in the first place. So Eric Stoner is wrong to suggest that the economic effects of policies implemented by democratically elected leaders after a nonviolent transition somehow discredit the nonviolent movements that lead to democracy -- unless he's suggesting that something is wrong with democracy. That's what the crowned heads of Europe argued in the 19th century and is implicitly what the Chinese regime argues today. It is not an argument that any people who are deprived of their rights and simply want self-government will find convincing.

Democratic governments are discredited to the extent that they go against the will of the people

Posted by Eric Stoner at Nov 26, 2009 11:28 AM
Thanks for the response Jack, but you're confusing my arguments. I clearly wrote in the article that the political rights and freedoms that have been earned by these nonviolent movements are very important and have improved millions of lives. So I’m not writing off democracy or somehow siding with the Chinese as you say.

But bad policies by a democratic government do discredit that government to the extent that it abandoned its platform during the transition without public input. You can obviously have a democracy in name only, that ends up going against the will of the people. And that's exactly what happened in Poland with regards to its economic policy.

The plan that Solidarity drafted at its first national congress in 1981, called for a transition from state-run industries to worker cooperatives. One of their popular slogans at the time was “Socalism –YES, Its distortions – NO.” The exact text of their program – calling for the “socialized enterprise… controlled by the workers council” as the “basic organizational unit in the economy” - is quoted at greater length in Klein’s book.

As Solidarity then came to power in 1988, Walesa was still talking about implementing these progressive economic changes. But then, as inflation skyrocketed and the country’s debt (which it had acquired under Communist rule) increased, they brought in Jeffrey Sachs to help. He was able to negotiate some debt relief and get $1 billion to stabilize the currency, but to receive this assistance from the international community, the newly elected leaders of Poland had to enact harsh neoliberal economic reforms that I describe in the article. And they did this without input from their base or the public. That is a slightly longer explanation for why I said that they effectively “sold out” when it came to implementing the economic policies that had guided their movement since its beginning.

Moreover, it was the policies implemented by Walesa, not the governments that followed, that led to the country’s economic nosedive. As Klein writes, they “caused a full-blown depression: a 30 percent reduction of industrial production in the two years after the first round of reforms. With government cutbacks and cheap imports flooding in, unemployment skyrocketed, and in 1993 it reached 25 percent in some areas…”

She also looks at how the Polish people continued to resist as these neoliberal economic policies took their toll. As Klein notes, the country’s “extreme dissatisfaction was reflected in a marked increase in the number of strikes: in 1990, when workers were still giving Solidarity a free pass, there were only 250 strikes; by 1992 there were more than 6,000 such protests. Faced with this pressure from below, the government was forced to slow down its ambitious privatization plans.”

Polish workers also showed their discontent with Solidarity by voting them out of office in the 1993 elections. There is no reason why we shouldn't see the strikes by Poles against these unpopular economic policies and the removal of their former allies in the subsequent elections as another chapter in the story of how the Polish people have effectively used nonviolent techniques to fight for what they want.

We do not need to make excuses for the failures and shortcomings of nonviolent movements. It’s never just black or white. We should simply be able to celebrate how Solidarity brought down the Communist regime, while critiquing the economic policies they implemented. Is that really so hard?

Majority of Poles in favor of free market economic reforms

Posted by Maciej Bartkowski at Dec 01, 2009 10:54 AM
In Poland, there is no lack of criticism of free market reforms introduced at the beginning of the 1990s. Ordinary Poles, however, judge these reforms and their outcomes in a much more favorable light than the critics, including the author of the text above, would want them to.

In 1991, in the midst of the economic transformation and economic crisis, 80% of people - many of them former and current members of what used to be a 10 million strong Solidarity movement - had a favorable view of the market economic reforms. In 2009, this support declined but only slightly with a sizable majority of Poles (71%) viewing free market reforms and market economy favorably. In all age groups, even the oldest one (65+) this support is well above 50%. For more see:
http://pewglobal.org/reports/display.php?ReportID=267

The results of the survey also show that despite the fact that there is a group (usually a generation of 65 +) that was affected particularly hard during the economic transformation, more than 80% of Poles see their current economic situation as better than in the 1980s.

Consequently, in the case of Poland, the failure of nonviolent movement can hardly be seen in the neoliberal economic reforms implemented in the 1990s. The results of the reforms are seen by many Poles as positive and in many instances, in line with their views about what the nonviolent struggle was about and what it was for. These reforms did not go against the underlying principles of Solidarity movement -- movement that included workers, intellectuals, students, priests, lawyers, doctors, artists, writers, economists, peasants - that were grounded in the ideas of political, social as well as economic freedoms.




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