.t December 18, 1975 / 30d * t I I I I t 9û I I I i PEACE & FREENM THRTJ ¡r+t t{S NONVIOLENTACTION I T I ûS'd0]nJ s srx auvr3^31i ¿,ç,zz "ug NtÛNV]*-l':'? 'tl Àt'lt{ or -¿¿ .: I : i I I l I o n ¡¿l¿b Ë '- IUrsIü unJ dl7 10CI3 ãotr'' ' t$' t' o I ¡ I f I I : I I I .!É :. I .'': : ¡. :t o I stice Social ! I plus MURRAY , t CRAIG SIMPSON onSPA|N ñ i i i t^ i åra '::-- -,4.**.. - t.-.... T, violent and nonviolent," and "rural revitalization as aþrerequisite to a nonviolent global economy"). This may be done by sending your name, add¡ess, and one dollar to me. -BEVL,RLY WOODWARD 148 N Street S. Boston, Mass. 02127 :I was extremely impr€ssed by David Mc-. Reynolds' article [WIN, lU 2'l l'1.51. li really gave me a much firmer commitment to racial nonviolent action ¿s ¿ way qflile and not simply as an oral palliative. It is so easy for me to be tempted by the por sibilities of reform that we need to cor¡ stantly remind ourselves that we must st¡ike at the core of the problem-to'say NO to the system which oppresses us, as Americans and millions of others around the world, and to say YES to building a I was just rereading the various letters of reply to Leah Fritz's'lresignation" letter IWIN, l0/30/75] . It seems to me a shame that this controversy has largely come down to a defense and/or personal c¡iticism ofLeah Fritz since I see the source ofcon'flict in broader terms. I am distressed by new society based on f¡eedom and non-PETER SHIRAS Ithaca, NY violence. t 'the dif[culty which the pacifst community has in understanding the feminist perspective. F'or many people feminism represents only the issue of women liberat- to be grateful to the Instifute and -'iî3-P,Y*iTf especially to Ralph DiGia who did yeoman work in assisting with the raising and the disbursement of a large part of the funds for the conference. Those of us present at ICOPRAPA feel we made a good beginning in the tâsk of linking action and research. Those who woi¡ld like to assist in car.rying this task forward I invite to order a set of the workshop reports of the confe¡ence (eight reports on themes such as "nonviolence fesearch and its application," "liberation movements: Sid Blumenthal writes ILetters, WIN lU27l15l that we must not let wishful thinking substitute for accurate reporting and appraisal ofevents in Portugal. cisely mY Point. That the male left presi has substituted rhetoric in the place of reportage when it has made some token Pre- that "due to public protest in New Zealand, the government there has called a permanent halt to its nuclear program." Unfor- Eggshells with orange beaks'rock under bare lightbulbs and glass. The chicks step out wet and greasf, : attempts to deal with the reality of women's stn.rggles in "revolutionary" Portugal is the problem. Articles have appeared in Power of l4)omerz (a British feminist pape¡) andMaiority Repott. T1l.e current isste oî Off Our Backs contains further information on the development of Portuguese lþminism in a long article, some of which is a reprint of an article by Jo Anne Preston published by New American Movement. The report of violent âttíicks on MLM and the general indiffe¡ence and hostility with which Portugrrese åï I have just read the article "Nuclear Oppo. sition in Europe" [WIN 9/25175]. In the ûrst paragraph of the article it is stated Incubatór \ ; down stickinþto their heads in matted'clumps, bits of shell still clin$ing to their pronged toeg. Pecking and hopp¡ng"they dry to trolk-hued fluff at the agricultural college in Farmingdale New York \ where their continuous almost electronic peeping is broken by another-a wail a scream of speakers I know from Central .Park Road it means: go into the cinderblock hallway where there are ño windows or under the desks, hands on bentheads, giggling. Everyone begins to follow yellow and black afrows, moving purposefully and solemnly,toward air'raid shelters; air aid shelters I think they are c4lled ì -i. as my neighbors acquire, them like swimming pools. My mother directs us four toward thbþxit; ' as we cross the parking lot wé're the only mov¡ng things abovq ground: A uniformed guard runs towards us stops us, . ing themselves fìom the suppression of their identities, culture, and economic livelihoods within our present society. I was pleased to seè Wendy Schwartz' piece Radical feminism is saying something more on the AlJ. Muste Memorial Institute than this which many are choosing to igher 1U20l75], and hope that IWIN, nore; namely thattheprocess we use to words will bring new donations, larye and otganize our society at present is at the small, to the Institute. A movement withroot not only of the oppression of women out funds cannot function and the Instibut all oppression. Pacifists have been saytute provides one of the best ways of ing something similar about process for a directing funds to the educational wo¡k of long time. Historically pacifism has been the nonviolent movement. identified as a women's point of view. It I would like to make a couple of corseems to me that radical feminists are rections to Wendy's piece. She states that articulating what is basically a deepei underthe Institute helped send WRL's delegates standing of nonviolence and its sou¡ces. I to the Intemational Conference of Peace don't think what Leah Fritz was asking for Researchers and Peace Activists (ICOPRAPA) was only a broader coverage of women's and to the WRI Triennial "both held in Belliberation aôtivities (though I would certaingium last summer." Actually both conly zupport this); rather I feel she was calling ferences were held in Noordwijkerhout, The for an emphasis on incorporating a feminist Nethe¡lands. More importantly, though, the perspective with the already nonviolent Institute did much more than simply send .perspective of WIN. To me this is highly WRL's delegate to ICOPRAPA. In fact it bppropriate; and it is only to be expected was the Sponsoring Organization for this that since most men have yet to look conference and had there been no AJMMI, seriousl! at feminism as a plocess, that it is questionable whethe¡ the conference women will leàd in this direction. So far; could have taken place. As the principal orin fac! only women have attempted to ganizer of ICOPRAPA I have particular make this connèction fo¡ WIN readers. reason tunately this is not the case. The NZ government has not yet embarked on a nuclear program, and a decision will be rnade in 1977 whether or not to go nuclear, and this will largely depend on an assessmerit of the country's coal reserycs. Höwever things are getting organized on the antinuclear fìont, and hopefuliy the breathing space will mean that the consciousness of the general public can be raised sufliciently by education, to permit popular di¡ect action like that at Kaiseraugst and Whyl if our government decides to go. ahead with nukes (as seems likely at present). -HOWARD KEENI.I Christchurch, New Zeal¿nd feminists are faced with from the left political parties are in all the above mentioned articles. My hope is then that just as David indi. cates how radicals have been slow to wake , ¿ up to ecological and envi¡onmental issûes too will radicals very so real, which a¡e so wake up to the ieality ofpatriarchy and understand that absent a commitrnent to feminism there will be no revolution. This hope seems to tâke us back to understanding events in Portugal too, for while no léft political party supports the MLM, feminists continue to wo¡k for such parties, for the women of MLM see the links between capitalism and women's oppression. The left potitical parties however don't seem to unde¡stand the links between capitalism and patriarchy, links which make patriarchy á mighty buttress to capitalism as it divides and drains the working class and reelgates women out of ihe revolutionary ptocess. GARY MITCHELL New Brunswick, NJ go back! ftv motfrer stands her ground, her brood big'eyed around "The radiation would get us if the blast didn't," her. -: Xl, No. 43 ' December 18,1975/ Vot. 4. The Call for the Continental Walk fpr Justice Disarmament and Social I 5. Organizing the Walk I Ed Hedemann 7. People are Suffering Because We Have Not Disarined I Joonne Sheehon and Steve Ladd 9. The Disarmament Connection Rick Molishchak 1 1. Notes on the Death óf Franco I . Me Murmy Bookchin I she argues. I have Ban The Bomb and Doublemint Gum singing together inside me. I drink powdered milk aged 6 months in our basement because of 18. Res¡stance Against Fascism in Spain fallout strontium 90 and whole milk, whenever I can get ¡t. 22. With the People at Reagan's Opening l 28. Reviews I Cor,\er: Walk logo designed by Ed Hedemann. STAFF \ siient with triumph and we children, wi,th relief. I stare out thè window from the seat beside my mother, Simpson lohn Lomperti 24. Dom-lnt I Ed Sanders '26. Changes Their discussion is unreal like the even¡ng news but I know my mother's getting into trouble with a policeman and move toward her till my forehead touches her soft fur lapel. I "Well-get into yôur car then,"' the man splutters. It's where we're go¡ng anyhow so we settle'in and drive away l from a crime for which others haVe been-jailed; Croig r Maris Cakars ' Sus¿n Cakars Dwight Ernest' Mary Mayo. Susan Pines Fred Rosen Murray Rosenbllül . not ready to turn to her; to reveal how full of fear my eyes wergand how UNINDICTED dazzled, -Sharpn Mattlln u.stice The Continental Walk for Disarmament a.ng Social f !q* qry::-1.. th^e com¡ng year. ;Ëõrú; Töi;ili oe a ma¡or focus for act¡vists throughout Tor tne iviÑ ü¡tl bé report¡ng on ¡ts progress as w€ll as- prov¡ding a forum to continuing this while be dóins raises. We'll ,l'"ìv dli.,ï¡äi"-t|rï"t¡ã (see Angeles to Los Sóain ¿"u"loptËits;;;ù;h";from keeo an eve on iO throuú 29). That's what we're here for' """åt *¡ittã"t vour help. Please do what vou can to keep *irf "'ä;;;;"'','iåãií th"ï;i;;';;llid; ;;iilÉ'"n¿ oi its longvovage' -wlN CO€ONSPTRATORS 'Tom Bruêkcr Jbrry Co-fllnr. Lynnr Shatzkln Coffn' . - it :, |' :i Ann Davldon I Dlåna Orvlcs' Ruth Drrr Rrlph Dlcl.r. Brlan Þohorty. Wltllåm Douthârdt K¡rãn Ourblnt. Chuck,Fagor. Scth Foldy J¡m Fofest. Larfy Gafa. Joan Ll.bþy Hawk Nell Haworth . Ed Hedomann Gracc HÇdomann. Hcndrlk Hert¿barg' KårlaJay. Mrrty Jazsrt. Brcky Johnson N¡nèy Jônnson. Plul Johnson''Allson K.rpal crrlg-Kàrp€lc John Kyp.r r Ell¡ot Llnlorr Jâckson Mac Lowi D¡vld McReynoldsr o Jan Barry. Lancc Balvlllc . Davld Morrls. Mârk Morrlsr ' Jlm P€ck T¡d Rlchârdi. lgal Roodcnkor¡ N¡nCy Ró¡cn Ed Slndars. WGndt Schwartzr. Martha Tñom-qtg¡ Art Wå¡kovrr. Alldn You ng c BGverly WoodwlrGl . r $ Måmb.7 of WIN Ed¡torlal Boård / ßifton / New York 12471 ephorr: 91 +339:45Es Box 547 Tel ! $45,000 $5,000 $1o,o0o $ 15,000 $2o,ooo : $50,000 $25,ooo wlN ls publlltr€d wookly €xcapt for th-a {lrst two wcoks ln J¡nuary, the last weak ln M-rrch' thc llrst w€ck ln June, th€ last two wscf¡ ln August, and tha frrst two wa.ks ln Saptcmber by W.l.N. M¡glzln€ lnc. wlth tho s¡pport Rösl3t€rs Loaguo. Subtcrlpt¡ons arc por ycar. Sccond class postage pald ôt of th€ War tli.Oo New York, NY lOOOl. lndlvldu¡l wrltcrs atã rasÞons¡ble for opln¡ons c'(pres¡aal and accuracy of iacts g¡ven. Sorry-m¡nuscrlpts cannot b€ re' truncd unlcss åccompanlcd by ð 5Êlf-addfe¡såd Pr¡ntcd ln USA 3t.mp.d rnv€loòe. @@@o Æi On Augu.st 6, 1945, w¡th the atomic bombing of the people of Hiroshima, war should have become unthinkable. Whatever war had been before the nuclear age,- whatevér logic human beings and naiions had used to justify the slauihteiot ifle¡t neighbors, on that day war be.came, indisputably,-a crime againsitrumanity. - -Today, 30 years later, war remains a cnime against humanity. That fact is still not clear to citizens of the United States. It is still not clear to our neighbors on planet Eãrth. Most dangerously of all, it is sti¡ not clear to the leaderioi g;;ñments, to those who now have it in their power to destroy-us ãnd oui planei. . Since 1-945 we, as Ameritans and as human beings, have.been preparing death for ourselves. We have been preparing death for future genentions. lt is the death of nuclear annihilation. irye arã unable to express the human ruin¡ng, ;-hi"rL ¡t the only real meaning, of nuclear war, other than to say that it would likely be total deith-ot ours"Ñãs, åui'ü"ií¡tiüo", our planet. Since 1945 we have been waging another kind of war on our neighbors. lt iq the death of sickness for which there is not enorigh medicine. tt is the death ofst¿rvation because there is not eîouth fooã. i;;;;""; nr-r¡."t war ties w¡thi; ;; power. But what of those who are dying now because we attend to miliiary matters before we heed the cries of human o suffering? For 30 years-the great powe.rs have talked about d.isarmament. They have called for disarmamenf while planning new weapons. They_have denounced each other while budgeting more funds for death. They have talked to ur dt iirt Ëonìiol while making their bombs and missiles more deadly. Ãnd ioday th" nit¡ons are more h'eavily armed than ever. Thirty years Thirty yeais have passed, and have passed, and it it is st¡ll not clear to all that war has become a crime against humanity. is still not clear to alt that to prepare for war WE NEED TO ACT We ask you to join with us in a Continental Walk for Diy armament and Social Justice, a walk which will cross l/B of the planet's su¡face. lt may seem to mâny to be a small and weak action in face of the high councils of government But the case for disarmament must be taken to the people, town by town. There is a powerful symbol in this simple action of .walking a realization that great goals are reached slowly, and that so ñ¡ndamental a change as we demand must begin in our neighborhoods and our communities. Fo¡ he¡e is where the iss¡es must.be discussed, and here is where true action . . Foreign policies based on fea¡ and mistn¡st continue to foster ever-increasing amis stockpiles. Nuclea¡ arms continue to threaten total dest¡uctio4. Non-nuclear arms continue to be uæd to repress social changè and to preserve patterns ofinjus 'tice, while carrying the risk of escalation from limited wa¡ to total nuclear We cannot wait for the govemments to act of their own acco¡d.lVe know that those who conttol the governments are trapped in the illuiion that militarism caniefend the irr terests of thei¡ nations and their peoples. The last 30 years have shown that, without mæsive public prèszure,'govemments will not take a single step towa¡d disarmament. Only war. 1 demonstrations, direct actionq and civil disobediencg did the I United States and the Soviet Union finally end the atmospheric Why would anyone donate march across the length and breadth of this country during the celeb¡ation ofits 200th year. We i¡rvite you to join with us in declaring our. iirdependence f¡om the machinery of death. We invite you to join with us in declaring our interdependence with our neighbors on all parts of the globe. Today, almost two cenh¡ries after the start of Jhe Ame¡ican Revolution, the revolutionary actìs disarmament. The revolutionary act.is to idèntify and eliminate the causes of war, which,lie in the.sexual and social and economic stîuctu¡es of our societies. The revolutionary act is to recognize that life and su¡vival will come f¡om our willingness tó struggle against all who hold powet over other human lives. The .revolutionary act is to divest ourselves of all power that is power over other human lives. Thp United Statei was the fi¡stfiation'to unleash ìhe hor '¡or of nuclear wa¡. Now it possesses an a¡senal of death unrivalled in human history. It is fitting that we should renew , ou¡selves in 19"16, the year of the Bicentennial, that weàs ¿ residents of this country should.lead the way in demonst¡ating that peaie and disarmament a¡e in_ou¡ inlerest and the inte¡est of all humankind. There are perhaps as many reasons as there are walkers, organizers, and supporters from the 47 states*who have eipressed interest in'the Wd k. The Montana fitrmer who donated the wheat is responding to the Ford-Kissinger grain sales to the Soviet Union. Or' ganizers in Vanõouver/Seattle area (which will have a ðar caravan leaving for San Francisco on January 1 ) are focusing oä the Trident Submarine. People in New England will Oe working against nuclear power plants. The Wdl provides an opportunity to be part of a dynamic and exciting event during a year which is not only the bicentennial of the United States, but an election year and the first year"since 1950 in which the US will have no irwolvement in Vietnam Dan Berr¡gan Phil¡p Berrigan Albert Blselow Robert Bly Jul¡an Bond Kay Boyle Harry Boyte Anne Braden M¡llen Brand WALK r Éenjamin spock Dorothy R. Steffens Gloria Steinem l.F. Stone Paul Sweezy Ethel Taylor oeM Studs Terkel Jean Claude van ltall¡e George Wald Art Waskow Cora Weiss BeverlY Woodward Margaret Wr¡ght Andrew Young Ron Voung Frank P. Ze¡dler Carl Z¡etlow REGIONAL ORGANIZING lrma Ziqas SPONSORI NG ORGAN IZATTONS Amerlcan Fr¡ends Service Cômmittee; Cathol¡c Peace F-ellowshlp; Catholic W_orker-: C.tergy & L¿¡ty Conç.erngd; ieilowsh.ip of Re.conciilat¡on; s-ane; southern chrlstian Leadershlp êonrerence¡ wã nls¡siãilleãõiä; i¡åi råi-à'esiliãi'cel [",iî!i.ii:' i'".",!ì:%å hiåT"Î91tf;{J?3it":lg'#r-?t Wöri'íeñ sti¡üe ii rionár Leasue for peace,& . ORIGIN your steps with ours. elman ! Though the idea for the Continental Wal k grew out of a desiie to focus on disarmament, there was a realizatlon from the beginning that disarmament could not be taken in isolation. The struggle against the arms race and militarism must be intertwined withthe strug' gles for social ¡ustice if they are to succeed. - A task force was formed'by lhe 1974 WRL Nation' al Committee to look into doing a maior project on rnilitarism'and disarmament. This task force b¡ought iq a numbpr of interested peace groúps which,'after seveial meetings, decided a cross'country walk focue ing on disarmament wouid bé the most timely and ef' fective proiect. Though'there was general enthusiasm for the idea, ' only the War Resisteri League (in an expanded Executive Committee meeting) gave the4oahead for the project. A proposal was drafted in light of criticisms and comments from several individuals and consultation with a half dozen groups. This proposal called for a May coalition meeting which resulted in the formation of the steering committee for the Walk and the involvement of ten national peace and social justice grouPs. ' We believe that disarmament is the greatest and most urgent challenge facing humanity. We will begin walking to meet that challenge in early 1976. We hope that you will join SIGNERS OF THE CALL TO'THE CONTTNENTAL Bobèrt McAfee Brown Jutes Feiffer Stephen G. Cary W.H. Ferrv Joseph Chalkin James H, Forest Larry cara N.gam Clomsky wllllam Sloane Cotftn Nlchbta ee¡qer Dorothy Qay Atlen c¡nsbõrq Karen Decrow Ed Gu¡nan Dave Dell¡nger Mike Háirinqton Ron Dellums James Hauqñton Shelloy_Douglass Dorothy Héatey James Dougtãss Nat Heñtoff Mart¡n Duberman Donald Katlsh Dånlel Ellsberq Yino Lee Keilev Barbara Ehren-re¡ch Hon-ey Knopp ' Rlchard Falk corl¡s-s uambnt S¡ssy Farenthold Bernard Lee Mlmi Farlna Shirtey Lens fifty bushels of wheat to a ti nen t? from the Call Ralph Abernathy Beila Abzug Robert Alpern M¡chael Ananla Joan Baez Richard Earnet Norma Beckêr Anne M. Bennett 1............ ¡o6uruu wal k across the North American continent? Why would anyone walk across the North American con- of war. . rbl4JÉtll- BY Ed HederÍiann We believe that every step taken by each person on tþe lValk across the nation will be a step toward the distant þut vital goal of disarmament, toward sürvival, toward the alleviation ofthuman zuffering, toward the elimination of the causes ' after extraordinary inteinational preszure, including mass testing of nuclear weapons. It is we the people who have allowed these military machines to be built and it is we who can dismantle them by our action. It is in ou¡ power to say no to the machinery of death. It is in ou¡ power to say yes to life and future. to mãke.wai, DISARMAMENT_ THE REVOLUTTONARY IMPERAT¡VE It is in this spirit that we invite you to join with us in our will begin. Military spending priorities continue.to rob ou¡ sisteis and brothers on this planet of dignity and even of life itself, while continuing to fuel the ûres of inflation and unemployment 4.., is Freedom. Though the Wal k has a steering/coordinating committee (composed of representatives of the sponsoring rAlaska, North Dakota, and Utah are the only holdouts' ENDORSING GROUPS gioups in consultation with represent¿tives from or- '. ãanÞed regions) which meets every twoweeks' most õf the orgãnizing and decision mak¡ng remains at the regional and local levels. The best organ¡zed region to date is in California. A San Francisco office is staffed by four peopleStephanie Brown, Ann Gonski, Steye Ladd and Scott Ullm¡rn. Peter Klotz is the Northern California coordinator, operating out of Santa Cruz, and Mandy Carter is doing the same fol Southern California. Two regional meetings have been held in California, as.well as severàl local ones..Bay Area women are currently drafting a leaflet relating sex¡sm and militarism, and plans are underway for a promotional women's festival, with music, dancing'films, and theater The lnternatioåd Fellowship of Reconciliation recehtly announced plans to coordinate an ¡nternational wal k for Au gu st, '1976, in France, starti ng from the World War I battlegrou nd of Verdun. Bill Wood (New Orleans) has expressed interest in investigating thç possibility of several people floating down the Mississippi from Mipneapolis to New Orleans raising similar issues. This "continental f oat" might intersect the Walk at St. Lou¡s. Other ideas have been suggested: planting trees . along the route, br¡nging a giþantic helium-inflated dove or peace symbol along and 5 million people on lnterstate 40 on July 4, holding hands to link both coasts. Wh¡le some of these ideas are off the wall, a lot of enthusiasm has been generated and people feel that this is an effective, continent-wide event that they can participate in. STRUCTURE OF THE WALK Fifteen years ago the Committee for Nonviolent Ac- tion (CNVA) sponsored the San Francisco tô Moscow Wal k for Peace. Though the current Continental Walk has a lot of similarities with th¡s pioneering effort, the differences are many and significant. The main route of the Wd( beginning in San Èrancisco January 31, will cut through 13 st¿tes before it ends in Washington DC,'sometirñe in October. The several branch routes (see map) will raise the total number of states involved to 32, so far, plus Canada. and Mexico. Though approximately 100 persons have expressed interest in doing long distance walking, the emphasis WIN lnternåtional Confedelation for D¡sarmament & Peace; lnternationat Fellowsh¡p of Reconc¡tiatioh; War Resisters, lnternat¡onat. / i , -.l -æ-.- 5 is on people walking through their own communities to link up with people in the nextones. The Walk is expected to average 15 miles per day-20 miles per day on the open road, and 10 miles in metropolìtan areas (the SF to Moscow Walk averaged 3 miles per day). Organizers in each community are encouraged to not simply "see" the walkers through their community,' but to relate the Walk to local concerns..lflocal peo ple are battling a proposed nuclear power plant or the closing down of a day care center, then the Walk'can incorporate a people's hearing a teach-in, a debate, stage some guerqilla theater, a festival, a demonstration to focus on those concerns. Each step along the Walk, people will be asked to sign a petition. lf we collect 200,000 signatures, we should be able to unroll a petition in Washington, DC, one mile longt. Those of üs working for the national organizing òffice of the Wdk are frantically trying to get buttons, posters, leaflets, and petitions designed, þrinted, and out to organizers. Mary Robinson is coordinating the production of an Organizers' Manual. All this is in addition to taking care of the correspondence, sending out calls (70,000 distributed so far), putting out the bi-weekly Walk NEWS to organizers, keeping the mailing list in order, trying to keep the regions in touch with each other. Though the day-teday operation of the offce is t¿ken care of by Larry Erickson, Joanne Sheehan and Ed Hedemann with help periodically THREE IMPORTANT JANUARY D/|TES ,ANUARY 1-Acar caravan from Vancouver, British Columbia will start a trek down the West Coast, through Seattle and Portland. This caravan will reach Ukiah (California) arou nd lanuary 21. lf you úant to participate, in the caravan, contact the Portland or Seattle organizers. ,ANUAßY 23-People will walk from Ukiah to San Francisco.,ContÃctotganizers in Ukiah if you want to be a part of that leg. ,ANUARY 31-The Walk begins in San Francisco a.i, with a rally. Contact the Bay Area offce for details. They need all the help they can get. for events in DC, send them !o the Continental Walk _ol to Gail Pressberg AFSC, 1 501 Cherry Srree! Philadelphia, PA 191 02. 9flg. coNTtNENTAL WALK ADDRESSFS NATIONAL , W{k, 339 Lafayette Sr., New,york, llç -C-o¡JLn.¡,ql NY 001 2, 212-677-5455. 1 REGIONAL Washington-Tom MacLean, c/o Soup & Salad Rest., 40 Lower Pike Place, Seattle, WA 98101, 206.6235700. 9¡9C31_ çl¡z.aberh Gorm an- Pru n ry, A FSC/CALC, 2032 SE 1 1 St., Portland, Oregon 97214. Northern Califomia: North of Bay Area-David Patton, 817 Cypress Ave., U kiah, CA 9 5482, 7 07 -462-0421. SF Bay Area-The Continental Walk, 1380 Howard St., San Franciscq CA 94103, 411626-6976. South of Bay Area-Peter Klotz, The Continental Walk,127 Franklin St. No. 3, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, 408-425-0436.' Southern Califomia- Mandy Carter, Th e Conti nen tal. Wdk, 3359 Canyon Crest Road, Altadena, CA 91001, 213-797-8973. Arizona-Lani/Joe Gerson, 1114 Maple, Tempe, AZ 85281, 602-967,8431. Texas/Oklahoma- Mary Robí n son, Th e Co nti nental Walk, 1713 W. 11 St., Austin, TX 78703, 5'12-47+ 51 55. Kansas/Missouri-Mike Haught, The Continental Wal k, 3950 Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City, MO 66103, 81G 432-0350. , - Chicago Area-The Continental Wd k, c/o Women for P eace, 2240 N. Li ncol n, Ch i cagq lL, 31 +929-6690. New England-Ed Lazar, AFSC,'48 lnman St., Cambridge, MA 021 39, 617-86+3150. Disarmament is not only ai urgrnt questioir,iecause we may all die in a nuçlear holocaust. Peoplç are sufferingtodoy, in this country and all over the world, because we have not disarmed. . EVery community that the Continent¿l Walk will go through hæ very,pressing needs that are not being met. People are conierned about. jobs, food þrices, housing, adequate medical care, quality education, childcaie, a good publîc transportation system, clean, cheap sourcðs of energy, and many other issues which affect their daily lives. While these needs remain unful- filled, the desires of the military-industlial complex are being met with vast sums of.money, material re sources, and human enerw. ' The focu5 of the Wd k is not only disarmament but also sociat jutstice. As human beings we have a need and a right to live decent lives in a iust Sbciety. ln order for those needs to be met tþq priorities of this country (and most countries) mdTt radiðafly change. The Wal k is a way of calling for those changes. While demanding disarmament we are demanding iur tice. This year the Federal government will pour over $100 billion of our tax money into military programs, thus robbing every community of money that should be used to meet local needs. That's about 55% of our tax dollars that will go to the Pentagon. For an aver' age family of four, according to estimates of SANE, almost $2000 of their taxes will go for military pro grams, while only $300 will go for health care, $257 for education and social services, and $107 for com' munity and regional development. But there is more to it than that. Right now, the United States is in the midst of its , severest economic crisis in four decades. lnflation is eating away at our spending power and millions of peopiè are out of work. Hardest h¡t by th¡s crisis are minority peoples, women and old people. According to various studies by economists and members of Congress, spending on the military is one of the prime causes of our current inflation. As Senator Alan Cranston puts it: "Military expenditures are the most inflationary. They do not produce goods or services people can use, nor do they really cantriblttg to the national security. . .Our cuirent inflation + started with the huge costs of the Vietnam War." '' Further studies reveal, as the Bureau of Labor Statistics noted, that "Dollar for dollar, more jobs can be created by non-military spending" Though the figures vary, all of these studies sho.w that each billion dóllars redirected from military production into civilian production can producg anywhere from 5,000 to 100,000 more jobs. The military's huge cost-over' runs and waste, combined with the need for more highly skilled (and therefore more highly paid) em' ployees for building weapons systems, lead to this situation. Redirecting military spending tó civilian production would not totally elim[nate unemploy' ment but would be a step in that direction. " These studies should help alleviate fears among many that disarmament means putting defense work' ers out of work. A well-planned program of conver' sion carried out over a number of years would help create more iobs and put workers in a more stable iob situation that is dot at the whim of unpredictable milit¿ry spending. But war and the preparations for war have become avery profitable business in this country. Not only are THE CONTINENTAL WALK 339 Lafayette Streêt, New York, NY 10012 212-677-54ss o from Rick Gaumer, Grace Hedemann, Jim Peck, David Mc Reynolds and ,Ralph DiGia and volunteers, we are continually' scrambling to keep our heads above the paperwork. So anyone in the New York City area who would like to help, please give us a call. ln addition, there are special task areas such as long distance wdkers' coordination and traíning (handled by Gail Pressberg), publicity, fund raising and coordination of speakers. THE FINALE Groundwork is underway to develop a scenario for the end of the Walk in Washington, DC. Sometime in October, wal kers will simùltaneously enter Washington from the North, thelSouth, and from the West (maybe even from the East, if,Scott Herrick brings his sail,boat up the Potomac). The Southern route 19 expected to have heavy participation fr:om SCLC. The finale may,be a multi-day evgnt involving a film festival, music, speeches, religióus services, [eafletting, seminars, and preparations for continuing the struggle-si.nce we don't expect the government fo "surrender.r Suggestions for demonstration sites include the White House, Congress, HEW, lRS, Departments of Labor and "Justice." But the most often cited target has been the pentogon lf you have ideas 6 WIN SC ADDRESS-PHONE- hare not I CITY-STATI.. --,1 -- ZI I support the Walk; please keep me info¡med. I would like to walk through my community. I am interested in walking a large palt and perhaps the O whole dista¡ce across the Continent. I would like to be an organizer for the Walk in my citY/¡egis¡' I am willing to house some of the walkers if they stop in lny community. am interested in spgnsoring a long distance walker. Enclosed is $-. to help with the organizing expenses. I can help in other way Plepse send copies,of thc (tall to mc;enclosed --is $to cover rrxpenses. ( I 0rl each, 5 for 251, 100 for $4, 1000 for $35. tsY Joanne Sl'reehan and Steve Ladd WIN 7 m il i tary p rotec t American bu siness í n te rests cou.nrries, it also fills ttre cofàii ãi defense _ojher. contractors here with huge profits. ftle l¡ne between militarv securirv ana corfioiatã ,är"i¡iv'*ì, tong ago 'b;rh erased.as rhe inierests i;;;iåJorä ¡nt.n rwined in rhe mitirary_indu;;¡ia¡;;rõiJ*.'ir,r "f ron porations involved in'defense .ontra&i *lrk hand in h.and with the pentagon ro create powårïu*l'lobbies in Wash i ngton. th ar pusË for. ;; p rï' ilruponr ritirary atIocarioni. In addiriän, ,ililirvryräi:.^T-:119 ncers olten become top executives in busínesses with ,{o:t_'rh. r-n ñ;; conrracrs,.and'many of theie ã^rcîtiu", 9:l:nrr ort"n gain powerful positions in dhe federal so*nrnrnt wh ere rh ey can in fl u enie d;;irñ;;';å;; "'it'itãiï ."_ penditures. What this means is that the struggle for disarma_ ment and s.ociat justice cannor U, iri".iiirl att¿cking the.corporate structure *Àl¿h -h;; øiüä, control over peoples lives and dominates orr. ,ifìt.rv policies. Sì mpt y.march in g agai nsr rh,t; ;;;;;';vr'tä expend¡ture will have only a very'lir¡iéã-"ifrrtor. *,ut unl.ss we. also srrike ar the reason, r", inå'rniriiuiy priorities being set. ' Militarism and arms are inevitably linked pression and dictarorship. Theyarãíh;;;;^to refor qerpetuatin g social i n justic, ui¿ rronãrni, ãppr"u sion. Wirness the US iole,in lÀ¿ãcñini'inîiou¡¿ine pjli?ry_ aid,to hetp overrhrow rhe etecred teaders in r.tlre,.tn atdtng dictators in.South Korea, the philipprnes, and Spaìn; and in aiding otheieóväi;ments to Sppress popular movements for sel f-ãetermination. The military is no lon-ger used to protectour borders or make rhe world safé for ¿"moiruiv,-¡iin iact it ever was. Rarher it is used ro projecr äi,J Jåf.n¿ American pol i ricat un ¿ poïå r"uä roua. I n make. rhe.wortd""onãñiù' safe for ÄÃãi¡rä;r'ãorporare îj9"_ir9 tnvestments, the US mu.st defend and reinfoice those governments that are supportive of our ecolomic interests in their countnes. As opposition movements have become t ",i, .in this country in recent years, repressü more vocal h;, increased on the home fronr. The ,i¡lit"iv riu, pla"y!äTsignincant ro repress trräse måvemJnìs, fl..iT-tlTp.tins rne weapons, tactics. and other technology "no deúeloped by the mititary (pariicutarty i; on numerous occasions been employed by Áormal police Vi;;;öirià forces. Many vererans,orc dirråtly ;l;;iih; and become potice prison or "rry eråiãí ,¡tÀJ, úäruurc th.ey can find no otherwork,är. mititary exp.eriences made tÉem ú;A;;;';h.y ;{: ;rp;; feet their ï.1ürr:täïlor. *,ut of ait thirï i"'i"äråäri"slv kind of work. The resutt mitirarized potice and intrlrigèniä f_;;;'ú;¿ä en tt y, an d br" åi i äouJrrn t !t-It,'T.i ror soctat ch_ange. Any moves for disarmament are,both a chailenge to rhe narure-"ilåóiriäåi therÍ and a means ro blunr US power rh.";ñ;ï;"he r,.* world. ,"r, * .å! tL-r very core of much of Ameriä,s miiitar¡stic po.licies is both racism and,r*irr. roü" iåäää" ¡" this counrry Third WortcJ.proólä url-un ãnt"iii'only to ted.or i gnored. rt,, iitr'r'.äi'dr"r¡rut prioríties.which favor the military "ãiv inãìiriloi""¡r" be. ex.pt oi man's army because they can,t.get jobs anywhere else, only ro be kícked out of the,iï¡iåivïiifltad dis_ charges, far out of proportion t" tr.l,jii in armed serv.ices; when they raise tneir voliËi'against "rriers the- military. racism in the i Women suffer much from the nature of American priorities which favor. military neeãiäùoi. t,rrnun needs. For insrance, the unemployñ"-i;; among women is substantically highei ttrân among men. But the connections between sexism and militäism goes much-deeper than rhar, and in facr ,tri[ä ii'ttl. urry for pe-opte arming. tf we toãt ãià'iàìv åt rhe use power of of peopte, at-possessivenò" äïp"äólä ãi"resources and at one dimensional thintine ;h¡ch ¡ecognizes.only one righr, we ¿iscãuéi it,åsË'to o. uspecrs of milirarism and sexism. wn, ü in irãliry rh;u.ttim.are expression of machismo ãnJ iü, üåur.rt ¡n_ dication rhar men dominare il;;;i.ry';n-Jour wortd rhar rhey have rhe óã*ritä ¿1, úoy it. :11:ll we go ro war because men know no other way tó relate to each other than through äi tn" threat ofviolence. preparation ior"i"l.nrå uálti. iJrurs tr,. many emotional and material interests of men, and ¡lom,!f, nlay ing men,s rot es (Got da M eiianã-l n dira bandhU, trom their m19ho ego interests to their corporare ínreresrs. We bu ild u p"óu r,¡tit"ii i"'i¡aicu lous .proporrions so that we can make sure tr,åt-*å'"iãii,ä' basis l,i,l: , 8 WIN from the public agenda. Meanwhile, as my neighþor can tell you with iustifiably more dismay than I can, New York City residents are about to be subiected to still higher levels of taxation in order to "solve" our financial problems. Oriè reason for our local fiscal crisis is the fact that the Ïr. sociat þstice. tt means thar we ;; ;;;; about food, shetrer, jobs, chitd;";r;ä*ri;_tife "fTJr¿n"¿ ir_ self-than having m'or. arm"ments than any other the capacity to btow ilrã wó,íaïp-' I severat [tmes over. Our government does not share these concerns. To brin! ail poãi ÀrJr.:.åiîuåou, poverry line in l97l,x St t.4 uilt¡on ,orlá''nlu" u..n lr_r{.d. Thar was the tow estimatã thåt vår iå, tfrc :::l[:il! t, &1 Bomber. The developmental exceii ånihr'A_l sz.r uiiliãn_ui;siii;Jää;, forthe vetoed chitd care program . ii" lg'iïi\ needed in.the Federat Menrat H.åtñ'àîäejilr";j "ut to $65 million, the same amount spenr ;ñ ;;; ,-lu u-iirort. Fed.erat Heat th Bi JgãiJrnri*rv *ä, sz. ¡ !* : :l? Dirron whtch is Bom.ber came ro equal to the overrun cost on the c_5a aircraft and main battte tank. fo Ou¡l¿ inã'åõrip ZSO in 1e71,.and pav jj,ôoo r."rñr^Irãräio ør. :1".".! gne yeaf would have cosr g6 billion. By 196éîe had losr 6,000 aircraft ¡n ln¿oitriÀa_lä'rîí¡"írv"rÚ,. qc s.uþwgy ,vitá, Y::Hp:"_l was esrrmared originally e,qual (:!ril;;;;Ëiå"¿lÏl" to çosr $Z.gg Oillion'which,is to the cosr of a nuclear u¡rrrufiunã sü;p; '" '1973,.$3 l1 :fjqt: orgnred areas Not the cities- billion was needed to reuu¡iJ in US cities, but what was it spent on? *Statistics fro¡î articte by Sey mour Metman in Ny TIMES, Dec. 4, 1974. "l ' , "ròughest,, or the ,,manliest,; nii¡ãn'in-i'rr, *ån¿. dominarion of these mititarisiic ãridil;ÌÅ""l. society is one of the most.btata";;i;;;;;;iàr, *uy, that sexist attitudes are reinforced. They perpetuate and reinforce male rule,.mat" powèr, ãnä ,*åiu tudes that very effectivótv "ttiptace,,, *oni""';¡i'ii,i¡r. .!.r'p tn srru ggt es f or gay t iue?atiãn'ii',,uü n orrul.,, 1,119,:! worKlng ïor disarmarnent must mean working for venrures.inro Third Wortd counti¡ei ai tñ" ãipinr" or meeting.human needs here is tÀe bái"ä[ãtiä" how rac.isr ati¡udes shape the páiJir, äiäT'ü's. "rl, i, non-white peoptes who irtrr ,irãsi riã; rh';"-' priorities. tn rhis counrry minority eiãupr'åiärlur¿"rt hir by ¡nflarion and unemptoyrritlr-tïv ;;.-;h" ones who are forced to,,volunteei,;f_ií.,, *f.,i* Over-reliance on technicalities, of course, has draw' backs. As an example there's the case of my generally i ntel I i gent al th ou gh occasional ly reacti onary nei gh bor, who agrees, despite some of his other politics, that pro duction of nuclear overkill is economically unsound and might even concede that it can be iust the least bit dangerous to our security. But there's no way that he's goin-g to warm up to a discussion, for instance, of thé relative merit of multilateral t¡eaties as a means to achieve general and coniplete disarmament, or unilateral disarmament as opposed to'b¡lateral af45 ço.[t: trol negotiations. Just no way. This has been the disarmament problem-it's beon. a specialty item. By our neglect of disarmament while working on various other urgent social concerns, we've conceded it to the specialists. The language of disarmament has been consigned to the realm of iargon. Disarmament is missing from the public forum as well as THE I"SARNANENT CONNEET'ON RICK MAL¡SHCHAK Writing about disarmament is as elusive as'writing about one of those wondrous animals found only in medieval bestiaries. You can supply all sorts of vivid details about its form, size, color, its habits and its personality. You can even give it a name. None of this means that such an animal exists, ever hæ existed, or for that matter ever will. Disarmament is, at this point ¡n his' tory, the dream-stuff of peace activists, researchers and edu cators. , Fables and fantasies, however, can sômetimes touch reality more closely than facts and figures. So far the bulk of what's been written and said about disarmament consists of facts and figures, mostly documenting in various ways disarmament's non-existence. (The best people-oriented primer I know is an article by Homer Jack called "Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Disarmamen! but dídíl't have the time to learn.t' lt's published by SANE and should be read by everyone interested enough in disarmament to be reading this issue of WlN.) lnformation about the technical side of disarmament is a necessity. Rick Mqlishchak is a stoff member of the New York Metropolìton Region of the American Friends Seruice Committee ond works with the þ1 Bomberf Peace'Conversion Compaign. federal government's spending priorities.have been building up the economies of statevwith heav.y concentrâtions of military production, at the expènie of st¿tes like New York which are heavily dependent on civilian production. And one result of this policy has been a net loss to New York City of federal revenues that could have prevented the city's budget crisis if the city had been allowed to spend a just share of its own people's money on its own people's needs. And one result of this is more taxes. The Continental Wd k for Disarmament and Social Justice is going to make a lot of connections-connec' tions between people, connections between com' munities, connections between two coastlines, and connections between and among many local breadand-butter issues and the broader issue of disarmament. The Walk will take disarmament out of the libraries and put it in the streets. lt will begi¡ to make disarma'ment as urgent and immediate an issue in the public . consciousness as it already is in reality. And this is iust where reality meets dream, where fact and fantasy come together. We don't'know whether a disarmed world will come into being..We can't be sure what a substantially disarmed world will look like. But the fact of a world armed to the teeth is a reality. And the assumption that it will require even more armaments to make us secure is not a fantasy, it is a lie, a lie that is in process of starving people in this country and in all parts of the world, people who can't afford to be fed because military power is the top , priority of their governments. lt-i$.a lie that has com- " bined with irresponsible technology to bring us to the ; very edge of mass destruction and megadeath far be yond the limits of our imagination. The dream of disarmament is more real than government policies that revolve around militaristic assumptions. Those policies shut the eyes of their proponents to the human suffering all. around them, the suffering that could be alleviated in a disarmed world. Those policies shut the eyes of their prop.o nents to the unspeakable peril that a nuclearized worl{ must face every day, to the hideous destruction wrought by non-nuclear arms every day. The human cost of our failure to disarm is the only real measure of the magnitude of the crime. The disarmament dream is real because it gives fore most consideration to thd human factor. lt is difficult if not impossible to conceive of a world of social, sexual, racial, and international justice that nontheless remains armed to the teeth. Disarmament includes the wrN 9 process of achieving iustice, and disarmament is a part of that process. Regardless of whether or not the revolutionary âct for American colonists in 1776 was to pick up the gun, it is clear that the truly revolutionary act for all of us in 1976 is to work to see that all the guns are put down, that they are dismantled and their parts used in building a new society and a new planetary consciousness based on respect for human needs and active concern for human grievances. A major focus of the Continental Wd k will be to promote interest in unilateral dísarmamenL Unilateral disarmament is a concept that will frighten and anger many people. lt is also one which needs to be injected into the public debate as a practical alternative to the -current situation of national and global insecurity. We must introduce people to the conceþt in an intelligent and sensitive way. We must educate people to the fact that unilateral disarmament is not surrender. Together with its collateral concept of nonviolent civilian defense, unilateral disarmament is a far cry from the form of surrender that is currently a cornerstone of our national policy, the surrender of our entire population as hostages to the escalating spiral of the nuclear arms race. Just as "Out Now" was at first an extreme position on Vietnam and later came to be widely accepted, unilaterd disarmament needs to be the rallying point, the "cutting edge," of the growing disarmament movement. An ineidental effect of unilateral disarmament's role as political vanguard will be to provide a greater share,of public credibility for other less radical methods of disarmament. Unilatera! initiatives for disarmament are one such method. A foreign policy con- IO WIN sistently based on bold unilateral initiatives would promote trust among peoples and governments, reduce tensions, and encourage reciprocal responses from other nations. Such a policy would include unilateral initiatives in decelerating the arms race (such as stopping the 8.1 bomber) as well as in many other areas (for example, establishing a publicly-held grain reserye earmarked for the poorer nations). As a new idea, the concept of unilateral initiatives will usually be received with much less initial hostility by ears that might otherwise be deaf to the whole notioh of disarmament. It can serve as a viable fall-back position as well as having its own validity and integrity. Two steps that must accompany any serious efforts toward disarmament are conversion and development of an alternative defense system. Conversion can mean either the concept of economic conversion of militar;z industries to civilian production and military bases to civilian uses, or the concept of Peace Conversion. As put forth by the national campaign to stop the B-1 bomber, Peace Conversion includes redirection of tax dollars and industrial production to meet real hqman needs and therefore encompasses economic conversion. ln addition it would include some radical social changes that would be related to disarmament símultaneously as causes (creating conditions favorable to disarmament- and effects (becomine more feasible as progress toward disarmamdnt is madê). lt would mean a decrease in the domestic economic pressures that contribute to acceleration of the arms race. lt would mean the freeing of countless workers who are now in effect economic hostages to the weapons industry. lt would mean improvements in our way of life at home and in the way we relate to our neighbors on planet Earth, improvements that would be impossible in a heavily armed world. lt would enable us to ,,afford" in economic terms a greater degree of trust and mutuality with other peoples. But it would not require blind faith in others, good intentions, the kind of faith that will never mater¡alize, because it would be combined ivith an alternative means of defending human values. Civilian defense or , nonviolent resistancb is a source of tremendous untapped power in achieVing security without recourse to pre-emptive domination. Military power can offer only the promise of mutual destruction, not real security. The long ánd generally overlooked history of nonviolent defense is something that the Walk will seek to publicize. Some''military people who have listened to the case for civilian defense have been impressed, and there is no reasqn to suspect that the public will be any less open to this exciting option of peo ple defending their own culture and their own values, rather than relying on a military establishment that hæ become a source of massive insecurity, both politically and economically. The time is right in the Bicentennial year to in¡tiate public debate on a truly revolutionary means of providing deterrence and defense without the hazards of militarism and a war *ho ur. likely to praise any dictator from Stálin to Franco for "modernizing" their countries and usher- ing then¡ into the 'lindsutrial age." !n the case of E/ Cãudiltð, Nixon happened Jo lead the pack, He.praised Franco ás "a loyal îriend ahd ally of the United States. . .who brought Spain back to economic re' covery" and '¡unified a divided nation through 1 policy of firmness and fairness toward those who had fought against him." At the other end'of thespectrum, ac' cõrdins to some press accounts, unmeasured numbers' Disarmament is also an envirsnmental issue. The for disarmament needs to be taken to people concerned about the quality of life, because nuclear weapons pose the greatest existing threat to the planet. There are enough nuclear weapons already stockpiled to cqnceivably destroy the ozone layer that protects, all living things from ultraviolet radiation. Survivors of a nuclear war would envy those who died in the ¡nitial blasts. The food clrain would bè deStroyed oi setiously damaged. A slow and lingering death would await tbe survivors. Disarmament should also include thetis-' màntling of nuclear power plants and reliance instead on benign souroes of renewable energy. Security can never be achieved in a world in which potentially destructive nuclear materials are permitted to exist and proliferate. Finally disarmament is a means to bring our councase try into a more mutual relationship with other.coun. tríes and peoples. lnterdependence is à fact of lífe ãñd - - Murray Bookchin is well know to WIN readers for his articles on ecological ond social problems' He has wr¡tten, omong mony áooks, Post'Scarc¡ty Anarchism and The Limits of the City. His latest book The Spanish Anarchists is ìn press and will be published this year. Nl) - must receive recognition and embodiment in our political and social institutions. A "balance of power,, between the superpowers is an outmoded concepl There are numerous centers of political gravity, and none are secure unless all are. Especially-terrifying is the research and development that is proceeding on the cruise missile, a potential nuclear Saturday-night special that practically any nation would be able to VIV A fßr+fvCo possess and use. Unless all peoples perceive their mutuality of interest in disarmament, a holocaust may become almost inevitable. Canadians will be foining us in the Continental Walk, and Europeans are planniñg a simu ltaneor.l s di sarmament activity. Disarmament then, is more than the act of elimin- ON DITATII l)l: trllAN0l) ating weapons, and it is also less. lt is more because it involves so many interrelated factors beyond the simple question of whether or not to plan for and to in defense of human values. And it is less because the act of eliminating weapons will itself be part of a larger process of transforming our lives and our societies. AboVe all, disarmament is necessâry. But the one thing disarmament shares with nuclear holo use violence caust is that neither is, in the last analysis, inevitable. History will not proceed without us. Let's point our toes in the right direction, and walk. : Gabriel jackson, a liberal histórian of the socalled "spanish Civil War," some 800,000 died o-ut of those 24million between 1936 and"1945. The figure may ' well have been as high as a million. The "Red Terror" imputed by many historiañs particularly to the Spanish anarchists (for whom Jackson has neither sympathy nor undèrstanding) is belied by Jackson himself in a brief but tell¡ng sentence. "ln Câtalonia and the Levant the anarchists arrested many a landlord and monarchist on the assumption that he had probably backed the uprising, but mostof these people were released when the evidence, and the testimoåy of villageis who had known them for years,.¡ndicatecl they ñad nothing to do with the uprising" By contrast with the admittedly inflated figure of 20,000 executions which he places in the republican zone, fackson observes that the "largest single cate-gory of deaths were the reprisals carried out by the Carlists, the Falangists, and the military themselves. Physical liquidation of the enemy behind the lines was a con' There is a comfortable conclusion toward whích all sectors of opinion are likely'to converge' notably that Franco's death "spells the end ofan era." That Franco may be the "last" of the "old fascists" whose personalities gave a face to the cold technocratic fascism of our own-era has some truth, although Franco's "personali' tv" could accurately be dismissed as one shade of gray ' p;inted on another. ln terms of his personality, the man was a deadening blank. The point seems to be that Franco provided a "face," in contrast to present' day bureaucrats who are indistinguishable from the civilian defense. :t : on boñ sides of ihe Spanish frontier opened their wine îasks and got drunk. I suspect that anlimmense section of Spanish public opinion is refected by those young Madrilenos who, when asked by Anrerican teleíision interviewers why they filed P.ast the coffin, bluntly declared that they wanted tö see if-the "old fascist" was reallY dead. Nonviolent civilian defense is aimed at defending.a people and their culture rather than at protecting only the territory in which they live. lt involves ruñning some risks, but these are of a lesser magnitude than the ones we already run in a world whère nuclear capability breeds nuclear countêr-capability in â s€€nì: ingly'endless cycle. lt involves a major overhaul of public perception of the nature and problem of security. But as a policy ratherthan a belief, it does not require any formidable overhaul of people's moral values. A major objective of the Continental Walk for Disarmament and Social Justice is the promotion of nonviolent ,.\ mdchines they operate. The regime could name ovenidas after him and saddle his'diminutive figure on marble horses in nearly every city in Spain. What could well rescue his reign from the opprobrium it deserves is forgetfulness, not forgiveness. A loss of a sense of history is perhaps the greatest support that could underpin the cult of "relevancy." lt is this for' getfulness, equalled only by thç ignorance that has iettled around the Spain of the thirties, that may well salvage the name of Franco and gxalt his impact on . . :.i Spanish society. Let me stress that if Francisco Franco wæ denied a place beside Hitler.and Stalin as one of histqry's'' most terrifying mass murderers, it was only because of the demographic limitations imposed upon him by the lberiañ peninsula, Hitler had the hundreds of mil' lions of Europe from which to gollect his mountains of corpses; Stalin, the many tens of millions i¡ Russia. Franco was limited to 24 million people. Acêording to Death normally invites eulory-€ven for a Mafia-cJpo Accordingly it'is not surprising that the delth of Francisco Franco summoned up the usual tiibute froin the acolytes of "relevancy"-a genre of people economy. .: cartoon trom Liberation/LNs. llymurrilf bookchln wrN l1 w t ' stant.process throughout the war. The Nationalists h.ad, b.y definition, far more enemies than the revolu_ ttonar¡es: all members of populaf Front parties, all . Masons, all officeho!ders of ucf or õñïrnìon, or ot Casas del Pueblo, ali members of míxed iurìés wtrõ t¡i¿ generally voted in favor of worker demañds. The re pression took place in three stages. At the outbrãil of me war, the arrests and wholesale shootines corresponded to the revolutionary terror in tÈ'e popular Front zone; but there were a great many ,oiu ílitim because such arrests and shoolings were omüulty sanctioned and because so large ãpercentage of the population were considered hõstilä. ln ttràià"on¿ stage, th e National ist Army, conqu rr¡ns .rrü provided a strategic model for Francð by witttdruwing from Paris when his position proved to be unten4ble and returning with a cclnquerìng aimy not to achieve victory but to enact a blgody "fnal iolution:' to the century'long unreSt of the Parisian Sãnvculottes. Franco followed an identical policy' itivins faile¿ to capture the maior cities of Spaìn in luly, 1936, he shifted the thrust of his.rebellioh from as 1871, r ti 6ical m it ¡t¿rv p ro nu n c la m i en fo, to ou tri gh t m¡ ¡ãri'tonor.tt. The.soðial movements that had played io óreutiv'. a role il Spanish history for nearly 70 . This uã"rt *tt" to be utteily uprooted and destroyed. -. *iJ no ideological or iñstitutional act; its goal was ;irlh outright eitermination of every militant erten'every focus of unrest. Forgetfulngss also threatens to conceal the fai?'that' pe:n held by the pop-ular Fron! cairied our heavy l1d repnsats ¡n revenge for thbse of the revolutionaries and rn order to control a hostile populace with few rroops. . , !n !he third stage,'whiit-iirilJåiìeasr inro tJre year "1943, the military authorities carried out mass cou rt-martial s fol I owed by I arge-scal e execu tions. . lf one adds 100,000 ,,battle'casuãlties"_a phræe that ih; ""sp;i;ñ Ciuil wur" was above alhl sweeping social revoluiion-in Burnett Bolloten's wordl, a revolution ';;;;;;;;ioun¿ in some respects thg.tñe. pglslrevi.\ ievoltition in its early stagesl and, I vûould be inclined "I loose often incìuded the execution of prisoners_ to add, in any of its sfages. lt was primarily an anar' chist rêvolutíon, whethér guided by mæsive anarcho svndicalist organizations such as the CNT'FAl or the résult of 70 vãars ofanarchist agitation. Franco irr-iJtåv.ttni wtl"t¡ãn ¡t had the resilienceto return in anything resgmbling its original form after the blood-lettiñg it s-uffered would now be idle specula' üon in view of ïTre changed social conditions in Spain' to the 2Q000 execuriøhs in the republicañ zãne, the f rygoi¡þ^m ay have sysrem atical y slau gh te red ä ose e an d. possi bt y as' m anias g gó, ô00. lo J00,.000_.peopt t-ollowing Franco's military victory in .ig¡g, tnê slaughter began ìn earnesl'lt conti'nued,niéf éniingf y up to the.early.fortíes, when Francq courtinj th; ÃÉ ,lies after Hitler's retreats in Russia, beqan to ieddce I p;ö; the execurions.'possibly as many á SOï,OOó were executed in this fiveyear oeriod. I know of no account of tn¡i carnage more compell_ ing and dramatic than Elena de La Soüchere,s l,whln tjme stood still" in her deeply perceptive *olï Ex p I a n at io nbf Sp øi n. I n Maári¿ aiãñã, ãuË óTrrn"n unt courts-martial tried prisoners in ,,batches,' of 25 and 50. Accusations were merely perfunctory, based primarily on charges of membership in a'íeftìit or_ gan¡zat¡on or participation in public office rather than supportable "atrocitiei." The percentage of those. . . Ài- q accused, rightly or wrongly, of ,blood c"rlmes, was minute," notes Sou.chere. iîollowing an aámonitory hãrangue by the military prosecutoi, the defense was allowed a "brief collectivè plea.', Thãn the entire ìgroup-was sentenced (usually to execution) without the military judges so much as leaving the hearing room. . "A dumber of prisoners spent months and some .. trmes even years on death row and, two or three eveningsa w€ek, were submitted to the anflish of hearing thefr namcs on lhe rollcall of men io be executed the next morning. ln Madrid during the first two years pf the regime, there were at least t-hree hundred m.el il every ,batch.' The conderlned spent their last night in the prison chapel, standing kneeltng, or seated on the stone floor. At dawn, theii. hands were tied behind rheir backs and the iàwe'r l"ü, of their faces were bound with rubber muzzleà so that ñ;hü l¡extricably bou nd !o F ranço's v ictory,-h oweveq wæ-the aid he'acquired from the Spanish Communist Party. lt ls impossible to write the,biography of- Franco, to giue an accöunt of his "National Movemen!" or to exõlain his success without stressing the counterrevolu' ' tionary role of Stalin and the Communists in Spain' From ihe murder of Andres Nin in a sec.ret Stalinist orison to the Communist execúTion teams who shot wounded anarchist m¡lit¡amen during the Battle of the Ebro, the'history of the Commi¡nists has been marked by such a ruthless commitment to counter' revolutiori that it bears comparison only with Ebert and Noske in Germany. The comparison was made in the most cutt¡ng fashiôn by Camillo Berr¡eri, o-1e. o{ the most widelf respected ltalian anarchists of his day, shortly before Íre too was killed by Stalinist agents in I Mav. i937. in iá t¡môiom" of us ôdme to realize that lhe Communilt ParW's activitíes formed perhaps the most imoortant oTthe unwritten chapters in the history of fascism. 1o place the party on the "left" had - Späniqh nìarfd¿ our deference more to symbolism, rhetoric, and tradition than.to political reality. What now boggles my mind is how little this harsh fact is underítoo'cl ioday'within and, far less excusably, putside of Spain. The'emergence of a -neostal i ni:lll :o wi despread . Baic'elona that it,can enraoiure contributors-to WIN as well the hacks wtro wìite for the Guardlan is evidehce of a 'forgetfulness" much closer to ¡tupidity than to a lack as ,l i I L \ the ðh"ns". Sut ìt is utterlv unforgivablê that American "' J Ëu top.un rad ical iirtel lectu al s, part¡cu arl y th ose;: "n *ñå orofäs a non'authoritarian approach, so readily trtr.n¿tt their moral probity with each change in the political winds as to réinforce the illusion that the i I ' bommunist parties are soqially redeemable'4 Here the cult of the 'irelevant" and'the "contempora-rY-" þetrays itself as ihe lack of an orgañic ¡nsight in which thèr b-ackground of events is sãen as much a part of the future as the Present. Franco's victory in 1939 did iiot form the prelude'to 'the.second Woild War as the historians tell us. lt marked the definitive end of the classical wórking class revolutions wtiich began in 1848 wi$ the June inzurrection of the Parisiañ proletariat. 9lép by step¡ each maior Eurooean countiy exhausted'this heritage, ¡ heritage from which traditional anarchism and socialism de-rived their hopes and their theoretical equip- . ment. ln France, all the later fireworks notw¡thstanding the heritage'ended with the fall of the Commune ¡n'i gZl. Thereafter, the French proletariat neler seriously challenged the established order a5o class, howevei.theatricá its participalion in the events gf the ' thirties and the sixties. lndeed, as a class its activity was siohoned into ¡nst¡tütionalized parties 44d unions, organizations to which it has been obedient for more thãn a century. Evenûally, it was not Thier5 and his exeçutioners who were to bring the revoh¡tionary heri' t¿se of the French working class to an end, but the adueit of modern largescale industry and the powerful . ;i;;i ;l i ; ; ;; ãiåi"íí"¿ p"n th e wórke rs th emselv ei. " was almost certainly over by ln Germanv. this era in ù20, revealing itself the assimilation of the Social Demócratic an-d Communist partie¡ to the capitalist svstem.t ln Russia, tho era ended wÌth the crushing of : the Kronstadt saiíors in'1921. Americ4 the center largescale industry and mass production pør excellence, less . neüer even rose to the level of a labor Par'tY, much an insu rrectionarv Proletariat. Militancv and viblence should never be confusedi with revolutionary behavior and revolutionary action. The American class struggle has been militant gngu$, but rarely hæ it evolved tb the Jevq! in which sizablé nqmbers'of workers were to châlleñge.the social ordern . of | :l itielf.'lndeed, never has it risen to tlie leve! of consciousness wliere self-activity coùld yield the promise of rñemory. As if the verdict of Spain were not enough, a recent verdict from'Portugal m.ight seem to suffcã for vears to come. "The Communists have let ús down again," b¡tterly declared a leftist iournalist in Lisbon aftãr tÉe recent'military uprising, "as they.let the rest of the left down in Chile after the coup."3 l¡ is time to regognize that this is neither "treachery" nor "betrayal" but the conseq!.ences of a totally mis' pl aced belief i n the revolútionary nature of auth orítar3. THE NEW YORK TIMES, November 12 ian "s'ocialism" as such. The Communist Party in every "left" than Fiinco s Falangei it can no more be-"red-baited" thän ' the followers oi George Wallace or Ronald Reagan' To sþeak frankly, however, I strongly. fear' that lhis verdict will not sufiìce. lt is understandable'that sl"nistr oeople, who have been*denied access to their ãwn r'r¡stbtv, will see in the well.financed and well:"ori ea"i*a Spáñ¡str Communist Party á lever f9r soSial ,^ aountry of the wprld is no more on the wtN 27' L975. wtN rancisco Franco in 1970. Photo from LNS. 13 of self-management which we assoc¡ate witlr a libertar- ian socialist society. Späin alone r"ri¡.d the classical rradition WeÛ our own century. Here, every classical working class movemenÇ ndeed, al most every revol u tionary sect, .i played out its programmatic role with guns inhand. Each exhibited its possibilities and limitat¡ons with¡n the traditional framewòrk that had been created by úe 1840s. With the collap¡e of the Span¡sh revoluiion into â As a sizable part of the urban ¡iopulation, _ More enigmaiic than the managerial sector ii the Spanish worlçing class-the class tñat stlll forms the great hope of the thirties' generation on both sides of the Pyrenees. Except fgr the Basque region, it would h.ave been diffcult by present-day standards to regard this class as fully industrialized 40 years ago. ln Bãrcelona, the textile workers who were to fiil the ranks the CNT were largely employed in shops of less than -of a hundred workers.owned as family concerns. Often, - century. class is a supportive army of salesmen, lechnicians, stat¡stiqal analysts, advertizi ng I egmen, accou ntants, bookkeepers, secretaries, typists, ieceition ists¡ and clerks-qll oriented toward the Spanish version of the "Americån dream" of upward mobility and suburban amenities. The susceptibility of this sèctor to social radicalism is likely to._be minírhal, if not non-existent; it is liberal àt béstand by no means.totally bereft of authoritarian procliv¡t¡es. lt may desirøa more democratic form of golernment in which to voice its ínterests,:but certain. lybne that is moderate, prudent, and well-tamea. Sulch a sector did not exist on a large scale in the thirties I wlN sle for their practical day'teday interests' Their orËanization wìll no longer presuppose a radical change i'n society; rather, it wìll presuppose precisely .the op- o"iit", íítrusele'with kinJ capitalism, notagoinst it' This of struglte is intrinsically a negotiabl.e.one that älóurs wittriñthe parameters of the prevailing.social ielãtíóntnips, As tb the precaþitalist ru-ral. origins of iñã piot.tar¡at, they wili disappear with the pueblo itseit'Rgr¡uus¡nêss li'es as much in store for Spain as i¡ fåi F;;;ce'and with the devêlopment of agri" ñ;¡;;;t, th. erosion of the peasantry as a force for social revolution. t ã;; A "unified" Spanish labor movement had already.befãrnô th" cry bf ttre CNT during the "spanish civil Wár.;'1o t¡'e degree tlrat it was achieved,-it benefited n"ìtll", the anarãhosyndicalist segment of the labor i n prof lanco rally in Madrid. Photo by Henr¡ Bureau/LNs' 'the most radical of these workers weró of recent rui.al backgrounds, at most a generation removed from a peasant or craftsman status. A marked tension tìe, tryegn t{re intimacy òf the pueblo and rhe a4onymity ofthe city, between work regulated by the ôeasóns and work regr:lated by the clock, exacerbated the ubiquitous m¿terial misery that burdened Spanlsh life and evoked a fiery, intensely libertarian response, Not surprisingly, Mad-rid, a city composed of bureaucrats, .retailers, and craftsmen had a predominantly Socialiít "proletariat." The construction workers in thì! capital ' were mainly anarchosyndicalists. The Barcelona . workers were overwhelmingly anarchosyndicalistsj the , more'privileged railroad workers ând thä skilled machinists in the repair shop3 tended even in Catalonia toward the Socialists. One could clearly, delineate.be tween 4 hereditary proletariat and a transitional one- i the former drifting into Socialist unions, the latter into anarch osyndical ist ones. Tlu Spanish workers of the seventies are,increasingly thé creatures of multinational corporations-in pari, too, emigre workers who have been.émployea Uy liini industrial enterprises in France and Germany..Oêñ¡te the arducjus nature of their work and the comparúively low wages they earn, they are in a very significant sense a part of the industrial bureaucracy ofmodernday capitalism. Unlike the old patronal system which imparte'd a"face" and a certain comprehensibjlity to Spanish capitalism, the modern corporate structure is anonymous and totally bereft of human scale. Tq the Barcelona workers of the thirties, ,,col, lectivization" with its condomitantsystem of self' management at the base of the economy, had authenticallyþersonal character. The popularity of . \ , an .t 14 the, ago. syndicalist or Marxist, libert¿rian or authoritarian came to an end. As in France, modern industry with its concomjtantshifts in population from the countryside to the.cíties, its reformist working class, its merger with the state, its use of econornió contiols, is Fostering of a technocratic sensibility and hierarchical mentality, and its wíde commercial baæ-dliháve comþìned tochange Spain more profoundly in the past decade than in tlre past The extent of these changesrcan'be measured by the.occupational shifts ryithín the Spanish pòpuUtion itself. Spain, ¿s seen through the picaresquò n'ovels of its traditional authors or the misty eyes óf romantic tou rists, has long been categori zed aí a hopelessly pre industrial nation, almost as though a tradiiional national temperament could perpefually surmount fundamental economic realities. This'vision might have had sorne,validity as recently as .l960,-embraci when arliculture w¿s,stil I the cou ntry's major adtivity, n-g nearly population. Within a mer'e span of 12 years, !.2/o 9!-t\ the shift from rural to urban occupations has been specqcular. By 1972, only 27o/o oi the Spanish people we¡e involved Ín agrículture and the trend is stlli down. q is most significant,buffer tg "extremism.f, The new managerial çlass and the aspirants that follow in its wake form the mass base- for a constitutional monarchy oi a republic and wôuld in themselves be sufficient to cushion the shockwaves that plunged Spain into social revolution 40 years i ' full history of proletariàn socialism-whether ward. By far the overwhelming majority of Spaniards are noq éngagg{ in industrial frodúction, constructioh, service activities, managerial tasks, profgssional woik, com merce and govèrmental responsibíl jties. Con. temporary Spain ranks 1Oth among the most indus trialized nations in its gross nationãl producl The gross national product has been íncreasing at a rate of about.T% to 8% annually. Foreign inriestñent in Spain is enormous. Despite thé recentãconomic slump which reduced.the labor force in the American auto'industry ' by .113, Ford continued'to invest some g35O millipn in its installations in Spafn. As one State Department 'official recently'observed: "Spain is now onè of the most hçavíly industrialized nations in the world;,, The shift in Spain from agriculture to industr,y and commerce has created an entirely nàw constellation of social forces with new political, cultural, and temperamental realities. Spain npw possesses a substantiaí managerial class, mor.e American in its outlook than Hispanic. The.a,bractJo is giv_ing way to the handshake;, the siesta to thè luncheon. Suirounding this manageriái it :\, movement nor the Socialist, but primarily the Communist. Today, a "unified" Spanish labor. movement lôrtainly be controlled bv the Communist råüiJ Þãrtr Ànotl'tdr harsh'fact must be faced concerning iõ"ìílt Uv nearly every account available to this writer, ;Ë'$;1tíì õäÅl*unitt Partv is the best-organizèd as best'financed political movement in Spain' Its membership has been estimated to be as hi-gh as Sõ.ö0ó in¿ is ïmost certainly not less than 30,000' Membership in an illegal organization has a very tenuous meaning to be surg a4d the Communlsts have ltáii *"lfîin. irotoriously inflàied their membership figures in all their parfiós. But there does seem to be widespread aqreement, even among opponents of the Communists, tñat no poiitical organi-zation in Spain has comparable Dower and lllegality itself confers this advantage on the comrunitíÞuitv, ¡rtt ut it sbrvei ttl impari a d-emocraüic,, nearly anarihiô character to the Workers' Commissioñs-, The Óommunists commind resources from abroad thai other potentially larger illegal organizations clearlylack, fheir oosiiion ls also ènhanced by' the aura of fo*"t that'emanades from their affiliations with the 'iEastern Bloc":ih Europe, even though the largest of the two Communist parties in Spain opposed the Rus' :sian invasion of Czechoslovakia and probably has very little access to Soviet resources. The Spanish Communist party divided o'ver.the invasion oi Czechoslovakia in 1969. The "offcial" Com' mun¡st Party (i.e. Soviet controlled) is currently.guided bv Lister. tÉe notorious Stalinist who forcibly disbånded the anarchist collectives in Aragon during the Spanish Revolution. The "unoffioial" party is led- by C'orrillo and probably has the greatest amount of sup- ' resources. wrN 15 .f, il * Spanlsh pêasants g¡vln9 the republican sâlute in 1936. Photo bY Chim. . port on the Penninsula. Corri[o has tried to build etian-styte parry wi th ¡u ppàri f;;;'M;;.h isrs I an seem to have much less. inhuence among the Spanish rhe press.has red us ro beliäv;;ai¡houó as :nif:1,{ll mey and the Coímmunists would seem to Uó ttre mõst likely.hein of rhe commissions-iri stráii i frenctrt1v m o1e.mf rh eroricar y uu t I ns f9^ l.l :l þ. maücaly retorm¡st ând bureaucratic. ^¿il¿i, At the present- weu as ttberals and has directed its appeat to almostl any willing ear in Sparn. ized, falriy wel l-kn it and,,effici ent,,, the Lommunrsts create ar image of- considerable power, an ^^ iq"gç rhar is nor wirhour ittr"uó,i-iã-"i-y'sóiliård; who have been raughr to resfeii'fo*ði¡v ir," dictarorshþ. irself. ey contäsq trrt coírLìrrion, (wnrcn are by no means controlled by the Communists) must adopt decentralized forms of toose, ntghfy democratic strucû.¡res "íe^nlrüron'^ì¿'--', if they are to main. tain the widespread adhe¡ence trrev enioíiñ strucûrres which oolitical partíes pruaónity avoid as too libertarian. Between. the comparatively well-organized Communtsts and the loosely organized Woikers, Commi* sions, the Social isrs, reþu biÍcans, òonriiõ'tioi¿'-" "monarchists, and nationalistic parties live in a contra. d rv. rratisric i n ir, éorv, ir, ãi' ;;"y';;-"" .Cen lp-r:l_ f i lt-organtzed existence in reality. Accordiñþly the Com_ munists have been buoyed to the top àittiirfËgál -"' political world of Spairi_an¿ I muit emp-tra-sire ttre word.,,political" betause the Workers' Commissions and the anarchists.face an entirety àif.i*ïTitration_ !ï!4 i õñ;':"' piecisely because of the dictato"'f,¡p, nåi'¿"rpite ii. size.of rhe mana;eñå1, óioiä¡on"l, 1|r. and wntte collar sectors of Spanish socièt¡ I strongíy doubt if the Communis.rs would be sûong as they,are roday if organizations ihar ãppåäf tt, ,ñùi_ qte classes were free to function in Spain. lt remäins ,,"rüoãó supreme.ly ironical that Franco,s cómmunism" has ultimately done more to èiiaUiùn "e"inri*re -ó¡ng Communists as rhe largest politicaig-in Spain "c:ïiÍïlq ñrliäs ì" i,1l'iä ; Jffiïi a pur t rñ m ñ u si i a n' ¿ ai d " ""1!ïr'-'16' The Workers' Commissions are large, anarchic in structure., and too naive in their aqtitridä towail ' ' hardened. potiticals tike rhe comnirnúìi tã iål¡r, ì m ptici t i n th e i r Jrv iãr-,;ù; i;t. ; r¡;;y 91ry::'-tlfre oo nol proless to þe a substitute for an instituiionalizäd trad.e union federation. ln the event tlr"ilï.v *.i. tt. , ' q'y L1_'l ¡:gl "'"" wou Id qu ic kly beco;; ; b;;iíegrou Tor conllt_cting social movements, such as the mu nþ1s, Socialists, .nd -Catholics na õom- il.,u Cor_, believed to,,cor¡ fr,ljr,ts, who are often mistake¡ly"n"r"ñLir. r,"rmissions, reporredly have been very rnuch 1191-^,11: g1::rydl*d among rhem owing ro rhe parry,s faiÍure ro ,strike. supporr the recent Bæque general 16 WIN The Socialists I time, however, the traditional PSOE (Spanirt, So"i"lir, l"rtv,.to us.e. the offcial name of the organiza_ -Y_olÍ!ll uon, ¡s in congiderable disarray and itscapaciry io influence Spanish events depenai neavity uloñ its iãeãii_ zation. ú;;d;; q n Tlre. great unknown in Spain is the size and influence of the anarchisr groups. fne nmeiiiaï pieìs an¿ tne . respectable anti-Franco ju.ntas thatt uã"n rJriäiãing governments and the public for financial "uå assistance are patentty unwilling ro acknowledgu unv ániüi¡rt pl9selce tn spain until evidence of anarchist act¡vitíes lreraly explodes in the form of dramatic otentodos Even anarchisrs abroad had beþñ.ió'ã.róiii'tr,¿ ur. memory of an im mense anarchãsy ndi."t¡!i riãuãränt in the rhirrìes had any rn."n¡neõi Spãi;;:il" seventres. As recentlv as afew weeks ago, the most pes simisric accounrs I häard d;;ùj;ñ;;;";'.ii!t.nr" or an anarchist movement in such trad¡tioíaf Ceïþrs of anarch ism as Barcel ona and Zaragoìi. occasìänal ac_ tions by spanish anarchisrs;;mË¿ to u'" iiìiiä ,orc than episodic gve.n!¡, carried Uv imill groups whtch had filtered in from France. is now evidence that tt,i, iråi. i, inàccurate. _ Therepolice roundups ot scores of anarchists reveal F-r-..llt mar me slze and certainly the influence of the move y. u nberest¡ m atã¿. Ri ih orì gh I trav enr-: I lit^|"_:n äõ;ñ' "f -greatt lJ)Eg 9louCh confticting opinionó ro wonder ütrett¡ei' large or very small, t am quite it:.:::l",rynr-is,very conv.tnced f.rgT t!" police arrests that s naf n ou rishes :i:::lil1,ilrh,i.n organtzarton. tt would1 indeed an indigenous isr .riiu i ty .n a an arch be surprising that a CNT or at leasr CNT nuclei do nor exist iri 5pán'ii¡, i"rtori., and vittages.. Acknowtedsement of C¡lïüïiuitv .ppears even in Workers' Cãmmission ¿orumËnt, I tr.u" read. It is also clear that the anarchist movement in the '"':j"::?1., flsge1 tga n teimi ãrîilåäor osv i'^" f f ! ¡ ano practtce. lt ¡s d¡vided between the exiles abroa-d and.lfe, "iltegats,' in Spain; betw..n ,.oiJ iiÃ.ir;är¿ youm; Detween those who emphasize propaganda and oth.ers who demand action;.beiwe.n ii¡rüu¡ïi'n, ,"r,o feel that many Marxian conteprs can no longãiU. ij nored and the adherents of a làrgely moral antiauthoritarianism. Finally, it is divided between those who wish to retain anarchosyndicalist doctrine in all its orthodoxy and individuals who believe that tradítional'anarchism and Marxism must bê transcended by a new form of libert¿rian socialism. The divisions between the exiles and indigenous groups or the old and young.are themselves quite tradi' iional and occurred throughout the history ofthé anarchist movement in Spain. The need to perpetuate orthodoxy or transcend it in the face of historic social developmônts-this, quite aside from the old battle be tween revolu tio4ary pu rism -and reformist accomodation- is the most i¡teresti n g- of. al l. Owi n g to th e. ill egal nature of the movemenÇ it is diffcult to determine whether the trend away from orfhodoxy is nourished by Maoist or New Left influences. Unlíke other western European. countries¡ Spaiñ'has had only a zuperficial contact with the New Left concepts of the sixties. The illegality of worken' organizt tions and the political character of many strikes have made the Spanish Left highly working-class oriented. Critiques of the labor movement so common in the United States are not readily accepted by Spanish . revol u ti on ary organizati ons. E normou s si gn ifi cance is attached to the working class in changing Spanish society-not merely by left and center organizations but evdn by "enlightened" sectors of the bourgeoisie which see an institutionalized labor movement as a safety valve in preventing an avoidable class war. Ac' cordingly, the primary reform in Sþain is seen to be not mãreiy the legalization of "responsible" political parties, but more significandy, "responsible" trade unions. I suspect that evgn a well-groomed syndicalíst federation wóuld be acceptable; a federation that would al,most certaínly render a milltant revolutionary anarchist movement inconseque¡tial. The greatest single prop to the Franco dictatorship has been the United States, and the Amçrican people re main more deeply implicated in Spanish developments than any other in the world. American aid rescued the dictatorsh¡p during its most d¡fficult period in the fifties when the peninsula mov'ed cl.oser to revolution than atanv time since 1936. American investments and tourism nourished the dictatorship throughout the sixties. American military bases in Spain remind the people that the regime has reserves over and beyond its police and armed forces upon which it can call in the,event of any decisive crisis. lndeed, American and Spanish military forces have trained. together and vague clauses in the mil[tary agreements between the two countries allow for armed American intervention in Spanish internal affai,is. Visits bi'Nixon and Ford have reinforced Franco's sagging þrestige in precarious periods of the dictator's rule. Today, the one featr¡re that vitiates any meanirrgful analysis of Spanish conditions is a gnawing sense of un' certa¡nry. We know from the foreign press that popular resistance gccurs daily and on a wid'espread scale. But the true relationshíp of forces within the army, the church, the working class, the middle classes, the na' tional groups, and the resistance organizations has been effectively obscured by the regime. As long as the free expression of ideas is forbidden, all the strat¿ that compose Spanish society and the groups that profess to speak in their name do not even know theiF own strength and influence. This sense of mutual ignorance, sustained partly by the legitimation the United States gives tq the rei¡ime, represents a very explosive factor in Spanish social development. lt mai COUNTRY SIORE ' )'.t . Movement fof a New soclety, 4722 Bal-ll-. .' morê Av€.,,Phlladelph¡a, Pa 19143. or '.MISC: call 215-SA+18q8, collect. Know of others?. sproad the word. BUY.TCENTE NNIAL RECESSION BLUES? ... what thJs,econgmy needs ls an American RevoluUon! PÉoples B¡centenhlal commlg s¡on, wdsh¡ngton, Dc 20036. . .' Anyone interested ln'actlve in alternat¡vs AMATEUR RADIO? Please wrlte Dwlght E/nest, c/o WlN. THE CONTINENTAL WALK NEEOS A CAR3 Expôctod to accompany the'Walk are two v€hicles: â truck (should ÞéW or V¡ ton pafiel truck, van, or step, van'of AmelicEn måko (chry.sler, GM or Fordl' 6-cyllndor stralght €riglne and automatic trañsmlssion) to càrry equlpment' med¡cal suppll€s, injuÌed or tlred walkers and foodi D ¡ 0 trr lt llo a¡ livobl Èut l¡rlid.lotowotúù erttÙh.at forarL ' lectior of wer pocms by Vietnrmvctc ". . .The nort eloquent ¡t¡te¡ncnt of urh¡t lhe wnr i¡ th¡t I h¡ve ¡ecn firqn its puticipmtr,- - Nqwtueck PËTE SEEGER, OAVID AMRAM' BEV ' ...1.... .GRANTi THE HUMAN CONOITION, 'HAPPY TRAUM are.do¡ng a benefrt concert for the LiÞèration N€ws Señ¡ce, January 24th. ln NYC. l6 further detalls, or rñont Ave., NVC too27,2L2- ' ì NY Í0012, 2!2-677-5455. ' .PRODUCTS '' NEW!! MAIL ORDER CATALOGUE OF WOMEN'S. LABOR. FOLK AND O]IHFR Þoutrtcnu REcoRDs' s€nd stampr Eroao and Ro6ss, !724 2Ûtn St' NW, Oc 2oOO9. l'oster of DOROTHY DAY ; Photo bY Bob Fitch, showing Dorotlty Day conr fronting potice on a farmworken picket line in Califomia' 1973. 17" x 22". \ NONCOMPETITIVE GAMES fOT ChIIdf€N and adults. Play togeth€r not agalnst each othar. Fre€ catãlog¡ Famlly Pastlmes, RR 4 Pèrth, Ontarlo, canada K7H 3C6. , óHÀNTI PUBLICATIONS REVOLUTTON AND EQUILIBRIUM by Darbara Deming ". . .a se¡ies of VEGETARIAN TIMES: ThO ÍnA9AZINE Of tho oantter culslne' Subscrlptlons: t5¡/t ¡9 sh¡dies sues]Sampte 75d' vegetarlan Tlmesr c/,owlÑ, PO àox A31o4, chlcago' lll 60690. 346, ¡&95).. Brlitol, Rhod€ lsland o2Eo9. .i Looklng for Reglstor€d Nurso lnt€rostod ln Prsvontlvè,Medlclne, Health Edücatlon, Hèålth Carb Alt€rnåtlves. Poslt¡on'âìra¡lable now ln Appalachlañ county of Southbâstern Ohlo. Wrlts or'call Bruce Ashley, Adams Brown Medlcal Cèntêr, Rt. I, Box lO, West Unlon, Ohlo 45693. (5r3549.2346 ot 547: 22361. .. 8ls€xual fom¡nlst people lnto radlcal soclal change, nutrltlon-vitality, personal liberatlon. dêd¡cated to hon€sty an