The State Is Not a Window (Iconoclast)
By Heatscore
Iconoclast
Both the corporate and alternative media have been abuzz over the actions of the several hundred participants of a black bloc contingent that smashed the windows of a Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) retail store and TD bank, as part of the “Heart Attack” mobilization on February 13th, during the Anti-Olympic Convergence in Vancouver.
As could be expected, the corporate media seized upon the sensationalism, inherent in the action, to portray the protestors as violent, anti-social hooligans. The CBC was quick to condemn the incident; a “breaking news” report entitled “Anti-Olympic rioters smash Vancouver store windows” included a quote from Vancouver police chief Jim Chu in which he described the black bloc protesters as a “loose collection of thugs from Central Canada, known to attach themselves to any cause, travel to any event that attracts media coverage and promote anarchy wherever they go.” This type of blanket generalization, combined with a deliberate suppression of contextual factors and an accompanying narrative of “restraint” on the part of the police, are the hallmarks of a corporate media whose interests are directly opposed to those of the protesters. So… no surprise there.
What was more shocking, however, was the rabid nationalism, and vitriol of the public backlash that followed. The online CBC article quoted above was rapidly inundated with thousands of responses from readers across the country, which overwhelmingly condemned the protesters as “terrorists”, “cowards” and “scum.” A similar article on the website of CanWest’s Vancouver Sun elicited an even harsher chorus, with a litany of (largely anonymous) posters suggesting that the protesters should be sent to Afghanistan or Guantanamo, locked up for the remainder of the games, water-boarded or even “boiled in oil.” Beyond these helpful suggestions, dozens of different posts suggested that the Canadian security forces should be taking lessons on crowd control from their Chinese and Iranian counterparts.
And it wasn’t just fair-weather fascists, jacked up on righteous nationalistic anger, who took aim at the black bloc. Many moderate progressive commentators were also furious.
Writing for rabble.ca, Judy Rebick ripped into the members of the black bloc, accusing them of dividing “the movement”, endangering peaceful protesters and risking the derailment of “the important Indigenous rights, anti-poverty and anti-corporate messages of the thousands of protesters on the streets of Vancouver.”
Blogging on linchpin.ca, Mick Sweetman vented his frustrations against the insurrectionalist tactics of the bloc, accusing them of sabotaging the years of hard work put into organizing against the Olympic Games, and further contributing to the public’s perception of anarchism as “mindless criminality.”
These two authors were not alone in their criticisms – the majority of which tended to frame the black bloc protesters as a fringe element whose actions destabilized and hijacked an otherwise morally justified anti-Olympic campaign. What these arguments largely failed to recognize was that many members of the black bloc were actually quite engaged in other, more “respectable,” aspects of the Convergence – such as the more family-friendly “Take Back Our City” march the day before, and the tent city established in Vancouver’s downtown east-side on February 15th – and in fact comprised some of the most committed organizers of the Olympic Resistance Network (ORN). Indeed, the actions were planned into the framework of the Convergence, and purposefully timed so as not to conflict with any of the more traditional marches and protests. That being said, the concerns that they raised are valid, and should not be entirely dismissed (nor should the reaction within the public at large). It is this type of insular thinking that contributes to anarchism’s continued political marginalization.
Two of the primary arguments made by black bloc supporters to justify the actions were that they did not in fact constitute violence, and that they were necessary in order to attract media attention.
The question of whether or not property destruction constitutes violence has been a source of contentious debate within the anarchist movement for years. Advocates of property destruction rightly point to the fact that the targets of their attacks are not human, and are in fact merely physical representations of corporations whose actions constitute vastly disproportionate levels of violence. The Hudson’s Bay Company, for instance, has a grotesque amount of blood on its proverbial hands, owing to its history of cooperation in, and facilitation of, the genocide of this country’s First Nations. Clearly a broken pane of glass pales in comparison to this corporation’s track record of crimes against humanity… so why the fuss?
While I am inclined to agree, the point is largely irrelevant. When dealing with public protests, whether or not something morally constitutes violence is not as important as whether or not it is perceived as violent by the public at large. The important thing is that the majority of the public viewed the actions as violent, and many viewed the accompanying police violence as entirely justified. It is ridiculous to think that a $1 billion dollar security budget could be justified as a response to the “threats” posed by several hundred anarchists…but unfortunately that will be the message taken away by the majority of those who viewed the news reports – many of whom will not take the time to contemplate the moral justification posed by the bloc (which won’t be available to them anyway, owing to the corporate nature of mass media).
This brings me to the second argument – that the action was necessary to attract media attention. This argument was posed by The Stimulator of submedia.tv, himself a resident of Vancouver, in his online podcast summarizing the events of the Convergence. He noted that major media outlets such as CNN and Fox ignored the much better attended peaceful protests, such as those that took place the day before the “Heart Attack” actions, but broadcast live footage of the black bloc tactics and ensuring confrontation with police to the entire world. While I respect the Stimulator, and am a big fan of his work, I am a bit confused as to why he feels that the “attention” of those he refers to as the “corporate boot-lickers of the ass-crunching corporate media” is tactically beneficial. The corporate media would not broadcast these actions if they perceived them as a threat. On the contrary, actions like these actually serve their interests - and the class interests of their billionaire shareholders - by portraying a one-dimensional caricature of anarchists as violent delinquents that provokes a populist nationalistic response. To seek the validation of predatory corporate media outlets as an end as opposed to a means is to do a disservice to the massive gains made in the past decade by alternative media. The Vancouver Media Co-Op (VMC) broadcast excellent coverage of the events on its website and was probably the greatest thing to come out of the Convergence, and the Stimulator played a large role in contributing to its success. Projects like this (and Stimulator’s own site) are Indeed “the megaphone of the resistance.” The corporate media is the enemy of the resistance - not a tool to be used to ferment revolutionary sentiment.
While I understand the motivations behind those who smashed the windows, and also appreciate the tactical benefits of masking up and dressing all in black to thwart detection from integrated state surveillance and to avoid arrest, I think that it is time to seriously question the tactical benefits of largely symbolic property damage that has become synonymous with black bloc actions. If it was not plainly evident during the debacle that ensued following the “Financial Fools” action against the IMF in London, UK last year (in which the police passively watched as several black bloc protesters smashed a window at the Royal Bank of Scotland [RBS], and then immediately used the actions as a pretense for mass arrests), it should be by now. Property destruction can certainly be used effectively as a tool of direct action – as shown by both its long history in labour struggles (generally classified as “sabotage”) and its more recent manifestations in the radical environmental movement – but it must not devolve into the stale, ritualistic practice of smashing of a few windows at a protest.
The organizers of the “Heart Attack” set out to “clog the arteries of capitalism.” While this was and remains a laudable goal, the “arteries of capitalism” are not the shop fronts of its corporate criminals, but the transportation and delivery systems of capital and resources. These are the vulnerabilities of a system that is predicated on the constant flow of resources and cheap consumer products, and these are the most logical targets of anyone who feels the need to channel their rage towards insurrectionalist tactics.
Leading up to the protests in Vancouver, it was said that the true benefits of the Convergence would be the enduring relationships and networks forged through years of shared organizing and mutual struggle. Hopefully any divisions sewn by the black bloc’s actions (and the corresponding failure of some of their more moderate allies to respect the ORN’s call for a diversity of tactics) can be overcome – and the disagreements which have ensued do not overshadow the gains made by a truly formidable national coalition of indigenous rights activists, anarchists, environmentalists and anti-poverty organizers in the lead up to the games.
- AlexB's blog
- Login to post comments
- Printer-friendly version


Great article
Hands-down this is the best article I've seen about the Black Bloc in Vancouver and the political debates that have followed it. Heatscore really captures all sides of the debate while putting forward an original and coherrent argument. Great writing.
Wrong Points
I agree with Mick that this article is very well written. I think however that the point has been missed.
Heatscore writes that Black Bloc activists justify the Heart Attack action by arguing that it "did not in fact constitute violence, and that they were necessary in order to attract media attention." Heatscore goes on to very intelligently address these justifications.
However, these are not the justifications I have heard for the action either in the planning of it or in the aftermath. When discussing the violence, the point is not that structural damage is not violence, the point is so what if it IS violent?The point is that structural violence is a legitimate response to systemic violence. Heatscore writes that "When dealing with public protests, whether or not something morally constitutes violence is not as important as whether or not it is perceived as violent by the public at large." My question to this is simply why? Why is it more important? Why must a resistance be seen as non-violent? I think this plays into a very narrow narrative of resistance that we should be moving away from.
As for the argument around media coverage, the points that I have come across outside of simple "talking-points" clarify the issue as being about opening-up space for more creative, constructive actions.
Heatscore makes a good point that the broken windows are not as useful a means of disruption as stopping "the transportation and delivery systems of capital and resources". But this is, I think, falling into the dominant narrative about the action invented by the main-stream media. The point of Heart Attack was not the window breaking. It was the march. It was the solidarity. Let's fight for that.
Thanks for the comments,
Thanks for the comments, Jonah.
I think discussion on this subject is important and healthy, as long as those on both sides of the divide keep in mind that divisions over tactics must not boil over into personal attacks. At the end of the day, we all want more or less the same thing.
Also, I should note that since I was not in Vancouver, my perspective on the matter is necessarily different from those who were on the ground. I wish I could have made it... but unfortunately I had to watch this one from the sidelines.
I'm glad to see that folks have been moving away from the question as to whether or not property destruction constitutes violence. It's been a point of debate within the movement for years now, and I always found it to detract from more important issues. From my discussions with some of those who were involved in the Heart Attack action, it seems you're right that the questions have shifted as to why it matters at all if resistance is violent. I think that's a good sign.
That being said, my statement indicating public perception was more important than moral considerations was simply intended to address the previous debate. Essentially what I meant is that it doesn't matter if anarchists have internalized a line morally justifying property destruction as non-violent if the majority of the population has not. I think you inferred from my statement that I was advocating some sort of pacifism... which is not the case.
That being said, the question remains as to whether the "violent" resistance of surgically smashing a few windows was tactically beneficial. I think that the black bloc plays an important role in public protests, and are necessary in the ongoing laboratory of street tactics. I just think that because it's so easily reproducible, the smashing of a few windows has become a substitute for more creative and effective actions. In this case, I think that it was felt that there was a need to create a spectacle of a riot where the possibility of one did not exist. There's a difference between the property destruction that we witnessed in Vancouver and that which occurred in Berkeley later that month; the window smashing in Vancouver was more akin to the Financial Fool's Day action in the UK last year, in my opinion... in that it was done because it was expected. I think that one of the important things we should take away from Vancouver is to not promise the world a riot years in advance, as the state will marshal the resources to ensure that a riot does not take place.
I assume that you're talking about the Tent City here. I have heard this argument, but I am not convinced. I don't think that the Heart Attack action can be credited for the fact that the police didn't move in to break up this demonstration. I think it's unlikely they would have moved on it anyway... as it would have been a PR nightmare. As an illustrative example, there was a tent city in London in 2001 that succeeded in establishing the creation of a new homeless shelter/transitional housing centre (called The Unity Project - http://unityproject.ca/). This was done without a spectacular action on par with the Heart Attack march, but simply through the occupation of a public park. It might not have made al Jazeera... but that is hardly the objective of such actions.
I agree completely. My article was focused exclusively on the smashing of the windows - which I think actually detracted from the march in the first place. I sincerely hope that the differences of opinion (and some of the personal attacks that have resulted from them) will initiate a dialogue that leaves the anarchist movement stronger and more united than before. Solidarity is crucial. When we fight amongst ourselves, we are doing our enemies' work for them.
Judy Rebick is our man -- if she can't do it...
'Violence against property' is indeed "violence" per se; and certainly in this context -- which is always the bourgeois corporate mass-media context: and for the foreseeable future too. And I don't want to go any further into that now -- as it is covered above, and I've commented on it elsewhere here today. But it bears repeating, and shall obviously be returned-to again and again.
However there is one thing both anarchists and communists and many other Leftists should be able to agree on, just to choose a simple subject: Judy Rebick is NOT a revolutionary. And frankly, I would expect she will likely also loudly denounce any actions which truly challenge the imperialist status quo, come the in-opportune moment. So let's all agree that Judy Rebick has long been on the wrong side of the barricades -- along with probably most writers at "Rabble.ca.", if not most of its readership (I hardly ever read any of the liberal-Left tripe there. Once a year, maybe). And discuss the nature of "class unity" around that (AFAIC) fact.
-- grok.
--
Build the North America-wide General Strike.
TODO el poder a los consejos y las comunas.
TOUT le pouvoir aux conseils et communes.
ALL power to the councils and communes.
Beware the 'bait & switch' fraud:
"Social Justice" is NOT Socialism