Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Non-Violence is collective, Defense is individual

Here's one way of looking at the two concepts.

Non-violence is clearly most impressive when you can put a million people on the streets. The best examples, according to Gene Sharp, are those that are planned and run by a committed, knowledgeable cadre of leaders. In effect, we see a struggle between two groups, the resistance leadership and the regime, backed by (it's hoped) nonviolent protesters on the one side, and police and army on the other.

Defense, on the other hand, is individualistic. Criminologist Gary Kleck for example has noted that Americans use firearms for defense on the order of 2.5 million times per year, and annually kill twice as many criminals as police do. These are virtually all individual actions.

Given the different venues for the two, it may be that one does not necessarily preclude the other.

It's clear that with large actions such as the recent overthrow of Mubarak in Egypt, you want to keep the protesters nonviolent, and guard against regime provocateurs turning it violent. But when you have come home from the demonstration, and someone pounds on your door at 3 AM in the morning to arrest you, what end does maintaining a nonviolent posture serve? Keep in mind the Egyptian action included informal block defense committees arising spontaneously as police activities vanished, and many of these included armed defense. In what way did this harm the overall non-violent protest? Could it not actually have helped it, instead, by showing people that protection can be had without police? Didn't it thus further reduce the legitimacy of the police, a usual aim of nonviolent protest?

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Isn't that blog name an oxymoron?

How can one be armed and non-violent? Being armed implies at least the possibility of violence, right?

I think this is a deeper question than it first appears. First, there is a semantic element. Most people would agree that aggressive violence is bad, and most would admit that defensive violence is at least justifiable, or even good. Are these two just subsets of the overall concept of violence? Or are they completely different things?

I examined this question in a short article here:
Good Violence

Part of the problem with the discussion of non-violent strategy and tactics, is that proponents just seem to lump it all together, as if there is no distinction between aggressive violence and defensive violence. I think there is a huge distinction, and that recognizing that distinction will give rise to the question whether non-violent strategy must necessarily preclude defensive violence.

Non-violence is naturally opposed to aggressive violence, that is clear. Gene Sharp (Part 3, starting page 594) makes an excellent case that non-violent resistance must not be tainted by violent activities (by this I assume he mostly means aggressive violence, e.g. riots), as did Gandhi before him. But is defensive violence also precluded? Sharp is silent on this, at least as far as I have been able to determine so far. If anyone knows otherwise, I'd appreciate a reference so I can look at it.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Initial post: What's this about?

I've been thinking about the dichotomy between two methods of opposing tyranny, armed resistance and non-violent resistance; and wondering if they are really mutually exclusive, as most writers and researchers seem to assume. Might they both be useful, each in their own way and under different circumstances? I intend to examine the question on this (my first) blog.