We do not justify violence.
Violence is never justified.
Violence is sometimes necessary.
You, however, justify violence. You justify violence when it is delivered to the ribs by a riot shield, the head by a baton, the eyes by pepper spray, movement by kettle, liberty by cell and cuffs, livelihoods and communities by austerity measures.
Coercion, incarceration, deprivation.
This is your routine and systemic violence; justified, smug eyes looking straight into the camera.
We did not deliver our message straight to camera, smiling. You could not see us smile, because we wore masks. Not to intimidate, or because it looks cool. But as a practical measure. Our message, our voice, is not allowed in the public discourse. Cameras follow us around. Those who dare act directly, passively and without anonymity, such as UKUncut, are lied to and incarcerated.
Why do you vilify our tactics, when all other paths of resistance are monitored and criminalised?
Our violence on saturday was not justified. It was necessary. It was not for fun, it was not what bonded activists together. What unites a black bloc is a mutual understanding that political expression must be rescued from the slippery slope to the lowest common denominator positivism expressed by the three main parties.
We do not denounce the TUC A-B march. It is a form of political expression, but, as Vince Cable said the following day, a futile way of challenging economic policy. What benefit a big march has, is (hopefully) a deeper politicisation of participants, a feeling of solidarity with a wider movement.
We hope they return home to rally and plot.
And you are right to ask ‘and what chance of changing economic policy does direct action have?’. The answer is none, we never expect it to. At least we are honest enough to say so, and seek other ways in which economic policy is disrupted or brought attention to; direct action, occupations, mutual aid.
We do not want physical violence.
You are supporting violent insurgents in the middle east, because it furthers your economic and political capital. We will never put a gun to your head. We will never ask that another state launch missiles to destroy your military or police infrastructure. We will be disobedient, we will occupy buildings, we will destroy symbols of capital, we will be a spanner in your wheels. Enough spanners and the machine grinds to a halt. Then we can dismantle and debate what to do with the constituent components.
And you Ed Milliband,
You invoked the memory of the suffragettes and civil rights movement, as if history were a dressing up box you could raid to make yourself look important.
You look fucking ridiculous.
In the same breath, you denounced the very same tactics the suffragettes and civil rights movement used over long protracted struggles with the state, media and public, to gain ground in the political discourse. And those movements did not ‘win’. Politics is not ‘won’. It is a perpetual renegotiation between a plurality of voices.
On Saturday we shouted the loudest.
We’re sorry that you misunderstood.