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Flint, "Fascists, Anti-Fascists And The State"

Fascists, Anti-Fascists And The State

by Flint, Roundhouse Collective (NEFAC — Baltimore)

"The totalitarian vision of fascists often resonates with the many
statists who wish to unbind their hands from the pretense of 'democratic'
government and civil liberties." — Call for a Revolutionary Anti-Fascist
Bloc

Over the last two years, the neo-nazi National Alliance (NA) has held a
variety of public demonstrations. The NA is the largest, most
well-financed, white supremacist fascist organization in North America.
The most successful venue for them has been Washington, DC. On May 11th,
they had their fifth demonstration. The May demonstration outside the
Israeli embassy, the largest public display of fascists in the U.S. in
decades, numbered over 300 hundred fascists.After the May 11th demonstration, an East Coast anti-fascist networking
conference was held in Baltimore to plan for the next time the NA would
march. As soon as details of the next NA action were known, several calls
to action began to circulate — in particular NEFAC's call for a
Revolutionary Anti-Fascist Bloc. Other calls came from Anti-Racist Action
(ARA), and an Arab Anti-Nazi Bloc. The Open City Collective in New York
City held a teach-in, as well as publicly responding to crypto-fascist
Israel Shamir attempts to spread disinformation to the Palestinian
solidarity activist community.

Responding to the NA's increasing presence, local activists formed the DC
Anti-Fascist Network. People went door to door in North East DC. Posters
were wheatpasted throughout the city, and flyers were handed out at metro
stations for months before the action. There was also a concerted effort
to outreach at the Reparations march in DC the weekend before August 24th.

Leading up to the action, ARA groups did public outings of local neo-nazis
in Ohio, New Jersey, and Maryland. The outing in Maryland was particularly
interesting, as it exposed Steven Smith, owner of the nazi paraphernalia
online store SS Regalia. Smith was attempting to use an elementary school
in Edgewater as a meeting location for carpooling and busing to DC.

With the Edgewater location outed, the NA chose the Baltimore Travel Plaza
for its meeting location outside DC. Once again, the location became known
to anti-fascists who distributed flyers door to door in the O'Donell
Heights neighborhood — warning that the fascists were coming to town and
calling for a demonstration at the Travel Plaza on Saturday morning. It
became common knowledge that the fascists were not only meeting at the
travel plaza, but had rented several buses for Saturday.

About an hour before the scheduled demonstration, a bus load of neo-nazis
from Detroit pulled into the Travel Plaza. Varying reports describe what
happened next: a small mob garbed in black charged the neo-nazis. Only a
few boneheads had gotten off the bus, and those that did were attacked.
The bus took most of the damage, having its windows smashed, tires
slashed, and the interior pepper sprayed. As quickly as they came, the
attackers fled the scene, leaving behind a banner that read "Smash Hate".
Eventually the neo-nazis left their bus, and were joined by other
neo-nazis from a nearby hotel. Cops swarmed the Plaza, trying to
understand what had happened. One cop reported to the media that it had
been a fight between rival neo-nazi gangs.

Later, anti-fascists arrived in a nearby parking lot for the
counter-protest that had been previously announced. They got out of their
cars, saw the scene over at the Travel Plaza with its confusion of
fascists, police and a downpour of rain, and debated whether to continue
or head on to DC. They crossed the street. Twenty-eight of them were
arrested. They were held for an hour in the rain, while neo-nazis were
allowed to photograph them, before being taken to central booking and held
for twenty-four hours before receiving their papers. When they were
finally allowed to see commissioners, some of the Twenty-eight were
released on their own recognizance while others received bail amounts
upwards of $10,000. Twenty-six were charged with three counts of
aggravated assault, possession of a deadly weapon with intent to injure,
malicious destruction of property, rioting and disorderly conduct.
Bizarrely, some of them had a "hate crimes" enhancement on their charges.
The only minor arrested was ludicrously charged with an additional 20
counts of assault. Even the lawyer that accompanied them was arrested with
the charge of failing to obey an officer.

Meanwhile, things were getting started in DC. The NA was meeting at the
top of the parking garage of Union Station. The police had erected small
barricades around the south side of Union Station's exit ramp,
complemented by hundreds of riot cops, horse cops, squad cars and armored
cars. The hum of the police helicopter remained constant through out the
day.

The Revolutionary Anti-Fascist Bloc (RAFB) was forming up at Stanton Park
at Maryland Avenue and 4th St NE, including NEFAC and ARA. Their meeting
location had been publicly announced, and was also attended by a dozen
marked police cars. Once the RAFB had gathered enough participants, they
headed up 4th Ave towards Union Station. The bloc, however, didn't turn
directly towards the phalanx of police. Instead, they headed further north
into North East where anti-fascists had previously gone door to door. The
police held their positions and didn't follow. Eventually, the bloc
reached H Street, and then quickly marched up the H Street overpass to the
north side entrance of Union Station parking garage that was "guarded" by
a single squad car. The bloc deployed itself thinly across the entrances
to the parking garage. A few neo-nazis had already made it into the
parking garage and looked over the edge at the black clad anti-fascists.
Several vehicles of suspected fascists were turned away from the garage.
Eventually the police redeployed and riot cops marched up the overpass
ordering the bloc to disperse. The bloc headed down the hill and headed
towards the police barricades on the south side.

A large crowd had gathered around Columbus Circle. Where there had been
plans for several distinct blocs, such as one for the DC Anti-Fascist
Network, another for the Arab anti-nazi bloc, and another for the Youth
Leadership Support Network; everyone merged into one mass. The Progressive
Labor Party's megaphones led the chants of "Death to the Klan". Perhaps
five hundred anti-fascist demonstrators were there, six times as many as
were at the May 11th demonstration. While this was a real improvement in
the size of counter-demonstrations in DC over the past two years, it was
only as large as similar counter demonstrations in York (Pennsylvania),
Richmond (Virginia), and Wakefield (Massachusetts). Most of the
demonstrators were part of leftist groups like Left Turn, International
Socialist Organization (ISO), and Anti-Capitalist Convergence (ACC). The
lack of spontaneous participation by locals was disappointing — in many
smaller towns, there typically is larger participation from unaffiliated
locals, as well as more participation from liberals groups like the NAACP,
or church groups.

One group needs particular mention, the Arab Anti-Nazi Bloc that was
formed by Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims. The NA was attempting to hijack
the cause of Palestinian liberation through their "Tax Payers Against
Terrorism" and turn anti-Israel sentiment, to anti-Semitism, even boasting
that there would be Arabs in attendance supporting them. There were none
who came to support the NA, but many who came out to oppose them.
Organized by participants in the Committee in Solidarity with the People
of Palestine (CSPP) and Stop U. S. Tax Aid to Israel Now (SUSTAIN), their
message was opposition to both Israel's treatment of Palestinians, and
opposition to anti-Semitism.

The NA was able to assemble about four hundred fascists, even with one bus
disabled in Baltimore--however they were also an hour late. The RAFB had
deployed too early to actually block the buses of the fascists. Typically,
the NA march was exclusively white, overwhelmingly male, and mostly
boneheads and some older suit & tie fascists. The entire time, they were
guarded by police who kept the counter-demonstrators away. Whenever small
groups or individual nazis left police protection, they were harassed by
counter-demonstrators to the point of fleeing back to behind police lines.

The counter-demonstrators followed the nazis along their entire route. By
the reflecting pool, counter demonstrators tore down some barricades to
get closer to the fascists, but were effectively kept separated from the
fascists who were "sieg heiling" on Capitol Hill. At one point, the NA
demonstration lost cohesion as boneheads slipped the leash of their suit &
tie masters to be so "brave" as to shout insults at anti-fascists behind a
fence, a wall, and a small army of riot police. The NA left Capitol Hill,
forty minutes before the permit was set to expire. While
counter-demonstrators dogged the NA march back from the Capitol, there was
little confrontation as the sheer number of police left little
opportunity. There were a few scuffles with nazis departing the area in
personal automobiles. There were only two arrests of counter demonstrators
for disorderly conduct in DC.

The NA headed north, returning to Baltimore. The most successful technique
for the NA for increasing participation at public demonstrations, has been
by combining them with hate core music shows at a venue near to the
protest. In exchange for going to the demonstration, the suits bribe the
boneheads with a racist concert. The venue was discovered by
anti-fascists, who followed the nazis back to Baltimore.

Several anti-fascist groups met in a show space in Baltimore, the
Bloodshed. Discussion ranged from jail solidarity for those already
arrested, to plans to counter the concert. Police presence in the
neighborhood was unusually large, and the anti-fascists decided to change
location. Shortly after they left, the building was raided by police
conducting a warrant-less search. There were no arrests. There were
several reports that throughout the evening after the protest in DC, that
anti-fascists in the Baltimore area were pulled over by the police and
questioned, some at gun point.

The remaining anti-fascists had decided that the best course of action was
to expose the controversial location of the nazi concert — an active duty
National Guard Armory in White Marsh, Maryland. To do so, they went to the
Progressive Action Center (PAC), home of the Baltimore Independent Media
Center. As they gathered at the building, police began to arrive there as
well. All of the anti-fascists entered the PAC and locked the door. A
police chopper was overhead, along with marked and unmarked police cars.
Eventually the police came to the door demanding entry. Lacking a warrant,
they were denied. The PAC is an old public library in the residential
neighborhood, and a day care center is in it's basement. Perhaps it was
the more public nature of the location, with curious neighbors looking on
from their porches, that deterred the police from conducting another raid.
While some anti-fascists worked the phones and the internet to expose the
hate core show, others negotiated outside with the police. From the roof,
a banner was dropped reading "Anti-Racists Under Siege". When the
corporate television media arrived on the scene, the police withdrew.
After an exclusive interview with television news, the anti-fascists left
the PAC for yet another location to plan jail solidarity for the arrested.

There were anti-fascists who made it to the National Guard Armory. Some
conducted surveillance, others quickly organized a small protest.
According to neighborhood residents, police had been training outside the
Armory for days, for exactly what they were doing that day — guarding the
neo-nazis. Over thirty police vehicles, including a helicopter, and a
large group of riot police protected the nazi show. The police set up a
road blocks in the vicinity of the Armory, using them as checkpoints for
identifying and interrogating drivers. Unlike DC, the National Guard
Armory is in the center of several residential neighborhoods, about fifty
neighbors came out to see the commotion and spontaneously joined the
counter-demonstration against the neo-nazis. There were no confrontations
at the concert, and no arrests.

Though there was some mild harassment by police of the picketers outside
the jail solidarity vigil in Baltimore for the Twenty-Eight arrested that
morning, there was far more support — ranging from the recently released
and their visitors, neighbors, passing motortists, and even cops who would
honk their horns in support. The defense committee began raising bail.
With such high bails, however, a bondsman had to be used, which still
meant raising a thousand dollars for each prisoner bonded. The solidarity
picket was maintained continuously until everyone was released by Monday
morning. One example of the continuing patriarchy of the state is that
women prisoners could not released at night, even if their bail had been
posted — though men could be release at any time.

The trouble for the "Parking Lot Twenty-Eight", as they called themselves
on the inside, didn't stop there. Most of their names, descriptions, ages,
addresses and phone numbers found their way from the police--into the
hands of fascists, who gleefully publicized that information as on their
websites and email lists, along with several violent threats. Not only
information from the defendants, but also information for many anarchist
and activist spaces in Baltimore and Philadelphia were distributed. Then,
the hang-up calls started. Later, anti-fascists at their home in New
Jersey found National Alliance stickers on their door and literature in
their mailbox. In Pittsburgh, the fascists were bolder; three of them
showed up to the home of one of the defendants armed with a baseball bat
and knives. However, they were confronted by three unarmed
anti-fascists — the fascists didn't go beyond talking. Eventually the
police arrived and sent the fascists home. So far, none of the defendants
in Baltimore have had any trouble from fascists.

Was the march by the NA a victory? Was it a victory for the anti-fascists?
It seems inconclusive. Unlike May 11th, anti-fascists were considerably
better organized. There were more counter protesters at the demonstration,
which have been slowly increasing in diversity. While it didn't achieve
the spontaneous popular participation that made York and Wakefield
interesting, there was more potential for that when the nazis venture out
of such a secure "official" venues as Capitol Hill, and into the
neighborhoods. The events of around the NA march were the lead story on
all local television stations as well as CNN and many newspapers, many
with stories sympathetic towards the anti-fascists.

The only time the neo-nazis didn't have police protection, is the only
time they were decisively attacked. The confrontation at the Travel Plaza
certainly disrupted the NA, caused them to loose a bus and arrive late.
All of the NA's security culture for meeting locations was repeatedly, and
visibly compromised.

Since that time, cracks have continued to develop in the unity of the
fascist milieu in North America. Bill Roper, deputy membership coordinator
of the National Alliance, who had been the driving force in organizing
these demonstrations — was fired from his position and expelled from the
organization. Roper is now calling for others to follow him in founding a
new organization — a move that may further divide neo-nazis. There have
also been a number of public arguments about the NA suit & tie fascists
disrespecting their bonehead supporters. For now, the Baltimore
Hammerskins are throwing their support behind the National Alliance, not
Roper. After another fiasco in Wakefield, many fascists are also
questioning the behavior of Matt Hale of the World Church of the Creator,
who led the NA into the disastrous (for them) situation in York. Gliebe,
the new "CEO" of the NA, seems to be distancing himself from public
protest and illegal action, while Roper might lack the support to continue
his public demonstrations. One thing is certain, continual opposition to
fascist gatherings by anti-fascists, does little to bolster the morale of
fascists, and much to discourage them.

Most of the problems for anti-fascists have come, not from the fascists,
but from the state. The state protected the fascists for the entire day.
The government protected the fascist meeting points in Baltimore, escorted
them through DC, and guarded their racist concert. The state provided an
active duty National Guard Armory for the concert, despite public outcry
against it. The state went beyond merely protecting fascists, to actively
repressing anti-fascists by arresting counter-demonstrators, and framing
them. The police continued to harass anti-fascists by raiding their
meeting locations, and attempting to disrupt their media work,
counter-protests and jail solidarity. The message was clear, "state
protection for fascists, state repression for anti-fascists."

As of October 8th, the majority of the Baltimore Anti-Racist Twenty-Eight
defendants have had their cases dismissed.

=======================================

This article was printed in Barricada's new special double issue which is
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