Democracy Is Nothing If Not Dangerous
By Carl Oglesby
SDS President 1965-1966.
I see SNCC as the Nile Valley of the New Left. And I honor SDS to
call it part of the delta that SNCC created.
A question has been raised in the New Republic of Oct. 30 which I
think it most appropriate for me to take up here. The question is a
familiar one, an old companion of American radicals.
The editors criticize Students for a Democratic Society for being
too casual about the prospect of communist infiltration. Our
members, they say, "do themselves and their aims a disservice by
welcoming communists in their ranks, and by making a virtue out of
indifference to the possibility of communists becoming the dominant
voice in their organization."
Presidents of SDS I am the fifth don't really preside over much.
They don't make policy. Least of all do they speak final words in
the organization's name. So my attempt to reach into the heart of
this concern is my own. And on a matter as perplexing to Americans
as communism is, I'm of course doubly cautious. And cautious a
third time because the problem is a very hard one.
I will cavil a bit to begin with, for the editorial in question has
somewhat misconstrued us. So we "welcome" communists, do we?
"Welcome" is of course the loaded word, automatic on these
occasions. We welcome small-d democrats and converts to radical
democracy, not totalitarians in cloaks neither red cloaks nor fed
cloaks. And the editors surely have an odd view of our simple human
pride in values if they think we'd be "indifferent" to the loss of
the organization that embodies and sustains those values.
Still, their question is real, even piercing. SDS does not screen,
purge, or use loyalty pledges. So along with Senator Dodd, the New
Republic editors narrow their eyes at us. We are not confused,
however. We can perceive the differences between Sen. Dodd and [the
New Republic editor Gilbert] Harrison. We understand about the
strange bedfellows that politics makes. Indeed, this is the whole
question, isn't it?
So what answers do we have? What about the problem of
"infiltration"?
It must surely be common knowledge that factionalism is the reef of
the American left, and that the "infiltration" argument is one of
the chief weapons of those who take comfort in its disarray. THE
way, that is, to factionize and fractionate the left here is to
cry, "Beware the Red Menace that bores from within!" It is by this
incantation that "pure" radicals are divided from the "impure," and
those among the pure who dispute the categories from those who find
them tolerable. It is not news that this happens. And when we are
referred to labor's experience with communism in the 1940s as if
that record proved the virtues of exclusionism it is not news
either that we could theorize from the same record that our
Establishment unions exist today at the expense of an American
left.
And just what are we expected to do, anyway? We say we are
democrats and are told that's not enough, for a man may smile and
smile, and be a villain. Certainly. He may also be a happy
democrat. Our critics must show us the perceptible telltale clues
that divide pretense from belief, or how to find the twisting
motive in the straight-seeming act. Motives are invisible. And it
is so obvious one nearly weeps to say it that to judge the
invisible even, alas, in politics is a type of sorcery. We judge
behavior. Those whose behavior runs athwart the deep SDS commitment
to democracy just have no leverage over the democrats of SDS.
And, in any case, SDS retains no detectives.
Further, it is hard to see how a group could be "taken over" unless
it has handles of power that can be seized, some "central
apparatus" that can enforce orders. SDS has no such apparatus only
a beleaguered hotspot in Chicago and it is a main hard point with
us that it never shall. In all our organizing work, in slums and on
campuses, we aim to involve everyone equally and openly in the
making of decisions, to break down social machines that bestow
power undemocratically and withhold it in the same sorry way.
Bureaucracies concentrate and conceal power. We avoid them. Anyone
who tries to invade us therefore invades only himself; for the only
power available to any of us is the power of good sense and
humanity.
But the criticism has entirely missed the real point:
"infiltration" is not nearly the problem that "association" is.
What should we do when we find ourselves agreeing on a special
issue with "outcaste" groups that we may strongly disagree with
generally? Mao Tse-tung wants the U.S. out of Vietnam. And
according to the official sources, so does President Johnson. Ho
Chi Minh would doubtless like to retire [Defense] Secretary Robert
McNamara whom Barry Goldwater the other day suggested should go
back to making Edsels. How may Mr. Goldwater and President Johnson
cleanse themselves?
The manual of American realpolitik recommends dissociation,
exclusion. We are pure, they are not. Our motives are good, theirs
ulterior. We pluck out this offending eye, cut off this hand. We
march alone. But that would hardly be SDS. Radical democracy, we
believe, is exactly that social freedom that can reflect critically
upon its own foundations. It exposes itself on purpose in order to
be itself. It insists on the equal thinkability of all thoughts.
Whoever gives himself to real democracy thereby gives himself to a
most demanding experiment one that never closes except in the
defeat one form of which is called "consensus." Is it not clear on
the face of the matter that democracy exists so that struggle can
exist without death? That it responds to the problems of
variousness in fact by requiring variousness?
Of course there is peril for SDS in the democratic commitment two
kinds, in fact. First, the danger that our democratic faith might
be outargued from within. I cannot describe the remoteness of that
danger. It seems to me galactic. But the other danger is more
intense. Our acceptance and trust of others opens up the
possibility of short-term cooperation with what the great world
condemns as untouchables. This can lead to our prejudgment, thence
to our political ostracism, and thence to defeat.
Then how do we justify taking such a stand?
Morally, there is just no choice. Our vulnerability must be total.
Is that naive? Yes, I think it is naive. Innocent? To be sure from
love. Is it also fatal? Only if America so decides.
But there is also, I think, a quite practical wisdom in our stand.
I doubt it, but perhaps we'd be more tempted if we were shown how
exclusion leads to a more democratic distribution of political
power. Clearly, it leads to greater acceptance. But acceptance by
what but the prevailing power champions whom we should be striving
to unseat? Acceptance to what use but the license to survive
without sway in an unchanged society? It is not the aim of the New
Left to become the love child of the wretched and the Bank of
America. The aim is to change society. We choose to remain
unacceptable to those who would not have it changed. And we already
know that if they cannot red-bait us and they can do that, as you
know, at whim and with no proof then they will beard-bait,
beatnik-bait, now this new depravity, Vietnik-bait; and when all
else fails, idealist-bait as if when it is once shown that you have
ideals, your arguments stands refuted in advance.
Compromising to meet the guilt-by-association attack is thus not
only unethical, it is also naive, innocent, and fatal. But from
fear this time, not love. And among political deaths, too, there
are the quick and the slow, the better and the worse.
There is maybe still a richer reason for our not saying no to
anybody.
I see SNCC as the Nile Valley of the New Left. And I honor SDS to
call it part of the delta that SNCC created. We are other things,
too. But at our best, I think, we are SNCC translated to the North
and trained on a somewhat different and broader set of issues. Our
best concern comes from SNCC. Some find that concern a bit
shocking, but I'll name it anyway. It is to make love more
possible. We work to remove from society what threatens and
prevents it the inequity that coordinates with injustice to create
plain suffering and to make custom of distrust. Poverty. Racism.
The assembly-line universities of this Pepsi Generation. The
ulcerating drive for affluence. And the ideology of anti-
communism, too, because it smothers my curiosity and bribes my
compassion. This ideology decrees for me that I may not love
Castro, however shining-bright his anguish, or Gus Hall, however
long his sorrow. And I quite likely speak for most all of us in SDS
when I refuse that ideology on plain and self-evident principle.
Finally, I would be so bold as to lecture our liberal critics a bit
on the subject of democracy.
Even as they counsel us on this matter, we stare their failures in
the face. What, after all, is the idea of "political democracy"
which they claim to be jeopardized by our radical trust? Is it this
quadrennial spasm of the body politic that puts purchasable men in
the low places and purchasers in the high? Do they see the fruit of
their own generation's political wisdom in this recently paroled
Congress, which met with such amazing silence what may be the major
crisis of American character, the Vietnam war? SDS, believe me, is
by no means smug or even to very hopeful about what it has been
able to do so far. But still we are puzzled that they should play
schoolmaster on this question. Better for them, perhaps, to observe
more and admonish less their sons and daughters. All the old good
hopes rest now with them, the young, whose risks are obligatory.
It simply must have been heard in this country, sometime, that
democracy is nothing if it is not dangerous.
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