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what ended up happening with that PSL general strike last week does anyone have news on it
It wasn’t a general strike, it was a one-day protest
I would look at BreakThrough News to see some video of it. It was a pretty large overall day of demonstration, hundreds of thousands of participants across 300 locations.
Long story short, there was some great activity in certain areas. I don't know how much the Twin Cities shut down compared to the week before. I did see that Boyle Heights, a major Latino immigrant neighborhood of LA was pretty much shut down. But there was nothing in any city that could be considered a "general strike"
I still think the day was a success in advancing the cause of a general strike and putting the idea into the people's consciousness. I don't know if a nationwide general strike is possible given the current material conditions, but localized general strikes where federal surges are likely to see success just like the Jan 23 Twin Cities strike.
The PSL is still pushing and agitating for a general strike, but there are no concrete further actions at this time. Hopefully, we can build towards a large mass action this May Day.
Yeah it wasn't meant to be a hole-in-one. Historically general strikes are built up over consecutive actions culminating toward the big one. In this case PSL amplified the organic calls from black and Somali student orgs to expand the strike and then mobilized 300 cities with varying degrees of success in developing coordination with unions, churches, civil groups and small businesses for large protests and shutdowns.
The snowball is just beginning it's long roll toward mayday, and a nationwide general strike is now closer and more popular than it's ever been in the past 8 decades or so.
Yeah I think a lot of people are missing that local organization for both a general strike as well as localized rapid response networks and mutual aid networks will rapidly intensify when there is an ice surge in the area or other material conditions that I can't foresee. In my town, very little "economic shutdown" occurred, just a handful of businesses either shut down, or donated a portion of proceeds somewhere (one place alleged they would donate 100% of proceeds to ACLU...)
Twin Cities had a headstart on the radical politics in general, but the success of economic shutdown and the massive participation in street level resistance wouldn't be possible if thousands of federal agents weren't constantly making life miserable for everyone.
There are naysayers about the general strike strategy, I've also heard anarchists frustrated that PSL aren't building rapid response networks in the area, but that is putting the cart before the horse in my opinion. All socialists can do is continue the work torward a general strike, brick by beick
The important part is the action and reflection - to try and to learn - to put theory to practice and synthesize new tactics and strategies in tandem with the masses in active struggle.
We could spend the next year online arguing about the correct approach having read this or that text (some have already done so), but unless someone actually tries in the real world, we'll end up with a bookshelf of lofty ideas and nothing else to show.
I would assume the strategy in twin cities was taken because rapid response wasn't seen as a gap the party was needed for. Maybe it was growing organically and sufficiently, or the space was already fairly saturated with existing organizations. Maybe they might already work with some and not want to create division by working in parallel.
Conversely they probably saw the party in this instance better suited to push consciousness and push the struggle beyond rapid response, to intensify broader political organizing and coalitions. After all as anyone organizing on the ground knows, rapid response alone will not be enough to win. (This is just my spitballing on how the decision may have been made, take it with a grain of salt).
I'm also sorry to be unclear, I was talking about PSL in my area. I'm not sure what role they have had in rapid response, ice watch, and mutual aid efforts in Twin Cities. But I do think it isn't the place of the PSL, there are plenty of orgs already engaging in that work.