Black Bloc clashes with fascists and Trump supporters in Berkeley, California

Black Bloc clashes with fascists and Trump supporters in Berkeley, California

On Saturday, April 15th, a black bloc made up of young antifascists, anarchists, and communists fought against members of neo-nazi organizations and Donald Trump president’s supporters in Berkeley, California.

Demián Revart

BLACK BLOCK V.S. FASCISTS AND TRUMP SUPPORTERS IN BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA!

On Saturday, April 15th, a black bloc made up of young antifascists, anarchists, and communists fought against members of neo-nazi organizations and Donald Trump president’s supporters in Berkeley, California.

The police served as accomplices to the right wing groups allowing them access to the main area of the rally. Along with the usual “Make America Great Again” t-shirts and hats, the right wing groups carried anti-semitic signs, flags with nazi swastikas, and at times were even seen carrying out the nazi salute.

While the clashes took place, the black bloc bravely carried a banner reading, “We will defend our communities” organizing around the “community” as an alternative to the american proletariat.

During the battle, objects and fences were put to use by the anti-fascists to impede the advance of the fascist groups. However, fascists used sticks, poles, and even tear gas against the anti-fascists demonstrators.

Comments

Hieronymous
Apr 18 2017 07:17

Having been at this event, from about a half hour before the antifa picnic began at 10:00 a.m. until around 2:45 p.m. when the Northern California local core of the white nationalists drifted back to Provo Park from downtown to celebrate their victory, I have to say the above account is misleading to the point of being largely incorrect. For most of the day the two camps were kept separate in Provo Park, with a 3' high plastic-netting fence stretched around its entire periphery. There were three guarded entry points, where the pigs searched everyone's bags and removed any contraband, which included weapons and literally any object that could be used a weapon. Additionally, the same plastic netting was stretched in two rows across the middle of the park, with about 5' in between, to separate the two factions and to allow the pigs to quickly move in between to keep the two camps divided. For most of that time, where there was fist-to-fist engagement, it was largely a draw.

But around 1;45 p.m., the white nationalists charged at antifa from the corner of Milvia, and chased them up Center Street one block to Berkeley Square, at the center of downtown. Along the way, every antifa protestor the fascists caught was beaten to a pulp. It was merciless. I haven't slept well since then and I feel queasy just writing that. It was a bitter defeat. My post of the Anti-Trump demonstrations in the US - write a report if you're attending gives the wrong impression, not acknowledging how badly our forces were defeated (I'll re-edit it soon).

I'm also going to correct the above post, point-by-point, in the name of accuracy and leaving an honest historical appraisal.

Ruptura Colectiva - RC wrote:
On Saturday, April 15th, a black bloc made up of young antifascists, anarchists, and communists fought against members of neo-nazi organizations and Donald Trump president’s supporters in Berkeley, California.

The Esquire article entitled "The Violent Clashes In Berkeley Weren't 'Pro-Trump' Versus 'Anti-Trump'," points out that any Trump supporters present were incidental, as this was really a provocation by white nationalists who traveled from across the U.S. -- and even Canada -- to make a statement by holding it in the liberal bastion of Berkeley. The other side, the one I was there in solidarity with, called a counter-demo to oppose their attempt to invade our turf.

Ruptura Colectiva - RC wrote:
The police served as accomplices to the right wing groups allowing them access to the main area of the rally. Along with the usual “Make America Great Again” t-shirts and hats, the right wing groups carried anti-semitic signs, flags with nazi swastikas . . . .

These statements simply aren't true.

The pigs searched everyone entering the fenced off periphery of the park (which I clandestinely avoided by stepping over it in an out-of-the-way spot), as well as entering both camps to confiscate any contraband, which included all flagpole staffs and any kind of sticks. No one was denied entrance to either side of the rally (there was no "main area," only two divided sections).

By around noon, when both camps had exited the park to brawl, the pigs remained at the park. When the antifa were routed and chased to downtown, there wasn't a single cop present. This was picked up on by the local weekly rag, the East Bay Express, which wrote in their article "Berkeley Police Basically MIA At Saturday's Violent Pro-Trump Vs. AntiFa Brawl":

East Bay Express wrote:
The groups continued to spar in Downtown Berkeley in the midst of oncoming traffic and Saturday brunchers. Cars caught in the fray tried to drive through as hundreds filled the intersection at Shattuck and Center. Two bicycle cops finally closed the two northbound lanes but left southbound ones open for the next half hour, despite the continuing flow of demonstrators making their way toward the intersection.

Other than closing the intersection for traffic, Berkeley police didn't actually intervene in the scuffle until much later, around 3:30pm. By then, the numbers had thinned and the crowd's energy was waning. A few dozen officers, still clad in "riot gear" and accompanied by five motorcycles and two bicycle cops, surrounded the remaining brawlers. Seven cops then came through on foot asking people to leave the streets.

Neither myself, nor anyone who I talked with who was there saw any "nazi swastikas." The white nationalists were extremely careful to not have symbols with any semblance of their true bigoted ideology nor which could be construed as nazi, racist or in any way fascist. The only thing even remotely "anti-semitic" was a sign that read "Da Goyim Know" next to an image of a cross.

Below is the only symbol that could be construed as pro-Nazi (right?):

Ruptura Colectiva - RC wrote:
While the clashes took place, the black bloc bravely carried a banner reading, “We will defend our communities” organizing around the “community” as an alternative to the american proletariat.

This banner, as well most of the others brought by antifa, ended up captured by the white nationalists, who paraded them around in their victory celebration after they returned to Provo Park, where they posed for photos in front of them.

I was there to witness this, and it was pretty demoralizing.

Here's a photo I took of them returning to the park, with a sign saying "Pro-USA, Proud, Strong & Unafraid in Berkeley."

Ruptura Colectiva - RC wrote:
During the battle, objects and fences were put to use by the anti-fascists to impede the advance of the fascist groups. However, fascists used sticks, poles, and even tear gas against the anti-fascists demonstrators.

Some objects used, in an infantile version of "barricades," were piles of garbage strewn on the street (in photo below). Sorry comrades, but this is extremely fucking stupid! (and it's rare that some moron doesn't try this at most militant demos I've been to).

In the Paris Commune of 1871 the barricades were well overhead and were intended to stop the charge of the armed forces and were a response to the military tactics and technological weaponry at that time in the 19th century. Trash cans toppled and garbage spilled is simply litter.

Both sides this past Saturday fought with whatever weapons were smuggled into the park or improvised. Another entirely stupid maneuver by antifa was to roll a dumpster into the street. This served no purpose at all, and was simply appropriated by the fascists.

Antifa made use of M-80 explosives (actually more like heavy duty fireworks) and lots of mace. I personally didn't see the white nationalists use either. They had sticks and shields, but inflicted most of the damage on antifa with fists and kicks.

To summarize, with numbers being equal, antifa were simply no match for the fighting ability of the various fascist groups. Many of the latter had military and police experience, some of whom did multiple tours of duty with the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan. They had better street fighting tactics and stuck together better and were simply more violent. After they routed antifa and chased the black bloc up Center Street, they held the heart of Berkeley and stayed as long as they wanted to. The sidewalk in some places was covered in blood -- and this was spilled, often bravely (but not always), by the comrades defending Berkeley from these white nationalists and their allies.

Here's the most demoralizing account of their ultimate victory:

East Bay Express wrote:
AntiFa left dumpsters in the road, and tried to unsuccessfully block the streets with debris and construction fences. But, with “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” — a song associated with the American Civil War — blaring through a handheld speaker carried by a man leading the charge, the pro-Trump contingent burst through and flooded into the intersection.

And here's how it looked on video:

Our side got our asses kicked and for me, who didn't physically get hurt, this defeat still brings great pain. I lived in Berkeley for 15 years and it's where I first got radicalized, so it's a sentimentally important place for me and many of my comrades still live there. I would strongly urge Demián Revart and Ruptura Colectiva to edit their piece in order to make it more accurate. Only in honest appraisals and self-critique can we theorize ways to avoid getting run off the streets of our own cities by white nationalists and fascists.

Jim
Apr 18 2017 12:02

Thanks for your post Hieronymous. I've been watching videos of what happened over the long weekend we've just had in the UK and it's been depressing. Particularly the video of the charge where the alt-right ran anti-fascists out of the park which you've posted above.

One thing which has interested me is how wide the anti-fascist mobilisation was. Was it just a local or regional mobilisation with people coming from California? Given people were travelling from across North America for the alt-right side it seems like a mistake that wasn't matched by anti-fascists.

I was also a bit surprised to see anti-fascists circling the park with the dumpster. There didn't seem to be much point and in all the videos I've seen it looks like anti-fascists could have charged the alt-right as they seemed to significantly outnumber them. Would that be a fair assessment?

Hieronymous
Apr 18 2017 14:04
Jim wrote:
One thing which has interested me is how wide the anti-fascist mobilisation was. Was it just a local or regional mobilisation with people coming from California? Given people were travelling from across North America for the alt-right side it seems like a mistake that wasn't matched by anti-fascists.

I honestly don't know. I heard at least a few came down from Portland, Oregon, but it seemed to be a mostly local mobilization. There were other competing events: just up the street at the University of California campus, the usual lame coalition of Trotskyite dinosaurs were having a conference called "The Struggle To Defend Public Education, Privatization, Union Democracy & Education Workers" that drew away a few hundred from the sectarian left and those naive enough to fall under their influence (with their boilerplate "transitional demands" and wooden appeals to denounce the "sell-out" union leadership, ad nauseam); across the Bay in San Francisco, thousands of liberals and anti-Trump activismists took part in a Tax Day March, where the main demand was for Trump to release his tax returns. Local community-based radio stations cautioned against "anarchist violence" and discouraged protestors from coming to Berkeley to oppose the fascists.

Jim wrote:
I was also a bit surprised to see anti-fascists circling the park with the dumpster. There didn't seem to be much point and in all the videos I've seen it looks like anti-fascists could have charged the alt-right as they seemed to significantly outnumber them. Would that be a fair assessment?

At the beginning, the park seemed to be pretty evenly divided between fascists and anti-fascist forces. By the time the fighting moved out of the park into Center Street, right before antifa were chased downtown, the pro-fascists had superior numbers.

Hieronymous
Apr 18 2017 19:26

My comrades and I missed the frontal assault of the fascist charge up Center Street to downtown as we were disarming the alt-right Arthurian knight role players on Milvia Street, so we didn't directly witness the brutality of the attack. But this account confirms what we heard: Berkeley: A Medic’s Report.

jef costello
Apr 18 2017 19:54

Thanks for writing these up, even though they don't make for very cheerful reading. What the medic said about groups of four and five isolating individual anti-fa is something that was in the video. They didn't go to extremes in the video but that's the kind of situation where people get seriously injure dor killed. It's also the kind of defeat that stops people from coming back and emboldens the fascists (which is the whole point of no-platform in the firs tplace)

eugene
Apr 19 2017 00:04

Thanks Hieronymous for this first hand account. I think anyone using an objective lens can clearly see how much of a political defeat this was.However, I am less demoralized by the loss than the utter denial and victim-hood that our side has taken up. Now is a time for reflection on are larger strategy for combating the rising trend of fascism, and not just in terms of better street tactics, but also in terms of building popular participation with in the class.

I really think this should be an article so that it can be circulated elsewhere....that is if you were so inclined.

Iktomi
Apr 19 2017 04:33

Feels bad, man.

Jim
Apr 19 2017 11:54
Hieronymous wrote:
I honestly don't know. I heard at least a few came down from Portland, Oregon, but it seemed to be a mostly local mobilization.

That's disappointing as I'm fairly sure if the militant anti-fascist movement in North America had taken this as seriously as the alt-right did then the numbers would've been a lot more favourable.

This reminds me of a string of protests we had in the UK in the coastal town of Dover. As the alt-right have been mobilising in Berkeley purely because the Milo talk was cancelled there after a black bloc rioted on the university campus, then subsequent protests have seen clashes between the alt-right and anti-fascists and this has encouraged more of them to mobilise.

In 2014 the UK far-right started holding protests in Dover because it's where ferries from Calais arrive and is therefore one of the places where illegal migrants enter the country. These were pretty badly attended by the far-right but saw an upsurge after a successful attack on anti-fascists football supporters by the far-right in Thamesmead, south east London.

That was the first time I can remember of the far-right thinking they had a victory against militant anti-fascists and it significantly emboldened the far-right. In many ways I think that attack can be compared to the latest Battle of Berkeley, anti-fascists knew it was coming, knew the far-right were mobilising on a regional basis, yet only mobilised on a local basis in response and didn't win.

The result of the increase in confidence on the right meant the next protest in Dover, a month after the Thamesmead attack, was attended by around 200 fascists (up from 30 or so at the preceding protest). Around 150 anti-fascists took the fascist RV point and were then attacked by the fascists. While it wasn't a clear cut victory for the far-right, they thought it was and posts online by naive anti-fascists helped them think it was.

You can read our article on that protest here.

Now with what they felt were two victories under their belt, the far-right announced they would be returning to Dover for the fourth time in two years. This time anti-fascists recognised how large the mobilisation was likely to be (13 different fascist groups mobilised for the September 2015 Dover protest, I think it was 15 different groups for the January 2016 protest). So anti-fascists mobilised nationally, people from all over the UK turned up. Even comrades in France tried to come over to join the anti-fascist mobilisation. Had it not been for an incident at a service station meaning over 200 anti-fascists and 50 fascists didn't make it to Dover, anti-fascists would have significantly outnumbered the 300 or so fascists who aimed to attend.

So because the anti-fascists had experienced what they thought was a huge victory at Thamesmead, a string of far-right protests which had been seeing 30-60 attendees, saw their numbers rocket, to 200 (many of whom who turned up to fight with the left), then to 300, with lots of them preparing to commit acts of violence against the left.

The only reason this upsurge in fascist street violence was stopped is because the UK far-right are so fucking stupid most of the fascists engaged in violence weren't masked up and the British police have got fairly advanced methods for identifying people who are masked up. Something like 30+ fascists were given lengthy jail sentences as a result of the last big Dover protest.

Basically, the key lesson is identify how widely the far-right are mobilising for a protest and then make sure it's matched by militant anti-fascists. If alt-right types were flying in from Canada then Canadian antifa should have been flying in as well. I know it's expensive but the cost of not matching far-right mobilisations is an upsurge in fascist street violence. How that upsurge will manifest itself in the US now isn't clear to me from over here, but one will happen (if you're not seeing one already).

Soapy
Apr 19 2017 12:03

Seems like anti-fascist action could be encouraging fascists. Instead of a dozen of them marching down a street being sneered at by bystanders hundreds now turn up at the prospect of beating up some commies.

my guess is after some a to b marches with nobody to punch theyll lose interest for mobziling pretty quickly

Jim
Apr 19 2017 12:26

I think there's an element of that, but if the far-right don't have people on the left to punch they'll go on to find different targets. Usually members of the minorities they hate.

Such as this occasion when an EDL protest attacked a fast food restaurant:

That's the kind of tactical call anti-fascists need to make, is an anti-fascist presence going to boost far-right numbers? Can a fascist march be allowed to happen without any opposition? I can think of some far-right protests outside a university just outside London which happened towards the end of last year. Students and anti-fascist mobilised to oppose the first two, the presence of opposition seemed to validate the fascist protest. Anti-fascists didn't both opposing the third and the far-right cancelled it just before it happened.

S. Artesian
Apr 19 2017 13:30

Think it's important to focus on the fact that the pro-Trump rally was bait, a "bait and switch" as it's called in business. And it worked. Yes, it's a defeat, but one determined by the limits of black bloc and "antifascism."

Engaging in direct face-to-face combat is not like breaking shop windows and overturning garbage cans, or throwing rocks at cops. Combat requires training, tactics, discipline, and the application of a critical mass, if not overwhelming amount, of force. Nazis understand that. They operate in units and target those who are weaker.

Did anyone from antifa or the black bloc look into the "pedigree" of the organizers of the rally? Did anyone have any "connections" or "intelligence" that this was purely a pseudo rally to lure them into a trap? Did anyone think it was even important to check out that possibility before marching bravely into the trap?

It appears that nobody did any of those things.

Trump has incredibly low support numbers. Nobody shows up at "pro-Trump" rallies unless the official Republican Party mobilizes its supporters, and shills, to attend. If it's not an "official" event, sponsored by the Republicans, nobody's going to be there except nazis. The "pro-Trump" rally is not like a Klan rally, by itself, enough to galvanize a community into opposition.

To defeat nazis, you need combat organization, and more than that, you need combat class organization.

This is serious business. Lives are going to be lost. Those are the terms we accept. Wasting lives is not.

Black bloc is not that organization. Neither is "antifa."

Jim
Apr 19 2017 14:03

Wasn't it more of a pretext for violent clashes with anti-fascists than a 'bait and switch'. Surely anti-fascists were aware of this given they turned up with mace and M-80s?

S. Artesian
Apr 19 2017 14:41

That's what "bait and switch" is-- a pretext. pro-Trump as the bait, the pretext; fascist phalanx as the switch. Nobody showed up to support Trump. That was not the purpose of the "rally."

As for the antifascists having m-80s and mace-- again, the issue isn't what the antifascists thought was going to happen or not happen; it's the fact that they were lured into a trap where there was literally no presence of mass support to offset the greater number of fascists.

Contrast that to Auburn University last night, where, after Spencer's speech, the students chased the fascists off campus.

Jim
Apr 19 2017 15:40

This is probably semantics but it wasn't billed as a pro-Trump rally. It was a 'free speech' rally, specifically because the Milo Yiannopoulos talk was cancelled, then another alt-right rally in March was confronted by militant anti-fascists (giving rise to the 'Based Stickman meme'). From watching the below video put out by Canadian alt-right internet personality Lauren Southern, it was pretty clear in advance that the alt-right were looking for a fight.

But yeah, a small number of militant anti-fascists with poor organisation and inadequate training is going to struggle going up against a better prepared and better organised opposition. I really don't understand why I keep seeing footage of anti-fascists and the alt-right mingling together before small fights kick off. I don't think I've ever seen that situation arise in the UK unless anti-fascists have deliberately tried engineer it as a way to disperse the fascists on arrival.

Flint
Apr 19 2017 20:12
Soapy wrote:
Seems like anti-fascist action could be encouraging fascists. Instead of a dozen of them marching down a street being sneered at by bystanders hundreds now turn up at the prospect of beating up some commies.

my guess is after some a to b marches with nobody to punch theyll lose interest for mobziling pretty quickly

I think your guess is entirely conjecture with little evidence.

If fascists want to fight commies, they'll be able to find some. If folks don't show up to oppose fascist rallies, then fascists will start showing up in large numbers to disrupt leftist events.

We've already observed small crews starting to show up at lefty events in the U.S. looking to start trouble and offer themselves as an auxiliary to the police.

If they can't find commies to punch, anyone will do: immigrants, LGBT, religious minorities, ethnic minorities, kids with bad haircuts, etc...

S. Artesian
Apr 19 2017 23:07

Soapy's just replaying the "ignore them and they'll just go away" or "ignore them and don't give them the publicity they crave." Those aren't really issues. They're not going to go away, and they will find ways to obtain publicity.

The issue is when, where, and how to engage; how to avoid walking into a trap and getting seriously stomped.

If small groups of nazis come to our demonstrations, we know how to handle that.

But they won't always do that, and not at all of our type of demonstrations-- they didn't fuck with the Panthers; they didn't fuck with Malcolm X. Hell, the tried to fuck with civil rights workers in Louisiana, until the Deacons for Defense and Justice got organized, then they backed the fuck up.

The point being there is more than just the practicality of disrupting a nazi demonstration; the issue is organization, maneuver, and overwhelming numbers-- mass mobilization. When outnumbered and/or outgunned, you retreat; you avoid the conflict. Most difficult part of combat is an orderly disengagement when the enemy has superior force.