YOU DO NEED A WEATHERMAN
(PERSON) TO KNOW WHICH WAY THE WIND BLOWS
DVD REVIEW
THE WEATHER
UNDERGROUND, 2003
In a time when I, among others, are questioning where the extra-parliamentary
opposition to the Iraq War is going and why it has not made more of an impact
on American society it was rather refreshing to view this documentary about the
seemingly forgotten Weather Underground that as things got grimmer dramatically
epitomized one aspect of opposition to the Vietnam War. If opposition to the Iraq war is the political fight of my old age Vietnam was the
fight of my youth and in this film brought back very strong memories of why I
fought tooth and nail against it. And the people portrayed in this film, the
core of the Weather Underground, while not politically kindred spirits then or
now, were certainly on the same page as I was- a no holds- barred fight against
the American Empire. We lost that round, and there were reasons for that, but
that kind of attitude is what it takes to bring down the monster. But a revolutionary
strategy is needed. That is where we parted company.
One of the political highlights of the film is centered on
the 1969 Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) Convention that was a
watershed in the student anti-war protest movement. That was the genesis of the
Weathermen but it was also the genesis of the Progressive Labor Party-led
faction that wanted to bring the anti-war message to the working class by
linking up the student movement with the fight against capitalism. In short, to
get to those who were, or were to be, the rank and file soldiers in Vietnam
or who worked in the factories. In either case the point that was missed , as
the Old Left had argued all along and which we had previously dismissed out of
hand, was that it was the masses of working
people who were central to ‘bringing the war home’ and the fight against capitalism. That task
still confronts us today.
One of the paradoxical things about this film is that the
Weather Underground survivors interviewed had only a vague notion about what
went wrong. This was clearly detailed in the remarks of Mark Rudd, a central
leader, when he stated that the Weathermen were trying to create a communist
cadre. He also stated, however, that after going underground he realized that
he was out of the loop as far as being politically effective. And that is the
point. There is no virtue in underground activity if it is not necessary,
romantic as that may be. To the extent that any of us read history in those
days it was certainly not about the origins of the Russian revolutionary
movement in the 19th century. If we had we would have found that the
above-mentioned fight in 1969 was also fought out by that movement. Mass action
vs. individual acts, heroic or otherwise, of terror. The Weather strategy of
acting as the American component of the world-wide revolutionary movement to
bring the Empire to its knees certainly had (and still does) have a very
appealing quality. However, a moral gesture did not (and will not) bring this
beast down. While the Weather Underground was made up a small group of very
appealing subjective revolutionaries its political/moral strategy led to a dead
end. The lesson to be learned; you most definitely do need weather people to
know which way the winds blow. Start with Karl Marx.
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