182 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
182 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
San Francisco style: The diggers and the love revolution
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By Alex Forman
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[Anarchy 77 (Vol 7 No 7), July 1967]
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When a small group of men began to plant and dig upon the Commons on St.
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George's Hill in Surrey, in 1649, it marked the radical culmination of the new
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forces of change resulting from the Reformation in Germany. For with the
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breakdown of the total supremacy of the Roman Church, these new forces were to
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go far beyond the moderate rebellion of Martin Luther. The destruction of the
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rationale for the Church's omnipotence led suffering people to question the
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power of other elements in the collapsing power structure. This can best be seen
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in the peasants' revolt in Germany and in the English Civil War. For not only
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was the Church questioned but also the institutions of the state and the system
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of land ownership.
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The Diggers, as the small group of men came to be known, questioned the existing
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order in its totality. They had grievances against the clergy, the judges, the
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lawyers, parliament, and the nobles. They requested that the common land, which
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had belonged to the King who had been executed, be turned over to the people.
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The people could run the commons collectively and set up a co-operative
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commonwealth alongside the existing system. The Diggers believed that their
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system would prove to be so peaceful and filled with reason and love that soon
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the whole country would join them. They saw no need for violence and refused
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even to defend themselves when attacked.
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The Diggers had two distinct arguments for their cause, one religious and the
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other political. The religious argument stated that God had not created the
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earth to be enjoyed by certain men only, but rather as a common treasury for
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all. The ownership of the land in England had been achieved, from William the
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Conqueror on, by the use of the sword--indirectly when not directly. Thus land
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ownership, based upon blood, was immoral. Diggers believed man to have two
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opposing instincts in his spirit: self-preservation, which accounted for greed
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and bloodshed, and common preservation, represented by sharing and love. To act
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in a morally correct way meant living a life based on common preservation.
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Diggers also believed that if men lived for a while in accordance with common
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preservation, their bad instincts would disappear because of the supreme power
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of universal love.
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The Diggers' political argument was that, since the common land once belonged to
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the King, it now belonged to all those who had fought to end the monarchy. Thus,
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since masses of people had fought, the masses were entitled to former royal
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holdings. It's important to note that Gerald Winstanley, the Diggers' leading
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spokesman, showed an increasing tendency to base their cause on the more
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concrete political arguments during the movement's brief history. The last
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important document to come out of the Digger movement was a long appeal from
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Winstanley to Oliver Cromwell calling for the creation of a co-operative
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commonwealth in England. This included concrete proposals on how to organize the
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economy, the schools, the state and judicial system. It favoured private
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property within the home, family-based settlements, universal manhood suffrage,
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common ownership of all Crown lands, and common storehouses for all products.
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Although the original Diggers didn't succeed in their goal, their thoughts have
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survived over three hundred years and appeared again in remarkably similar form.
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Growing out of give-and-take between the New Left and the old beat generation, a
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hippy culture blossomed in San Francisco in late 1965. Two new factors which
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made the hippy culture a very distinct phenomenon were, first, a feeling of
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community (emphasized by individuals frustrated in the New Left), and second,
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the use of LSD. Cutting across the economic and social differences of many
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alienated Americans, almost all quite young, a new tribal love culture took root
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in the Haight-Ashbury district of the city. The new force unleashed by LSD
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constituted the primary unifying factor in a grouping which ranged from the
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sometimes violent Hell's Angels motorcycle club to meditating Zen Buddhists.
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This new culture was at first amorphous but it soon took on the shape of a
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bohemian community complete with its own merchant class: the hip merchants.
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Haight-Ashbury's new love community acquired members primarily from the swollen
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ranks of alienated young people who were also discovering the "love trip".
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Conversations on streets in the Haight-Ashbury became filled with talk of love,
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and then, suddenly appearing in the autumn of 1966, was a group calling itself
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the Diggers. It began to distribute free food in the local park--food donated by
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individuals and collected from the surpluses of local markets. The new group
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also attempted to provide housing for the growing number of young people who had
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become convinced that they should create a new, loving society.
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The important point is that the new Diggers began similarly to the original
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ones, by simply showing up on the scene and declaring that they acted in
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accordance with the spirit of universal love. The fact that this love was found
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partly through LSD--not derived from the Bible--isn't crucial. The original
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Diggers were also said to be influenced by mystical ideas during their religious
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gatherings.
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At first the coming of the new Diggers was lauded by the entire hippy community.
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The "Digger thing" of giving things away spread into the community--and beyond
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into the high schools and colleges of the city. There was a powerful new force
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in the air as one walked down Haight Street and saw people giving away flowers,
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fruits and candies. The Diggers in a sense became a new morality, the opposite
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of industrial capitalism's grab-bag marketplace morality. The moral position of
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the Diggers can be seen in the fact that after they had been pushed out of
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various offices by the police and health departments, they were given an office
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and kitchen privileges by a neighbourhood church. They were looked upon soon as
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the most beautiful part of the community and then began to be labelled by some
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as a "community service". It was at this point that an inevitable split
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occurred, for the Diggers did not want to be a community service--they wanted
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the community itself to be based on the new morality. A conflict began between
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the Diggers and the hip merchants.
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It was fairly obvious that the merchants were getting rich without helping the
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hippies on the streets, many of whom were dependent on the Diggers. At a meeting
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one of the more vocal Diggers asked why, if they were a community service, did
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they find it so hard to get aid from the community. They wished to see money
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used to buy space for people--living space, growing space, space to create the
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new world. Such aims conflicted with those of the business-minded merchants. A
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full-scale break was developing.
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Meanwhile, the Diggers' magic acquired them two farms which are now being
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established as future food suppliers as well as colonies of freedom from the
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city hassle. In April of 1967 the movement jumped across an ethnic barrier with
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the beginning of a Black Man's Free Store in the heart of the Negro ghetto. lt
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was at this time--with the establishment of free-stores in the black community
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and the Haight-Ashbury, with the beginning of farms and the break with the
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merchants--that the Diggers repeated Winstanley's course by putting stress on
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concrete political realities. They spoke now of need for some kind of
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revolution--and especially in the Black Man's Free Store the work is viewed as
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the beginning of a revolution. This new tone can best be described by quoting
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the close of a Digger leaflet distributed in early May, 1967.
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". . . well love is a slop-bucket and we are the children of awareness but our
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courage has not yet manifested itself within our floating community. We put down
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the merchants, the bullshitters, the hustlers and we sit around and it's all the
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same and there's nothing new under the sun and free food seems a long time gone
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because we're playing the game of the 193O's, we're the new cry babies and james
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dean's tears have finally taken root in a shallow weak kneed series of cabals
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which expect someone to take care of their living . . . some revolution."
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This is not to imply that the Diggers are giving up on love. If anything,
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there's now more love than before. But they're becoming more aware of the system
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that prevents love, more aware of the strength of competitive industrial
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capitalism, since it's threatening their own community. This awareness was
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demonstrated when four individuals associated with the Diggers, each from a
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different section of San Francisco, sent a letter to the city government echoing
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Winstanley's demand for a system of free storehouses to be replenished when
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empty. The letter argued that our industrial system is capable of feeding
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everyone if organized for that purpose, and stated that it's a moral and
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psychological necessity that this be done. Reading this leaflet in the Black
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Man's Free Store, gazing out the window at prostitutes selling their
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bodies--beautiful black bodies on a sunny afternoon--I realized that such
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changes were indeed a necessity. But the Diggers alone can't implement them. It
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will take a massive alliance of the alienated young people and the political
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left. Yet the Diggers continue working toward their goal--working through the
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medium of love, as illustrated by the following exchange heard in the Black
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Man's Free Store as it opened in April:
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Rembrandt (a sign-painter passing by): I see that you guys are opening a store.
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Do you want a sign painted?
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Roy (a former freedom-fighter in Mississippi, now organizer of the store): Well,
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this is a free-store so we can't pay you anything, but if you want to paint a
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sign . . . you see, we give things away.
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Rembrandt: I never give anything away and nobody has ever given me anything.
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Roy: Nobody's ever given you anything? . . . See that box of spray paints--if
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you can use them they're yours. Do you have any money? Here's thirty cents for
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bus fare.
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Rembrandt: I don't understand. What are you guys doing here?
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Roy: See that big appliance and furniture store across the street, with the sign
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about cashing welfare checks? Well, that's where all the people on welfare go .
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. . I've taken them there myself. The woman who runs the place came in here
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awhile ago and asked what we were doing. When I told her we were setting up a
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free-store she told me that I was in the wrong neighbourhood--that we didn't
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need a free-store here. She said I should go to the Haight-Ashbury. Then she
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became really excited and said that we just couldn't do this here and she would
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stop it. Well, the point is that we're here to give things away so that the
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people on welfare can have enough money to live better than now. It's the
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beginning of a revolutionary movement for change.
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Rembrandt: I see. Well. why don't I paint a nice big sign on the window saying
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"Watch For our Grand opening Day" and write "Free Food, Clothes and
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Appliances"---that'll really scare her.
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Rembrandt (after painting): Listen, I have a truck I can borrow so I'll come
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back and give you guys some glitter and help move some stuff. (He leaves.)
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Roy: He really did his thing, didn't he? Did you dig it? We turned that cat on
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to doing his thing and he did it, man, he really did it.
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