January 24, 2005.
The Antiwar Student Movement
The
Implications of the J20 Walkout
By RICHARD MORENO
Global Resistance Network
The January 20th walkouts were
a milestone in the student-youth movement. It was a veritable step in the reconsolidation
of the genuine and vivacious antiwar-campus struggle that was set into motion on March 5, 2002.
High school and college students
walked out from around the globe. Indeed, as of this writing, news of walkouts
from San Francisco to Seattle to Germany to Canada is over filling the author's email box.
Here are just a few examples
of some student actions.
At Seattle Central Community
College, an estimated 500 students managed to kick military recruiters off their campus during their walkout, and then the
students met up with 500 other students from the University of Washington (KoinNews6). In Chicago, several hundred Evanston Township High School students walked
out of classes despite threats from the administration, which charged them with absences (Chicago Tribune). At Mt. San Antonio College in the Los Angeles area, students who walked out
staged a mock trial of George W. Bush (SGV Tribune). In Colorado, one Boulder High School student, inspired by the Berkeley Free
Speech Movement, led a walkout alongside of his English teacher (Colorado Daily).
What started as an idea from
a middle-class centred junior college quickly grew to a global manifestation. It
was a collaboration amongst many on the Left, from websites such as Black Thursday and Znet (which published the author's call for a student strike) to various organizations, e.g., Not In Our Name, Food Not Bombs, Axis of Justice and others (--there was even a link on
Michael Moore's website named "J20 Student Walkout" calling for massive walkouts, independent of our original call).
To be sure, the walkouts for
the most part tended to have a spontaneous character to them, as news from different localities have shown.
It is also important to note
that many of the campuses that called for walkouts in March 2002, before the initial invasion of Iraq (number II), virtually
had no presence this time around. That is to say, although the casualty rate
amongst Iraqis and U.S. troops continues to grow, much of the organized resistance has not grown alongside of it.
In a recent interview, Campus
Antiwar Network representatives for their part spoke about the post-invasion confusion and electoral diversion as being factors
in the recent lull of their work (Left Hook).
Nevertheless, inroads have
been made in other localities. For example, the Los Angeles area walkouts were
combined with the protest initiated by A.N.S.W.E.R., which grew a crowd of some ten thousand people on January 20th. There were also huge marches and protests in Washington, Italy, Peru, Belgium, and
Guatemala, just to name a few.
In synthesis, this demonstrates
the necessity for individuals and organizations to continue to connect, or refine the bridges that exist, in order to combat
the vociferous psychological-social warfare campaign being waged by the consolidated corporate media, e.g., FOX, which has
managed (if only temporarily) to create a deleterious effect within the antiwar movement.
In this context, the January
20th student walkouts must be seen as a groundbreaking path toward a coherent and militant antiwar movement amongst a new
generation. The January 20th walkout is a new chapter being written by our generation
in this epic struggle against war and empire. . . .Onward to March 19 now!
Richard Moreno is a student and activist at Mt. San Antonio College.
He is also a co-founder of www.globalresistancenetwork.com. He can be reached at polyapplications@aol.com.
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