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The single most dramatic moment of the protests in Quebec came
on the first day of the summit, when the thousands of protesters
who had marched through the city finally reached "the wall." Until
that point no one had seen a single cop. Now, a phalanx of riot
police, armed to the teeth with tear gas, pepper bombs and plastic
bullets, waited silently behind the chain-link fence. There was
a momentary pause, and then hundreds of masked activists--ranging
from black-clad anarchists to Mohawk Warriors--descended on the
wall itself, produced grappling hooks and wire cutters, and began
to systematically tear it down.
This was not simply a fortuitous target of opportunity: a month
before, a call had gone out over the Internet--put out by anarchists
and members of the newly formed American branch of Ya
Basta!, originally an Italian group, which has been calling
for principles of free immigration and global citizenship--for "all
people held back by walls to converge in Quebec City to take direct
action against the security perimeter."
Attacks on the wall were echoed by actions against border posts
across North America. In Vermont, there were "people's assemblies"
along the border at spots where the Canadian government was systematically
denying entry to anyone who so much as looked like an activist.
Several hundred activists occupied the Peace Bridge in Buffalo;
thousands rallied on both sides of the crossing between San Diego
and Tijuana; in Blaine, Washington, 4,000 activists and union members
from the United States and Canada marched across a border bridge
and seized customs posts before finally being dislodged by the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police.
Walls and borders were the perfect symbols: Treaties like the FTAA
allegedly promote a process that is making nation-states and national
borders increasingly irrelevant. The reality is that corporate globalization
is premised on exactly the opposite of a free flow of people, products
and ideas. Rather it is based on keeping the majority of the world's
population trapped behind increasingly fortified borders, within
which even existing social services can be withdrawn, and then removing
all restrictions which might have kept Nike and The Gap from taking
full advantage of their resultant desperation.
In fact, the size of the U.S.
Border Patrol has almost tripled since the signing of NAFTA,
and the Immigration
and Naturalization Service (along with police forces and prisons)
is about the only branch of government that is actually growing.
By fortifying the border and placing dozens of activists in arbitrary
detention to prevent them from being able to express their ideas
in Quebec, the Canadian government was merely subjecting mostly
white activists to the sort of violence most of the world's population
face every day.
More than anything, the attacks on walls and borders demonstrated
that the rapidly growing movement of global resistance is not an
"anti-globalization movement" at all. It is, or is rapidly becoming,
a movement for real globalization, for the genuine free movement
of people, possessions and ideas.
It is not clear whether the movement will ever be able to get this
point across to the corporate media. When it comes to the free flow
of ideas at least, the corporate media constitutes the greatest
wall of all (and indeed, activists are increasingly debating whether
the next step is direct action against the media). But with so many
unions rapidly switching their positions from nationalistic nativism
to actual support for increased immigration and amnesty for undocumented
workers, we might well be seeing the beginnings of an historic transformation.

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