Black Flag 215 index
Letters
As an anarchist militant within the Swedish SAC, I read with great
interest Kieran Caseys piece in Black Flag # 214. In a rather
unusually, for comrade Casey, pedagogic and sensible form he has
given a brief description of his version of SAC's positions in the
numerous questions concerning SAC's relations with the IWA. Comrade
Casey's article, in combination with Peter Principles earlier piece,
paint a generally accepted picture of the situation.
There are however, a few points made in comrade Caseys article that
I would like to comment upon as well as a few points in regards to
the SAC which comrade Casey has unfortunately forgotten to mention.
First up is his claim that no section of the IWA has a "higher
degree of democratic culture and transparency than SAC, no matter
what their size." I can only giggle at such organisational
chauvinism! It must be obvious to any sensible person that a small
affinity group, of which I suppose some IWA sections consist no more
of, have a better democratic culture than an organisation of circa 9
000 members in which only circa 300 partake in member referendums on
a regular basis (such as the SAC)!
Comrade Casey further claims that there are no "informal
hierarchies" within the SAC. I must give comrade Casey some credit
on this point in reference to his own four year term as the duly
elected International Secretary, and thereafter employee, of the
SAC. His term in office was sufficient enough to convince SAC's
members that his responsibilities were better off being taken care
of by a committee of interested members rather than by a paid
official. The recent 26th Congress of the SAC dismantled comrade
Caseys former post. But, the fact remains that the SAC does suffer
from informal, as well as formal, hierarchies. To claim that any
organisation in today's society, no matter what size, were free from
such is simply plain folly.
In regards to the claim that all SAC employees and functionaries
enjoy the same wages - that is a truth in modification. SAC
currently owns three judicial corporations, connected to its union
activities in various degrees, and the employees of those enjoy
differing wages and benefits, ranging from housing to well paid
salaries. Indeed, some of these employees are not even members of
the SAC but of the social democratic Lands Organisation, LO!
Comrade Casey also refers to SAC as a revolutionary syndicalist
organisation and I assume that he sets that term in juxtaposition to
anarcho-syndicalism as well as "ordinary" syndicalism. Although I
should not assume things, this is relevant in the fact that he does
not define what revolutionary syndicalism is. SAC's brand of
revolutionary syndicalism however, allows for political party
functionaries and members, not only into its rank and file (which
does not necessarily have to be a problem), but into central posts
of trust. At least one member of the central working committee of
the SAC is a member of the left party, former communists
(Vänsterpartiet) and one member of SAC's highest instance between
congresses, the central committee, is a member of the bourgeois
agrarian party (Centerpartiet)!
I would like to end this on the positive note that, as comrade Casey
has written, the "SAC does not propose itself to be the perfect
workers organisation and that (SAC) continually seeks to improve
(its) democratic structure so that it might serve as a tool in the
shaping of a future libertarian socialist society." SAC has also
continually become increasingly radical for every congress in the
last sixteen years and the current influx of societally-disposed
youths from the independent Syndicalist Youth Organisation, SUF, as
well as different anarchist networks, are the spear-point in a
continued radicalisation of the SAC. For all its shortcomings, SAC
does deserve to fly that red and black flag high.
With anarcho-greetings,
Kurt Svensson member of Stockholms LS of SAC