Oakland group wants to help raise ruckus
by Dan Reed ,
Mercury News
April 20th, 2002
EAST BAY SEMINAR TO TEACH TOOLS OF ACTIVISM
The Ruckus
Society -- as in "raise a ruckus'' -- is a group of left-wing
protesters who have taught scores of other activists how to blockade
police, hang banners off buildings and generally monkey with the
"corporate machine.''
Now, the Oakland-based society has scheduled its first "Tech Toolbox
Action Camp,'' a training seminar to show demonstrators how to use the
most modern technology to fight the world's capitalist overlords.
To them, it's the 1960s all over again, but this time in the age of the Internet and global positioning satellites.
The Ruckus Society is the group that trained squadrons of protesters
for the World Trade Organization's (WTO) summit in Seattle three years
ago and has taught such civil disobedience methods as "how to lock your
head into something,'' a means of using one's body to stop some action.
In a camp scheduled for June 24 to July 2 in Sonoma County, the
hell-raising activists will show how to bring to bear the latest
technology in protests against whatever Establishment foe happens to be
in their cross hairs.
"We have quite a number of geeks within
our ranks,'' said Ruckus Society Executive Director John Sellers.
"We're seen by a lot of the movement as the wonky action geeks, so we
have some incredible technical people.''
Not everyone is charmed by their crusades.
To Mike Burita, communications director for the Center for Consumer
Freedom, the new high-tech camp just sounds like the Ruckus Society is
"preparing to cause more trouble.''
Given that the society's logo is a monkey wrench being thrown into some gears, Burita's probably right.
"I think this is an example of some misguided youth who really need
something better to do with their time,'' said Burita, whose group is
funded mainly by restaurant chains and tavern operators. "The things
they protest really provide a benefit to society -- for instance,
biotechnology and genetically modified foods.''
Burita's
center runs a Web site, www.activist cash.com, which profiles protest
groups and tracks their funding. It started in the mid-1990s in
response to "different food cops and public health advocates,'' Burita
said, "who were telling people what they should and shouldn't eat.''
But the consumer center has expanded beyond that now, keeping tabs on a
variety of activists.
Activists branch out
One of the
Ruckus Society's founders, Mike Roselle, was a co-founder of Earth
First, the radical environmental group that gained notoriety for
driving spikes into trees to foil loggers.
Two months before
the "Battle in Seattle,'' the society held an action camp to train
activists on disruptive demonstration techniques for the WTO protests,
then asked them to pass on the techniques to other foot soldiers back
home in preparation for the summit. While Sellers does not condemn
vandalism outright -- the Boston Tea Party was property destruction, he
says -- he believes that the violence in Seattle was out of bounds
because it created an unsafe situation for others.
"Non-violence is the heart and soul of what we do,'' Sellers said.
Now the society's new bag of tricks -- in addition to teaching such
staples as urban rappelling and civil disobedience -- will include
high-tech tools. Allen Gunn, better known as "Gunner,'' is organizing
the new venture, which the society hopes will become a regular feature
in its catalog of protest camps. He expects about 100 trainees.
Naturally, only vegetarian cuisine will be offered during the weeklong gathering.
The camp's curriculum
Among other things, the trainers will be talking about Web sites, how
to use e-mail tactically, information and privacy, how to use
technology on a limited budget, and how to protect files and data.
"What if your donor list is on your hard drive and it crashes?'' Gunner
said. "Or what if the feds come knocking on your door? Then it's
one-stop shopping for them.''