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Indybay Feature

Farewell from the Midnight Special Collective

by Midnight Special Law Collective
A closing letter from the Midnight Special Law Collective
640_mslc_logo_no_text.jpg
Dear Friends,


Midnight Special has been engaging in months of discussion and critical analysis about the role of law collectives, both amongst ourselves and with other members of the law collective movement. We have also been looking at our own internal process as an anti-authoritarian collective. We have reached various conclusions: that we have been unable to break out of the service provider model; that we are dissatisfied with jumping from action to action, and leaving little infrastructure behind; that we often emulate the oppressive structures we seek to change; and that these problems are much harder to solve than we had believed.


Our final conclusion is that, because of the state of the movement and ourselves, Midnight Special will not be able to overcome those challenges. So it is with sadness and hope that we write to you today. After 10 years of work, we, the members of the Midnight Special Law Collective, are closing our doors.


We have mixed feelings about ending the collective. On the one hand, we have achieved so much over the last decade. We trained hundreds of people how to legal observe and thousands more how to use their rights to (more) safely agitate for social change. We provided legal support for some of the most significant protests of the last 10 years, from the anti-globalization demonstrations at the end of the Clinton administration to the anti-war protests of the Bush years to the protests against the financial and political bullying of the G8/G20 today. We are proud of the work we have done the the relationships that we have formed with you all over the years.

Frequently, Midnight Special has been called upon to travel and help out with radical legal support. While we are honored that the work we do is appreciated, we have found that other collectives and people doing similar work are overlooked, and their opinions are not heard. We recognized back in the year 2000 that it was crucial for us to spread our knowledge. Unfortunately, we were always better at supporting others than in organizing others to support themselves. Additionally, we have created an internal collective dynamic that validates macho behavior and has been unable to seriously address issues of gender and power within the collective. After many months of trying, we have not made meaningful progress in resolving these dynamics. That failure is what ultimately led to the demise of our collective. We state it here to encourage other political groups to take anti-oppression issues seriously.

While ending a 10 year project is never easy, this does create opportunities that did not exist before. We are now free to use what we've learned through Midnight Special in other work for social justice. We hope that the lessons we have learned about anti-oppression will be taken up by other projects and organizations, and into our future work. Each of us continues to believe that the movement still needs democratic and accountable legal support, for everyone who protests for social justice. Your support, as much as our work, has made that possible, and we are excited to see how legal support will grow from here. Thank you.

Yours in struggle,

The Midnight Special Law Collective
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by Jonathan Nack
Mad props to the Midnight Law Collective. You guys rocked it.

Thanks also for your blunt and honest self-evaluation. Don't be too hard on yourselves. That your collective manifested problems endemic to our society should be neither surprising nor disappointing.

Best wishes for all your future endeavors. Stay strong and revolutionary!

by Craig Louis Stehr (craigstehr [at] hushmail.com)
I will always appreciate the time when we were at Olive Branch Catholic Worker house during the A16 World Bank-IMF days of dissent in Washington D.C. in April of 2000. When you set up an office in the front room downstairs, and then the jail support later, at what was one of the largest and most successful protest-demonstration-direct actions, shutting down central D.C. for three days...everybody who participated may take credit for having intervened in history. You were just amazing. Thank you.
by deanosor (deanosor [at] mailup.net)
I just read the statement by the "Specials" and am floored. I don't believe it. One of the most effective movement organizations is dissolving. Why? Your explanation while coherent does not make any sense. Some of the problems you mention are problems with the world itself today. Others, i believe you could solve, and would solve, knowing you, as time moves on. Others might not be solved, but so what? As i've learned many years ago, Do not let what you can do interfere with what you cannot do. Please reconsider.
On their home page, www.midnightspecial.net, but not at the top or bottom, one sees:
Midnight Special on hold
We've put our projects on hold for the time being. Details will follow.
Everything else on the page -- and, apparently, elsewhere on the site -- implies business as usual.

I wouldn't accept the statement on this page as the final word on what is actually happening with the collective. It isn't signed, except with the name of a collective that supposedly has ceased to exist. The statement may, perhaps, be the work of some faction of the collective or even of outside forces. Clarification will, presumably, be forthcoming.

By the way, deanosor appears to have gotten "what you can do" and "what you cannot do" reversed in his comment.
by friend of MSLC
This statement is indeed from Midnight Special. The statement posted here is the very same one emailed from collective members and was posted on one collective member's facebook page.
by mslc
Sorry for any confusion. Its been quite an emotional process, and some of our tasks took a little longer than others. For those who might doubt the authenticity of this letter, please check out our newly revived website. We'll continue to leave it online, in the hopes that our fellow activists will still be able to make use of all of our trainings and handouts.
by nash
Almost seven years later your work and tools continue to be the foundation for so much important work being done to support liberatory movements and to mitigate the damage inflicted by the kidnapping and detention of so many fighting for freedom, liberation and the protection of our planet.

Thank you for modeling accountability and radical care.

- nash
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