Commandment Car: Freedom's armour

MicroBalrog

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Self-Defense Network
commandment car: freedom's armour
"The armour's tough,
And our tanks are speedy."

Soviet Military Song
In Israel, Orthodox Jewry groups are rather unpopular with the mainstream media. It is, to say the least, extremely hard for them to get airtime on any mainstream television channel. In 1999, when Orthodox leader Arie Deri got imprisoned for fraud and embezzlement, about 15,000 supporters protested outside the prison. During the same time period, a small group known as "The Four Mothers" protested IDF involvement in Lebanon. It is estimated that they never assembled over 400 people during that period. Guess who got more coverage?

With that kind of coverage, the Orthodox leaders had to find other methods of spreading their beliefs. While I am no Orthodox, the methods used by them are fascinating. The religious lobby went grass roots, spreading free tapes with rabbinical sermons, stuffing a leaflet in every mailbox, opening small-size talk radio. The ultimate in grass roots firepower was the rehev mitzvoth - "commandment car" (as in the Ten Commandments).

Commandment Cars, which eventually became used by practically every non-mainstream political movement in Israel, are, in their basic form, an SUV with mounted loudspeakers, loaded with leaflets and activists. The cars move through the streets and roads of the country, blaring out their message full-blast, stopping at intersections to hand out their leaflets and explain the message. Due to ease of use, the Commandment Cars are seeing service with even the poorest of political pressure groups. For example, 8th of May has been declared by Ale Yarok (the local marijuana legalization party) to be Marijuana Day. Aside from the standard protests and parties, the Ale Yarok party will use a Commandment Car that will patrol various areas of Israel, spreading the green, leafy message as it goes. The words rehev mitzvoth are now used to denote any such car - regardless of whether it promotes drug legalization or religious Judaism.

In Israel, the story of grass roots activism - and, in particular, the story of the Commandment Car - is a story of success. When the settlers faced Sharon's separation initiative they faced a $450,000 campaign allied with the power of the mass media and mainstream politics. The Commandment Cars engaged with the Channel 2 video crew trucks and the Network C broadcasting helicopters, and the settlers' grass roots activism and their Commandment Cars carried the day.

The story of the Commandment Car is a story that any activist on the planet can learn from. Political battles are not won by the people who support an idea. Political battles are won by the people who actually detach their butt from the TV couch and do something - just look at the Free State Project№.

The Commandment Car is one of the easiest ways to attract attention to your cause and it is extremely effective. Nothing attracts attention as much as a large car with working loudspeakers in the neighbourhood. If you belong to an organization that can finance its own vehicle, you could attach decals supporting your cause to your vehicle. If it's a private vehicle, tape posters to the car and rip them off later.

A Commandment Car is easy. Even your own car, provided a good sound system (plugging your home stereo into it is good enough), can make a perfect Commandment Car. Want to get active for your cause? Print out a few dozen leaflets from the Internet, tape a poster to your car's hood, put some nice propaganda mp3s into your player and you're ready to rock and roll. Think an SUV covered with pro-gun messages (you can get some nice posters at A-Human-Right.com), playing pro-gun adverts full-blast (tap Armed & Secure and Jews For The Preservation of Firearms Ownership) won't attract attention in Manhattan? Think a drug-legalization promoter won't make himself noticed, say, in Memphis? I know the answer.

You can make a difference. You have all you need. If you have a car, a printer, and a stereo, you can be part of the armoured columns of freedom. All you need is willpower - the willpower to turn the key in the ignition and go out and spread the good word. Think you won't make a difference? You will. The only difference between members of Martin Luther King's civil rights march and their silent brethren was willpower. Willpower is the difference between a couch potato and the activist. Willpower is the difference between victory and defeat, and it will eventually be the difference between slavery and freedom.

You can sit at home and watch the onward crawl of tyranny. You can witness Waco and Rainbow Warrior all over again. But you can fight it. You can put fleets of Commandment Cars protesting gun control on the streets of London, the war on drugs in Manhattan, infringements on religious freedom in Paris. You can give those who fight a war against freedom a real fight. Make it their Kursk.

Boris Karpa, May 2004,
Ashdod, Israel
PS If you, or your pro-freedom group, use a Commandment Car, please e-mail me at <karpa@netvision.net.il> and tell me about it.

№ For those not in the know, the Free State Project is a plan to make the political make-up of a US State (namely, New Hampshire) more liberal (in the classical sense) by convincing 5,000 pro-freedom activists, from Anarchists to Libertarians, to move into the state. While electorally this might not seem much, the number of politically active individuals that are expected from the project outnumber the political activists working for both Democrats and Republicans in New Hampshire


Originally published:
http://www.rkba.co.uk/sdn/car.html
 
I don't mind the idea, but in my neighborhood that car would be riddled with bullet holes before long. We tend to value our peace and quiet around here! :p
 
In my own area, Micro, I believe such an ostentatious display would do more harm than good.

For better or worse, conservative (in the classic sense) areas respond to a more dignified approach.
 
Thumper - perhaps you can explain, so I, as a non-American, can understand better - what's the classical sense?

I think it's the traditionally anti-gun communities that need "armoured assaults".
 
I guess what I mean is that anything flaunting societal norms, especially something that seems especially flamboyant or brash, isn't received well here. I'm speaking specifically of my small area of Texas (Houston).

We seem to get more results with a refined, austere message.

It might be different elsewhere.
 
I think the modus operandi should definitely be fitted to the environment, and I am not sure it would work in such areas at all (maybe if you turn down the volume, or ditch the sound altogether?), but blighted areas like NYC, PRK, PRNJ need commandment cars. Desperately. :D
 
I wouldn't want to drive one down the neighborhood streets (esp. in urban assault's neighborhood... :eek: )...

...but I'd love to have one for the next anti-war rally or gun-buyback day. :cool:
 
If you drove down my street with a "commandment car" covered in Oleg Volk posters and blaring pro-RKBA stuff at 105db, I'd call you in for disturbing the peace same as I would if you were blaring rap music.

I don't appreciate being deliberately disturbed, no matter how noble the intent, and I sure as heck was raised with better manners than to deliberately disturb others.
 
Kirk,

You nailed it! That's the first thing I thought of when I read this. "Sounds like the Bluesmobile."
Live! On Stage! At The Palace Hotel Ballroom on Beautiful Lake Wassapamani! The Fabulous Blues Brothers! Free Parking! It's Ladies' Night!

I don't mean to discredit the idea, Micro, but I just can't think of a single place in my area where such a thing would work. Perhaps in the "big city," but certainly not in rural or even suburban areas. JMO.
 
Some things just don't translate from culture to culture. Such a Commandment Car would not be well received in most neighborhoods in the U.S., and anyone using that method to advance their views would actually do more harm than good to their cause.

You would really need to spend some time here and gauge the potential effectiveness of such methods for yourself.
 
That got me thinking Marko, perhaps we need to create such a vehicle and have it drive around screeching the most outlandish anti-gun sentiments and slogans we can find. The more obnoxious and patently untrue the better. Nasty, annoying and grating anti-gun propoganda thats disturbing to even apolitical folks, might make alot of fence-sitters on the issue say "Huh, those anti-gun folks are REALLY crazy". I don't like the idea of resorting to a tactic that the anti's might think up themselves, but I am for just about anything that hurts those bastards, even if its only a little. So, anyone out there motivated enough to play some dirty pool? Maybe the only reason this sounds like a good idea is because I had a couple cold beers awhile ago :D
 
UA - Wouldn't be the high road.

They fight dirty because they need every advantage to try and overcome logic and fact. We have no need to stoop to their level.
 
Agreed Bluesman, agreed. But sometimes I think that the Low Road is a more efficent way to get to a destination. I do try to walk along the High Road, I really do, but there are so many instances where high-minded, moral people decided to take the gloves off and fight dirty and it eventually helped them prevail. What I am asking is, if one is convinced that anti-gun people would take away his freedoms if they could, and has seen covincing evidence of such behavior, why would he hold himself to a higher standard if it means losing what he holds dear? Where is that line drawn? Thats the issue I wrestle with quite a bit and I am no closer to a solution. Look at the dirty tricks used by the Allies against the Axis powers during WWII. These were good men who actively tried to confuse, injure, harass and attack their enemies at every turn. Why is it admirable that they used such tactics against a freedom-hating enemy, but if we use some reverse-propoganda it is considered bad and uncouth. The Anti's want to disarm this country tomorrow and when we are disarmed, we will have no way to protect ourselves from a much more powerful Goverment, if they ever chose to strip us of our basic rights. What are your thoughts?
 
But sometimes I think that the Low Road is a more efficent way to get to a destination.

A character in one of my favorite books offers the quote, "I'd rather have my principles shot out from underneath me, than put a bullet into them myself."

It may be more efficient to be obnoxious, dishonest, and generally uncultured, but I will refuse to make use of such tools against my convictions, even if it may mean a loss of "efficiency".

That's why we're ultimately the good guys, and that's why we should speak up against both annoying neighborhoods with untruths or torturing or humiliating prisoners of war. That's what they do, and if we resort to their methods, there will be nothing that separates us from them.
 
Principals are great when you have the luxury of an honorable enemy...

If you want to win in pig-wrasslin', be ready to get muddy... :D
 
Yes!

Creative non-violence can work!
If a student is forbidden to show, say, a rebel symbol-at the prom...
Why can't they have a counter prom?
Turn the defeatism off, turn the mind on.
 
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