Booman Tribune

Ugly Storm Building ... Can We Reclaim the Dawn?

by Madman in the Marketplace
Mon May 15th, 2006 at 11:16:17 PM EST

Can you feel it? The gathering energy of a really big, dangerous and life-threatening storm?

The right is ramping up their storm-making machines, lifting up racists masquerading as patriots and seeding the atmosphere with threats and intimidation. To add to the growing sense of danger, we've all-but abandoned the idea that we should care for the most vulnerable amongst us, and are even about to punish those left outside in the winds and cold rain of health crisis and personal need.

What is wrong with us as a people? Why have we submitted so eagerly to these evil warlocks, these warpigs, these demons of our lesser natures, these monsters calling down storm after storm upon our heads? Is this cold, harsh, angry land the one we really want to live in?

Sometimes it's tempting to wallow in this mystery, this terrible belief that so many Americans have that we're in a harsh world where we all must be afraid, where it is human nature to cheat and steal and lie and fight. However, a great post at Unscrewing The Inscrutable had this challenge from Belledame at Fetch Me My Axe:

First, as a political activist and/or idealist, what are you fighting for? (as opposed to, what are you fighting against).

Which Alon Levy answers with:

It's hard to explain exactly what I'm fighting for, since I'm too much of a generalist to say something like "gender equality." I think the best way to characterize my liberalism is as a philosophy that stresses the importance of equal rights and equality of opportunity but not of results. Unlike libertarians, who prefer to focus on negative liberties, I think that the government can and should enforce equal rights in a variety of ways, including equal pay laws, public education, anti-trust laws, and a social safety net. But still, my underlying view is very individualistic, and ultimately what I want is a society that makes it easier for the individual to thrive, regardless of what his/her socioeconomic background is.

That is a liberalism many of us could get behind. I think it's a liberalism that is more fundamentally "American", and more in tune with our founding documents and the real history of this country. It's more in line with who we most fervently want to be than the pinched, angry and hateful political philosophy we've been living under for far too long. So many Americans have been hearing only one side of our story. We hear only about cutthroat competition, about people who lift themselves up by their bootstraps. For years we've heard only a twisted retelling of our history, of our nature, a story cobbled together by some spawn of Ayn Rand and Thomas Hobbes. It's a myth ... nobody lifts themselves up alone.

In Belledame's challenge, she also asks what stories motivate activists. What fairy tales or myths motivated us as children? I enjoyed stories of people who worked together in dangerous environments, stories like the children in Wrinkle in Time who solve problems with the help of mysterious strangers. Stories of the colonists in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, who find strength in themselves and each other to rebel against tyranny. In the early days of this country, in many communities people found ways to work together with the original inhabitants of this country, took inspiration from the government of the Haudenosaunee to build a structure where disparate states could form a central common government. This history was buried by the land-greedy likes of President Jackson and Davy Crockett, but it's part of our history none-the-less.

Our history is the collision of these two competing stories. THIS activist is going to keep telling that lesser-known story. This country is a country that includes numerous people who want us to take care of each other. A people who believe in education and fair wages and hope for the future. There are more of us than there are of the angry haters, deep in our hearts. We are the people who fought for emancipation and sufferage ... the people who protested when confronted by our government's crimes against those who lived here before us. We are the people who raised our neighbor's barns, who helped the family next door who's house had burned down. We're the people who formed bucket brigades, who worked together to build a schoolhouse. We are the people who fought for immigrants to feel welcome in this land that our ancestors had come to uninvited when they came here uninvited. We may have been the ones working the long hours, struggling to feed our children, fighting to learn how to live in a strange land and speak a language we didn't understand, but we've always found a way to help one another. It is among the poor, the unique and the outcasts that one often finds the greatest community.  

I believe that the country we should be working toward is one that invests in its people. I believe that government is the way we express our hopes and belief in each other, and it's far past time that we started using it again. I believe that the myriad variations in our races and cultures and faiths enrich us all, that we can all learn from each other, better ourselves by being open to "others". I believe that real national security is grounded in a public health system that works, a regulatory system that ensures that businesses are required to act responsibly, that they clean up the byproducts of their business. We can better secure our borders though a robust and open diplomacy rather than belligerent militarism, by an open embrace of the rule of law, even laws established over sovereign nations. I believe that none of us are free unless all of us are free to make our own choices about our bodies, unless all of us are free to follow the voice inside of us that tells us where we can find love, no matter what "tradition" demands.

Activism is born in stories, as Rebecca Solnit told the graduates at the Department of English at the University of California at Berkeley:

I thought of these things with the tools with which we English majors graduate into the world - not the tools that enable you to splice genes, cantilever bridges, or make piles of money, but those that enable you to analyze, to see patterns, to acquire a personal philosophy rather than a jumble of unexamined, hand-me-down notions; those that enable you not to make a living but maybe to live. This least utilitarian of educations prepares you to make sense of the world and maybe to make meaning; for one way to describe the great struggle of our time is as the endeavor to become a producer of meanings rather than a consumer of them - in an age when meaning as advertising and marketing, as others' definitions of pleasure and terror, is daily forced down our throats.

To make meaning, to change the world, or just to read it thoughtfully (which can itself be insurrectionary)… And never has our world been so overloaded, so rapidly changing, and so full of surprises that require us to change our minds, rethink possibilities, and then do so again; never has it required such careful reading. In my own case, the kind of critical reading I first learned to do with books, then with works of art, turned out to be transferable to national parks, atomic bombs, revolutions, marches, the act of walking - a skill transferred not only to feed my writing but my larger path through the world.

It's not just about protests and marches and legislation ... change grows from stories, from our ability to use our imaginations to see the world through another person's eyes. Change and a better, stronger nation can grow from compassion, compassion which we can attain by listening to the stories told by people different from ourselves, stories that we can imagine ourselves in, if only we take the time to imagine a different beginning for ourselves and a better future for us all.

The frightened and hateful amongst us will mock these stories, write it off as immature and soft-hearted. They are wrong. Human history isn't solely about conflict and war and bloodshed and hatred. Human history is about families gathering together into villages, villages into towns, and towns into cities. Our race builds more than it destroys. We create beautiful things and sing wonderful songs and learn each other languages so we can trade with each other and learn from each other. This isn't a soft, naive way of looking at the world, it's a clear way of looking at our world, looking at it by refusing to surrender to fear and hatred.

Isn't that a world we all want, for ourselves and our neighbors? Why don't we start fighting back, working to make it real?

All great movements start with a story of a better world - Liberal Street Fighter



Display:
Change and a better, stronger nation can grow from compassion, compassion which we can attain by listening to the stories told by people different from ourselves, stories that we can imagine ourselves in, if only we take the time to imagine a different beginning for ourselves and a better future for us all.

You have given me soul food for the day Madman. This quote just got archived in my file for "favorite quotes."

I so often think about the idea that a mere change in our political leaders is necessary, but not sufficient to produce the kind of change we need to heal our country.

You've articulated a vision that helps me begin to see what that change looks like - thank you.

Doesn't information itself have a liberal bias? Steven Colbert

by NLinStPaul on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 08:29:13 AM EST
wow, thanks.

I have a bad habit of holding the good things I see close ... giving into fear that they too will be swept away. It's not healthy, yet only I sign that I was steeped in this culture too.

Our politicians will never get any better until we believe we deserve better.

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott

by Madman in the Marketplace on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 08:58:52 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Heart + mind = powerful writing!!!

Doesn't information itself have a liberal bias? Steven Colbert
by NLinStPaul on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 09:11:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Once upon a time there was a small and twisted, angry, hate-filled person.  Oh, he hadn't always been that way. When he was young he was filled with joy and faith and love. But then something happened.  He started drinking from a deep dark well of poisoned water. The poison was extremely slow acting, but very effective.  As he grew up, the poison killed his joy and his faith and severely maimed his love.

He no longer believed in the goodness of people around him.  He no longer believed in the goodness of people far away.  He no longer believed in himself - though he didn't know that. The poison, known as fear, worked its way through his whole system. It caused him to simultaneously lash out and shut down. He bought lots of stuff to distract himself from the pain. He told himself he was smart and strong and righteous, but his central nervous system was damaged and the concepts penetrated only the outer layers of his brain.  He told himself he was good, and blessed, and worthy, but the poison had damaged his heart and these concepts bounced off the hard shell surrounding it.

Although he was shrinking, he learned to compensate - puffing himself up to appear as large as possible.  He would cause fear in his enemies - who were everywhere.

All around him other people drank from the well. The poison's work was swifter and more devastating in some people than in others, but insidious in everyone.

He became rude, and rigid, and violent - but only to keep himself safe. Other frightened people ridiculed him. "He's so dumb he doesn't even know he's poisoned," they would chortle. "He's different than we are. He's base and vile." "We're not!"  The taunts did not help him to heal. He felt superior - as did those who were taunting him.  He knew he could survive it all.  He built a fence, then a wall.  He armed himself.  He only went out when accompanied by a beast that he had trained to be vicious. The poison kept working though.  It drove him to desperation.

One day he was sitting by the banks of a river, guarding against the arrival of "The Others."  Despite his vigilance, he must have dozed off. All of the sudden a child was next to him.  The child was gently stroking his hand and gently humming. The young one picked a dandelion and solemnly handed it to him, before toddling off. The sun must have become very bright, for his eyes filled with tears. His breath came a little more deeply and freely.  Although he did not know he was filled with poison, he sensed deep within him a fleeting moment of health.


If you want things to get better, be prepared to deal with change.

by Kahli on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 08:55:02 AM EST
fear is a terrible poison, and this culture is swimming in it.

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott
by Madman in the Marketplace on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 12:32:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Brilliant.

Obama is a Patriot
by Steven D on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 12:14:47 PM EST
thanks.

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott
by Madman in the Marketplace on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 12:30:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Breath taking diary Madman. Your writing moves me to my depths of heart and soul.

Frodo failed...Bush has got the ring.
by alohaleezy on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 12:16:11 PM EST
thanks.

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott
by Madman in the Marketplace on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 12:30:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]
A truly terrific diary, Madman: heartfelt, concise, intelligent, meaningful.
It exemplifies what we, as a community, now need to share with one another: bountiful resource.

Related, imo: I shared the following via email this morning. Note that my reference to 'Spirit' here refers not primarily to any manner of religiosity, per se, but to what sustains us, individually, in strength & community -- which is not self-interested, but serves us all in common if it serves us alone.

As I keep saying, there is nothing alien to 'the American way of life' about BushCo. If anything, they exemplify it; they are the stars & heroes, the pinnacle of all we've achieved or hope to achieve, as a nation (rather than the hype-nation): absolute power, endless comfort & screw all.

This goes double & triple for their overseers.

Additionally, 'tis correct that this really has nothing much to do with nations, per se. It's a matter of universal human detriment, the limits of the lower being divorced from Spirit.

Ergo, I'm of the opinion that the only way for individuals to combat this state of affairs requires, first off, that we realign with Spirit -- not in the typically superficial way, but in a way that forms our existence & guides our sensibilities.

Otherwise, we've got absolutely nothing to hold against these creatures, because we're basically just the same. They are of us & we are of them; assumptions to the contrary are strictly reactionary in terms of specifics.

These people have arisen to power because we, as a national community, are largely characterized by the very same selfish indifference.

Frankly, whatever brings about a crisis of conscience in this country as a whole -- & this will not occur until we've truly 'hit bottom' in terms of our international standing, which is, in fact, occurring -- will be ultimately for our benefit.  ..

Not meaning to toot my own outlook; just adding to what I see as an excellent & sorely needed dialogue on who we are, precisely & how this informs the lighted path forward.

by wilderness wench on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 01:58:28 PM EST
Wilderness Wench, you too have captured so beautifully and profoundly what has been in my heart and mind lately. Thanks!!

Doesn't information itself have a liberal bias? Steven Colbert
by NLinStPaul on Tue May 16th, 2006 at 06:03:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]
This is beautiful. Moon is a harsh mistress was a nice touch. Inspiring.

There is a full book online about how impressed Benjamin Franklin was with the indian nations, it inspired our checks and balances.

F O R G O T T E N
F O U N D E R S
By Bruce E. Johansen

Benjamin Franklin, the Iroquois
and the Rationale for the
American Revolution


Truth without proof is just biting comedy. ~~ TimeTogether

by TimeTogether (TimeTogether -@- gmail -dot- com) on Wed May 17th, 2006 at 03:23:29 AM EST
Thanks for the link!

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott
by Madman in the Marketplace on Wed May 17th, 2006 at 06:48:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Excellent diary but somehow I no longer believe this is a just a storm. It's beginning to feel like a planet killer size disaster which only the un-lucky will survive to live day by day in total and complete misery.

Metal Faces, Metal Times, Metal Places, Metal Lives, You can laugh or you can cry, For Metal Men, With Mirrorshade Minds.
by Mirrorshade Mind on Wed May 17th, 2006 at 04:01:38 AM EST
I worry about that too.

"Whenever a Voice of Moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott
by Madman in the Marketplace on Wed May 17th, 2006 at 06:46:47 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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