Whose Standards?
10/04/2003
- Opinión
When a New York Times correspondent indicated on its front page of
February 16th 2003, that there were now only two super powers in the
world -- the U.S. and public opinion - dissidents everywhere trumpeted the
article as recognizing activism's stature and importance. But did we
understand the broader implications?
The Times observation indicates what we all should already have known --
that there is a war in the world. It is between an agenda that aggrandizes
the rich and powerful at the expense of the poor and weak - and a contrary
agenda that diminishes differences in income, wealth, and power on the
road to equity and self-management. Moreover, it isn't the policies of the
disparate heads of state of France and Germany, Italy and Spain, Turkey
and India, South Africa and Egypt, Chile and Bolivia, that ultimately
matter most to people's daily life prospects. Nor is it the machinations
of the separate corporate leaders of competing businesses around the
world. What ultimately matters most to people's prospects now and into the
future, is the struggle between the world's masters and its aroused
citizens.
The conflict between these super powers rages in neighborboods,
communities, counties, countries, and regions, and across the whole
planet. Advocates of justice are getting stronger, but we cannot yet
reverse the rising tides of repression, violence, and impoverishment. We
cannot yet win big victories for peace, redistribution, and justice. And
so if we go to bed each night measuring our day's labors by whether we
have won major victories against the behemoth, then each night we will go
to bed weeping over our inadequacy and moaning at the power of the world's
centers of power and their ability to ignore our demands. Worse, our
weeping and moaning will diminish our energies and make us unattractive to
those we seek to reach. We will go to bed dumb as well, because we will be
ratifying standards of measurement which stunt and curb our efforts, and
which entirely lack reason.
This is the best of times. We have seen, in recent weeks, not only the
largest simultaneous peaceful legal demonstrations worldwide in history,
but massive civil disobedience, coordinated resistance, citywide,
regional, and national teach-ins, protests, and marches, and what is
ultimately most important, local outreach in towns, on streets, in
schools, and everywhere.
More, the tone and tenor of this upsurge is diversifying. People are
seeing the necessity to not only oppose this war, but to oppose all
imperial war. People are seeing the need to not only seek peace now, but
to seek pervasive and lasting peace, and not just peace but also justice.
People are seeing the need to not only reject the barbaric, the colonial,
and the domineering, but to propose and advocate positive alternatives to
capitalism, patriarchy, and racism.
A movement is growing that can persist to fight again and again,
amassing strength as it goes. By the standard of winning big changes
every day, this movement will lose, lose, lose, for awhile. But by the
standard of daily growing bigger, broader, more committed, and more
competent, it will win, win, win. And as a result of those continuing
achievements, it will begin engineering a trajectory of smaller and then
larger changes in society that will each in turn improve people's lives
and create conditions for still more improvements, right up to
establishing an alternative world we can all celebrate.
But this is also the worst of times. We have seen, in recent weeks,
despite our activism, not only a gigantic assault on a defenseless
country but a celebration of that assault as if it were a major human
achievement. On top of missiles, bombers, helicopters, and tanks we have
suffered a media that reports war like it was soccer, that obscures
context and substance to highlight dismissive details, and that lies and
denies and even fabricates news so that it is fit to print in the eyes of
the masters.
Mainstream media presents what suits the masters. It obscures what
doesn't. Media mystification so swamps the air waves, the sound waves, and
the byways, that any person not directly plugged into alternative avenues
of thought and not sustained by a community that ratifies true information
and analysis, cannot help but to some degree succumb to the fear and
loathing and triumphalism screaming forth from every orifice of society,
It is no wonder that at least temporarily imperial thoughts occupy many
people's minds, not only despite people having a social conscience, but
even, amazingly, in pursuit of manifesting such a conscience.
This is the age of wisdom. The taxi driver and meat packer, the nurse and
train steward, the dishwasher, maid, and drugstore cashier, the truck
driver and the assembler all know that injustice pervades the hierarchies
of wealth and power they daily encounter at work, in court, dealing with
doctors, and in every other pursuit that crosses paths with the wealthy
and powerful. They know too, even if they don't always want to admit it,
that Bush is braindead, that elections are sham choices between advocates
of the powerful that occur despite our desires, and that at the bottom of
reality tv and pervading unreal news reporting there lies profit and
power. The public is becoming poetic. The commercial and the crass,
broadcast everywhere and requiring our attention at every moment if we are
to be part of society, are nonetheless ultimately losing the battle for
our hearts and minds. People are gaining awareness, consciousness, and
even, ever so slowly, confidence.
But this is also the age of foolishness. As if to spite the very idea of
thoughtfulness and wisdom, all too many people with advanced degrees, with
decades of education and reading, and with access to unlimited
information, all too many people who monopolize legal and medical and
engineering and administrative information, and certainly all too many
economists and political scientists and managers and newspaper journalists
- overwhelmingly prattle the most nonsensical idiocy. We are liberating a
country that we are subjugating. We are beacons of freedom in a world that
fears our every move. We favor democracy as we install colonial rulers and
ignore the will of whole populations. Our bombs are the sounds of freedom,
not of violent silence. Empire is what we reject, not the touchstone of
our behavior. Those with the highest education pontificate against fact,
lecture against reason, and preach against the slightest sense of moral
decency. It is not only that in America the more we watch the less we
know; it is also the more education we have, the stupider we tend to be -
not surprisingly.
Here in the USA, we have belief and incredulity. We have light and
darkness. We have hope and despair. Looked at one way we have everything
before us. Looked at another way we have nothing before us. Considering
our aspirations, we are all going direct to heaven. Considering the bones
and bodies accumulating in our name, we are all going direct to hell. It
wasn't only in Dickens time that it was the best of times, that it was the
worst of times.
So, which is it? Is history on a road to a worse past or on a road to a
better future?
Is democracy coming to the USA...real democracy, for the first time? Or
fascism?
It depends whose calculus we use to judge. It depends whether we use the
localist's or the globalist's measuring stick. It depends whether we use
apocalyptic or sober analysis. It depends whether we let the media make us
pessimistic, or we let our minds see the realistic.
There is a war on. It is not new, but it is heating up. Our side is
getting stronger, much stronger. And not surprisingly, that means the
other side is showing its fangs. We shouldn't exaggerate our gains, but
neither should we underplay them. We shouldn't think we are on the verge
of massive victories and as a result adversely evaluate ourselves against
attaining such victories now. We should instead see that while we are
still relatively small we are nonetheless on a path of continuing growth
of numbers, continuing diversification of methods, continuing enlargement
of insights, continuing espousal of positive aspirations, and we should
judge ourselves daily by whether, with ups and downs, we can keep moving
on that path.
Wrong standards will yield a depressing decay of our efforts. Right
standards will yield a calm continuation of our efforts. Given that
simple reality, surely we can all set standards sensibly.
* Source: ZNet (http://www.zmag.org).
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/107333?language=es
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