Monday, December 26, 2016

Natal~Subversão~Resistência Christmas~Subversion~Resistance Navidad~Subversión~Resistencia

Reflexões natalinas de uma amiga nossa:
Gosto de pensar no Natal como um ato de subversão...

- Um menino pobre;
- Uma mãe "solteira";
- Um pai "adotivo";
- Quem assiste seu nascimento é a ralé da sociedade (pastores);
- É presenteado por gente "de outras religiões" (magos, astrólogos);
- A "família" tem que fugir e viram refugiados políticos;
- Depois volta e vai viver na periferia;
O resto, a gente celebra na Páscoa... mas com a mesma subversão...
“Sim! A revolução virá dos pobres! Só deles pode vir a salvação!” (Jon Sobrino)

Feliz Natal!
Feliz subversão!
Feliz resistencia!
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Chrismas reflections from a friend:

I like to think of Christmas as a subversive act . . .
- A poor child;
- A “single” mother;
- An adoptive father;
- Those who witness his birth are the least of society (shepherds);
- He receives gifts from persons of other religions (magi, astrologers);
- The “family”has to flee and so become political refugees;
- Later they return, to live far from the center of power;
The rest, we celebrate at Easter . . .but with the same subversion . . .
“Yes! The revolution will be led by the poor! Only from them can salvation come!” (Jon Sobrino)

Merry Christmas!
Merry subversion!

Merry resistance!
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Reflexiones navindañas de una amiga nuestra:
Me gusta pensar en la Navidad como un acto de subversión ...
- Un niño pobre;
- Una madre "soltera";
- Un padre "adoptivo";
- ¿Quién vigila a su nacimiento es la escoria de la sociedad (pastores);
- Se presenta por personas "de otras religiones" (magos, astrólogos);
- La "familia" tiene que huir y convertirse en refugiados políticos;
- Después regresan y van a vivir en la periferia;
El resto lo celebramos en Pascua ... pero con la misma subversión ...
“¡Sí! ¡La revolución vendrá de los pobres! ¡Sólo de ellos puede venir la salvación!” (Jon Sobrino)

¡Feliz Navidad!
¡Feliz subversión!
¡Feliz resistencia!

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Reflections on the Occasion of Fidel Castro's Passing

When I learned of the passing of Fidel Castro on November 25th this year, as an expression of my sense of loss I posted to my Facebook page an image along with my personal message: “The world lost an amazing leader today, someone I have always admired.”

While I anticipated that some of my more conservative friends would not appreciate my perspective, I was surprised when a fellow-Bernie Sanders supporter and good friend responded with: “David, do you mean to say that my understanding of him as a ruthlessly unwavering dictator who basically imprisoned his own people for 57 years (and counting) is wrong and that there was a GOOD side to this bitter tyrant?”

At first I thought that perhaps his comment was tongue-in-cheek. I nevertheless responded briefly citing what I understand are world-class advances made under the Cuban revolution in the areas of agriculture, education, greater equality among citizens, and healthcare. My friend responded again clarifying that he was serious in his comments, further stating that “I simply think that liberty, universally, is worth more than anything you mentioned.”

This brief social media exchange challenged me to further explore and deepen my own understanding and stance concerning Fidel – the theme of this blog post.

I want to begin though with the question of universal liberty. To speak about liberty – especially as a citizen of the country that claims “liberty and justice for all,” reflection concerning liberty (or the lack thereof) in any other nation must be considered within the context of the reality of liberty experienced in these United States. Sadly, contrary to our national claim, one does not have to go far at all to discover that the reality stands at a great distance from the ideal.

A current illustration would be the recent stand-off on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota. While our nation promises freedom of speech and liberty to assemble peacefully and liberty to demonstrate peacefully, what we saw playing out in North Dakota speaks a different reality – a reality repeated frequently in this country. Peaceful demonstrators have experienced various forms of repression and abuse at the hand of local police and the National Guard – being water-cannoned in sub-freezing temperatures, as well as beatings and jail time. This, carried out against citizens and in defense of corporate (i.e. capitalist) interests.

Another example would be the fact, as reported in the Washington Post – not exactly a bastion of liberal politics, that the United States incarcerates its citizens at a higher rate than any other country! They state that “the United States had the highest prison population rate in the world, at 716 per 100,000 people. [By comparison] More than half the 222 countries and territories in the World Prison Population List . . . had rates below 150 per 100,000.”1 While the United States accounts for 5% of the world's population, it has 25% of the world's prisoners. Furthermore, those in prison are disproportionately people of color – according to the American Friends Service Committee, 60%.2

It has been my contention for decades that “liberty” in the United States only exists to the extent that one supports or in no way threatens the politico-economic powers that are the actual deciders in this country. A person or movement that becomes vocal and visible enough to be seen as an actual threat to the desired status quo will very soon experience their “freedom” curtailed. A common tactic has been to imprison key movement leaders on trumped up or minor charges. Leonard Peltier, a leader in the American Indian Movement has been in prison since 1977 on charges of killing two FBI agents, this despite considerable evidence indicating that the legal basis for guilt are problematic at multiple levels.3  So, if the measure of “liberty” is what takes place in the United States, one must be very careful in being too quick to judge the lack of liberty in other places.

Fidel Castro and the Cuban revolution:
Admittedly, my admiration for Fidel Castro is not based on the
measure of personal civil liberty experienced by the Cuban people. There is significant and credible evidence that those who pose a challenge to the political status quo in Cuba experience various forms of intimidation and repression including imprisonment.4 In a 2011 assessment of the Cuban revolution, author Samuel Farber notes that while the revolution may have enjoyed popular mobilization and enthusiasm, what was eventually lacking were avenues for popular democratic participation and control.5 Cuban journalist, Carlos Manuel Álvarez, corroborates this lack but highlights the intriguing fact that the revolution cautivó la imaginación de generaciones enteras que fueron beneficiadas por una revolución que terminó hace mucho tiempo, pero que aún sobrevive como marca política” (captivated the imagination of entire generations who benefited from a revolution that long ago ended but that survives as a political symbol). Again, I would suggest that this lack of liberty while perhaps not the same in quantity is essentially the same in quality as what takes place in the U.S.

So what is it that I admire about Fidel? First is the fact that he not only unseated the U.S. imposed dictator, Fulgencio Batista6, but that the Cuban Revolution has for fifty years survived in defiance to and in spite of the indefatigable pressure of U.S. imperialism. It stands as an alternative social-political-economic model to global capitalism. In the words of Salvadoran writer, Élmer L. Menjívar: “Lloré a Fidel porque murió una esperanza que fue, porque murió una imperfecta posibilidad de que el mundo podía ser distinto, acaso mejor, menos desigual, menos material” (Cry for Fidel, because (with him) dies a hope that was, the imperfect possibility of a different world, perhaps better, less unequal, less materialistic).

So what are the achievements of Fidel's Cuba that I so value?7 First is the tremendous advances in education. In 1958 the illiteracy rate in Cuba stood at 23%. In just one year, with the mobilization of 280,000 volunteers teaching approximately 100,000 students, illiteracy in the country was virtually eliminated. A resident of the city of Santiago de Cuba is quoted in a 2009 Miami Herald article as acknowledging that while "It's true we have problems and we don't eat exactly what we want every day, this town was 70 percent illiterate before the revolution. Now it's filled with people who read, write, think and analyze." Another advance in education – still not achieved in the United States - is that not long after the revolution free education was established at all levels, from pre-school to a PhD. Today Cuba has more teachers per capita than any other country in the world.

Another significant achievement is in the area of healthcare. Cuba is recognized worldwide for some of its advances in medicine and it is renowned for sending medical personnel to places in need in Africa and Latin America. Prior to 1959, except for the very wealthy, most Cubans had very little or no access to healthcare. The revolution established that health care is a basic right of all Cuban citizens. It established a new ethic in health carenot for profit, but for service to the people. According to the World Health Organization, life expectancy in Cuba is now 78 years — 76 years for men and 80 years for women. In comparison, the US life expectancy at birth is 75 and 80 years for males and females respectively. In 1959, average life expectancy in Cuba was just 58 years. In 2008, infant mortality in Cuba was 5.9 deaths per 1000 live births. Infant mortality in the US is 7 deaths per 1000 live births. According to the WHO, Cuba has nearly twice as many physicians per capita as the US — 5.91 doctors per 1000 people compared to 2.56 doctors per 1000. In fact today Cuba has more doctors per capita than any other country in the world.

While the numbers in this regard are more disputed, there is indication that Cuba has made significant advances in addressing issues of racism, sexism, and homophobia as well. Cuba is also recognized for advances in agriculture and dairy production, in organic farming, urban food production and in the development of renewable energy sources. Cuba has the world's best environmental record, and since 1959 they have increased the forest coverage on the island by 50%. They are the only country in the world designated by the World Wildlife Fund as developing environmental sustainability.

While the story line in the United States is that Cuba is a nation characterized primarily by poverty and the lack of freedom, according to the United Nation's Human Development Index quality of life in Cuba is on par with that of Brazil, parts of Europe, Russia, China, Mexico, Panama, and Costa Rica among others.

In conclusion then, I acknowledge that it is a mixed story. However I value that Fidel Castro believed in and gave his entire life – flaws and all – to the vision of creating a better, more just and equitable world. To quote again the article by Owen Richards: “The importance to humanity of [the] social gains in 50 years of the Cuban Revolution cannot be overstated. Cuba shows what is possible — even in a blockaded Third World country that had inherited deep poverty and an economy distorted by colonialism and imperialist exploitation. Perhaps the greatest achievement of [all] is that it demonstrates that it is possible to build a society that is motivated principally by human solidarity rather than personal greed.” 

Look for my next post on "liberty or quality of life and the common good."
 
3 For a summary overview, see this recent article in Mother Jones. See also the recent teleSur article, on the U.S.'s unpardonable crimes.
5 Samuel Farber, Cuba Since the Revolution of 1959: A Critical Analysis (Haymarket Books, 2011). I am here citing a review of this book by Jason Farbman: “A Balance Sheet of the Cuban Revolution.”
6 As one source put it: “to Castro's credit, at least among those who were offended by Cuba's reputation as a haven for money-hungry undesirables, he drove out those (often American) underworld entrepreneurs who profited from Havana's notorious gambling casinos and bordellos.”
7 In the following paragraphs I draw, not exculsively, but heavily on the helpful summary article published in 2008 by Owen Richards, titled “Cuban Revolution: Celebrating 50 Years of Accomplishments." See also "Comandante Fidel: Combatant to the End."

Sunday, November 20, 2016

O DIREITO DE SONHAR - Eduardo Galeano

 Read in English.  Leer en Español. 
Como escreví no meu post anterior (On the Eve of the U.S. Elections), hoje estamos vivendo em tempos desesperados. Isso fica aindo mais evidente com os resultados electorais aquí nos EUA. Dada esta realidade – aquí, no Brasil, e em muitos outros lugares do mundo – como é que devemos reagir? Eu acredito que um passo importante é sermos claros sobre o tipo de mundo que desejamos; O tipo de mundo com que sonhamos, o que buscamos.
As palavras do grande jornalista e escritor Uruguayo, Eduardo Galeano, é um dos lugares onde encontro esta visão poderosamente articulada. Então, neste post do meu blog vou compartilhar, para todos nós, as palavras da poesia dele, “El Derecho al Soñar” (“O Direito de Sonhar”):
 ________________________________________________________________________________
Então vamos delirar! Deliremos, por um bocadinho:
Que tal, se fixamos os nossos olhos por um momento alem da infâmia do presente para imaginar um outro mundo possivel?
Nas ruas, os automóveis serão atropelados pelos cães.
As pessoas não serão conduzidas pelos automóveis, nem serão programadas pelos computadores, nem serão compradas pelos supermercados, nem serão vistas pelas televisões.
A TV deixará de ser o membro mais importante da família, e será tratado como o ferro de engomar, ou a máquina de lavar.
As pessoas trabalharão para viver, em vez de viverem para trabalhar.
Os códigos penais incorporarão o delito de estupidez que cometen aqueles que vivem por ter o por ganhar, em vez de viver por viver e nada mais, como canta o passaro sem saber que canta e como brinca a criança sem saber que brinca.
Em nenhum país irão presos os rapazes que se neguem a fazer o serviço militar, mas sim os que quiserem fazê-lo.
Os economistas não chamarão “nível de vida” o nível de consumo, nem chamarão “qualidade de vida” à quantidade de coisas.
Os chefs não acreditarão que as lagostas adoram ser cozinhadas vivas.
Os historiadores não acreditarão que os países adoram ser invadidos.
Os políticos não acreditarão que os pobres adoram comer promessas.
A solemnidade se deixará de crer que é uma virtude, e ninguém tomará em sério nenhuma pessoa que não é capaz de fazer piada de se mesmo.
A morte e o dinheiro perdem seus poderes mágicos, e nem por causa da defunçao ou pela fortuna o canalha se transforma em cavaleiro virtuoso.
Ninguem será considerada heroe e nem besta por fazer o que ele acho que é justo em vez de fazer o que ele acha melhor para se mesmo.
O mundo já não estará em guerra contra os pobres, mas sim contra a pobreza. A indústria militar não terá outro remédio senão declarar falência para sempre.
Ninguém morrerá de fome porque ninguém morrerá de indigestão.
As crianças de rua não serão tratadas como se fossem lixo porque não haverá crianças de rua. As crianças ricas não serão tratadas como se fossem dinheiro porque não haverá crianças ricas.
A educação não será o privilégio de quem a possa pagar, nem a polícia será a maldição de quem não a possa comprar.
A justiça e a liberdade - irmãs siamesas condenadas a viver separadas - voltarão a juntar-se bem juntinhas, costas com costas.
Uma mulher negra será presidente do Brasil. E outra mulher negra será presidente dos Estados Unidos. E uma mulher índia governará a Guatemala e outra o Perú.
E na Argentina as “Loucas da Praça de Maio” serão um exemplo de saúde mental, porque elas se recusaram a esquecer nos tempos da amnésia obrigatória.
A Santa Madre Igreja corrigirá alguns erros das tábuas de Moisés. O sexto mandamento ordenará festejar o corpo. O nono, que desconfia do desejo, declara-lo-á sagrado. A igreja também declarará um décimo primeiro mandamento, de que o Senhor se terá esquecido: “amarás a natureza, da qual fazes parte!”.
Serão reflorestados os desertos do mundo e os desertos do alma.
Os desesperados serão esperados e os perdidos serão encontrados, porque são desesperados por tanto esperar e se perderam por tanto buscar.
Seremos compatriotas e contemporâneos de todos os que têm vontade de beleza e vontade de justiça, seja onde for que naceram, seja onde for que viveram, e não importa nem um pouco as fronteras do mapa ou do tempo.
Seremos imperfeitos porque a perfeição continuará sendo o chato privilegio dos deuses.
Mas neste mundo atrapalhado e fudido seremos capazes de viver cada dia como se fosse o premeiro e cada noite come se fosse a ultima.

THE RIGHT TO DREAM by Eduardo Galeano

Leer en EspañolLeia em Português.
As I wrote in my post On the Eve of the U.S. Elections, we are today living in desperate times. This has become even more evident with the election results. Given this reality – here in the U.S. and in many other places globally - how are we to respond? I believe that one important step is to become clear about the kind of world we desire; the kind of world we dream of, that we en-vision.

The writings of the great Uruguayan journalist and writer, Eduardo Galeano, are one of the places I find this vision powerfully articulated. And so in this post I share, for all of us to consider, the words of his poem: “El Derecho al Soñar” (“The Right to Dream"):

"How about if, for a moment, we rave?
Let's set our sights beyond the abominations of today to divine another possible world?
The air shall be cleansed of all poisons except those born of human fears and human passions.
In the streets, cars shall be run over by dogs.
People shall not be driven by cars, or programmed by computers, or bought by supermarkets, or watched by televisions.
The TV set shall no longer be the most important member of the family and shall be treated like an iron or a washing machine.
People shall work for a living instead of living for work.
Written into law shall be the crime of stupidity, committed by those who live to have or to win, instead of living just to live like the bird that sings without knowing it and the child who plays unaware that he or she is playing.
In no country shall young men who refuse to go to war go to jail, rather only those who want to make war.
Economists shall not measure living standards by consumption levels or the quality of life by the quantity of things.
Cooks shall not believe that lobsters love to be boiled alive.
Historians shall not believe that countries love to be invaded.
Politicians shall not believe that the poor love to eat promises.
Solemnity shall no longer be a virtue, and no-one shall be taken seriously who can’t make fun of him or herself.
Death and money shall lose their magical powers, and neither demise nor fortune shall make a virtuous gentleman of a rat.
No-one shall be considered a hero or a fool for doing what he believes is right instead of what serves him best.
Rather than wage war on the poor, the world will wage war on poverty.
The arms industry shall have no alternative but to declare bankruptcy.
No one will die of hunger because no one will die of indigestion.
Street children will no longer be treated as though they were garbage, because there will no longer be street children; rich children will not be treated as though they were gold, because there will be no rich children.
Education shall not be the privilege of those who can pay and the police shall not be the curse of those who cannot pay.
Justice and liberty, Siamese twins condemned to live apart, shall meet again and be reunited and inextricably connected once again.
A woman, a black woman, shall be president of Brazil, and another black woman shall be president of the United States; an Indian woman shall govern Guatemala and another Peru.
In Argentina, the crazy women of the Plaza de Mayo shall be held up as examples of mental health because they refused to forget in a time of obligatory amnesia.
Holy Mother Church shall correct the typos on the tablet of Moses and the Sixth Commandment shall dictate the celebration of the body.
The Church shall also proclaim another commandment, the one God forgot: “You shall love nature, of which you are a part.”
The deserts of the world and of the soul shall be reforested.
The despairing ones shall be awaited and the lost shall be found, for they are the ones who despaired from so much waiting and who were lost through so much seeking.
We shall be compatriots and contemporaries of all who have a yearning for justice and beauty, no matter where they were born or where they lived, because the borders of geography and time shall cease to exist.
We shall be the imperfect ones because perfection shall remain the boring privilege of the gods.
However, in our bungling and fucked up world we will live every night as if it were the last and every day as if it were the first.

EL DERECHO AL SOÑAR - Eduardo Galeano

Read in English.  Leia em Português.
Como escribí en mi post anterior (On the Eve of the U.S. Elections) estamos viviendo hoy en tiempos desesperados. Esto se ha hecho aún más evidente con los resultados electorales aquí en los EUA. Dada esta realidad - aquí y en muchos otros lugares a nivel mundial - ¿cómo respondemos? Creo que un paso importante es que seamos claros acerca del tipo de mundo que deseamos; El tipo de mundo con el que soñamos, lo que buscamos.
Los escritos del gran periodista y escritor Uruguayo, Eduardo Galeano, son uno de los lugares donde encuentro esta visión poderosamente articulada. Y así en este post comparto, para todos nosotros, las palabras de su poema: "El Derecho de Soñar.”
__________________________________________________________________________________
¿Qué tal si deliramos por un ratito?
¿Qué tal si clavamos los ojos más allá de la infamia para adivinar otro mundo posible?
El aire estará limpio de todo veneno que no provenga de los miedos humanos y de las humanas pasiones.
En las calles los automóviles serán aplastados por los perros.
La gente no será manejada por el automóvil, ni será programada por el ordenador, ni será comprada por el supermercado, ni será tampoco mirada por el televisor.
El televisor dejará de ser el miembro más importante de la familia y será tratado como la plancha o el lavarropas.
La gente trabajará para vivir en lugar de vivir para trabajar.
Se incorporará a los códigos penales el delito de estupidez que cometen quienes viven por tener o por ganar, en vez de vivir por vivir no más, como canta el pájaro sin saber que canta y como juega el niño sin saber que juega.
En ningún país irán presos los muchachos que se nieguen a cumplir el servicio militar sino los que quieran cumplirlo.
Los economistas no llamarán nivel de vida al nivel de consumo, ni llamarán calidad de vida a la cantidad de cosas.
Los cocineros no creerán que a las langostas les encanta que las hiervan vivas.
Los historiadores no creerán que a los países les encanta ser invadidos.
Los políticos no creerán que a los pobres les encanta comer promesas.La solemnidad se dejará de creer que es una virtud, y nadie tomará en serio a nadie que no sea capaz de tomarse el pelo.
La muerte y el dinero perderán sus mágicos poderes, y ni por defunción ni por fortuna se convertirá el canalla en virtuoso caballero.
Nadie será considerado héroe ni tonto por hacer lo que cree justo en lugar de hacer lo que más le conviene;
El mundo ya no estara en guerra contra los pobres se no contra la pobreza.La industria militar no tendrá más remedio que declararse en quiebra.
Nadie se morira de hambre porque nadie morira de indigestión.
Los niños de la calle ya no seran tratados como se fueran basura, porque no habra niño de la calle.
Los niños ricos no serán tradatods como se fueran diñero, porque no habrá niños ricos.
La educación no será el privilegio de quienes puedan pagarla y la policía no será la maldición de quienes no puedan comprarla.
La justicia y la libertad, hermanas siamesas, condenadas a vivir separadas, volverán a juntarse, bien pegaditas, espalda contra espalda.Una mujer, negra, será presidenta de Brasil y otra mujer, negra, será presidenta de los Estados Unidos de América; una mujer india gobernará Guatemala y otra, Perú.
En Argentina las locas de Plaza de Mayo serán un ejemplo de salud mental porque ellas se negaron a olvidar en los tiempos de la amnesia obligatoria.
La Santa Madre Iglesia corregirá algunas erratas de las tablas de Moisés y el sexto mandamiento ordenará festejar el cuerpo.
La Iglesia también dictará otro mandamiento que se le había olvidado a Dios, “amarás a la Naturaleza de la que formas parte”.
Serán reforestados los desiertos del mundo y los desiertos del alma.
Los desesperados serán esperados y los perdidos serán encontrados porque ellos se desesperaron de tanto esperar y ellos se perdieron por tanto buscar.
Seremos compatriotas y contemporáneos de todos los que tengan voluntad de belleza y voluntad de justicia, hayan nacido cuando hayan nacido y hayan vivido donde hayan vivido, sin que importe ni un poquito las fronteras del mapa ni del tiempo.
Seremos imperfectos porque la perfección seguirá siendo el aburrido privilegio de los dioses.
Pero en este mundo, en este mundo chambón y jodido seremos capaces de vivir cada día como si fuera el primero y cada noche como si fuera la última.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

EVE OF THE U.S. 2016 ELECTIONS

So it has been several months since my last post. At that time after reviewing what I see as the state of the world today – with the gutting of democracies and the unabashed efforts of the super wealthy 1% to create a global plutocracy - I proposed a critical calling for our time. This calling led to three questions: (1) What are the actions and strategies that can effectively counter this global reality? (2) What approaches will enable those of us (the 99%), who are by far the majority, to fatally wound, to undermine, to bring an end to the direction of this plutocratic movement envisioned and controlled by the super-wealthy 1%? And, a final question: (3) What are the structures and practices that need to be put in place to build a world of true justice, equity, and peace? At the time I said that I would explore these questions in my subsequent postings. So here we go!!


I must confess, it has taken me this long to do a first follow-up . . . because it is not entirely clear to me what the answer to these questions might be. Over the last few months, events in our world – in my world – have made it even more difficult to envision how best to proceed. At the time of my last post there was a movement under way in Brazil – my heart country – to remove the duly elected President. It was clear that the grounds for removing her were fabrications representing economic and corporate interests as well as the interests of members of the congress and senate who wanted to put an end to the investigation of corruption charges against them. At the time I could not have imagined that this parliamentary coup could actually succeed, but succeed it did. And in the following weeks - and now months, despite almost daily street demonstrations and currently a growing occupy movement, and despite challenges from professional and student groups and social movements in Brazil as well as outcries from the international community (except the notable absence of the U.S. government), the propogators of the “golpe parlamentar” (parliamentary coup) continue to move forward in blatant disregard to the outrage. Their interests and sense of power are such that they really don't seem to fear or care about their country or the people.

Meanwhile here in the US – my birth country – we've watched as the two-party farce, with the support of a sensation-seeking media, have produced two candidates for the presidency each the least liked by their respective party. On one side of the political theatre a racist, xenophobic, misogynist, foul-mouthed, narcissistic, tax-evading supposed billionaire with possible traitorous ties to Russia. Shortly after the election – win or lose – he is due in court to face child rape and rackateering charges. His opponent on the other side is a woman who maintains secretive close ties to corporate and banking elites and supports the continued projection and probable increased use of US military power globally. Hanging over her head are accusations of poor judgement and possible criminal charges related to use of personal emails in her role as Secretary of State. Furthermore it has come out that her party manipulated the primary campaign process to ensure her victory over a more progressive and likely the most popular candidate in the race.* And as has been the case for decades, both parties controlled the electoral process in such a manner as to guarantee that no alternatives to the two-party hegemony are able to gain any significant foothold. Here, as in Brazil, the powers-that-be demonstrate a total disregard for any real interests of the citizenry.**

These are just two examples, not to mention the on-going wars and pillage in the Middle East, the forced migration of peoples on a scale not seen since WWII, the often violent opposition to outsiders in so many places in our world today, and the blatant violence of police against protestors and against communities of color including the current police violence against protestors on the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota. The list goes on and on. So -- what to do?

We live in desperate times! Those of us who dream of a world of justice, equality and peace face a challenge. Who are we called to be? What stands are we called to take? What will it take to effectively counter and subvert the present reality? What will it take to bend the course of history in a new direction? Clarifying our own values and vision and deepening our understanding of the current powers and structures are two keystones in the archway of an effective path forward.

* Excellent insightful reflection by philosopher Cornel West on the state of Democracy in the 2016 elections here in the United States: Spiritual Blackout in America.
** http://www.truthdig.com/avbooth/item/julian_assange_and_john_pilger_discuss_the_20161105 

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Our Critical Calling

I started this blog three and a half years ago with two primary purposes. One was to articulate – for myself and for others – where I stand in terms of faith. I grew up in a conservative Christian evangelical-fundamentalist context which in some ways continues to inform my spiritual life. But I have also departed radically from those upbringings to a much more open, nuanced, modern (and more ancient) theology and spirituality. In a short series of posts I described it as “A Strange Mix” (see posts dated 12/2/2012 and 12/30/2012).

A second purpose was to explore more deeply – and again to attempt to express for myself and for those who would read my blog – my view that the journey inward (see the post dated 10/12/2012) of self-understanding and spirit is intimately and dialectically bound up with the journey outward (see the post dated 10/15/2012) of life choices and actions aimed at creating a world of greater justice, equality, and peace. Both of these journeys, in my view, are grounded in the belief that God makes a preferential option for those on the margins of society and that this option defines our human calling and true faith.

Two years ago life offered me an opportunity that reflects both of these purposes: I was invited to join the team at Hope CommUnity Center in Apopka, Florida. With a history of over forty years rooted in faith, Hope's mission is to be a place of empowerment with the immigrant and working poor populations of central Florida. This is a mission that parallels my own vision and mission in life. I am truly grateful for the opportunity to be a part of this amazing organization.

Photo source: Popular Resistance newsletter
 This being said, events in the U.S. and globally over the last number of years have – each day it seems –
highlighted to an ever greater extent the need for concerted action for justice in our world. Around the world we've seen, in startling strides, the demise of people's democracy. The decision of the U.S. Supreme Court to legitimate unlimited contributions by corporations and the wealthy to political candidates and campaigns is a final blow to the average citizen having any real voice in elections. In the current election cycle the power of the two political parties here in the U.S. - two shades of the same political color really – to control the process of selecting candidates and to eliminate third party or outlier challenges has become starker than ever. We saw the rise of the Occupy movement, a voice for what has been recognized as the 99% - the vast majority of us barred from voice and influence in matters of the public domain. As long as the movement offered a minor and nonconstructive presence it was essentially ignored but once it began to gain voice and visibility, as is always the case, government and the police state engaged to ensure that there was ultimately no serious threat to the interests of business and the monied crowd.

Recent events in Brazil – my heart country – reflect in a similar way a startling disregard for the will of the people and the legitimacy of democracy. What is being called a “parliamentary” or “institutional” coup is being implemented by a wealthy and pro-corporate minority to remove the elected president and to undo gains made for the poor and average middle class during fourteen years under the elected governments of the Ignacio Lula da Silva and Dilma Rouseff, both of the Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers Party). Promulgated in the name of fighting corruption, the coup is in fact a blatant effort aimed at ending the criminal investigation of those who have seized power.*

The U.S. government has been strangely silent about the overthrowing of the government of the fifth largest nation in the world and a critical player in the Western Hemisphere. On the other hand perhaps it is not so strange since U.S. business is interested in and stands to gain a foothold in the lucrative oil and gas holdings of Brazil under the new illegitimate government. Other recent examples would include coups in Honduras, Libya (including the murder of the Libyan president) and the Ukraine – and even as I write, efforts to undo the elected government in Venezuela¥ -- all supported if not having direct involvement by the U.S. government.±

A key feature of the world we live in and the primary driving force undermining true democracy is the presence and influence wielded by those I refer to as the “monied crowd.” More accurately, it is the monied few. In a 2014 briefing paper, “Working for the Few,” Oxfam reported that the 85 wealthiest individuals in the world have as much money as the poorest half of the entire world's population – 3.5 million persons!

In the past few years here in the United States some of these ultra-super-wealthy have become open and explicit about the agenda they are funding and promoting. It is an agenda to do away with all government and legal support for workers, for the poor, for students, for the retired, for the middle class. Witness the decades of strategic support by the Koch brothers, the 5th and 6th wealthiest persons in the world, to eliminate the right of workers in the United States to unionize. It was even more revealing to me to learn recently that the Koch brothers provided training and financial support to three of four groups leading efforts to remove the elected president of Brazil. I begin to see that the aims of this monied crowd are driven by a global vision. They are not satisfied to dominate what happens in the United States or any other individual country. In fact, it seems to me that they have no real national interests. Their goal is to dominate the world, to create a very different world from the one we have today, a world that functions entirely according to their interests and demands. Their aim is a global plutocracy, creating a world ruled by the super rich, with the rest of us as serfs, serving their every beck and call.

What are the strategies and actions that can effectively counter this global reality. What approaches will enable those of us who are by far the majority, to fatally wound, to undermine, to bring an end to the direction of this hegemonic plutocratic movement envisioned and controlled by the super-wealthy 1%? And the balancing question is: What are the structures and practices that need to be put in place to create a world of true justice, equity and peace?

And so the questions that have become central to me over the last couple of years really, and even more so as I witness more recent events, are: What are the strategies and actions that can effectively counter this global reality. What approaches will enable those of us who are by far the majority, to fatally wound, to undermine, to bring an end to the direction of this hegemonic plutocratic movement envisioned and controlled by the super-wealthy 1%? And the balancing question is: What are the structures and practices that need to be put in place to create a world of true justice, equity and peace?

These are the issues I propose to explore in subsequent postings. I value and look forward to additional creative thoughts and ideas being expressed by those who read my blog and choose to respond. For those of us who are part of the 99%, it seems to me that this is our critical calling for this time.

*See also “New Leak: Brazil Coup Plotters Sought Protection from Corruption Probe” http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/New-Leak-Brazil-Politicians-Sought-Corruption-Probe-Shield-20160530-0011.html

See the YouTube documentary, “Koch Brothers Exposed.” Linguist, philosopher and social critic Noam Chomsky describes this as “class war.”

See Michael Brenner's article Plutocracy in America. See also the Popular Resistance newsletter article “US Democracy Crisis Creates Illegitimate Political System.”

Sunday, February 28, 2016

CITIZEN OF THE WORLD

At a Peter, Paul and Mary concert once, Paul Stookey reflected in his own dry-humor style on the increasing narcissisim in society as reflected in the titles of magazines in the United States. “What was the most famous magazine title a generation ago?” he asks the crowd. “Life!” they shout back, and Stookey spreads his arms out wide, as big as the world. “Then we moved from 'Life' to 'People,'” he said, moving his hands closer together. “Then, from 'People' we went to 'US,'” he continued, moving his hands closer together yet. “And then from 'US' to 'SELF .'” His hands now showed a gap of only a few inches. “I am waiting for the next magazine title to appear,” he concludes with a wry smile. “It will be simply entitled 'ME'! And a few years later a well known TV personality actually came out with a magazine titled simply the first initial of her own name. And, more recently the online popularity of “selfies” . . . Need we say more?

But what I would like to reflect on here is not narcissism of the individual personal sort, but of a another kind. Stookey's tongue-in-cheek observation of our culture came back to mind for me while reading a conversation with Black philosopher-theologian Cornel West on the question of nationalism/patriotism.* And that triggered a thought about who we seem to have become in large measure, as a nation.

I don't know about you but in my experience it seems that we in the United States, as a people and a culture, tend to view ourselves as the best and the brightest in all things, better than anyone else. In recent years some politicians have made this cultural sense explicit, affirming directly “U.S. exceptionalism,” something they claim we have lost in the eyes of the world but that they promise to regain.

I suggest that there are several consequences when we look at the world and ourselves in this way. One consequence is that we tend not to see the strengths and good in others. If we see ourselves as the very best, why even recognize what is second or third best. Another consequence is that we fail to see our own shortcomings and weaknesses. So, for example, in the days and weeks following 9-11, the overriding storyline in our media, from our poltical leaders and among us as citizens, was, in part, puzzlement about why someone could hate us so much that they would bring this level of violence to our shores. Bewildered, we would say among ourselves: “We have done so much good for so much of the world . . . why?” In our search for some kind of explanation, when the president on whose watch this attack took place told us that it was because “women in our society are free, and that such freedom for women was a threat to 'those people,'” somehow many of us believed him, that that was the cause. That was the explanation.

However during that time – and this came to me mostly in hearing and reading news from international sources, and from conversations with my in-laws as well as friends from South America – what I heard was a more nuanced perspective. Across the world, leaders and peoples expressed their sadness on our behalf. Many of them were familiar, first hand in some cases, with the experience of extreme violence. And so they understood the sorrow and pain, the indignity of being violated, and they felt with us. However, where they differed with the main storyline that was being told here in the U.S. is that they were not puzzled by what had happened. They felt the pain with us, “but,” they would say, gently, “you really shouldn't be surprised! The way you have used threat and power to get your way, no matter what, all around the world – militarily, politically, economically – this has made you many enemies. You are not exactly loved by many around the world. You are not necessarily seen as the bright star that you may imagine yourselves to be. The image of global bully comes closer to reality. So you shouldn't be too surprised. We feel for you, but . . . you really had it coming!”

And this brings me back to the beginning of my reflection. It seems to me that there is not only a narcissism of the individual, personal kind but there can also be a national narcissism – a “group-ME” sort of identity. We are seeing this expressed in the most vitriolic and unreflective, brutish way in the voices of many of the current GOP candidates for president and among those who support them.

Watching the opening of the Superbowl recently, I was taken aback by the display of military decorum and might in the opening ceremony, including the roaring fly-over of the Blue Angels precisely timed at the conslusion of the singing of the national anthem. The beginning of a grand sports event, but contextualized within this “group-ME” sense of “the best” and “the mightiest,” nested at the deep core of our national identity.

Nationalism,” West argues, “is the dominant form of idolatry” in the modern world – a statement that should cause pause for any of us who claim a serious faith commitment. Reflecting from the perspective of “Black peoplehood” in the formation of the US nation-state, “every nationalism that I know,” West continues, “has been patriarchal, class-ridden, homophobic, and usually xenophobic . . .”

To be honest, I do not understand the kind of nationalism/patriotism that seems to be so much our U.S. culture and identity. Especially when the sense of “group-ME” pits us as against and over against all others. Perhaps it is one of the blessings of my own multi-cultural upbringing. Growing up at the intersection of mixed cultural identities, including an adoptive indigenous brother and afro-Brazilian sister, friends from several tribal ethnic groups, and living within the richly racially and ethnically mixed culture which is Brazil, somehow the idea of the exceptionalism of one nation or of one race or ethnicity didn't occur to me. This is something which now, in retrospect, I am grateful to have missed.

Since my early 20s, I have consciously and intentionally identified more strongly with being a “citizen of the world” than being the citizen of any particular nation – be it the one where I was born and have now lived most of my life, or the one where I grew up. And somehow, as I listen to all the language and words we use to draw lines, to separate ourselves from others, to separate this group from that group; as I hear politicans and fellow citizens supporting (with our tax dollars) the building of walls, whether on the southern border of the United States, or between Israel and Palestine, or more recently in the pathway of refugees seeking asylum in Europe; or city services-based and racially defined separations between neighborhoods in the towns where we live and work -- I can't help but wonder!

If I take my faith seriously (and I would suggest that this is affirmed at the core of all faith and spiritual traditions), I understand that we are all sisters and brothers.± The liturgical affirmation made within the Native American Sweat Lodge and other rituals states it beautifully: “Metakuye Oasin. “All are my relations.” There is no “other.”

So where I choose to stand is in a place that challenges the words and powers that seek to divide. To recognize Metakuye Oasin, all as my sisters and brothers. The “Group-ME” identity that I choose is to be a citizen of the world.
 _________________________
*Christa Buschendorf, ed., Cornel West Black Prophetic Fire (Boston: Beacon Press, 2014), 130-134.
Ibid.
±As Pope Francis affirmed recently: "A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian. This is not in the gospel."