Grass Roots

A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands;
How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than he.

I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green
stuff woven.

Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,
A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropt,
Bearing the owner's name someway in the corners, that we may see
and remark, and say Whose?

Or I guess the grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation.

Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic,
And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones,
Growing among black folks as among white,
Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, I give them the same, I
receive them the same.

And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.

- Walt Whitman

"You don't know," he said, and began to smile. "O great sorcerer who brings the dead to life. You don't know."
"I know," the man in black said. "But I don't know... what."
"White light," the gunslinger repeated. "And then--a blade of grass. One single blade of grass that filled everything. And I was tiny. Infinitesimal."
"Grass." the man in black closed his eyes. His face looked drawn and haggard. "A blade of grass. Are you sure?"
"Yes." The gunsliger frowned. "But it was purple."

- Stephen King's "The Gunslinger"

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I am God's Secret 7th Day Project.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Let's Get This Occupation Started

Let’s Get This Occupation Started

I hope this “Occupy” movement spreads and I hope people stick with it. We tend to feel things about issues like a crackhead flippin' channels while he's bored.

Channel Surfing
Remember the Chilean miners? That was HUGE! But no nobody cares anymore. Nobody asks what the conditions were like at that mine, whether more could have been done, how many previous mining accidents occurred where the miners didn't survive. In fact, there have been 34 deaths per year since 2000 in Chile's copper mines (1). There's a rich history of labour abuse and struggle we know little about. Dickens wrote about it in his novels, Howard Zinn documents it in his writings (2). Labour abuse has been a reality in every land and every era, but we don't care about that. The Chilean thing was a good story, we swallowed it whole, and then emotionally moved on.
BP Oil spill? Fukushima nuclear disaster? Wikileaks? Are these things even still going on? We totally forgot about them! (For the record, they ARE still going on and are still urgent concerns).
Remember the 2008 "Great Recession"? Do you even know anything about it? It has had far more devastating effects than 9/11, OJ Simpson, or the conclusion of Lost. But nobody in politics used it as their 24/7 talking point like they did with 9/11. In fact, no one really talks about it at all. And heaven help us if anyone tries to learn about it or do something about it. We're all in debt. That statement is almost literally true for every person in the industrialized world and every country. The average Canadian consumer debt is over $25,000 per person, not including the national debt and the inflation our children will have to bail our countries out of (3).
Who cares about Greece defaulting and going into chaos? I mean, it's a good story, but who cares about actually asking questions? Who cares why it happened to them or to Iceland? And the London Riots? Who cares that, since 1998, police have killed 333 citizens, yet not one officer was ever punished or charged. Who cares that this riot happened because after an officer fatally shot Mark Duggan -- in gun-controlled England -- police-officers physically harassed a 16 year old girl who was only protesting peacefully. Who cares if the people who live there say that’s what happened (4)? Let's just think of them as young, highly ethnic, hooligans who are being raging, ignorant, anarchists.    

Who Scarifices for Security in this Post 9/11 World?
A Breast Cancer survivor just got humiliated at an American airport when a standard pat-down included a public pat-down of her synthetic breasts (which replaced the ones she had to amputate). For the record, she was not a terrorist or drug-smuggler (5). Who cares? I didn’t even read the whole story, just the headline. It’s just so funny how, after 9/11, Western society swallowed the lesson that we have to give up many of our civil liberties in order to make everything safer in this now dangerous world.
What’s funnier is how the 1% don’t seem to think that they need to sacrifice with the rest of us. Environmental movements are still fiercely resisted (just ask Harper about regulating big business for the benefit of the environment). Does anyone care whether, after the BP Spill, our oil industry is doing things any safer or more responsibly? The Earth? Global Climate Change? Who cares?
Or how about economic safety? Watch Inside Job, Meltdown, Maxed Out, or read a book. Fractional-reserve banking is doomed to bankrupt us all for the benefit of the top 1%. Regulators are bought and paid for. The system creates way too many unnecessary risks for the benefit of the few and the risk of the many. That’s the story of the 2008 Global Recession. Things are the same now, many of the same people are still in charge, and many of those to blame have made MORE money. Remember AIG executives’ sweet getaway right after the bailout money had cleared (6)?
Or how about regular ol’ military safety. The US and its allies continue to make war around the globe for nothing more than strategic advantage and awarding of fat military-industrial contracts. It has little to do with making us safer or benefitting anyone else. If that were the case, we’d fight HIV in Africa and intervene in their bloody civil wars. Or maybe we’d campaign for global peace. The CIA already knows that when Western Powers topple foreign governments for their own selfish reasons, they create “blowback”. Basically, we create terrorists because we give them all the reasons they’ll ever need for hating us. Is it right? No. Is it the reality we face? Yes.
But why would the 1% make any sacrifices for our security? We need to make those sacrifices, not them. Just because they have all the money and make all the decisions doesn’t mean that the 1% can make any difference; it’s us who have to change our behavior.

A Problem of Trust
Well, we do have to change our behaviour. We need to care more about how things are run at every level. We need to be better informed and more demanding of our leadership. We need to strive to live in a world that we can be proud of, that we feel is really being the best it can be. But I think I get why people don’t care. Why people tune out. It’s because, no matter what, life goes on. We are all busy and we are all entitled to relax when we’re not busy. We elect people to take care of this stuff for us. The economy, the environment -- our role is supposed to be small. Don’t liter, find a job, pay our bills, walk a little more. Our lives are complex and demanding enough without worrying about the big stuff.
But, unfortunately, we can’t trust the 1% to take care of the public good -- our good. Hell, we probably can’t trust those who insulate them or those who would replace them. We just can’t trust anyone who controls so much in each of our individual lives. We can’t simply put our faith in anyone who, from afar, directs the affairs of our civilizations and our planet. These people are supposed to be leaders: the most talented and most responsible our society has to offer. They need to start living up to their job descriptions, no matter who they are, because they have the most responsibility on their hands. We need them to be their best. But we can’t trust them. Not our political leaders or our business leaders, at the very least. If we could trust them, if they took their responsibilities seriously, things would be better.

Jesus is Spinning in His Grave!
We potentially have the technology, labour, and moral wisdom to make this world a far better place. Our political discussions should be about how to take care of everyone and how to make ourselves as happy and fulfilled as possible. I mean, we’ve had these moral philosophies around for over 3000 years, and from every different kind of culture. Every religion teaches peace, compassion, unity, empathy. There’s no good reason why we still put up with far less from our leadership, and from ourselves.
We have the means to grow far more than enough food, build far more than enough material things, construct far better infrastructure, produce enough energy, and provide enough services and assistance for everyone. Our governments and voters should be arguing over how to best balance a surplus of resources between everyone. We all have different ideas about how much inequality should exist: how much is necessary and when the gap between rich and poor becomes unacceptable. We all have different ideas on what the details might be like: the mechanisms, rules, and principles. We have the power to force the 1% into these discussions.
Let’s remember, the 1% stand on a huge pyramid. They live in a dream realm that extends far up into the heights. Their wealth and power is just amazing. Yet, they only achieve those heights because of us. Almost 7 billion people laboring, consuming, buying, voting, obeying, serving. No matter how powerful or capable you are in respect to your society, it’s the people who make you. If you’re the king on an island of 11 people, you’re not much. If you are in the 1% who cuts off a huge slice of 7 billion people? Now that’s something. But make no mistake, the 99% hold the real power in our pockets. We are the king-makers. We just forget.
For example, Wal-Mart is huge. We’ve helped make it a king by spending so much of our money there. But if we decided not to buy anything from Wal-Mart ever again, it would shrivel up and die almost immediately. If we decided to say “suck it” to Harper (or Obama) and decide to elect Pete from down the street instead (because, even though he’s stupid, maybe he’d at least be honest with us), than Pete would be the political leader of the free world and Obama (or whoever else) would be a funny but odd footnote in political history (the first president in history to lose to a World of Warcraft addict).
Occupy!
Right now, we need to realize that we hold this system up. Right now, we need to remember that we supply all the power society runs on. Right now, we need to decide that whatever is going on in politics and the economy has to change. We need to take an interest in learning more or, at the very least, demand that our leaders are honest and responsible. We need to make sure that our leaders are -- above all else -- serving the 100% instead of the 1%.    

Links
1) Wikipedia. 2010 Copiapó mining accident.

2) Youtube. Howard Zinn on the Ludlow Massacre. . firstrunfeaturesnyc.

3) The Globe and Mail. Average debt for Canadians: $25,597. . June 1st 2011. 

Wikipedia. List of countries by external debt. .

Wikipedia.  List of sovereign states by current account balance. .

The Economist. World Debt Comparison:The Global Debt Clock.

4) Al Jazeera. Nothing 'mindless' about rioters. . Opinion. 09 Aug 2011.

Al Jazeera. Rioting for 'justice' in London. . 09 Aug 2011. 

The Guardian. Deaths in police custody since 1998: 333; officers convicted: none. . 3 Dec 2010.

5) The Globe and Mail. Breast cancer survivor slams ‘humiliating’ patdown at U.S. airport. . 04 Oct 2011.

6) Wikipedia. AIG bonus payments controversy.

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