Yes

Teaser: 

by Sathyu:

"I am a rabid optimist... the battle is not only on, it is being won."

Body: 

Yes.

Yes, I am a rabid optimist.
For me,
Every tree that continues to stand,
Every stream that continues to flow,
Every child that runs away from home,
Is an indication,
That the battle is not only on,
It is being won.

Possibly you will tell me
About the nuclear arms race,
And all I can tell you
Is that An unknown child
Held my hand
With love.

You will try to draw me
Into the plateau of practical life
Tell me,
That not only God but all the religious
And irreligious leaders
Are dead.
And all I can tell you
Is that Across the forest
Lives a young man
Who calls the earth His mother.

You will give me the boring details
Of the rise of state power
After every revolution.
And all I can tell you
Is that
In our tribe
We still share
Our bread.

You will reason with me
And I will talk nonsense like this.
And because the difference between reason and poetry
Is the difference between breathing and living life,
I will read poems to you.
Poems full of optimism.
Poems full of dreams.
Maybe poems better than this.

-Sathyu

Arundhati Roy Interview

Teaser: 
Gives a good overview of Roy's writing, how she looks at the world, and what struggles she is involved in in India. Much of the writing talked about here is elsewhere on the site.
Body: 

Arundhati Roy
an interview
by David Barsamian

There is a high-stakes drama playing out in India these days, and the novelist Arundhati Roy is one of its most visible actors. Multinational companies, in collusion with much of India's upper class, are lining up to turn the country into one big franchise. Roy puts it this way: "Is globalization about 'the eradication of world poverty,' or is it a mutant variety of colonialism, remote controlled and digitally operated?"

Roy, forty-one, is the author of The God of Small Things (Random House, 1997), which won the Booker Prize, sold six million copies, and has been translated into forty languages. Set in a village in the southwestern state of Kerala, the novel is filled with autobiographical elements. Roy grew up in Kerala's Syrian Christian community, which makes up 20 percent of the population. She laughs when she says, "Kerala is home to four of the world's great religions: Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, and Marxism." For many years, Kerala has had a Marxist-led government, but she hastens to add that party leaders are Brahmins and that caste still plays a strong role.

The success of Roy's novel has brought lucrative offers from Hollywood, which she takes impish delight in spurning. "I wrote a stubbornly visual but unfilmable book," she says, adding that she told her agent to make the studios grovel and then tell them no. In Kerala, the book has become a sensation. "People don't know how to deal with it," she says. "They want to embrace me and say that this is 'our girl,' and yet they don't want to address what the book is about, which is caste. They have to find ways of filtering it out. They have to say it's a book about children."

Roy lives in New Delhi, where she first went to become an architect. But she's not working as an architect or even a novelist these days. She's thrown herself into political activism. In the central and western states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Gujarat, a series of dams threatens the homes and livelihoods of tens of millions. A huge, grassroots organization, the Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA), has arisen to resist these dams, and Roy has joined it. Not only did she give her Booker Prize money (about $30,000) to the group, she has also protested many times with it, even getting arrested.

She skillfully uses her celebrity status and her considerable writing gifts for this effort, as well as in the cause of nuclear disarmament. Her devastating essay on dams, "The Greater Common Good," and her searing denunciation of India's nuclear testing, "The End of Imagination," have literally kindled bonfires. The upper class didn't appreciate her critique of development, and the nationalists abhorred her for questioning India's nuclear arsenal. (These two essays comprise her latest book, The Cost of Living, Modern Library, 1999.)

By now, Roy is used to criticism. "Each time I step out, I hear the snicker-snack of knives being sharpened," she told one Indian magazine. "But that's good. It keeps me sharp."

Her most recent essay is called "Power Politics." In it, she takes on Enron, the Houston-based energy corporation that is a large financial backer of George W. Bush. In India, Enron is trying to take over Maharashtra's energy sector. The scale of what is happening, she says, makes California's power woes look like child's play.

On a cold, mid-February afternoon, Roy gave the annual Eqbal Ahmad lecture at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, before a huge crowd. It was a powerful, political talk, and afterward she was besieged by a long line of mostly young South Asian women, many of whom are studying at one of the five colleges in the Amherst area. She donated her lecture fee to earthquake relief in Gujarat.

The next morning, I interviewed her in the back seat of a car taking her from Amherst to Logan Airport in Boston. The two-hour drive went by in a flash...

Q: You grew up in Kerala. What's the status of women there?


Arundhati Roy: Women from Kerala work throughout India and the world earning money to send back home. And yet they'll pay a dowry to get married, and they'll have the most bizarrely subservient relationships with their husbands. I grew up in a little village in Kerala. It was a nightmare for me. All I wanted to do was to escape, to get out, to never have to marry somebody there. Of course, they were not dying to marry me [laughs]. I was the worst thing a girl could be: thin, black, and clever.

Q: Your mother was an unconventional woman.

Roy: She married a Bengali Hindu and, what's worse, then divorced him, which meant that everyone was confirmed in their opinion that it was such a terrible thing to do in the first place. In Kerala, everyone has what is called a tharawaad [lineage]. If you don't have a father, you don't have a tharawaad. You're a person without an address. That's what they call you. I grew up in Ayemenem, the village in which The God of Small Things is set.

Given the way things have turned out, it's easy for me to say that I thank God that I had none of the conditioning that a normal, middle class Indian girl would have. I had no father, no presence of this man telling us that he would look after us and beat us occasionally in exchange. I didn't have a caste, and I didn't have a class, and I had no religion, no traditional blinkers, no traditional lenses on my spectacles, which are very hard to shrug off. I sometimes think I was perhaps the only girl in India whose mother said, "Whatever you do, don't get married" [laughs].

For me, when I see a bride, it gives me a rash. I find them ghoulish, almost. I find it so frightening to see this totally decorated, bejeweled creature who, as I wrote in The God of Small Things, is "polishing firewood."

Q: Tell me a little more about your mother.

Roy: She is like someone who strayed off the set of a Fellini film. She's completely nuts. But to have seen a woman who never needed a man, it's such a wonderful thing, to know that that's a possibility, not to suffer. We used to get all this hate mail. Though my mother runs a school and it's phenomenally successful--people book their children in it before they are born--they don't know what to do with her, or with me. The problem is that we are both women who are unconventional in their terms. The least we could have done was to be unhappy. But we aren't, and that's what bothers people.

By the way, my mother is very well known in Kerala because in 1986 she won a public interest litigation case challenging the Syrian Christian inheritance law that said a woman can inherit one-fourth of her father's property or 5,000 rupees, whichever is less. The Supreme Court actually handed down a verdict that gave women equal inheritance retroactive to 1956. But few women take advantage of this right. And the churches have gone so far as to teach fathers to write wills that disinherit their daughters. It's a very strange kind of oppression that happens there.

Q: Since you wrote your novel, you've produced some remarkable political essays. What was that transition like?

Roy: It's only to people in the outside world, who got to know me after The God of Small Things, that it seems like a transition. In fact, I'd written political essays before I wrote the novel. I wrote a series of essays called "The Great Indian Rape Trick" about a woman named Phoolan Devi, and the way the film Bandit Queen exploited her, and whether or not somebody should have the right to restage the rape of a living woman without her consent. There are issues I've been involved with for a while.

I don't see a great difference between The God of Small Things and my works of nonfiction. As I keep saying, fiction is truth. I think fiction is the truest thing there ever was. My whole effort now is to remove that distinction. The writer is the midwife of understanding. It's very important for me to tell politics like a story, to make it real, to draw a link between a man with his child and what fruit he had in the village he lived in before he was kicked out, and how that relates to Mr. Wolfensohn at the World Bank. That's what I want to do. The God of Small Things is a book where you connect the very smallest things to the very biggest: whether it's the dent that a baby spider makes on the surface of water or the quality of the moonlight on a river or how history and politics intrude into your life, your house, your bedroom.

Q: Estha, one of the main characters in your novel, is walking "along the banks of the river that smelled of shit and pesticides bought by World Bank loans." The World Bank scheme for the Narmada River Valley envisioned the construction of more than 3,000 dams. The bank has since withdrawn from the project, and the government of India has taken it over. Tell me about the Narmada Bachao Andolan, the NBA.


Roy: When I first met people from the NBA, they told me, "We knew that you would be against the dams and the World Bank when we read The God of Small Things." The remarkable thing about the NBA is that it is a cross-section of India. It is a coalition of Adivasis [India's indigenous people], upper-caste big farmers, the Dalits [formerly known as Untouchables], and the middle class. It's a forging of links between the urban and the rural, between the farmers and the fishermen and the writers and the painters. That's what gives it its phenomenal strength, and it's what a lot of people criticize it for in India, saying, you know, these middle class protesters! That makes me furious. The middle class urban engineers are the people who came up with this project! You can't expect the critique to be just Adivasi. You isolate them like that, and it's so easy to crush them. In many ways, people try to delegitimize the involvement of the middle class, saying, how can you speak on behalf of these people? No one is speaking on behalf of anyone. The point is that the NBA is a fantastic example of people linking hands across caste and class. It is the biggest, finest, most magnificent resistance movement since the independence struggle.

Q: One protest you were involved in last year took place at a village on the banks of the Narmada at the site of one of the proposed dams. You were among many who were arrested there. What was that like?


Roy: It was absolutely fantastic. I was in a village called Sulgaon. All night, all over the valley, people started arriving, by tractor, by motorcar, by foot. By three in the morning there were about 5,000 of us. We started walking in the dark to the dam site. The police already knew that the dam site would be captured, but they didn't know from where the people would come. There's a huge area of devastation there. So we walked in the dark. It was amazing. Five thousand people, mostly villagers, but also people from the cities--lawyers, architects, journalists--walking through these byways and crossing streams in absolute silence. There was not a person that lit a bidi or coughed or cleared their throats. Occasionally, a whole group of women would sit down and pee and then keep walking. Finally, at dawn, we arrived and took over the dam site. For hours, the police surrounded us. Then there was a baton charge. They arrested thousands of people, including me. The jails were full.

Q: You say that the government of India is "hell-bent on completing the project." What's driving it?

Roy: There are many things. First of all, you have to understand that the myth of big dams is something that's sold to us from the time we're three years old in every school textbook. Nehru said, "Dams are the temples of modern India." So they're like some kind of huge, wet national flags. Before the NBA, it was like, the dam will serve you breakfast in bed, it will get your daughter married and cure your jaundice. People have to understand that they're just monuments to political corruption, and they derive from very undemocratic political institutions. You just centralize natural resources, snatch them away from people, and then you decide who you're going to give them to.

The first dam that was built in the Narmada was the Bargi, completed in 1990. They said it would displace 70,000 people and submerge 101 villages. One day, without warning, the government filled the reservoir, and 114,000 people were displaced and 162 villages were submerged. People were driven from their homes when the waters rose. All they could do was run up the hill with their cattle and children. Ten years later, that dam irrigates 5 percent of the land that they said it would. It irrigates less land than it submerged. They haven't built canals. Because for contractors and politicians, just building the dam in itself is a lot of money.

Q: What happens to those who are displaced?

Roy: Nobody knows. When I was writing "The Greater Common Good," what shocked me more than the figures that do exist are the figures that don't exist. The Indian government does not have any estimate of how many people have been displaced by big dams. I think that's not just a failure of the state, but a failure of the intellectual community. The reason that there aren't these figures is because most of the people that are displaced are again the non-people, the Adivasis and the Dalits. I did a sanity check based on a study of fifty-four dams done by the Indian Institute of Public Administration. According to that study, just reservoir-displaced, which is only one kind of displacement, came to an average of something like 44,000 people per dam. Let's assume that these fifty-four dams are the bigger of the big dams. Let's quarter this average. We know that India has had 3,600 big dams built in the last fifty years. So just a sanity check says that it's thirty-three million people displaced. They all just migrate to the cities. And there, again, they are non-citizens, living in slums. They are subject to being kicked out at any minute, anytime the housewives of New Delhi's upscale areas decide that all these slum people are dangerous.

Q: You've compared this uprooting to a kind of garbage disposal.

Roy: It's exactly like that. The Indian government has managed to turn the concept of nonviolence on its head. Nonviolent resistance and nonviolent governance. Unlike, say, China or Turkey or Indonesia, India doesn't mow down its people. It doesn't kill people who are refusing to move. It just waits it out. It continues to do what it has to do and ignores the consequences. Because of the caste system, because of the fact that there is no social link between those who make the decisions and those who suffer the decisions, it just goes ahead and does what it wants. The people also assume that this is their lot, their karma, what was written. It's quite an efficient way of doing things. Therefore, India has a very good reputation in the world as a democracy, as a government that cares, that has just got too much on its hands, whereas, in fact, it's actually creating the problems.

Q: But you say about your own politics that you're "not an anti-development junkie or a proselytizer for the eternal upholding of custom and tradition."

Roy: How can I be? As a woman who grew up in a village in India, I've spent my whole life fighting tradition. There's no way that I want to be a traditional Indian housewife. So I'm not talking about being anti-development. I'm talking about the politics of development, of how do you break down this completely centralized, undemocratic process of decision-making? How do you make sure that it's decentralized and that people have power over their lives and their natural resources?

Today, the Indian government is trying to present privatization as the alternative to the state, to public enterprise. But privatization is only a further evolution of the centralized state, where the state says that they have the right to give the entire power production in Maharashtra to Enron. They don't have the right. The infrastructure of the public sector in India has been built up over the last fifty years with public money. They don't have the right to sell it to Enron. They cannot do that. Three-quarters of our country lives on the edge of the market economy. You can't tell them that only those who can afford water can have it.

Q: Still, I sense some optimism on your part about what you call the "inherent anarchy" of India to resist the tide of globalization.

Roy: The only thing worth globalizing is dissent, but I don't know whether to be optimistic or not. When I'm outside the cities I do feel optimistic. There is such grandeur in India and so much beauty. I don't know whether they can kill it. I want to think they can't. I don't think that there is anything as beautiful as a sari. Can you kill it? Can you corporatize a sari? Why should multinationals be allowed to come in and try to patent basmati rice? People prefer to eat roti and idlis and dosas rather than McDonald's burgers. Just before I came to the U.S., I went to a market inDelhi. There was a whole plate of different kinds of dal, lentils. Tears came to my eyes. Today, that's all it takes to make you cry, to look at all the kinds of dal and rice that there are, and to think that they don't want this to exist.

Q: Talk about the material you covered in "The End of Imagination" concerning the nuclear testing on the subcontinent.

Roy: It's so frightening, the nationalism in the air. I'm terrified by it. It can be used to do anything. I know that a world in which countries are stockpiling nuclear weapons and using them in the ways that India and Pakistan and America do to oppress others and to deceive their own people is a dangerous world. The nuclear tests were a way to shore up our flagging self-esteem. India is still flinching from a cultural insult, still looking for its identity. It's about all that.

Q: You said that the jeering young Hindu men celebrating the nuclear test were the same as the ones who were thrilled with the destruction of the Babri mosque.

Roy: Indian intellectuals today feel radical when they condemn fundamentalism, but not many people are talking about the links between privatization, globalization, and fundamentalism. Globalization suits the Indian elite to a T. Fundamentalism doesn't. It's also a class problem. When people stop some film from being shot or burn a book, it's not just that they are saying, this is against Indian culture. They are also saying, you Westernized, elite, English-speaking people are having too much of a good time. It's a very interesting phenomenon. I think it has to be addressed together, not separately. The religious rightwingism is directly linked to globalization and to privatization. When India is talking about selling its entire power sector to foreign multinationals, when the political climate gets too hot and uncomfortable, the government will immediately start saying, should we build a Hindu temple on the site of the Babri mosque? Everyone will go baying off in that direction. It's a game. That's something we have to understand. With one hand, you're selling the country out to Western multinationals. And with the other, you want to defend your borders with nuclear bombs. It's such an irony! You're saying that the world is a global village, but then you want to spend crores of rupees on building nuclear weapons.

Q: You use a metaphor of two truck convoys. One is very large, with many people going off into the darkness. The other is much smaller and is going into the light of the promised land. Explain what you mean.

Roy: India lives in several centuries at the same time. Every night outside my house I pass a road gang of emaciated laborers digging a trench to lay fiber optic cables to speed up our digital revolution. They work by the light of a few candles. That is what is happening in India today. The convoy that melts into the darkness and disappears doesn't have a voice. It doesn't exist on TV. It doesn't have a place in the national newspapers. And so it doesn't exist. Those who are in the small convoy on their way to this glittering destination at the top of the world have completely lost the ability to see the other one. So in Delhi the cars are getting bigger and sleeker, the hotels are getting posher, the gates are getting higher, and the guards are no longer the old chowkidars, the watchmen, but they are fellows with guns. And yet the poor are packed into every crevice like lice in the city. People don't see that anymore. It's as if you shine a light very brightly in one place, the darkness deepens around. They don't want to know what's happening. The people who are getting rich can't imagine that the world is not a better place.

Q: You made a decision, or the decision was made for you, to identify with, or to be part of, that large convoy.

Roy: I can't be a part of the large convoy because it's not a choice that you can make. The fact that I'm an educated person means that I can't be on that convoy. I don't want to be on it. I don't want to be a victim. I don't want to disappear into the darkness.

I am an artist and a writer, and I do think that one always places oneself in the picture to see where one fits. I left home when I was sixteen and lived in places where it was very easy for me to have fallen the other way. I could have been on the large convoy because I was a woman and I was alone. In India, that's not a joke. I could have ended up very, very badly. I'm lucky that I didn't.

I think my eyes were knocked open and they don't close.

I sometimes wish I could close them and look away. I don't always want to be doing this kind of work. I don't want to be haunted by it. Because of who I am and what place I have now in India, I'm petitioned all the time to get involved. It's exhausting and very difficult to have to say, 'Look, I'm only one person. I can't do everything.' I know that I don't want to be worn to the bone where I lose my sense of humor. But once you've seen certain things, you can't un-see them, and seeing nothing is as political an act as seeing something.

Q: Are you thinking about writing any new fiction?

Roy: I need fiction like you need to eat or exercise, but right now it's so difficult. At the moment, I don't know how to manage my life. I don't know how I'll ever be able to make the space to say, "I'm writing a book now, and I'm not going to be able to do x or y." I would love to.

Q: You feel a sense of responsibility to these silent voices that are calling out to you.

Roy: No, I don't feel responsibility because that's such a boring word.

Q: You're in a privileged position. You are a celebrity within India and also outside.

Roy: But I never do anything because I'm a celebrity, as a rule. I do what I do as a citizen. I stand by what I write and follow through on what I write. It's very easy for me to begin to believe the publicity about myself, whether for or against. It can give you an absurd idea of yourself. I know that there's a fine balance between accepting your own power with grace and misusing it. And I don't ever want to portray myself as a representative of the voiceless. I'm scared of that.

But one of the reasons some people get so angry with me is because I have the space now that a lot of others who think like me don't. It was a mistake maybe for so many people to have opened their hearts to The God of Small Things. Because a lot of dams and bombs slipped in along with it.

Armed and Dangerous

Teaser: 

"The Desperation of Rural America." Derrick Jensen interviews Joel Dyer about the devestating effects of centralization of corporate control of agriculture on small farmers in America. As a result of this economic tyranny (and the Left's blindness to it), many (white, male) small farmers are turning to suicide and right wing militia movements.

Body: 

ARMED AND DANGEROUS:
THE DESPERATION OF RURAL AMERICA

An Interview with Joel Dyer
by Derrick Jensen
Published in "The Sun"
December 1999

Eight years ago, I got a flat tire while collecting firewood way back on a dirt road in the hills of northeastern Washington. No spare. Thumping along at about five miles per hour, I came to a small house and asked to borrow a pump. The owner didn't have one, but offered me a spare tire instead. I drove home on the spare and returned the next day with his tire and a cake. The man, clearly a logger, asked if I wanted some firewood. I said sure, and he picked up his chain saw.

Before starting up the saw, the logger asked what I did. "I'm a writer," I said. He asked what I wrote. Relations between loggers and environmentalists being poor at best, I was tempted to lie, but nothing came to mind. So I told him the truth: that I was writing about how the big four timber companies in the Pacific Northwest had gotten their land illegally from the American public. The logger turned red in the face and started swearing. I was looking for a chance to make a break for it when I realized he was swearing not at me, but at the timber companies. An independent logger, he'd been put out of business by Plum Creek Timber Company and hated them even more than I did. Within minutes, we were swapping stories about Plum Creek's atrocities and planning how to take on the big corporations.

Too often, however, what seems like a natural alliance between environmentalists and people who make their living off the land - whether loggers or ranchers or farmers - never comes into being. Joel Dyer's book Harvest of Rage: Why Oklahoma City Is Only the Beginning (Westview Press) offers some compelling reasons why farmers end up allied not with environmentalists but with the far Right.

Dyer was drawn to write about the farm crisis when he learned that American farmers are killing themselves in droves: suicide has long since replaced equipment accidents as the primary cause of unnatural death on the farm. Dyer wanted to know why, and what could be done to help. So, working closely with Glen Wallace, head of the Oklahoma Rural Mental Health Department, he began to interview farmers throughout the Midwest, and to visit militia compounds to figure out their attraction.

He found people driven to desperation by a political and economic system out of control - one that does not represent them and, moreover, is destroying their way of life. And he found people with a level of anger and dedication that is inconceivable to most of us. "We will continue to see rural America turn to terrorism to protect its way of life," Dyer says, "because it doesn't have the numbers or the resources to fight any other way."

Dyer points out that, though we tend to think our nation's history is fairly smooth, we've always had "radical" movements: in the 1890s, the 1930s, the 1960s. Common people changed the world during these periods. The rise of the antigovernment movement is a sign that it could happen again. He has written: "There may be conspiracy afoot. But it's not a conspiracy of Jewish bankers against Christians; it's a conspiracy of wealth holders versus the rest of us."

A journalist living in Longmont, Colorado, Dyer was editor of the Boulder Weekly for four years and in 1997 won the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies' first-place prize for social reporting. He is now a frequent lecturer on college campuses and commentator on television and public-radio networks. His most recent book, The Perpetual Prisoner Machine: How America Profits from Crime (Westview Press), explores this country's prison-population explosion, the largest in history. Dyer has written for Mother Jones, Utne Reader, and the New York Times Magazine. He is currently cowriting a screenplay, with actor-author Peter Coyote, based on Harvest of Rage.

This conversation took place at the Boulder Public Library in June 1999.

Jensen: Why is rural America angry?

Dyer: Because the people there look around at their way of life, their unique culture, and they see that it's changing. It's dying out. And the reasons for that change are beyond their control. I think all of us tend to get angry when our lives are harmed by forces outside our control.

Rural Americans are a small enough percentage of the nation's population now that they can't affect our democracy the way they once could. The cities carry every election. Even in an agricultural state like Kansas, if a candidate can convince the cities to vote for him, he can lose the rest of the state and still win.

This means people in the cities are now capable of dictating, through the government, how rural Americans must live. And rural Americans are upset by this, because they don't want to change their way of life. They don't want to live by city rules. They're a very nostalgic population that wants to keep things the way they've always been. They want to give their kids a gun when they turn ten and teach them how to hunt. They want to farm. They want to be left alone. They don't want to have to mess with eight thousand different laws.

Jensen: How do you define "rural America"?

Dyer: Once you leave the cities and get past the half-million-dollar houses on five acres - the gentlemen's farms - you're in rural America, the other 85 percent of the land mass of the United States. Rural America is where most people make their living through agriculture, mining, or some other occupation based directly on the land and natural resources, and where the economy depends on the money spent by these people. A town of ten thousand probably isn't rural America because it has a sustainable economy that doesn't rise and fall with the price of wheat or lumber, whereas a town of three thousand whose economy is tied directly to the price of soybeans would be.

Jensen: Would you say that the farm crisis in rural America is a crisis of democracy?

Dyer: There are two components to this. The first is that we haven't always had a national democracy. The U.S. was founded as a republic, with mostly local government - it had to be, because of the lack of communications and transportation technology. If you were in, say, rural Missouri 150 years ago, you had to be self-sufficient, because traveling to the nearest store or court of law was prohibitive. Because it took so long to travel between locales, it made sense for each place to establish its own laws, courts, and way of life based on local customs and economics. Laws in Missouri were different from laws in New York City. For all practical purposes, the two might as well have been in City. For all practical purposes, the two might as well have been in different countries.

As transportation and communications technology improved, a simple democracy and federalism became practicable. It became possible for Washington, D.C., to dictate to people in rural Nevada how they were supposed to live - and to check up on them and make sure they were obeying the rules. Now we're hearing about the possibility of national elections being conducted over the telephone. You won't even have to leave your home; you'll just dial up, punch in your vote, and you're done. Simple.

But what does that kind of simplicity do to minority cultures? By "minority" I mean not just people of color or the poor, both of whom certainly suffer from laws passed by the middle-class white majority, but any group that doesn't have the numbers to compete in a large-scale democratic government. A perfect example is here in Colorado. Think how many "I send ten dollars to the Nature Conservancy" pseudo-environmentalists live in Boulder and Denver. These voters easily have the numbers to override all the farmers in the western half of the state. They want to do a good thing for the environment without ever leaving their easy chairs. But how many thousands of rural people have they put out of work with impractical environmental legislation dreamed up by urban activists who lack practical knowledge of rural life? Suburban-chic environmentalism is a big source of rage in the hinterland, because it has imposed a certain standard of behavior to which many rural people don't want to be held.

By the way, most small family farmers are not resistant to environmentalism: they pollute because, economically, they have to in order to stay on their land. They're angry because, quite often, environmental regulations are the last nail in the coffin of their way of life. Contrast this to large corporate farms, which pollute because it allows them to make more money.

Jensen: Most of the farmers, ranchers, and loggers I know hate environmental regulations for the same reason I do, which is that they don't work: small operators have to abide by the rules, while huge corporations get pet senators and representatives to pass waivers, or else simply ignore the regulations and pay a fine.

Dyer: There's a fellow out in California who is something of a martyr in the antigovernment movement. He operated a small mining claim on public land. Government regulations allowed him to cut enough trees to work his mine, but, according to the government, he cut about thirty too many. He was sentenced to ten years in prison - primarily because he'd written a number of racist, antigovernment books. He was stabbed to death behind bars a couple of years ago. Weyerhaeuser, on the other hand, can "accidentally" cut down a whole damn forest and get a fine - maybe not even that.

But back to the point. If both urban and rural cultures in this country are to survive, then we have to begin allowing for some diversity in the laws. If not, relative population densities will guarantee that the rural culture dies out. And the more that happens, the more rural Americans will turn militant.

This leads to the second part of the problem. To put farmers under the thumb of urban America is bad enough. But what's even worse is that our national democracy is, for the most part, an illusion. There are a number of reasons for this, but the problem really begins with the media, especially television.

Behavioral scientists now increasingly believe that, for the first time in our history, we're formulating our worldview based more on images that come to us through our televisions than on what we see with our own eyes. This has huge implications, especially when you look at who controls those images. In 1983, fifty companies controlled half of all media - not just television. By the early 1990s, it was down to twenty-six. Now nine corporations control more than half the media in the entire world. The biggest is Disney; the second, Time Warner.

It's important to look at how content is selected. What is the motivation of those who control these images? The images are controlled by corporations, and corporations' sole purpose is to make money. And what makes money? More specifically, what makes money in a global market? Violent and sexually explicit content, since these lose the least in translation. So that's what gets produced.

As a result, we're inundated with violence: 61 percent of all television programming now contains it. This applies to the news, as well; because violence sells, the news media exploit incidents of violent crime. Just since 1990, sensationalized reporting of violent crime has tripled. That means the NBC Nightly News reports three times as many sensational, violent crimes as it used to. Think about the stories that have been covered to the point of saturation: Bobbit, Buttafuoco, Littleton, JonBenet Ramsey, O.J. What do any of these really have to do with us? Nothing. But they generate money because they're sordid and unusual. It's insane that, five years after John Wayne Bobbit got his penis whacked off, more people know about his story than know about the biodiversity crisis, soft-money loopholes, or the collapse of the family farm.

Now, if you are constantly bombarded with the details of sensational murders, the world begins to seem an overwhelmingly violent place, much more violent than it actually is. The media critic George Gerbner calls this the "mean-world syndrome."

Jensen: I interviewed him for The Sun ["Telling Stories," August 1998].

Dyer: He's a very perceptive analyst.

Unfortunately, the consolidation of the media coincided with the rise of the political consultant, whose stock in trade is constant polling. In the last five years, the amount of money spent on polling by political candidates has quadrupled. Bill Clinton polls to see what tie to wear, to decide where to vacation, to determine which words to use when he speaks.

Jensen: Are these examples actually true?

Dyer: Unfortunately. During the Lewinsky scandal, Clinton used pollsters to try to figure out what to tell the country. His political consultants discovered that whenever Clinton used the word truthful, everyone got angry. But every time he described what had happened as "part of [his] private life," people felt empathetic.

The result was that Clinton went on television the next day and, in a four-minute speech, used the term "private life" seven times and never once said anything about being truthful. Afterward, another poll found that 70 percent of Americans approved of Clinton. But did we really approve of Clinton, or simply of words and images to which pollsters had already determined we'd react favorably? In other words, were we simply being manipulated?

Political consultants have been around forever, but they really began their rise to prominence in the 1970s, when politicians stopped calling them in six months before the election and just put them on staff full time. So politicians follow consultants, who feed them the results of polls taken of people who've been manipulated by images designed by other people who've taken polls to see what images will resonate - and these images are largely delivered by nine gigantic corporations. So we end up with a Congress that jumps through hoops held up by nine corporations motivated solely by profit. That's the America we live in.

A new poll just came out that said crime is the single most important concern for most Americans - this at a time when, for seven years, crime has been falling. That's a powerful divergence: our fear and anger and frustration regarding crime are going up while crime itself is going down. It makes no sense, unless you look at the role of the media. Because political consultants constantly poll people infected with Gerbner's mean-world syndrome, everyone in Congress is told, "Crime is the hot-button issue. Be harder on crime." Anyone who said, "You know, we can't continue to spend this kind of money on prisons," would get thrown out of office in a heartbeat.

Here's why: Because the cost of a national-level electoral campaign has gone from $300,000 to $10 million (much of that money going, by the way, to the nine gigantic media corporations), politicians are more beholden to big money than at any other time in our history. Any politician who wants access to that money is told, "Here are the ten hottest issues. If you're in line with the targeted electorate on those issues, you get the money. If not, you don't, because these corporations don't want to spend money to purchase access to someone who's not going to be elected." So because we've been brainwashed by the media to believe the world is a much more violent place than it actually is, even corporations with no vested interest in prisons will, as a rule, give their money only to someone who's hard on crime.

As a result of this setup, the U.S. went from having two hundred thousand to 2 million inmates in less than three decades: the largest prison expansion in the history of the world. And it's all come about as the result of the media trust's decision to boost ratings by exploiting sensationalized crime as a form of twisted entertainment.

Now, at last, we return to your original question about the sources of anger in rural America. Not only is rural America subject to the will of urban America, but it's not even the true will of urban America: it's a brainwashed will based on an illusion.

Jensen: I would say there's another level to this that has nothing to do with politics, but rather with corporate control of rural economies. A family farmer once said to me, "Cargill gives me two choices: either I cut my own throat, or they'll do it for me."

Dyer: You've got to love farmers. They go straight to the heart of the problem. And the heart of the problem is that a few corporations have monopolistic economic control of rural America. Without that control - if, for example, we had anything resembling a free market - the political control wouldn't matter. To gain political control, you have to have economic control.

Jensen: What are the numbers on corporate control of agriculture?

Dyer: In the beef-packing industry, Cargill, ConAgra, and Iowa Beef Packers control 80 percent of the total market. At the beginning of the farm crisis, the seven largest grain companies controlled 96 percent of all U.S. wheat exports, 95 percent of corn exports, 90 percent of oat exports, and 80 percent of sorghum exports. The numbers have only gotten worse since then. Some of these companies have been around for hundreds of years, and because they're family owned, they're not required to give out any information on how much they make or how much they're worth.

Every farming industry is dangerously concentrated. In Oklahoma, if you're a chicken farmer, Tyson Foods provides your propane, your building, and your baby chicks. You basically work for Tyson. At the end of the season, they come and truck the chickens to their plant and tell you how much they're going to pay you. Hog farming is quickly becoming like that. One farmer in Missouri told me that, just a decade ago, there were a dozen people to whom he could sell his pigs on any given day. Now there's one, fifty miles away, who tells him on what day he can come and dictates the price.

What does this consolidation mean for producers? Two years ago, farmers were getting thirty-five dollars per hundred pounds of pork - and they were already losing money then. Earlier this year, it was fifteen dollars per hundred. Does this mean that the price in the supermarket has gone down by more than half? Of course not. You saw maybe a 2ÿpercent drop in pork prices at the store. A giant processor - the only one in, say, a four-state area that buys that particular product - can dictate a price that's less than what it costs for the animal or crop to be raised. And the farmer still has to sell, because there's nowhere else to go.

In Idaho, ConAgra, the last time I checked, was paying less per hundred pounds of potatoes than it cost to raise them. The farmers' response has been not to sell, but ConAgra doesn't care; it just uses NAFTA to bring potatoes over from Canada, where the farmers can get a lousy price and still stay in business because they're subsidized. So ConAgra cheerily goes on making potato chips, all the while holding American farmers over a barrel.

Jensen: One might say, "So what? Buggy-whip makers went out of business when cars came in. Why can't farmers just get jobs in the city?"

Dyer: Because it's not just the loss of a job - it's the loss of an entire way of life. Rural America is a different culture. Farmers don't just say, "Damn, these corporations sure are making it hard for me to get by. I guess I'll take that factory job in the city." They don't want to go to the city; they want to hold on to the life they have.

Consequently, they continue to lose money every year while they can't afford to feed their children. Twenty-seven percent of all kids in rural America go to bed hungry every night - more than in the inner city. These farmers can't buy food; they can't make loan payments. Their stress level goes up and they start having heart attacks. And some of them - more than you'd imagine - kill themselves.

Five times as many farmers now die of suicide as die from equipment accidents - which, historically, have been the single biggest cause of unnatural death on the farm. And that's not even counting suicides made to look like accidents: if you're about to lose your farm and have life insurance, you can crawl into your combine, and your family might be able to keep the farm. Personally, I suspect there are more fraudulent accidents than straightforward gunshots to the head. So it could be that ten or fifteen times as many farmers die from suicide as die from accidents.

Jensen: You're talking about an extreme level of despair.

Dyer: As much time as I've spent with farmers going through foreclosures over the last decade, I don't even pretend to understand the anxiety they suffer. That's part of the problem of urban-rural relationships: we urbanites can see the despair, but we can't feel it. We can't fully grasp the feeling of "My great-granddad homesteaded this piece of land and fought to keep it. My granddad took it over from him and made it bigger and better. My dad took it over from him and did the same. And now he's given it to me, and I'm going to lose it."

Jensen: And not because you're a bad farmer.

Dyer: No, because of economics, consolidation, and the activities of the federal government. The farm crisis of the 1980s was a direct result of Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's fighting inflation so that rich people could save money. He consciously decided to tighten credit drastically. When other governors of the reserve board warned him that this path would precipitate a disastrous farm crisis, he responded, "That's the price you pay for letting inflation get out of hand."

It isn't the farmers' fault - they did everything they were told to do. When the secretary of agriculture told them, "Get big or get out," they got big. When he said, "Plant fence row to fence row; there's a global economy out there, and we need all the wheat we can get," they did. Farmers obeyed when they were told - by their bankers, by the government, and by their extension agents - "Go into as much debt as you can; buy more land." Then Volcker pulled the plug, and suddenly the farmer who'd borrowed $4 million to buy more farmland so he could plant more wheat was sitting on land worth only $700,000.

That would have been bad enough, but next the banks - in one of the most extraordinarily stupid actions in banking history - started calling in their loans, giving farmers ultimatums: "Pay back the $4 million immediately, or lose your farm." Obviously, no one had that sort of money, so the bank foreclosed on the farm and then, astonishingly enough, turned around and sold off that land for $700,000 to another farmer - or, more likely, to a giant corporation.

But the reason doesn't always matter; the important thing is that the farm went belly up. And when you lose the farm that belonged to your great-granddad and your granddad and your dad, and that was supposed to go to your kids, it's worse even than a death in the family, because on top of the emotional distress is a thick layer of guilt. You feel as though you murdered that farm; as though you murdered your children's future, your heritage, your connection to God, and your connection to history.

Imagine you go into a house in western Oklahoma and see a forty-year-old farmer with a shotgun sitting in his lap, empty bottles of Jack Daniels lying all around. He hasn't slept in days, hasn't bathed or shaved in weeks. There's food stuck in every nook and cranny. The wife and kids split a while ago. You can't look into those eyes and say, "Why didn't you just get another job?" It's not like that. Of course he would have gotten another job if that were all there was to it, but it's bigger than that, deeper than that.

I recently received a videotape made by rural psychologist Glen Wallace. It was an interview with a farmer named Jerry, who looked to be in his midthirties. He had red around his eyes, as if he hadn't slept. He'd lost his farm four years before, and he'd been going through counseling, doing everything he could to hang in there. He'd lost his wife; she couldn't take the stress, took the kids and left. The counselors followed Jerry around to his new job pumping propane, still in the same community. He said, "It was hard, but I realized I had to go on with my life." He had kind of a stammer. You could still hear the anxiety in his voice after four years. The tape was made to show an example of someone who was recovering, someone who was going to make it. After I watched the tape, I read the note Glen had put in the box with it. It said: "Unfortunately, we lost Jerry this week." After four years, he'd killed himself.

So what do you do? You can't just say, "You lost your farm; get over it." You have to look at retraining. You have to look at medicating some people. But obviously the best answer is to figure out a way to keep the five hundred family farms a week from going under in the first place.

Jensen: The farmers' unwillingness to get a factory job reminds me of a quote from Big Soldier, a nineteenth-century Indian: "I see and admire your manner of living. . . . You can do almost what you choose. You whites possess the power of subduing almost every animal to your use. You are surrounded by slaves. Everything about you is in chains, and you are slaves yourselves. I fear that if I should exchange my pursuits for yours, I, too, should become a slave."

Dyer: It's a terrible thing to be a slave to another person. But it's potentially a wonderful thing to belong to a piece of ground. Indigenous cultures understand that connection. And as an agrarian society, we once understood it. But within the last few generations, we've lost that connection. I'm forty-one. I didn't grow up on a farm, but my grandparents did. And my uncle had a ranch, where I went as a child. Even though I didn't see my time there as important, it did help me establish the connection: I knew where pigs came from, and milk and potatoes. Future generations won't have anywhere like that to visit. They'll be totally disconnected from the land. I once talked to a woman about the farm crisis, and she actually said to me, "I really would like to be concerned, but I don't get my food from the farmer anyway. I get it at the store."

Now we have generations of people who don't even drive from one big city to the next. Their understanding of rural America is that big flat area their plane flies over. And should they wonder what life is like down there, they figure it must be pretty good, because they've seen those TV commercials in which Archer Daniels Midland says it's "feeding the world."

Jensen: How does the conversion take place from despair to militant action?

Dyer: When I was researching Harvest of Rage, I was shocked to find out how universal the patterns are. Whether I was hanging out with the Freemen, or the Republic of Texas people, or some other group, there was a uniformity to their stories that I haven't seen anyone in the mainstream media address.

Jensen: Why is that?

Dyer: Probably because we're in the middle of an economic boom that's gone on for seven years, and to acknowledge the universal causes of rural despair would be to acknowledge the hollowness of the boom. Even though a good-sized portion of U.S. children are going hungry, these are still boom times for the audience the media are trying to reach.

But you were asking how despair turns to action. Filmmaker-activist Michael Moore has a great quote about this: "If you want to know where the Michigan Militia came from, they're the unemployed arm of the United Auto Workers." And that's true. If you begin to listen to militia members, you'll find that what moves them to action is depression from losing their farm, their house, their job, their wife and children. The problems are never just economic. The question is: How do you respond to not just the loss of your home and family, but the loss of your whole way of life, and of control over your life?

The answer depends a lot on your culture. If you're a farmer, the next step may be to put a gun to your head. Ranchers are a slightly different breed. They're more likely to turn their violent feelings outward. But the point here isn't the difference between ranchers and farmers; it's that once long-term, chronic depression has set in, only three things can happen: One, you can get help through counseling or the like. But because most people caught in an economic crisis don't have insurance, and because the government has been slashing budgets for rural counseling at the same time that it's been driving farmers off the land, that option doesn't exist for the vast majority. The next option is that you turn the anger inward, which means maybe you kill yourself or drive your family away (recognizing that violence against one's family is in some way internally directed). Or maybe you drink yourself to death, or do drugs, or otherwise escape. The last option is that you turn your anger outward, into some form of action. That can mean driving through the front window of a bank and shooting the guy who wouldn't give you a loan extension. But for most, it has meant turning to militant action. Quite often, I've found rural people's racism and hatred for the government to be symptoms of economic stress rather than a simple ideological difference.

Let's say I've lost everything, and I'm chronically depressed. My entire world has fallen apart. Then somebody knocks on my door and says, "I can help you. It's not your fault. Let me give you my support." Whoever extends that helping hand to me, I'm likely to be converted to their cause: If the Mormons knock, I might become a Mormon. If the Jehovah's Witnesses knock, I might become a Jehovah's Witness. And if it's the militia, I'll probably become a militia member.

If you go to a farm auction, time after time you'll see someone crying and putting his arm around the man who's losing his farm. Chances are, that will be a local John Bircher or a local militia member. He's there because he lost his farm, too, and he understands what that farmer is going through. He's saying, "It's not your fault, man. It's the government's fault. It's the evil Jewish conspiracy's fault. I love you, and you can come with me now and fight this battle. Here's another reason to live." What a message!

If someone were there for that farmer with another message - and that person would have to know and care about what the farmer was going through; it couldn't be just another urban type trying to manipulate the farmer - then the farmer might go in another direction. If a rural psychologist like Glen Wallace were there with his arm around him, then maybe the guy would make it out of his despair without joining the antigovernment ranks.

You also have to realize that it's the rare militia person who takes it all the way to a truck bomb. Most guys just put out a bunch of literature and get a little angry and eventually calm back down.

Jensen: So where is the Left through all this? Why is it a John Bircher with his arm around the farmer, and not an anticorporate activist?

Dyer: The Left is in the city, worried about urban blight or the environment. We on the Left have put on blinders, to the point where we aren't willing to reach out to middle-aged white men. Middle-aged white men are supposed to be the root of all evil. And I don't disagree with that notion in many ways: it's absolutely true that middle-aged white men are the root of most evil, because they occupy the positions of power. But there are 15 million poor middle-aged white men who have more in common with urban blacks and Hispanics than they do with the average CEO.

So there's no help from the Left because these rural men are villified as "rednecks" and "Bubbas." Besides, there are too many problems for people on the Left to worry about as it is - the last thing they need to take on is underprivileged white men. Can you imagine how hard it would be to raise money from wealthy liberals to help poor white males?

This attitude allows those of us on the Left to sidestep examination of our own bigotry, which is, I think, just as serious as that of the Right. The Left determines who is downtrodden, and often that determination is based on just as shallow a measure as those the Right uses to determine who is worthy. Another problem with the Left's attitude is that it ignores the potential for violence among white males, which is high. Finally, the Left is alienating a massive group of potential political allies. Twenty-four million whites are currently living in poverty.

The Left needs to realize that low-income whites, including farmers and others in rural America, are not and have never been the enemy.

When I first started cruising around talking to suicidal farmers, my friends would say, "My God, you're not going to Watonga looking like that, are you? They won't even serve you in restaurants there." In a sense, they were right to be concerned, because I had hair almost down to my butt and wore an earring. And there would be a sudden silence when I walked through the door of the local diner. But then I'd say, "I'm here to talk to so-and-so about how the banks are screwing him out of his farm," and instantly they'd say, "Hey, you want to come to my house for dinner?" and, "If you need a truck while you're here . . ." Once we had a common cause, our other differences didn't matter.

During my book tour, I went on TV shows like Good Morning America and Today. On one show, they introduced me as "Joel Dyer, who went undercover into the antigovernment movement." As soon as I came on, I said, "I never went undercover anywhere. I walked up and knocked on doors and said, 'I want to know what you think, and why you're angry,' and they told me." The TV people couldn't believe that somebody in an armed compound had let me in just like that. I said, "They're angry, and they want to tell someone why, but the only time a reporter ever shows up is to cover a shootout or ask stupid questions about how many guns they have. No one ever shows up to really talk to them, which involves listening."

I wasn't there because I agreed with them, but because I thought I understood why they were mad and wanted to know how they had reached their conclusions. I'd have arguments with men in the Christian Identity Movement, for instance, about the Bible. And they were much scarier than the more straightforward, political militia members. The Identity people believe that blacks and Jews don't have souls and aren't human. I told them I thought they were wrong. We talked about it. Nobody hit me. (They might have wanted to.) Of course their rhetoric is very offensive, but change will never come until we establish open lines of communication with them. You don't have to pretend to agree with them to talk to these people. They are perfectly open to dialogue, and the Left would find it shares many things in common with the non-racist militia groups. I've seen more than one militia leader reading Noam Chomsky.

One reason for the popularity of antigovernment groups - and also racist groups like the Christian Identity Movement - is that they provide scapegoats. When we're depressed and in trouble, scapegoating can sometimes save our lives. If we can somehow get the blame off ourselves, we're less likely to do ourselves harm - either through the slow suicide of drinking, or the fast suicide of a pistol.

Now, whom we're going to scapegoat depends a lot on who delivers that saving message to us when we're vulnerable. To me, the most obvious scapegoat - and one that doesn't require twisted interpretations of the Constitution or the Bible - is large corporations. Corporations technically aren't even scapegoats, since it's true that they are driving rural farmers out of business. Does this have anything to do with government? It has to do with decisions being made by government - trade agreements like NAFTA and GATT, for example - decisions made to benefit the big corporations that fund political campaigns. I look forward to the day when antigovernment groups become realistic and stop blaming this mess on some arcane Jewish conspiracy.

One of the healthiest developments I've seen in the last decade was when farmers blockaded rail lines in North Dakota and Montana last year. This protest was pulled off by guys who four years earlier were wearing fatigues and shooting at targets. Now they were putting their tractors across rail lines to stop trains from bringing in wheat that was undercutting theirs.

Jensen: Leaving aside the racists for the moment, what is it that most militant farmers want?

Dyer: I don't think they're greedy. They want to feed their families, keep their farms, work their land, and make a decent living - not a six-figure income, but enough to provide food and health care for their kids. If you give rural Americans that, they will be happy, because everything else stems from those basics. If the farmers and loggers and miners have that, then the guy who runs the corner store will have it, too. In my first book, I described a comparison done by Walter Goldschmidt of two towns in California: Dinuba and Arvin. Dinuba was surrounded by family farms, whereas Arvin was surrounded by a few very large, industrialized farms. In Dinuba, there were more businesses, better schools, less crime, more parks, less welfare, less violence, a better system of government, and a much smaller gap between rich and poor than in Arvin.

Jensen: What about those who resort to terrorism? What do you think they want?

Dyer: Some have gone mad and want revenge against those they think are to blame for their problems. Others want to be heard and believe violence is the only way to get their message out.

The Oklahoma City bombing was one of the most horrible things I've seen in my life, senseless and brutal. Yet some of the most militant of the antigovernment folks will tell you that it was "a success" because it accomplished its goal of bringing attention to Waco and Ruby Ridge, and of swaying public opinion. Polls show that the vast majority of Americans now believe the federal government was extremely out of line at Waco and Ruby Ridge.

Contrast that with Leonard Peltier. Everybody who's paid any attention to the Peltier case knows he was wrongfully convicted and that the government fabricated evidence. But most people in the U.S. don't even know who Peltier is, because the mainstream media haven't focused on him.

It's a fact that the Oklahoma City bombing made the media look more skeptically at the government's actions at Ruby Ridge and Waco. But then to claim, as some in the antigovernment movement have done, that the bombing was the only way to accomplish this - well, that's insane.

Jensen: What, in your opinion, is the potential for mass violence by militia groups?

Dyer: I don't think there will be mass violence. Most people in militias have never blown anything up and never will. But there is an element that is willing to put a gun to its head, that is willing to drive through a bank's front window and shoot the banker, that is willing to blow up a building in Oklahoma City or shoot an abortion doctor or blow up spectators at the Olympics.

There's a story pertaining to this that I used to end Harvest of Rage: In February 1998, Daniel Rudolph, the brother of Eric Rudolph (a fugitive wanted in connection with the bombings of an abortion clinic in Birmingham, gay bars in Atlanta, and the Olympic games), sent a videotaped message to the FBI. Rudolph turned on a video camera and focused it on a power saw. He then walked over to the whirling blade, laid his arm on the table, and proceeded to saw off his left hand at the wrist. Then he turned off the camera, mailed the videotape to the FBI, and drove himself to the hospital.

To me, Daniel Rudolph explained through his videotape something that I could never explain, and something that not even his brother could explain by blowing things up and killing people. The question he seemed to answer is: How dedicated am I? How committed am I? Zing. More committed than any of you people can ever be.

And he's right. Just as I can't imagine the anguish weighing on that farmer who's about to commit suicide, I can't imagine the anger going through the mind of someone who is willing to cut off his own hand. It's a level of commitment that you see in Afghanistan, Palestine, and elsewhere around the world. We're not used to seeing it here, but we're going to see more and more of it.

The people we should be frightened of aren't those guys who "secede" from the U.S., make up flags, and fly them in front of their houses, or who go on TV to say, "We're tired of the government." The ones we need to worry about are the ones we've never heard of, and the government's never heard of. We won't hear about them until something bad happens.

And the sad truth is, I don't think anyone will bother to take a hard look at the demise of rural America until more bad things happen.

Jensen: Are you saying it's like an addict who has to hit rock bottom before he or she can change?

Dyer: I'm saying that I don't think the forces that have the power to fix things will pay attention until they're compelled to do so. And we need ways other than violence to make them pay attention. As long as corporations determine who will be elected - and, subsequently, what legislation will be enacted - rural America will continue to race toward Third World status, our inner cities will continue to implode, and the gap between the rich and the poor will continue to widen.

This is nothing new. Serious social change generally does not come out of good intentions or concern. It comes out of fear on the part of the haves, and desperation, frustration, anger, and depression on the part of the have-nots. And it comes only when there are enough people who fit into the second category.

Until someone comes up with a plan for change that makes sense to rural Americans, they will continue to turn to strange conspiracy theories and weird schemes to get the government off their backs. The whole purpose of some of these - like the "common-law courts" and their strict, line-by-line interpretations of the Constitution - is to get people out from under the control of the federal government, and especially its taxes, which often represent the difference between feeding the family or not. These schemes can seem pretty bizarre and crazy, but the message to rural Americans (and, increasingly, to underemployed urbanites as well) is very attractive: You can live your life the way you always have, without some outsider - the government, the farm bureau, suburban environmentalists, the IRS - controlling you. Who could disagree with the attempt to reassert control over one's own destiny?

Jensen: If things are likely to get a lot worse before they get better, what can we do to try to help in the meantime?

Dyer: I think one of the most important things urban people can do is educate themselves about rural America. So many activists have never held a farm or factory job in a working-class community, so they don't really know what they're talking about when they talk of unions or agricultural issues. They don't know anything about these people's lives. And if you don't know anything about them, it's much harder for you to help them.

Jensen: It strikes me that one way we could help, on an individual level, would be simply to buy directly from farmers. For instance, I buy half a cow at a time from local ranchers. In doing so, I don't support factory farms, I get chemical-free beef from a cow raised on open pastures, it's much cheaper, and the local rancher makes more money.

Dyer: That raises some possibilities. There are certainly no laws against buying directly from growers - yet. It would be even better if we could get grocery stores to buy direct. But that isn't really possible, because if grocery chains started buying from local ranchers, Iowa Beef Packers or Cargill would either temporarily drop prices to drive the local ranchers back out of the stores, or threaten to pull other product lines if the grocers refused to play along. So, unfortunately, grocery stores don't have the option of investing heavily in local producers.

Jensen: How can we get them that option?

Dyer: By enforcing the existing antitrust laws.

Jensen: How do we make that happen?

Dyer: Considering that the media won't cover a story these days unless it's somewhat sensational, you could truck a hundred thousand pigs to Washington, D.C., and turn them loose on the streets while encircling the city with a tractor blockade. If you did something like that, the media would show up and stick a microphone in someone's face, and you might be able to get a message across that would resonate with people in the city.

Jensen: When do you see more open rebellion occurring?

Dyer: When the economy goes bust. And I'm afraid much of the energy will be focused against scapegoats. You go down to Alabama right now and ask people why they're in a militia or the KKK, and you'll find out it's because they've been told black people have taken all the good jobs, or that Mexicans are willing to work cheap.

Jensen: Which is crazy for many reasons, not the least of which is the pretty-much-open warfare that has been waged against blacks by the government. A convincing case can be made that prisons are simply concentration camps for black males.

Dyer: There's a chapter in my new book, The Perpetual Prison Machine, called "Pulling the Plug," in which I get to say what's wrong with the prison system, the media, and rural America. It was a hard chapter to write because my inclination is to point the finger at easy targets like politicians and corporations. But they're only the manifestations of the real problem: they are simply operating on a misguided reward system that you and I have established for them. Management theorist Stephen Kerr talks about "hoping for A while rewarding B." This is exactly what we do.

All organisms will do what they're rewarded for doing. And we've established systems that reward the very behavior we say we're trying to discourage, and don't reward the behavior we say we prefer. Perfect example: politicians. We say we want them to speak substantively about the issues. We want people in office who will "tell us the hard facts." Yet every time someone speaking the truth runs against someone who just spouts the usual rhetoric - "I stand for a proud America, and I'll punish bad people more harshly than the other guy" - we turn around and vote for the guy with the rhetoric. It's the same with corporations. We say we want them to act responsibly, but every time a company lays off U.S. workers in favor of Third World labor, we rush to buy its stock.

Until we're willing to change the reward systems, we'll get what we deserve. And I suspect that we won't bother to change those systems until things turn violent. If we were smart, we'd change them right now. It's within our power. But it's inconvenient.

For example, I'm tired of the fact that every product I pick up is made in China. I have a problem with that - not just because of slave labor, but because so many people in the U.S. don't have decent-paying manufacturing jobs. But you know what? I don't search for the product that's not made in China. I'm not willing to pay more for the item not made in China. And until I'm willing to do that, every single time, nothing's going to change. Until there are thousands, and tens of thousands, and millions of people doing it, things won't change.

Again, I hate Wal-Mart. But how can I tell people to boycott Wal-Mart because it puts local stores out of business? The people shopping there are only trying to find cheap diapers, and they may have just gotten laid off themselves, or maybe they're working two part-time, minimum-wage jobs and haven't had health care since 1982.

Jensen: In some ways, you're a fool if you pay two bucks for something you can buy for a buck elsewhere.

Dyer: But by saving yourself a buck, you hurt another community somewhere else. The factory is now in Guatemala, where the workers are paid slave wages, and some of the workers in the U.S. who lost their factory jobs so you could save a dollar are now sitting around making lists of people to shoot.

To return to your question of when I think things will start to change: I believe that when the entire country starts to go to hell in a handbasket, you'll see some reforms. But not until then. That's what happened in the Great Depression: Roosevelt wasn't enlightened - he was terrified.

Jensen: He was trying to stop a revolution.

Dyer: Historian Howard Zinn is exactly right when he says that the Depression could have brought down the government if the New Deal hadn't been put into place. Well, another New Deal won't happen right now because there are still too many people doing too well from the stock-market boom. But when the market collapses and takes with it the money of the schoolteachers and social workers and garbage collectors who've jumped in, tempted by the ungodly profits of the last few years, many more people will be feeling the harsh realities now felt by the poor, minorities, and farmers.

When Race Burns Class

Teaser: 

A casually worded but strong and well researched viewpoint articulating the way in which the U.$. settler system creates a situation in which class is burned into the outward expression of race. Touches on many different issues, from "white" history, to fascism, to unions, and so on.

Body: 

When Race Burns Class: "Settlers" Revisited
An Interview With J. Sakai,
courtesy of Solidarity and Kersplebedeb

EC: In the early eighties you wrote Settlers: Mythology of the White Proletariat, a book which had a major impact on many North American anti-imperialists. How did this book come about, and what was so new about its way of looking at things?

JS: Settlers completely came about by accident, not design. And what was so "new" about it was that it wasn't "inspiring" propaganda, but took up the experience of colonial workers to question how class really worked. It wasn't about race, but about class. Although people still have a hard time getting used to that--it isn't race or sex that's the taboo subject in this culture, but class.

Like many radicals who struggle as organizers, i had wondered why our very logical "class unity" theories always seemed to get smashed up around the exit ramp of race? At the time i'd quit my fairly isolated job on the night shift as a mechanic on the railroad, and was running a cut-off lathe in an auto parts plant. The young white guys in our department were pretty good. In fact, rebellious counter-culture dope smoking Nam vets. After months of hanging & talking, one night one of them came up to me and said that all the guys were driving down to the Kentucky Derby together, to spend the weekend getting drunk and partying. They were inviting me, an Asian, as a way of my joining the crew. Only, he said, "You got to stop talking to those Blacks. You got to choose. White or Black."

Every lunch hour i dropped in on a scene on the loading dock, where a dozen brothers munched sandwiches and had an on-going discussion. About everything from the latest sex scandal to whether it was good or not for Third World nations to be getting A-bombs (some said it was good ending the white monopoly on nuclear weapons, while others said not at the price of endangering our asses!). Plus the guy from the League of Black Revolutionary Workers in our plant area had recruited me to help out, since he was facing heavy going from the older, more established Black political tendencies (various nationalists, the CPUSA--who had great veterans, good shop floor militants --etc). And, why would i go along with some apartheid agenda anyway? Needless to say, the white young guys cut me dead after that (though they later came out for me as shop steward, which shows you how much b.s. they thought the union was).

That kind of stuff, familiar to us all, kept piling up in my mind and got me started trying to figure out how this had come about in the u.s. working class. So for years after this i read labor history and asked older trade union radicals questions whenever i could. Finally, an anarchist veteran of the autoworkers' historic 1937 Flint Sit-Down strike told me that the strike had been Jim Crow, that one of the unpublicized demands had been to keep Black workers down as only janitors....or out of the plants altogether. This blew my mind. That's when it hit me that the wonderful working class history that the movement had taught us was a lie.

So i decided to write an article (famous writer's delusion) on how this white supremacy started in the u.s. working class. i didn't know--maybe it was in the 1920s?, i thought. So Settlers was researched backwards. i knew what the conclusion was in the mid-1970s, that white supremacy ruled the white working class except in the self delusions of the Left. "No politician can ever be too racist to be popular in white amerikkka", is an amazingly true saying. Settlers was researched going back in time, trying to find that event, that turning point when working class unity by whites had dissolved into racial supremacy. 1930s, 1920s, pre-World War I, Black Reconstruction, Civil War, 1700s, 1600s, i kept going back and back, treading water, trying to touch non-white supremacist ground. Only, there wasn't any!

By then it was years later in our lives, and i'd been recruited into doing national liberation movement support work. And was reading Black nationalist writings. One day i caught a speech in which u.s. whites were referred to as "settlers", meaning invaders or interlopers, as in South Afrika and Rhodesia. Of course, white history always talks about settlers with the non-political connotations of pioneers or explorers or the first people to live in an area (native peoples didn't count as real people to euro capitalism. They were part of the flora and fauna). This was a moment of the proverbial light bulb turning on in my mind!

First chance i got, i asked the UN representative of an Afrikan liberation movement if he thought u.s. whites as a society, including workers, were settler oppressors in the same way as Rhodesians, Boers, or Zionists in Israel? He just said, "Of course." Upset, i demanded to know why he didn't tell North Americans this. He only smiled ironically at me, and i won't even bother telling you what certain Indian comrades said. So Settlers didn't involve any great genius on my part, just finally listening to the oppressed and what the actual historical experience said about class. Finally.

From there it was hard research work, but no conceptual leap at all to see that in general in u.s. history the colonized peoples have been the proletariat, while the white working class has been a labor aristocracy. This has been camouflaged in capitalist history by retroactively assigning white racial membership to various european immigrant peoples who weren't "white" at the time. For instance, when leading u.s. capitalists started the "Interracial Council" to promote patriotic nationalist integration during World War I, the "races" they wanted to bring together were the Irish race, the Welsh race, the Polish race, the Lithuanian race, the Hungarian race, the Sicilian race, the Rumanian race, and other Europeans that we now think of as only nationalities within the white race. Shows you how race is another capitalist manufactured product.

So groups who we think of as "white" today, were definitely not considered "white" in the past. Like in the Midwest steel mills just before World War I, when native-born American WASP men were all foremen and skilled workers---what was called "white man's work"--while the back-breaking laboring gangs were made up of "Hunkys", Eastern Europeans. Like immigrant Finnish workers, who weren't citizens, didn't speak English, weren't considered white but "Mongolian", who were oppressed like draft animals in small town mines and mills in the Northern Midwest, and who made up something like 60% of the total membership of the early communist party. They wanted armed revolution right then, just like against the Czar, and most of them were actually imprisoned or deported. Wiped out as an oppressed class and national group. It's a long distance in real class from those oppressed revolutionary women and men to the middle-class pedants and would-be commissars of today's Left. Settlers goes through this real class history.

EC: How is settlerism different from racism?

JS: This is a useful question, because people are confused about the two. Some people think that "settler" is just a fancy way of saying "white people", and that it's all just about racism anyway. Racism as we know it and settlerism both had their origins in capitalist colonialism, and are related but quite distinct. Settler-colonial societies started as invasion and occupation forces for Western capitalism, social garrisons usually in the Third World, as Western capitalism expanded out of Europe into the Americas, Afrika and Asia.

Racism as we experience it today didn't exist before capitalism, which is why many revolutionaries see rooting out the one as requiring rooting out the other. To Europeans before modern capitalism the most important "races" were what we would call nations. Indeed, until well into the 20th century it was widely assumed by Europeans that even different European nationalities were biologically different, and had different mental abilities and propensities. Slavs were thought to be biologically different from Nordics, and Jews were thought to be an exotic race all by themselves.

Pre-capitalist and even early capitalist Europe was a lot different from our racial stereotypes. It wasn't that oppression and bigotry didn't exist. Obviously, for example, there was a long tradition of anti-semitic and anti-romany persecution in "Christendom". But the whole context of "race" was unlike what we usually think of. i was astonished to learn that in early 18th century Germany, a leading philosopher, Anton-Wilhelm Amo who lectured at the University of Halle and the University of Jena, was a Black German ( born in Africa, he also signed his name in Latin as "Amo Guinea-Africanus" or Amo the African). Or that Russia's greatest poet, the 19th century aristocratic Pushkin, was Black by American standards. And nobody cared. And in the time of Marx and Bakunin, the major leader of early German radical unionism was also very visibly Black, and his part-Afrikan heritage accepted.

Well, what we've been saying all along is that "race" in modern capitalism was originally changed from an undefined difference into a disguise for "class". Capitalism, after all, always prefers to restructure class differences in drag of some kind (all the better for their manipulations). Like Northern Ireland, where there is supposedly a "religious" or "ethnic" bloody conflict between Catholic Irish Republicans and Protestant Loyalists.

Actually, this has been an up-front class conflict between British capitalism's historic settler garrison population (the Prostentants) and the historic colonial subjects (the "Catholics"). Both sides European, both "white". The Northern Ireland Protestant settler working class has always had relative privilege, including the best jobs (sound familiar?). Belfast's traditional blue-collar "big employer", the Harland & Wolff shipyard, had always been so dominated by Protestant settler workers that the shipyard union called a pro-imperialist political strike in the 1970s, closing down the yards, to oppose granting any democratic rights at all to Irish Catholics. (Now, of course, the obsolete shipyards are going out of business, and a globalized British imperialism has much less need for their loyal Unionist servants).

The "Orangemen" settlers in Northern Ireland have hated the Irish with just as much crazed viciousness as white u.s. workers hate the oppressed. Irish revolutionary Bernadette Devlin McAliskey picked up on this same comparison in real class when visiting the u.s. in the 1970s. She said afterwards:

"I was not very long there until, like water, I found my own level. 'My people'---the people who knew about oppression, discrimination, prejudice, poverty and the frustration and despair that they produce--were not Irish Americans. They were black, Puerto Ricans, Chicanos. And those who were supposed to be 'my people', the Irish Americans who knew about English misrule and the Famine and supported the civil rights movement at home, and knew that Partition and England were the cause of the problem, looked and sounded to me like Orangemen. They said exactly the same things about blacks that the loyalists said about us at home. In New York I was given the key to the city by the mayor, an honor not to be sneezed at.
I gave it to the Black Panthers."

So settler-colonialism usually has taken racial form, but it doesn't have to. In fact, one of the newest examples---the Chinese capitalist empire's Han settler occupation of Tibet--is all Asian.

What we never should lose sight of is that these may be socially constructed differences---but they are real. There's a certain trend of fashionable white thought that claims that race (or nation) is nothing more than a trick, an imaginary construct that folks are fooled into believing in. So we even find some middle-class white men claiming that they've "given up being white" (i can hear my grandmother saying, "More white foolishness!" with a dismissing headshake). Needless to say, they haven't given up anything.

Race as a form of class is very tangible, solid, material, as real as a tank division running over you ... tank divisions, after all, are also socially constructed! About another form of this same white racist game---white New Age women deciding to play at "becoming Indian"---Women of All Red Nations activist Andy Smith used to wearily suggest that if they really really wanted to "become Indian" they should live on the rez--the u.s. colony--without running water or jobs, without heat in the winter or education for their children, with real poverty, alcoholism, and violent oppression.

So both racism as we know it and settlerism each had their origins in capitalist colonialism and are related, but are also quite distinct. Settler-colonial societies have a specialized history, because they started as invasion and occupation forces for Western capitalism. Usually as social garrisons in the Third World, as Western capitalism expanded out of Europe into the Americas, Afrika, Asia.

EC: Some critics have argued that your book suggests that "racial issues" should take precedence over "class issues"...

JS: This liberal intellectual polarity that "race issues" and "class issues" are opposites, are completely separate from each other, and that one or the must be the main thing, is utterly useless! We have to really get it that race issues aren't the opposite of class issues. That race is always so electrically charged, so filled with mass power, precisely because it's about raw class. That's why revolutionaries and demagogues can both potentially tap into so much power using it. Or get burned.

You can't steer yourself in real politics, not in amerikkka and not in this global imperialism, without understanding race. "Class" without race in North America is an abstraction. And vice-versa. Those who do not get this are always just led around by the nose, the manipulated without a clue -- and it is true that many don't want any more from life than this. But wising up on race only means seeing all the class issues that define race and charge it with meaning. Why should it be so hard to understand that capitalism, which practically wants to barcode our assholes, has always found it convenient to color-code its classes?

When i started high school way back in the daze, it was up North and in theory there was no segregation. But our city school system had five intellectual levels or "tracks"--from the highest college-prep track to the lowest remedial vocational ed track. In a high school that was 85% Black, the top college-prep track never had more than one or two New Afrikans. In fact, those classes would literally close for Jewish holidays. When we started high school all of us non-white types were automatically assigned to the bottom two tracks, which we could only rise out of by "achievement". Those two "colored" tracks (although there were a few hillbillies in them, too) were non-academic, which meant that after four years of attendance you "graduated" high school--but instead of a diploma you only got a paper "certificate of satisfactory attendance". This was real good for getting you your slave job as a porter or at the garment factory -- my first full-time job, the summer i was 14 -- but in fact you couldn't qualify for college with it even if you had somehow managed to get literate.

So college education and middle-class careers just "accidentally" happened to be legally forbidden to most New Afrikans in our city. Everyone knew this who wanted to, it was just a fact of life. So much so that when i started working for the neighborhood gang council (some small gangs, but mostly the big vice-lords and cobras and d's) as a nerdy ten year-old, the leader said that they wanted me to go on to graduate from high school since none of the rest of them would (obviously, even then Asians were designated to finish school). Of course, now neo-colonial capitalism has had to get much slicker and share some loot, create neo-colonial bourgy classes.

Starting a new movement, a new radicalism, we need a better map of class. Which means we need to see what's really happening with race just for starters. Settlers did that for u.s history, particularly for the Black-Indian-white main structure of colonial capitalism here, but that's only a beginning. An outline not a full map. It might be good to come at this from a different angle than the customary Black/white situation. Let me use an obscure example from my own life in which race and even anti-racism played out a different kind of subtle class politics.

A number of years ago, i was trying to help a group of young Chinese-American activists on an anti-racist campaign. This was an interesting case of how a pure "race" issue only fronted for class politics. Now, these folks were "paper Maoists" in every worst way you could think of -- and all my friends know that i'm someone who has warm feelings for the old Chairman. Not only did they have what Mao once called "invincible ignorance", but were also arrogantly full of Han nationalism. They did have physical courage, at least. Their project was to protest the sports racism in the famous industrial town of Pekin, Illinois---which was originally named in the 19th century after Beijing, and whose high school sports teams were colorfully named "the Chinks"! (capitalism, what an ever-amazing civilization---what next? "Auschwitz! The Perfume!" ).

Every week a few carloads of young Asian protesters would arrive in Pekin to picket the high school and city hall, hold television news conferences, and keep the issue simmering in the news. You see, the small flaw in the campaign was that all the protesters had to be imported from New York and Chicago. There were only eight Chinese families in town, and all were refusing to have anything to do with the anti-"Chinks" campaign (not wanting to lose their livelihoods, homes, and be driven out of town by the controversy).

By accident, not in any political way, i had casually met two vaguely liberal young white guys there. One was a teacher in that very high school. The second was a UAW (United Auto Workers union) shop steward at the nearby giant Caterpillar tractor assembly plant, which was Pekin's main industry. So i thought maybe they could be persuaded to get some local people to take a moderate wishy-washy public stand, anything just to give the Chinese families some local community cover if they wanted to speak out (there was zero local support of any kind, including all the unions and churches of course).

When i suggested it to this Maoist group, there was a moment's startled stony silence. Then the leader barked, "We do not work with white people!" Discussion over. So, is this a good example of that error of "racial issues taking precedence over class issues"? i know some radicals might think that, but they'd just be getting faked out.

First off, to those activists running it, "race" was not what was central to their thinking. After all, if those Asian American dudes had really been into either "race" or anti-racism they might have started by organizing and working with the local Asian families. They might have tried to help find some survival strategy for these families, who couldn't just drive off into the sunset after each press conference (being an isolated Asian family in a heavy white racist scene is no joke, obviously). This is just a normal problem in anti-racist work, which folks had to deal with all the time in small towns in 1960s Mississippi, for instance.

It also wasn't true that those Chinese-American leftists "didn't work with white people". They did that all the time, when they wanted, and these Han nationalists even argued for the "revolutionary" nature of the white working class . What i came to realize was in that situation they didn't want any broad community support for the Chinese families there, or to let others into "their" issue. Because they had a really different agenda. Which was to get sole public credit for this and other anti-racist issues, so that their little Maoist "party" could vault into political dominance over the Chinese-American communities. Later, when they thought it necessary, they even used physical violence and death threats to drive other Asian groups away. They intended to be the people in ethnic power, in effect like replacing the tongs. These "paper Maoists" had a pure class agenda, all right, only it was a bourgeois agenda. Although they themselves might have honestly believed what they did was "revolutionary", they had anti -working class politics hidden by "anti racism" and left people of color talk.

And this Maoist group really did get their Andy Warhol-like "15 minutes of fame", becoming large in part because the more dishonest and destructive their "anti-racist" maneuvers became, the more support they got from white middle-class liberals and "progressives" (coincidentally?). i mean, from many white social-democrats, those white anti-repression "experts", academic leftists, etc. Those types that subject us to those endless droning lectures about "the working class" (which they aren't in and don't get, of course). As a sage comrade of mine always says, "Like is drawn to like" even if their outward appearance is very different.

This is a more difficult, easy to slip and fall on, even dangerous way of seeing things than radicals here are used to. But either we learn it well or we're lost in this post-modern decaying civilization. That dead left way of thinking about "race" and "class" not only isn't radical, it's corrupt and anti working class.

Why the giant United Auto Workers local down there near Pekin never saw anything wrong with Asian children being forced to go to school in a white supremacist haze, surrounded by constant references to "the Chinks", was just business as usual for the labor aristocracy in America. In the 1960s and 1970s all those government regulated American unions fought even elementary Civil Rights tooth and nail. Including the most liberal, including those run by white "socialists" like the East Coast garment workers and West Coast longshoremen.

Many dissenting Black longshoremen in the 1960s and 1970s were literally barred from the industry for life by the dictatorship of the settler "socialist" labor bosses of the ILWU. As outrageous as it may be, those "socialist" union dictators could just issue orders that this New Afrikan or that Chicano was not to be allowed to work on the docks again ever. Oh, they loved Martin orating and marching non-violently far off in Washington, but they fought Civil Rights inside their industries & unions every bitter step of the way (it's also true that in places, in Detroit, San Francisco, Flint, New York City, there were small handfuls of maverick white socialists and anarchists who sided with the Black and Latino workers even against their own white left).

The funny thing is that for all the constant "Marxist" blah-blah about government unions as "main roads of the class struggle", in our lifetime the AFL-CIO unions have been on the wrong side of just about every major mass movement. That's why they have been back-slapping with Pat Buchanan and helping to legitimize white racism in the current anti-WTO campaign. i guess because that's their job.

Many people conveniently forget that these business unions were rebuilt to conform to tight capitalist laws, are constantly u.s. government regulated and monitored, have involuntary "membership", and are about as democratic as the USSR (which had elections, reforms and repairs, too, before it broke down under the mismanagement of primitive capitalist empire). Once workers' "unions" were free associations, were wild, were outside bourgeois law and part of a counter-culture of the oppressed, but these genetically modified creations only use the same name.

EC: Speaking of white workers, another criticism I have heard is that you are denying that there even is a white working class in the United States. Would you say this is an accurate reading of your work, or are people missing the point?

JS: Now, there obviously is a white working class in the u.s. A large one, of many, many millions. From offshore oil derricks to the construction trades to auto plants. But it isn't a proletariat. It isn't the most exploited class from which capitalism derives its super profits. Far fucking from it. As a shorthand i call it the "whitetariat". These aren't insights unique to Settlers, by any means.

Unfortunately, whenever Western radicals hear words like "unions" and "working class" a rosy glow glazes over their vision, and the "Internationale" seems to play in the background. Even many anarchists seem to fall into a daze and to magically transport themselves back to seeing the militant socialist workers of Marx and Engels' day. Forgetting that there have been many different kinds of working classes in history.

Forgetting that Fred Engels himself criticized the English industrial working class of the late 19th century as a "bourgeois proletariat", an aristocracy of labor. He pointed out how you could tell the non-proletarian, "bourgeois" strata of the English working class--they were the sectors that were dominated by adult men, not women or children. Engels also wrote that the "bourgeois" sectors were those that were unionized. Sounds like a raving ultra-leftist, doesn't he? (which he sure wasn't).

So that this is a strategic and not a tactical problem, that it has a material basis in imperialized class privilege, has long been understood by those willing to see reality. (the fact that we have radical movements here addicted to not seeing reality is a much larger crisis than any one issue).

EC: Don't some of the benefits of living in an imperialist metropole trickle down even into some of the internal colonies, causing some of the distorting effects of settlerism to be replicated within, for instance, the non-white working classes within the United States?

JS: Yes, absolutely. Radical workers themselves have often understood this, although the official "Marxist" left has always worked to silence them.

Way back in the 1970s two Detroit auto workers wrote a short pamphlet about politics, addressed to "fellow workers who have begun to wonder whether they are going to spend the rest of their lives just hustling for more money..." What was so striking about this was the authors, James Boggs and James Hocker, who between them had over fifty years experience in the plants. Strikes, militant factory caucuses, revolutionary organizations, Black nationalism, mass ghetto rebellions, they had taken part in it all. One of them, James Boggs, had been a close comrade and co-author of the Pan-Afrikan revolutionary historian C.L.R. James. Boggs was one of the leading working-class theoreticians of the 1960s Black Revolution.

The role of the white racist construction trades unions back then, who were used by the u.s. government as their unofficial goon squads to beat up Anti-Vietnam War protesters, was infamous. But Boggs and Hocker don't let their fellow factory workers escape responsibility, either. They remind them (and the rest of us) that all the AFL-CIO unions, even the liberal ones, completely backed u.s. military aggression in Asia, the Caribbean, and Latin America.

Nor did it stop there, since Boggs and Hocker saw a direct relationship between the opportunism of all the unions and the opportunism of a bribed u.s. working class. What was so refreshing was that Boggs and Hocker expressly rejected the time-worn and worn-out "radical" argument that u.s. workers are free from all sin (sort of like the ultimate condom of immaculate conception ), since supposedly "it is only sellout by the union bureaucracy which has kept the workers in check."

"Workers coming into the auto plants today receive economic benefits undreamed of by their predecessors. These benefits tie workers to the company, particularly the high senority workers. It also creates in them a vested interest in the system which exerts a growing influence on how they view the social reality around them. More and more they think only about their own interests. They worry only about how to 'get mine' or, at best, 'get ours'"

The two pointed out how auto workers in Detroit refused to fight for better mass transit, because, although they know how much poor people need this, "they also think that adequate public transportation might mean fewer jobs for them."

"This opportunism is clearly demonstrated in dealing with the most important issues of our time, such as the war in Indochina and the inflation caused by the war.

"The war in Indochina took the lives of thousands of youth in this country, many of them sons of working class families. But it was the workers and their organizations who demonstrated enthusiastic support for the clearly illegal war perpetrated by the United States government, even when other groups in the society, especially students, were showing by their actions increasing distaste for the war.

"Many workers, when challenged individually, would deny that they supported the war. But at the same time they refused to take any actions to exhibit opposition to the war and clearly were hostile to the students who opposed the war. The attitude of most workers was 'The President knows best' and in any case what mattered was their jobs---even if their job was making bombs or napalm to burn up the Vietnamese...

These guys were seriously pissed off at their own class, at their brothers and sisters, and not afraid to lay it all out. But saying that u.s. industrial workers are not as a whole revolutionary or "class conscious"---and check out that Boggs and Hocker, who worked in the Detroit auto factories that were Black-majority, are definitely not just exposing the "whitetariat" alone but Black workers as well--- isn't the end of the road. i'm not saying that we should forget about working class organizing. What i am suggesting is that radical working class politics here needs different strategies than the traditional left has understood. Everything that we've discussed just clears away all the middle-class left underbrush, so people can see the actual path before us and get down to work. Settlers didn't directly deal with all this, naturally, since it's historical analysis of the oppressor class structure and history.

EC: Would you say that organizing within the present-day white working class is hopeless?

JS: We need to talk about how people unthinkingly objectify the working classes. It never occurs to anyone to believe that the metropolitan middle classes are going to overthrow the system that privileges them. No one says, "The white doctors and professors and managers are the revolutionary class." Yet, without any big fuss or posturing, middle-class radicals just organize in those classes when and where they can, all around themselves. Students just form issue groups in even the most elite universities. Teachers try to open minds to social justice, while even some doctors volunteer to serve in refugee camps or argue with the majority of their criminal profession about being healers not rip-offs or stock market addicts. For better or worse, success or defeat. No big political deal, it's just living the life, the meal that's set before us.

But when it comes to the working classes, whoa, then it's all this ideological ca-ca.

To believe what we're told, no one should want to organize or educate workers unless they can be sure that the entire class is "bound for glory" as the main force for revolution! (which you won't see here in this lifetime, trust me).

So the white workers as a whole are either the revolutionary answer---which they aren't unless your cause is snowmobiles and lawn tractors---or they're like ignorant scum you wouldn't waste your time on. Small wonder rebellious poor whites almost always seek out the Right rather than the left.

There's an underlying assumption that revolutionary movements worldwide share, that's always there for us, that we are part of the working classes. That we live our lives in these communities, hold those jobs, try to live productive lives not just do capitalist bullshit, struggle within these class situations. We're talking in a wide arc here, maybe, but to a point: to how we need to build movements that have the learned skill of the recognition of reality. That understand revolutionary politics as more than abstract ideology, in more than an academic or reform movement way.

If radicalism can build small counter-currents of liberation in the overwhelmingly corrupt middle classes, why should similar work be questioned in the white working class communities? What i am fighting is the slick "Marxist" or "anarchist" opportunism, which sees aligning with the white settler majority and reform politics as the absolute necessity.

Malcolm X and Women's Liberation, ACT-UP and Wounded Knee II, Anti-Vietnam War draft card burning and radical ecology, were all shocking to the majority of North Americans. Radical threats to "the American Way of Life"--- and loudly condemned not only by the majority but more specifically by the white working class --- these political offensives by the few turned everything upside down. Because in the metropolis, radical and democratic change can only come against the wishes of the bribed majority. That may be tough to swallow for white folks, but reality is just reality.

This obsession with needing a social majority has nothing to do with being "practical". What it has to do with is bourgeois and defeatist thinking.

This is like the left thinking that could not build a practical anti-fascist movement in Weimar Republic Germany during the 1920s and 1930s, although millions hated Nazism and wanted to do something, because that German left was too preoccupied with fantasies of either seizing or getting elected into state power for itself.

That left was too lost in delusions of success almost within their hands, delusions of maneuvering together a majority, to bother even really understanding fascism coming up fast in their rear view mirror. The urgent need was to organize a working minority to counter fascism in a much more radical way. Not by trying to defend liberal bourgeois rule. All the real things that had to be done by scattered German anti-fascists later after the Nazis were put into power---such as to survive politically, to significantly sabotage the war effort, to rescue Jews and Romany and gays, to build an underground against the madness of the Third Reich--all these things were attempted bravely but largely unsuccessfully, because they had to be done too late from scratch. This is a much larger subject, too large to dive into now, but it is on the horizon, like the smoke of a distant forest fire.

EC: Are the settler societies of North America different from the racist and imperialist countries in Europe in any kind of fundamental way which should be important to anti-fascists?

JS: Which takes us into somewhat different ground. i'm not knowledgeable enough on European politics--or on Canada-- so that i could do a list of point by point comparisons. What i'd like to do instead is to talk about u.s. society, and readers themselves can see if the comparisons make any sense. And, yes, i've run into young fascists of the "stormtrooper" variety, with their gray semi-waffen s.s. uniforms, open veneration of Hitler, open talk of "mud races", etc. i still think that fascism here has been very influenced by its birth within a settler society, instead of being just some lame copy of the German experience. Just as Israeli settler neo-fascism has a very different language and public look from that of their Nazi tutors (taking a religious fundamentalist form).

The most conspicuous difference between Europe and North America was class in the outward form of race. In the centuries before World War II, the overwhelming mass of the European populations were poor and in misery. They were the proletarian classes, the laborers, poor peasants, and oppressed industrial workers. But in the settler colonies and nations, the lowest classes, the proletarians, were the natives, the conquered, or the imported colonial laborers. While white settler workers were automatically, from birth, no matter how poor, a whole level up. As W.E.B. DuBois remarked about poor white workers in the post-Civil War South. Thanks to imperialism. Which is why the mass of French colons in Algeria solidly supported imperialism against the Algerian people. Why millions of working class and poor whites in the segregationist u.s. South were more than willing to help police and kill and terrorize Black people. And even today, a century and more later, if we left it up to the white majority, the u.s. would secede from NAFTA and the WTO all right---and fly the Confederate flag!

In many settler societies, historically the white population not only supported the police, in part they were the police. Unlike in Old Europe, where in general the masses of people were kept disarmed and landless, in settler colonies often the entire euro-male culture revolved around common and cheap access to land and rifles and the bodies of the oppressed. Posses or militias or "Committees of Correspondence" or lynch mobs of armed men enforced the local settler dictatorship over Indians, Latinos, Afrikans, Asians, North Afrikans, women, etc. And white men of all classes joined in, to affirm their membership in the most important "class" of all.

Settlerism filled the space that fascism normally occupies.

So in the 1920s and 1930s large fascist movements arose in Old Europe out of the bitter class deadlock in war-torn societies. But in the u.s. then, while there were small fascist groups and certainly real currents of sympathizers (enough to fill Madison Square Garden in Manhattan on one occasion), there was no mass movement for fascist seizure of power itself. Nor was the ruling class close to implementing fascism. The sputtering flare-ups of attempted fascist coups by ruling class elements against the reformist Roosevelt New Deal (Colonel McCormick's Chicago Tribune newspaper calling for the assassination of the President, or the DuPont abortive seizure of Washington using suborned u.s. marines) were easily shrugged off. There was major u.s. imperialist support for Italian, Spanish and German fascism before and even during World War II, as opposed to support for fascism at home. Fascism was distinct from racism or white supremacy, which were only " As American as apple pie."

Neither the ruling class nor the white masses had any real need for fascism. What for?

There was no class deadlock paralyzing society. There already was a long standing, thinly disguised settler dictatorship over the colonial proletariat in North America. In the u.s. settlerism made fascism unnecessary. However good or bad the economic situation was, white settlers were getting the best of what was available. Which was why both the white Left and white Far Right alike back then in the 1930s were patriotic and pro-American. Now only the white Left is.

The white Left here is behind in understanding fascism. When they're not using the word loosely and rhetorically to mean any repression at all (like the frequent assertions that cutting welfare is "fascism"! i mean, give us a break!), they're still reciting their favorite formula that the fascists are only the "pawns of the ruling class". No, that was Nazism in Germany, maybe, though even there that's not a useful way of looking at it. But definitely not here, not in that old way.

The main problem hasn't been fascism in the old sense--it's been neo colonialism and bourgeois democracy! The bourgeoisie didn't need any fascism at all to put Leonard Peltier away in maximum security for life or Mumia on death row. They hunted down the Black Panthers and the American Indian Movement like it was deer hunting season, while white America went shopping at the mall--all without needing fascism. And the steady waterfall of patriarchal violence against women, of rapes and torture and killings and very effective terrorism on a mass scale, should remind us that the multitude of reactionary men have "equal opportunity " under "democracy ", too. They don't need fascism--yet.

Right now under neo-colonial "democracy", the system of patrolling and confining the Black Nation is at a fever pitch. Every known narcotic is being shoved and shoveled onto the streets of the Nation like it was confetti at parade time---coke, heroin, malt liquor, Bud, crack, commodified sex, you name it. The huge 2 million inmate u.s. prison system contains the largest single Black community of all. One out of every four Black men in Washington, D.C. is in jail, prison, on parole or probation, or awaiting trial--i.e. under direct supervision by the law enforcement system . Even Ronald K. Noble, the new Secretary General-designate of INTERPOL, has written that he regularly gets stopped, questioned, and sometimes even searched by u.s. police (in Europe, too, of course). And if the top law enforcement official in the capitalist world gets routinely stopped as a Black man for u.s. racial police checks, guess what happens to the unemployed, to young working class Black men.

The old Black industrial working class has been largely wiped out, and warlord armies and gangs given informal state permission to rule over much of the inner city at gunpoint. A few years ago i went home with a comrade. When we got off the bus, all the passengers started walking home down the middle of the street. My friend explained that all the sidewalks were "owned" by one or another dope gang or dealer, reserved for their crew and customers. You walked in the street or you got taken down by a 9mm. While the new Black middle class takes itself out of the game, flees the old communities and disperses itself into the suburbs. Why would capitalists need fascism? "Democracy" is doing the job for them full gale force--and let's not forget that North America has at the same time become the conscience of the world lecturing everyone else on human rights. "How sweet it is!" ( Guess Leonard Peltier must be a prisoner in China ).

But i am not saying that the situation is static, or that past history isn't being razed and rebuilt. All variants of capitalist metropolitan societies are becoming slowly but surely more alike, Quebec and Raleigh, Tokyo and Frankfurt, as capital expands, develops, and merges. While Western European farmers complain about McDonalds and agrobusiness, they willingly accept the most significant "Americanization"--the replacement of Western European labor with Algerians, Turks, Albanians, etc. Throughout Europe the proletariat has been pushed outside of national boundaries socially--just as euro-settlerism once did in the Third World--and is being redefined as Arab, Filipino, Algerian, Turkish, Albanian, Afrikan, and so on.

And, as Arghiri Emmanuel has noted, imperialism is gradually abandoning its own kith and kin, its settler societies. We first saw this in Kenya in 1960, where the British settler colony was unceremoniously dumped after the Mau Mau Rebellion in favor of an Afrikan neo-colonial regime. Then in Algeria, where French imperialism gave up on what had by their laws been an actual province of France--and left a million French Algerian settlers to lose their farms and homes and possessions, to flee in a frenzied mass evacuation. Capitalism has no loyalties, after all, only interests (to paraphrase a famous statesman). It was only then that the colons and their military sympathizers sought an end to French bourgeois democracy, to start a new fascist interlude. Even in North America settlers are being told by imperialism to move over and make room for new immigrants from Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and Afrika. To pay the bill as the state gives back some land and reparations and tax concessions to Native nations. And they certainly hate it!

So there is a certain convergence, of settler and non-settler metropolitan societies becoming more alike. In the u.s. the increasingly global ruling class has no need of domestic fascism-- so far. But white mass politics is not confined to taking phone calls from the ruling class. Far from it.

EC: How do you view the rise of the Far Right, specifically the American Far Right?

JS: We can see that neo-fascism is a growing factor in u.s.politics. Still marginal, but already more significant than, say, white Marxism. The Far Right is politically strong enough, represents so much mass sentiment, that its momentary electoral champion---Pat Buchanan---has become the hero of some trade unions and the closet ally of white socialists and anarchists in the anti-WTO campaign. [for more details on the right wooing the left in the anti-globalization movement, see My Enemy's Enemy, published by Anti-Fascist Forum]

And again, to understand this dynamic we have to lay aside 1930s' political formulas and take the social reality in a fresh way. Were Timmy McVeigh and his comrades "tools of the ruling class" when they dusted the federal building in Oklahoma City? Does finance capital & the big bourgeoisie pull the strings behind the Militia Movement as it spreads doctrines of tax resistance, seizing federal land, and targeting the imperialist state as white man's main enemy? You'd have to be nuttier than they are to believe that! The old "pawns of the ruling class" 1930s analysis of European fascism do not apply right here in the old way.

This is too big a subject for me to go into fully here, but the broad outline is obvious. The Far Right is growing steadily, moving on the offensive, as white settler society itself is fragmenting and being forced to gradually give up its old national form under immense pressures from the new global imperialism. In this fragmentation, some sectors and classes of the old settler society are now more open to neo-fascism in their desperate search for a new civilization for themselves in which they will still be masters of the land.

While in Europe the much larger fascist current has manifested itself by violent attacks on immigrant labor and on defending the concept of the old nations, in the u.s. the New Right is primarily concerned with attacking the u.s. state itself, using both armed struggle and mass political organizing, and founding new self-governing cults and societies . That is to say, it is an emerging revolutionary movement, albeit still a small one. The Left has little daily contact with the fascists, because they are in different classes and live in different geographic areas and are in diverging societies.

In the best guerrilla fashion, this New Right is by-passing the major cities, with their massive Third World populations, corporate economies and large state machinery. Rather, their focus is on winning de facto power inside the marginalized white male populations. Romeoville, Illinois rather than Chicago. Prisons rather than Ivy League colleges. Theirs is a re-statement of the early settler vision, of setting up independent outposts of a racially-cleansed culture, on re-pioneered white land. With heavily armed bands of once again masculine white men pushing out the mercenary u.s. authorities. For a period of time we could see both white fascist Right and the white Left--working in geographically separate cultures on this vast continent-- grow without impinging on or really clashing with each other. Both mostly white "Free Mumia" campaigns in the old major cities and the quiet ouster of federal agents from Western lands.

The old Right of the 1920s Klan or 1960s White Citizens Councils or Minutemen or Jewish Defense League were patriotic & pro-u.s.a. They saw themselves as "saving" the traditional America, and often cooperated closely with and were led by local business, police, the f.b.i. and government officials.

In a major reversal, the new Far Right is radically anti-American. It sees their white male settler empire of "America from sea to shining sea" as really lost. Its cities taken over by the sub-human millions of the "mud races", its economy drained by the "Jew banks" and the alien corporate economy, its culture polluted by hostile genetic contaminants, its once-proud citizens increasingly without rights and dictated to by the shell of the former "u.s.government" which is now the "Zionist Occupation Government". And while the masses of conservative euro-amerikans are not yet fascist, neither are they anti-fascists.

And the hard-core of the new Far Right is very fascist, since neo-fascism represents the basic ideology that the aspiring white "lumpenbourgeoisie" need to restart and reorganize a part of settler society as their own private fiefdom. The u.s. constitution just doesn't work for them. Just as Trudjman and Milosevic, who once were Yugoslavian patriots and "socialists" when that met their class interests, turned to neo fascism and genocidal ethnic nationalism to be "born again" as the local "lumpenbourgeoisie" under global imperialism.

Take the David Duke phenomenon. As we all know, in 1990 Louisiana state representative David Duke ran for the u.s. senate. In losing Duke still won a large majority of the statewide white vote, some 57%. His highest percentage of votes came from white workers with incomes under $15,000 a year. This despite the fact that Duke was and is notorious not "merely" as a racist, but as someone who has spent his entire adult life as a very public neo-nazi organizer, propagandist, and leader. He was opposed by both Republican and Democratic Parties, and the churches, civic and business organizations. The entire media machine kept exposing and criticizing him, repeatedly running old photos of him in his American Nazi Party uniform. Yet, if it wasn't for the Black voters, David Duke--naked fascist agenda and all-- would have emerged as one of the most powerful politicians and in the u.s. senate. You can see why granting Black people the vote was so important to u.s. imperialism--and why the white masses were carefully never given a chance to directly vote on it!

For sure, the growth of fascism here has many class contradictions of its own, and their Aryan future is far from certain. But it is significant that while the masses of euro-amerikans are not fascists, being neo-fascist is quietly acceptable to many of them. Today the radical future is dividing into those who--whatever their strategies and ideologies--recognize that fact, and those who still wish to avoid facing it.

This text, with Kuwasi Balagoon's review of Settlers ("The Continuing Appeal of Anti-Imperialism"), is available in a 34 page booklet from Kersplebedeb Distribution. Kersplebedeb also provides a page dedicated to reviews and discussion of Settlers.

Elements of Refusal

Teaser: 

Derrick Jensen interviews John Zerzan, and they discuss the growing dissatisfaction with the entirety of our existence. Encouraged by the events in Seattle, Zerzan puts forward that the protests weren't all that much about the WTO. What were they about then? "They were about everything."

Body: 

ELEMENTS OF REFUSAL
DERRICK JENSEN INTERVIEWS JOHN ZERZAN
Published in "Food & Water"
Winter 2000

John Zerzan: Just today I was talking with a guy from the New York Times, and though I don't know exactly what his focus is, he's much more interesting than I would have thought. He understands that there's a big disconnect going on, and has for a long time been predicting that there would be an upsurge in resistance to the system. In that sense Seattle wasn't surprising to him.

There are a couple of interesting things about this. The first is that this wasn't some anarchist saying this, but instead someone who works for a major mainstream corporate media outlet-and I have to say it didn't seem like he was blowing smoke, but instead saying what he believed. And the second is that he comes to this from a very non-political, non-theoretical perspective. His perception of the disconnect comes from his being very interested especially in what the youth are feeling. It's kind of like where Adorno talks about the need which stands behind philosophy. . . .

Derrick Jensen: What do you mean by disconnect?

JZ: I think what he sees is that there is a growing number of kids especially who see through the happy face of the system to the nightmare beneath, both the horror and misery it causes for example in the Third World and in the natural world, and also the emptiness and misery of the lives it forces all of us to lead.

We hear again and again from the media in response to criticism of the system: "Well, gee, things have never been better. What are you guys talking about? Everything is wonderful. Everybody's happy. I don't get it." But of course that sort of ridiculing of criticism is part of the nightmare itself. And the ridicule cannot continue forever. Something is happening that won't allow it to.

DJ: What, exactly, is happening?

JZ: People are beginning to come together and say that they'll no longer put up with all this emptiness that's galloping along, because they're realizing that they no longer have to lead miserable lives in the service of a system that is destroying the planet. They're realizing that they no longer have to accept a media, political, and economic system that refuses to acknowledge the reality we all face on a daily basis.

I was talking to that guy today about the surge in schoolyard shootings, and he was just as appalled as I am at the ridiculously superficial discourse surrounding Columbine and Thurston. Now they're talking about video games as a potential cause. Their use of any ridiculous dodge to avoid talking about the pathology of the system, to avoid even scratching the surface, really is criminal. I'm not using that word lightly.

How long can we go along pretending civilization makes sense, that there's any future here, any answers here? I can't even hardly find anyone to defend the system anymore, unless they're paid ideologues like politicians or those who run the media. That was what was so refreshing about the guy today.

Back to the resistance. I would say that given the palpably worsening lifeworld on every level, the most surprising thing about the burgeoning resistance is how long it's taken to get to this point.

DJ: You mentioned Seattle. I thought what happened there was one of the most hopeful and best things I've seen in a long time.

JZ: I've been thinking about this a lot, and I feel that Seattle already has gone past the movement of the sixties. You could say that one swallow doesn't make a summer, but people understand now some things that for the most part we didn't back then. I was very involved in the sixties, in Berkeley and San Francisco, and I've long felt we didn't even scratch the surface of what was necessary. But in Seattle, already at the dawn of this new movement, people were plumbing the depths of understanding how far oppression goes. I don't want to rhapsodize or magnify it without that much evidence, but it just feels to me that there are an awful lot of people who are really close to breaking through all the proscriptions and rules holding them back.

The whole thing in Seattle was very intense, and something that impressed me very much was that even given the widely disparate styles of protest, all of the protesters held in common tremendous courage, commitment, and endurance. I saw a tremendous willingness to take some very serious risks, whether we're talking about black-clad anarchists committing felonies, or the more rule-abiding protesters facing down cops while getting gassed from three directions. Protesters clogged intersections around the convention center for hours, hanging tough until the cops finally lost it because they saw these people weren't going to give up. And still the people hung in there. I was so proud of the resisters. They could have been beaten to death, yet they didn't give up.

DJ: I've read first person accounts of people getting shot point blank in the face with rubber bullets, of cops breaking jaws, of people being placed naked in restraining chairs.

JZ: Well, the brutality of the system was there to see as well as the courage.

I really think-and I could be wrong here-that what happened in Seattle didn't have all that much to do with WTO. I think there was a sense that the WTO is just the tip of the iceberg, that people generally knew that WTO or no WTO doesn't really change anything.

DJ: What were the protests about then?

JZ: They were about everything.

Here's an anecdote that still cracks me up whenever I think about it. I saw a middle-aged guy arguing with some college-aged kid. The older guy was bringing up all the details on what's wrong with the WTO, that it's not transparent, anti-democratic, and so on, and was making all these suggestions for how we should fiddle with the WTO procedures. The kid heard him out, and finally just looked him over and said, "I don't know all these details you're talking about, but I do know I hate rich people." It blew the other guy away.

They were from two different planets. On the one hand you've got the liberals who endlessly fret over every little detail and miss the bigger picture, and on the other you've got people who say, "It's the whole thing that's fucked."

DJ: Let's go back to what you said about the sixties not scratching the surface.

JZ: In the sixties there seemed to be a general sense that the system was somehow reformable, or even if it wasn't, that the revolution wouldn't be that hard. The winds were blowing a different way, we thought. But the great changes we were seeking never came. And so in the seventies some of us began to ask ourselves what we meant by revolution in the first place. What does the concept mean? What would it take to really change things? Were we even on the right track? We asked these questions in great measure because it was becoming increasingly clear that our work was insufficient. Now, some thirty years later, after three decades of defeat and damage, we have less idealism and optimism, but I think we also now have fewer illusions. We're beginning to gain an understanding of the depth of the problem, and of how far we have to go. And I think some people are sensing this in very profound ways these days.

DJ: How do you mean all this?

JZ: I'm not saying people didn't have a clue back then as to what kind of transformation would be desirable. But there were a lot of things we didn't think nearly enough about. Technology, for example. People didn't think about what technology really is, and how deeply the system is embedded in it (and vice versa), how far it incarnates the system of capital. That's partly because society hadn't been so technologized at that point. But now real experience is on the verge of extinction. There's almost no unmediated experience left. So it's very hard on some level to at least not see that life-the texture of life, the wholeness of life, that sense of having direct experience-is being leached away. We are witnessing and participating in what Debord called the movement from lived life to represented life.

Another thing we didn't think enough about-and this is closely related to technology-is media. But now you really can't avoid discussing it. The entire image machine urges us to consume all these images of life: to consume representations instead of to live. This is pretty well known, whereas I'm not sure that was the case thirty years ago.

Another good thing is the degree to which people increasingly realize that the system doesn't foster these questions as part of the discourse of what society is and what it should be.

DJ: It cannot, because if it did it would collapse immediately.

JZ: I think that's right.

DJ: What would you like to see people do in the short run?

JZ: On the one hand, the system is so fucked that almost anything we can do would be welcome, whether it's protecting biodiversity or working to help battered women. But all of those are essentially defending ourselves against the onslaught of the system. What would it mean to take the offensive?

That's a more difficult question, because in some ways it's hard to see those immediate practical steps. I think that's because the whole project is so enormous. But I'm pretty clear that the project we face is largely one of removal, of deconstruction, of taking away all these separations and mediations and intrusions. And that involves-and this is where it gets really tough-taking down this enormous ensemble of interlocking institutions. The fact that the system is so tightly interlocking-such a totality-is one reason it is so effective.

DJ: I don't know how, but it strikes me also that this condition of being interlocking could provide a key toward taking it down. . . .

JZ: That's intriguing.

DJ: Back to what we should do. . . .

JZ: The other day I was reading this 'zine called "Practical Anarchy," and I remember thinking, "Well, I wish there was a practical answer." But our project has to be utopian in some senses, because otherwise we're still on the system's own terrain, still operating under the illusion that we can somehow work it out within this totality instead of breaking its hold over us and removing it.

DJ: Let's get more specific. Do you approve, disapprove, or take no position on the property destruction that took place as part of the resistance in Seattle? I mean both morally and tactically.

JZ: I guess I would put it this way. It's very hard to see how proceeding by the rules of the game-by the approved protest rituals that the system has handed out-is going to accomplish the removal of the system. I don't see how people can actually think that the system is going to hand out the rules for its own demise. It would be nice if polite protest and respecting the rules of the game, including the rules of property, would be enough. But civil disobedience remains exactly that: civil to the system. And what kind of disobedience is it that accepts the enemy's notions of what is and isn't acceptable?

DJ: There are a lot of people who've equated the destruction of property with violence.

JZ: I just don't understand how people can miss that incredibly important distinction. You can't violate an inanimate structure or object. Violence against any living creature has almost nothing in common with damaging property. Crossing the line to violate the sanctity of property is in no way the same as crossing the line to violate the sanctity of life. In fact our whole system, based on the sanctity of property, is the most murderous system around, not content to simply kill humans through both economic and military means, but bent on destroying all life on the planet.

I would draw a distinction, too, between corporate and personal property. There's all the difference in the world between breaking a window at Starbucks and heaving a rock into my neighbor's living room. It still surprises me how many people say, "Well, that means you'll come and break my windows." That seems like such a non sequitur, but it needs to be acknowledged, and it needs to be answered. That's not what we're talking about at all. Why would anyone go and break your window? To even ask that question is to suggest that the actions are random, not framed by any vision, critique, or analysis. It's crazy. Are you so heavily identified with the system that you think because someone broke windows at Starbucks, next they're going to shoot you, and then your dog for good measure? Get real.

But those of us who are part of the resistance must accept as part of the challenge the fact that these issues haven't been brought out for people to think about, have been occluded from consideration. And we need to change that by talking about the issues directly and honestly.

DJ: It seems that some of the strongest criticisms of those who are willing to destroy corporate property comes not even from the corporate press, but from other protesters.

JZ: That's true, and it strikes me as absurd. I have no problems with anyone who is brave enough to do civil disobedience, to sit there in front of the cops with their gas and their rubber bullets. I would never attempt to censor them. I may disagree with them, and tell them I think they're wasting their time, but I respect their right to protest however they want. But so often these same people attempt to disallow any tactics they disagree with.

Many of these ostensible pacifists actually became violent in their defense of corporate property, tackling people and shrieking at them about the need for nonviolence. They were remarkably strident, and working overtime to protect the system and to protect their agreed-upon rituals.

But I have to tell you that even in the middle of this wild, heightened context I saw some very interesting conversations. When faced with these people who were so strenuously objecting to breaking the rules, some of the black-clad anarchists would say something like, "Well, do you think civil disobedience will really be enough?" And I actually saw some people change their minds on the spot. I heard them say, "Oh, I never even thought of that before."

I really respected that openness. So many people are so schooled in this liberal reformist doctrinaire stuff, and I have to admit that it wasn't necessarily the easiest time to consider a whole new point of view. We're all defensive when our worldview is challenged-at least I know I often am-yet some people were able to open themselves up.

DJ: Something else I find remarkable is that so many of these people who were opposed to the black-clad anarchists probably support the Zapatistas, and say "Hooray for Crazy Horse."

JZ: That's for sure. There's a flyer that somebody put out here in Eugene that says, "You denounce the masked anarchists and support the masked Zapatistas, and to a very large degree they're fighting for the same thing." What's the deal?

DJ: Let's return to the question of revolution. How would you envision that happening?

JZ: I was talking with someone last night who said, "One of the big questions about Seattle seems to be: how would things have been different if the black-clad anarchists hadn't been there "messing up our protest"? But then she said, "Why don't people turn it around? Why don't they ask: What if there were another hundred black-block people, smashing it up? What if there were five hundred? What if there were 5000?" Just think of what might have happened. What kind of possibly radical breakthrough would have begun right there?

DJ: How do you see the resistance moving from its current state? Or let's say that there already would have been 5000 of the black-block anarchists in Seattle. What's the next step after that?

JZ: Insofar as people understand that the whole setup is toxic from one end to the other, from its very foundation, then the rest just follows. In other words, the first thing we need to do is recognize the craziness of playing by the sytem's rules. To imagine that kneeling down and getting arrested, then paying your fine, will actually stop or significantly slow the monstrous development of capital technology and civilization is just crazy.

The future of the environmental movement I think depends on realizing that it has to be broadened and deepened. Its serious needs to be called into question. For example, I've thought a fair amount about the Earth First! movement, and how its rallying cry is "No compromise in defense of mother earth." But what does that mean? Compromise? How do we even know what compromise is? It's a social concept. And we're all compromised, we're implicitly part of the system. I'm not saying that our own culpability needs to paralyze us, but that we need to really examine what we mean, and what we want.

DJ: Okay, then. To remove this from abstraction, what would it take to shut down Weyerheuser? Or moving back up one level of abstraction, what would it take to shut down the timber industry? And then the next level: what would it take to shut down the whole machine?

JZ: I think the first thing is that we need to decide that's really what we want. That's a very courageous and I think sensible position. Given the destructiveness of the system, I think it's really the only sensible position. And there are a lot of people who would agree with it. But there are also an awful lot who are afraid of that position.

DJ: I agree with it wholeheartedly, and it scares the hell out of me.

JZ: It's very scary.

Having decided that, I think the next question-or maybe in some ways this question even comes first-is: what would it take to break the hold of the terrorism of consumer culture, where the only choices and the only satisfactions left are those provided by consumerism? Or you could phrase the question differently: why is it that some people have already decided that consumerism is meaningless and hollow? Why do we see a film like Fight Club, which is ferociously anti-consumer? The central message of that film is incredible. I'm not saying it doesn't have any flaws, but it's very clear that a life that finds its satisfactions in consuming is completely unhappy and absurd.

DJ: Let's talk about violence. It is already a given in our lives, not only because of things like Columbine and Thurston, and not only because the military is essential worldwide to keep resources flowing into the corporate economy, but because there simply is a lot of violence in this culture. How much violence do you believe will be necessary-I hate to use that word, because so often violence is excused as necessary-to take down civilization.

JZ: Frankly I'm still hopeful that the dominant setup may be closer to its last legs than we think. If we just know how to push, it may have less support than it appears to at the moment. So I think it's not out of the question that with just the right pressure applied at just the right places-and I'm not even talking about violence-the whole thing could collapse. I no longer take it as a given that civilization has this big reservoir of support, and that taking it down will be this endless bloody struggle. Who will really defend it? Who supports it and believes it and thinks that it has any answers or any future?

DJ: I don't know if they think about the future, but certainly the cops and the military defend it.

JZ: Well, that's probably so. Maybe I'm just indulging in wishful thinking.

But it's also true that during a lot of strikes, particularly in the nineteenth century, the militia refused to kill strikers, and in some cases actually defected. Whole regiments. Obviously that didn't happen in Seattle, and maybe it's just a fantasy, but at some point there will have to be some police who say, "Fuck it, I'm not going to shoot at unarmed people to defend the corporate state."

Cops don't have it easy. You realize that when you look at the rates of alcoholism, suicide, abuse, and so on. Where is their satisfaction? Their level of immiseration may suggest that their allegiance may not go that far. I'm not saying they're all going to take off their clothes, dance naked in the streets, and hug trees, but nor am I so sure they're down for the whole nine yards.

DJ: I want to be clear on something you said a moment ago. Do you think the system will collapse on its own, or do we need to give it a push? And if we need to push, where?

JZ: I think that unfortunately it's not going to collapse on its own. But I do think, as I said, that it's a shell with only an eroding base of support.

So the question of where to strike is a good and increasingly crucial one. I would turn that around and ask, Where not to strike? The whole thing is so destructive and worthy of condemnation and dispatching that I don't know any part of it that's worth saving. That understanding-and the understanding that the system is killing the planet-will really free you up to act in appropriate and effective ways.

Where the Buffalo Go

Teaser: 

"How Science Ignores the Living World." Derrick Jensen interviews Souix intellectual heretic and author of many books about Indigenous spiritual and political struggle, Vine Deloria, Jr.

Body: 

WHERE THE BUFFALO GO:
HOW SCIENCE IGNORES THE LIVING WORLD
AN INTERVIEW WITH VINE DELORIA

by Derrick Jensen

( published in The Sun magazine, July 2000)

Vine Deloria is one of the most important living Native American writers. For more than a quarter century, he has produced an extraordinarily read-able critique of Western culture. Central to Deloria's work is the understanding that, by subduing nature, we have become slaves to technology and its underlying belief system. We've given up not only our freedom, but also our relationship with the natural world.

Deloria was born in 1933 on the Pine Ridge Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. For many generations, his family has straddled white and Indian cultures. One of his ancestors, the son of a fur trader and a Yankton Sioux headman's daughter, had a vision that his descendants would serve as mediators with the dominant society.

Deloria's father, a Dakota Episcopal priest, took his young son to the site of the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre and pointed out to him the survivors who still lived on the reservation. Deloria left home at sixteen to go to a college-preparatory school in Connecticut. After graduation, he turned down an acceptance to the University of Colorado and bought a used car with his tuition money. He went on to study geology for two years at the Colorado School of Mines (my own alma mater) before enlisting in the Marine Corps reserve. In 1956 he enrolled in Iowa State University, where he met his future wife, Barbara Jeanne Nystrom.

They moved to Illinois so that Vine could attend a Lutheran seminary in preparation for becoming a minister, like his father. For four years, he studied philosophy and theology by day and earned money as a welder at night. Although he completed his education, he grew increasingly disappointed with "the glaring lack of solutions" the seminary provided.

In 1964, Deloria went to work as the executive director of the National Congress of American Indians, and there he began to see the importance of building a national power base for Indians through grassroots organizing. He soon came to appreciate the need for trained Indian lawyers who could defend tribal sovereignty and treaty rights within the legal system, and in 1967 he enrolled in law school at the University of Colorado.

Deloria maintained his ties to Christianity, even being elected to the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church. In one of his books, however, he posed a challenge to the religion of his childhood: "If, as they claim, Christianity is for all people, why not let Indian people worship God after their own conception of Him?" Deloria no longer identifies himself as a Christian, but, if pressed, offers that he is a "Seven Day Absentist."

Since receiving his law degree in 1970, Deloria has written many books and lectured at colleges all over the country. In both his writing and his speaking, he has never shied away from direct assaults on injustice. It's as though he doesn't have time or patience for the polite indirectness that characterizes so much political dialogue today. His book titles alone testify to this directness: Red Earth, White Lies (Fulcrum Books) won the 1996 Nonfiction Book of the Year Award from the Colorado Center for the Book; Custer Died for Your Sins (University of Oklahoma Press) brought accounts of the trail of broken treaties up to date; and God Is Red (Fulcrum Books) remains one of the best books written on Native American spirituality.

Deloria recently retired from his position as a professor of history, law, religious studies, and political science at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He lives in Golden, Colorado, with his wife, who edits much of his work.

Jensen: What would you say is the fundamental difference between the Western and indigenous ways of life?

Deloria: I think the primary difference is that Indians experience and relate to a living universe, whereas Western people - especially scientists - reduce all things, living or not, to objects. The implications of this are immense. If you see the world around you as a collection of objects for you to manipulate and exploit, you will inevitably destroy the world while attempting to control it. Not only that, but by perceiving the world as lifeless, you rob yourself of the richness, beauty, and wisdom to be found by participating in its larger design.

In order to maintain the fiction that the world is dead - and that those who believe it to be alive have succumbed to primitive superstition - science must reject any interpretation of the natural world that implies sentience or an ability to communicate on the part of nonhumans. Science insists, at a great price in understanding, that the observer be as detached as possible from the event he or she is observing. Contrast that with the attitude of indigenous people, who recognize that humans must participate in events, not isolate themselves.

Ironically, although science prides itself on being a search for knowledge, Indians can obtain knowledge from birds, animals, rivers, and mountains that is inaccessible to modern science. And Indians can use this knowledge to achieve better results. Take meteorology. Scientists know that seeding clouds with certain chemicals will bring rain, but this method of dealing with nature is wholly mechanical and forces nature to do our bidding. Indians achieved the same results more peacefully by conducting ceremonies and asking the spirits for rain. The two methods are diametrically opposed. It's the difference between commanding a slave to do something and asking a friend for help.

Being attuned to their environment, Indians could find food, locate trails, protect themselves from inclement weather, and anticipate coming events thanks to their understanding of how all things are related. This knowledge isn't unique to American Indians. It's available to anyone who lives primarily in the natural world, is reasonably intelligent, and respects other life-forms for their intelligence. Respect for other life-forms filters into our every action, as does its opposite: perceiving the world as lifeless. If you objectify other living things, then you are committing yourself to a totally materialistic universe - which is not even consistent with the findings of modern physics.

The central idea of science, as it has been developed and applied, is to get machines or nature to do the work human beings don't want to do. This is immensely practical, but in a shortsighted way.

Jensen: How so?

Deloria: Developing the automobile, for example, allowed people to get quickly from place to place, but at what cost, both in terms of accidents and of damage to the natural world? And what effect have automobiles had on our spiritual life?

In a capitalist system, whoever supplies the money de-termines the technology. This means that science, as it's applied, is never really for the good of humankind, but instead for the good of the financial elite or the military. It also means that science will be dominated by the authorities who have found institutional favor, whether they have the best evidence for their beliefs or not.

When beliefs and knowledge harden and become institutionalized, we turn to institutions to solve all our problems: people purchase food grown by others, settle their conflicts in courts and legislatures rather than by informal, mutually agreed-upon solutions, and wage extended and terrible wars over abstract principles instead of minor battles over the right to occupy land for hunting and fishing. Similarly, beliefs about the world are processed into philosophical and rational principles rather than anecdotal experiences, and religion is reduced to creeds, dogmas, and doctrines.

Now, every society needs educated people, but the primary responsibility of educated people must be to bring wisdom back into the community and make it available to others. Because of hierarchies, European thinkers have not performed their proper social function. Instead, science and philosophy have taken the path already taken by Western religion and mystified themselves. The people who occupy the top positions in science, religion, and politics have one thing in common: they are responsible for creating a technical language incomprehensible to the rest of us, so that we will cede to them our right and responsibility to think. They, in turn, formulate a set of beautiful lies that lull us to sleep and distract us from our troubles, eventually depriving us of all rights - including, increasingly, the right to a livable world.

Rather than trusting our own experiences and senses, we often look to scientists for explanations of the world. In giving explanations, these scientists defer to the dogma and doctrine they learned in universities and colleges. It's gotten to the point where almost anything anyone with a Ph.D. says is taken as gospel, rather than as someone's opinion.

One example of this credulity is the widespread acceptance of the notion that Indians came to the Americas across the Bering Strait. Newspapers and textbooks say that archaeologists have proven there were waves of people moving to and fro across the Bering Strait, but they haven't proven anything of the kind. Assuming that carbon dating is anywhere near accurate, and that the researchers didn't throw out as "noise" any results they didn't agree with, all they can prove is that a group of people lived in such-and-such a place, however many years ago. Everything else is just theory and speculation.

Jensen: So you view the theory that human beings came to North and South America across the Bering Strait as an article of faith, rather than as fact?

Deloria: I've yet to see any remotely convincing evidence to support it. It's a doctrinal belief that institutional science has imposed on us.

The effort to deny that Indians are native to this land really started with the old Spanish clerics, who tried to identify Indians as either survivors of Noah's flood or members of the lost tribes of Israel. So modern scientific theories are part of an entrenched line of thought: a Judeo-Christian insistence on seeing the world through Eurocentric eyes. Indians cannot simply be Indians. They have to have come from somewhere in or around Europe.

Jensen: Why is this issue of deep origins important?

Deloria: People want to believe that the Western Hemisphere, and North America in particular, was vacant, unexploited, fertile land waiting to be cultivated according to God's holy dictates. The hemisphere thus belonged to whomever was able to "rescue" it from its wilderness state. We see the same rationalization at work today in the Amazon and elsewhere. If the Indians were not the original inhabitants of this continent but relative latecomers who had barely unpacked when Columbus came knocking on the door, then they had no real claim to the land and could be swept away with impunity. Thus, science justifies history and eases the guilt over five centuries of violence. Even today, I hear some non-Indians say, "Well, aren't we all immigrants from somewhere?" The short answer is no. By making Indians immigrants to North America, Westerners are able to deny the fact that this is our continent.

Another way science has assuaged Western guilt is by claiming to prove that Indians are just as destructive as Westerners. You've probably heard of the Pleistocene overkill hypothesis, which states, without any real evidence, that as soon as Indians "arrived" here, they started killing everything in sight. When the hypothesis was first proposed some fifty years ago by Carl Sauer, it was shot down almost immediately by Loren C. Eiseley, who raised numerous concerns that have never been refuted. One is the fact that not only large mammals disappeared during the Pleistocene Epoch, but also birds, mollusks, and frogs, which could not have been hunted to extinction. Also, there is no evidence that tribal hunting groups using ancient techniques could exterminate - or even significantly alter - an animal population, unless the hunters and prey were restricted to a very small area. The example of modern tribes who still use Stone Age methods supports this.

So the overkill theory remained dead in the water until the 1960s, when it was revived by a book called Pleistocene Extinctions. Since then, as the destruction of the natural world has become ever more difficult to ignore, Westerners have needed ever stronger salves for their consciences, so the theory has risen up again in full force. Although there is still little real evidence to support it, its ideological function - to prove that destructiveness is part of human nature, and not just the result of a destructive way of living in and perceiving the world - is important enough to justify its admission into the scientific canon.

There's even a new theory that Indians were responsible for the near extinction of the buffalo. According to this argument, Indian winter encampments deprived the buffalo of feed, and so the population plummeted.

Jensen: How could anyone make that claim?

Deloria: Simple: by ignoring all evidence that contradicts the thesis, such as 1870s newspaper reports of white hunters shipping out trainloads of buffalo hides. In the Dodge City area alone, hunters killed 3 million buffalo in three years.

Jensen: If Indians didn't cross the Bering Strait, how did they come to inhabit this continent? What do the Indians themselves say?

Deloria: That last question isn't asked often enough, and points out another problem with the scientific tradition. Somehow it is presumed that scientists, and thus Europeans, know better than the Indians themselves how Indians got here and how they lived prior to Columbus. That attitude is patronizing at best. Instead of digging and analyzing, why don't researchers just ask the Indians? And then, having asked, why don't they take the answers seriously?

Indians' beliefs about their origins vary considerably from tribe to tribe. Many tribes simply begin their story at a certain location and describe their migrations. Others will say they came from another continent by boat. (Of course, archaeologists generally refuse to believe them, because they think Indians couldn't have built boats, which is absurd.) A number of tribes say that they were created here. A few say they came here through a portal from another world. They walked into a cave or tunnel, for example, until it was completely dark, and they continued walking until a tiny light appeared ahead of them. As they kept moving toward it, it grew bigger, gradually revealing itself to be an entrance to a new world.

Personally, I like the Pacific Northwest tribes' idea that, in the distant past, the physical world was not dominant, and you could change your shape and experience life as an animal, plant, or bird. Then the world changed, and some people were caught in different shapes and became animals, plants, and so on.

Much of the Indian knowledge of origins is revealed in ceremonial settings and involves views of time, space, matter, and cosmic purpose that the scientific perspective considers heretical. Because of this, such accounts are generally dismissed out of hand as superstition: nice campfire stories that have no connection to reality.

Jensen: Philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend has said that "whatever fails to fit into the established category system or is said to be incompatible with this system is either viewed as something quite horrifying, or, more frequently, it is simply declared to be nonexistent."

Deloria: That's standard scientific procedure. You throw out the results you don't agree with, turn to the results that "make sense," and say, "See, this is proven." It's nonsense.

Scientists gather data from what appear to them to be similar sources and circumstances and, after much meditation, announce the discovery of "laws" that govern the universe - with some notable exceptions we rarely hear about. Sometimes these "anomalies" are acknowledged and become the basis for fruitful discussion, but more often they're simply swept under the rug. The increasing sophistication of scientific measuring instruments continues to reveal flaws in the previously agreed-upon canon, yet this seems not to bother a great majority of scientists, nor the rest of us, who should care far more than we do.

Scientists impose highly restrictive laws upon the natural world, thereby limiting its potential for response. They are asking incomplete questions of nature and, in many cases, irrelevant ones. In my opinion, fields purporting to be scientific should devote considerable time to reexamining what they can really prove and what is speculation, and then restate their principles. Standards of evidence need to be erected. There's got to be some discipline and courage. Scientists should be willing to speak out when authoritative-sounding pronouncements are being made on the basis of questionable - or nonexistent - evidence.

Jensen: A friend of mine says that science is an even better means of social control than Christianity, because if you don't believe in Christianity, you're simply doomed to burn in a hell you don't think exists, whereas if you don't believe in science, you're presumed to be stupid.

Deloria: I think science has replaced Christianity as the dominant religion in our society. You see evidence of this whenever someone goes to court to try to establish or protect religious rights. If science and religion come into conflict, religion always loses. That's true for everyone from Christian fundamentalists to Indians to Orthodox Jews: anybody who has a religious view that's unacceptable to scientists.

Jensen: What are some better ways of perceiving and living in the world?

Deloria: I would say one alternative to forcing nature to tell us its secrets is to observe nature and adjust to its larger rhythms. This alternative is practiced by many other cultures, but it scares a lot of people in the West because it derives information from sources that may be tinged with mysticism. For example, many centuries ago, three sisters appeared to the Senecas and said they wished to establish a relationship with "the two-legged people." In return for the performance of certain ceremonies that would help them to thrive, the sisters would become plants and feed the people. The three sisters became beans, corn, and squash. And the soil of the Seneca farmlands was never exhausted, because these three plants, in addition to sharing a spiritual relationship with one another, also formed a sophisticated natural nitrogen cycle that kept the land fertile and productive.

The white man came later, planted only corn and wheat, and soon exhausted the soil. Then, after conducting many experiments, scientists "discovered" the nitrogen cycle and produced chemical fertilizers to replace the natural nitrogen. But now we know that these chemicals have unpleasant side effects that may be even worse for us than they are for the soil.

The point is that, for every scientific "discovery," there may exist one or more alternative ways of understanding natural processes. But we can't know what these alternatives are until we absolutely reject the idea of forcing nature to reveal its secrets and instead begin to observe nature and listen to its rhythms.

Jensen: I've heard about South American tribes who can take a poisonous plant and, by some complex process - boiling it three times, skimming off the froth, and so on - turn it into medicine. Usually, the tribes are assumed to have arrived at these processes through trial and error, but this seems ludicrous to me, because the original plant is a deadly poison. By contrast, you've written that "getting information from birds and animals regarding plants is an absurdly self-evident proposition for American Indians."

Deloria: There are plenty of Indian stories where a plant will appear in a dream and speak to someone, or a person is walking through the forest, and suddenly a plant will say, "I'm edible, but you've got to do these various things in order to eat me."

When I was much younger, I would bring Indian plant knowledge to scientists for them to investigate. But they always wanted to take the plant apart, break it down to see what its constituents were. Their efforts were pointless, because that's not the way the medicine men use it. They use it whole, and then they get the natural product out of it by making a tea, or a poultice. You can't chemically disassemble it, because it's the whole of the plant that cures, not any one ingredient.

Jensen: This seems to get at the heart of the fundamental difference between Western and indigenous cultures: seeing the plant as a whole and letting it literally speak to you, versus putting nature, as Francis Bacon said, "on the rack and extracting her secrets from her."

Deloria: That's true, although most of the greatest scientists dabbled considerably in spiritual matters and believed that mystical and intuitive experiences provided them with knowledge. This is true even of Descartes, the first materialist, who is famous for articulating the mind/body, human/nature split. He said an angel came and explained things to him. Heisenberg, Einstein, and Bohr all had sudden insights. What's the difference between that and the Indian performing a ceremony and hearing the plant say, "Do this"?

Jensen: I've heard of ceremonies in which Indians would sing to the corn. How does that help? What does singing do for the plant?

Deloria: We're giving energy and respect to the plant. It's kind of like when you're trying to teach your kid how to play basketball, and even though he can't hit the hoop, you say, "Hey, that was really a good one." You're not only telling the plant, "We respect and appreciate you"; you're also making a fuss over the fact that it's growing. It's a straight transfer of energy.

Any fool can treat a living thing as if it were a machine and compel it to perform certain functions. All that's required is sufficient force. But the result of force is slavery, both for the victim and for the wielder.

Jensen: In one of your books, you cite the Osage chief Big Soldier on this:

"I see and admire your manner of living. . .
You can do almost what you choose. You whites possess the power of subduing almost every animal to your use.
You are surrounded by slaves.
Everything about you is in chains, and you are slaves yourselves.
I fear that if I should exchange my pursuits for yours, I, too, should become a slave."

Deloria: That's the best thing any Indian ever said. I teach at the University of Colorado, and so many of my students are convinced that they are free, yet they act just like everyone else. They all do the same things. They all think alike. They're almost like a herd, or clones. They're enslaved to a certain way of life. The thing is, once you've traded away spiritual insight for material comfort, it is extremely difficult ever to get it back. I see these kids hiking in the mountains, trying to commune with nature, but you can't commune with nature just by taking a walk. You have to actually live in it. And these young people have no way of critiquing the society that is enslaving them, because they get outside of it only for the occasional weekend. They may see beautiful vistas and develop an aesthetic appreciation of this other world, but they're not going to get to a metaphysical understanding of who they really are.

In this sense, poor Appalachian whites and rural blacks are much closer to the natural world than my students, because they live in it twenty-four hours a day. These groups also have in common their oppression by industrialization and the destruction of the land on which their lives depend. Their connection to the natural world teaches them who they are. And it's not just an abstract connection, but a relationship with a particular tree or a particular mountain.

Jensen: How does being in one place for a long time teach you who you are?

Deloria: If you live in one place long enough, you begin to lose the defenses you've erected in order to survive in industrial civilization, and you fall into the rhythm of the land. You develop a different sense of the natural world and no longer have to think of things in the abstract. You think, instead, of how the land looks and what it's telling you. I would think many Appalachian people have this sense, especially the ones who've lived back in the hills for five or six generations. They have begun to adjust to the land, as opposed to forcing the land to adjust to them. If you talk to them, you'll find they don't have many of the abstract concerns that so-called civilized people have.

Jensen: What sort of abstract concerns?

Deloria: Always wondering who you are. Always trying to prove yourself, to prove that you are good enough, strong enough, rich enough, good-looking enough. Always trying to define yourself in terms of what you do for a living or what your hobbies are or what you can buy. I can see how that would be an effective survival technique in New York City, but if you live in a place where you're not always having your identity called into question, you don't need to worry about those things. You can simply be yourself.

Because of the industrial machine, no one really has an identity anymore. So you have to keep giving people numbers and meaningless ways to define themselves. If you look at the bestseller list, you see all these books offering to tell you how to be yourself. Well, when the land gives you a foundation, you don't have to struggle with that question.

If you live a long time in one place, you have an ongoing experiential context. If you don't, your life is limited to little disconnected experiences. To really feel alive, you've got to grab as many of these experiences as you can. Thus, you've got MTV and malls and discos.

Jensen: How have modern Indians been separated from the land?

Deloria: Obviously, there are some whose tribes came from the swamps of south Georgia, but who live on a reservation in Oklahoma, or on the south side of LA. People my age mostly grew up on reservations or in towns near reservations, but now a substantial number of young Indians grow up in the suburbs. When these kids come back to Indian culture, they are grasping the images rather than the substance. That's why it's important to live in one place, or at least to visit your place and your people often: to stay in touch with who you are, you need to know not just your peer group, but your family and your ancestors and the tribe you were born into. Young suburban Indians often can't distinguish between the Indians of their tribe and all the information put out about Indians in general. Black Elk Speaks has become a kind of bible for a whole generation of Indians, but it's really only about one Sioux medicine man.

Loss of ethnic identity, of course, is not just an Indian problem. It's happening in the big cities. Take Roman Catholic churches. It used to be that you would have an Irish Catholic church, and two blocks over an Italian church, and then six blocks down a Lithuanian church. Now, for financial reasons, the three churches have to consolidate into one, and people lose that sense of community based on ethnicity. They become homogenized into one great big church that stands for nothing, because they've had to make so many compromises.

We all need to relearn our own cultural traditions. About six years ago, I brought together traditional people of different tribes for several conferences on Indian knowledge. The whole thing was very emotional, almost traumatic. Few of the Indians in the audience had heard real Indian storytellers tell about their own traditions. A storyteller would get up and speak for forty minutes, and the entire audience would be in tears. People would come to me and say, "I've never experienced anything like this in my life." I'd respond, "Well, this is what our ancestors did. They didn't spend twenty-four hours a day hunting buffalo. They'd kill a buffalo, have a feast, and then take a few days off to sit around the campfire and tell stories." Those traditions built incredibly strong characters and happy people.

Jensen: How can we revive that sort of community?

Deloria: Well, in my own case, I would start by pulling together what's been written down and getting to know it reasonably well, but then I would go out and ask some of the elders how accurate it is. Most books tell only part of the story, and some actually get things wrong. The authors just happen to find some Indians who want to talk and write down what they say. Once it's in print, it becomes absolute: "This is what Sioux Indians believe," or "This is what Shoshones believe." But medicine men and elders often know better.

Many of these elders probably reached adulthood in the 1930s. This means their grandfathers did not grow up on reservations, but were the last generation brought up in freedom. Now we're losing the last people who ever spoke to the last people who were free. We're at a very dangerous time. When my generation goes, people are not even going to remember rural communities with no paved roads. In the small towns near reservations, there are no longer any benches where people can sit and talk. Where can we find the coming together, the old visiting? Not at the tribal councils, which are just about policy decisions. Not at the powwow, where everyone is trying to win the dance competition. The old kinship responsibilities are all fading away. How many people today, Indian or otherwise, know where their grandparents are buried? There are no family cemeteries anymore. There is no returning to a place where you feel at home.

Jensen: Why do you think the West destroys every traditional culture it can reach?

Deloria: I don't think those in power want it known that there are other ways of living, because for the industrial state to succeed, all the citizens have to be part of the economic machine. If you have people living out in a rural area pretty much self-sufficiently who spend their time singing and writing poetry, it tempts those who are still part of the machine to try to seek better lives themselves. If you saw the lack of stress in indigenous people, and then looked at the stress created by the industrial machine, you'd realize that the whole system has gone crazy. We don't control machines; they control us. So the system has got to crush any alternatives.

This is the legacy of Christianity. The stated Christian ethic is to "love thy neighbor," but, historically, Christians have been afraid and suspicious of any neighbor unlike themselves. And if those neighbors won't change, they've simply killed them. Certainly, millions of Indians were given the choice of Christianity - and enslavement - or death. The same thing happens today, but it's generally couched in economic terms, rather than religious ones.

Jensen: How are Indian religions different from Western religions?

Deloria: Most Indian cultures never had a religion in the sense of having dogmas and creeds, nor did they have the sort of all-powerful deity that Christians speak of - a specific higher personality who demands worship and adoration. Rather, they experienced personality in every aspect of the universe and called it Woniya ("spirit") and looked to it for guidance.

Jensen: So Indians believe everything has spirit?

Deloria: Not exactly. It's not something they believe. What happens in the different Indian religions is that people become so intimate with their particular environment that they enter into a relationship with the spirits that live there. Rather than an article of faith, it's part of their experience. I think non-Indians sometimes experience this, too, when they spend a long time in one place.

Indians believe that everything in the universe has value and instructs us in some aspect of life. Everything is alive and is making choices that determine the future, so the world is constantly creating itself. Because every moment brings something new, we need to strive not to classify things too quickly. We must see how the ordinary and the extraordinary come together into one coherent, mysterious story line. With the wisdom and time for reflection that old age provides, we may discover unsuspected relationships.

In this universe, all activities, events, and entities are related. Thus, it doesn't matter what kind of existence an entity enjoys; whether it is human or otter or rock or star, it participates in the ongoing creation of reality. To Indians, life is not a predatory jungle, "red in tooth and claw," as Western ideology likes to pretend, but a symphony of mutual respect in which each player has a specific part to play. We must be in our proper place and play our role at the proper moment. Because we humans arrived last in this world, we are the "younger brothers" of the other creatures and therefore have to learn everything from them. Our real interest shouldn't be to discover the abstract structure of physical reality, but rather to find the proper road down which to walk.

I would also say that another major difference between Western and indigenous religions is that aboriginal groups have never had any need for a messiah. In fact, there really is no place for one in their cosmos.

Jensen: Why is that?

Deloria: If the world is not "a vale of tears," then there's no need for salvation. Indians know nothing of a wholly different world - a heaven - compared to which this world has no value. Indian religion is instead concerned, as sociologist Robert Bellah has noted, with "the maintenance of personal, social, and cosmic harmony, and with attaining specific goods - rain, harvest, children, health - as men have always been." The North American Indians don't desire transcendence. They simply want to learn more about the reality that confronts them.

Why do Western people - and the Near Eastern peoples from whom their religions are derived - need a messiah? Why is their appraisal of the physical world a negative one? Why do their societies suffer such crises? Why do they insist on believing that ultimate reality is contained in another, unimaginable realm beyond the senses and the span of human life? I don't understand it. Religion, as I have experienced it, isn't the recitation of beliefs, but a way of helping us understand our lives. It must, I think, have an intimate connection with the world in which we live, and any religion that favors other places - heaven and the like - over the physical world is a delusion, a mere control device to manipulate us.

Jensen: What, then, to an Indian, is the ultimate goal of life?

Deloria: Maturity: the ability to reflect on the ordinary aspects of life and discover their real meaning.

Now, I know this sounds as abstract as anything ever said by a Western scientist or philosopher, but within the context of Indian experience, it isn't abstract at all. Maturity is a matter of reflection on a lifetime of experience, as a person first gathers information, then knowledge, then wisdom. Information accumulates until it achieves a sort of critical mass, and patterns and explanations begin to appear. This is where Western science derives its "laws," but scientists abort the process there, assuming that the products of their own minds are inherent to the structure of the universe. Indians, on the other hand, allow the process to continue, because premature analysis leads to incomplete understanding. When we reach a very old age, or otherwise attain the capacity to reflect on our experiences - most often through visions - we begin to understand how experience, individuality, and the cycles of nature all relate to each other. That state seems to produce wisdom.

Because Western society concentrates so heavily on information, its product is youth, not maturity. The existence of thousands of plastic surgeons in America attests to the fact that we haven't crossed the emotional barriers that keep us from experiencing maturity.

Jensen: I'm friends with an Okanagan Indian, from British Columbia. I once asked her where dreams come from, and she said, "Everybody knows the animals give them to us." How would you answer the same question?

Deloria: You have to remember that the Indian relationship to the land is not abstract, but very particular, tied to one piece of ground. My people come from the plains, so we say dreams come from the spirits, not from animals. This is because, if you look around the Great Plains, you see only three large wild creatures: the buffalo, the bear, and the wolf. And you don't run into them all the time. On the other hand, in the Pacific Northwest, where your friend's from, there are so many living things that a person is in danger of disappearing into the crowd. So if she says that dreams come from animals, she's absolutely correct - for her area. If I say dreams come from spirits, I'm correct, but only for the plains.

Jensen: It seems pretty clear to me that if the dominant culture has its way, it will destroy the planet.

Deloria: No question about it.

Jensen: What can we do, then?

Deloria: So long as we perceive science to be a cure-all for everything and a means to overcome nature, there's nothing we can do. Our answer to increasingly violent weather, for example, is to build cement bunkers to protect us from tornadoes. We're adjusting to the destructive system rather than abandoning it.

Jensen: You've suggested the beautiful possibility that extinction might not be forever, but that, instead, the endangered creatures go away and come back when their habitat is once again being treated properly.

Deloria: About ten years ago, I spoke to members of the Society for Ecological Restoration. I told them that traditional Indian knowledge says that beings never become extinct. They go away, but they have the power to come back. I predicted that, in their restorations, if they were preparing the area right, plants they thought were extinct would begin coming back unaided after four or five years. Plants would come back first, and then animals, and then birds.

Of course, my audience thought I was crazy. But later, when I went to get a cup of coffee, several people followed me. They said, "You're right. We're seven years into a swamp restoration in Wisconsin, and all the original plants are back."

This is not as extraordinary as it might sound. The elders tell us that the buffalo used to go back and forth between two worlds. In the summertime, people would find themselves in the middle of a big herd for weeks. But in the wintertime, there would be only a few buffalo down in the river bottoms, or up in the grasslands. Where were the huge herds? According to the Sioux, they were underground. There were about ten places where they went in or came back out.

When I first heard that, I didn't believe it. Then I talked to some of the elders, who said, "Of course," and showed me the buttes where the buffalo used to come out in the springtime. I thought, This is insane, so I scoured the literature, but I couldn't find any accounts of big buffalo herds in the wintertime. Then, come June, the damn plains were covered with buffalo. In the fall, they started disappearing again.

I'm still working on this one. But that's what life is all about. You take disparate facts, bring them together, and say, "Now, what's the real question?" And so often you're amazed to find that the matter is much deeper than you ever imagined. But the point is to ask the questions, and keep asking them.

FIHEL ASIREM (YOU MUST ACT)

Teaser: 

by Djur Djura

"Children of Algeria! You seek peace, but death is better than life without dignity."

Body: 

FIHEL ASIREM
(YOU MUST ACT)

"Children of Algeria!
You seek peace, but death is better than life without dignity."

One morning you awaken
And discover
That you have another day
To live in poverty
To add to the day before.
You discover that everything
Has become confusing
Everywhere you turn
To make twenty
There's still nineteen to go.
You seethe with fury ----
Which path should you choose?

Wake up, shake yourself
Two times rather than once
Until your worries
Come to an end.
You who sit doing nothing
You should neither sleep
nor relax.

And the day when you will
be broke
The water will replace the
sauce on your plate.
Busy running here and there
Tighten your belt one notch
Try to keep count.
When you don't have a penny
Then will you be humbled
And your head will touch
the earth.
Like a crow soaring over
canyons
Who abandons its babies
To anxiety and fear
You cry and scream
But still you get nothing to eat.
You cannot endure winter.
It's true that the cold can kill.
Without having the smallest of
hopes
You have only the right to tears.

You turn around
The problem is everywhere
In all directions
There is no solution.
The end is already at
the doorstep
And tears cannot help.
If you worry, it will be in vain
The facts are clear
And they are unassailable.
You have not found and will
not find a way.
The poor will always suffer
Because the rich have made off
with the spoils.
From the morning
They've taken their share and
more
And you dare not hope for even
a crumb.
Poor, oppressed, dreary,
Your poverty has been cruel
Your pitcher is hopelessly empty.
Don't fool yourself
Don't wait for a miracle
"Act now! Resort to revolution!"

One morning you awaken
To discover that you have
Another day to live in poverty
To add the day before.
You discover that everything
Has become confusing
Everywhere you turn
To make twenty
There's still nineteen to go.
You seethe with fury ----
But I must say to you
"Act now! Resort
to revolution!"

- Djur Djura

Tzitzimes

Teaser: 

by Taylor Sparrow:

A piece about the "tzitzimes" or terrifying black birds that will peck out the eyes of those who no longer know the teachings of their fathers. Specifically about Christian missionizing and cultural genocide of Native peoples.

Body: 
"The world would end because of those who had forgotten the teachings of the fathers and grandfathers and no longer knew to whom they owed birth and growth." This is the powerful prophecy left by the indigenous peoples of these lands we now disgracefully call "america." If you have no roots, you will die. Without a language, without a history, without a land, you have no people.

And the Europeans came, "Tzitzimes, terrifying black birds…in disguise, enemies of all happiness," seeking to build an empire of money and things where once lived people, animals and land. And it was the friars, and their baptisms, that were so sinisterly murderous.

The military might of the conquistadors, the economic slavery of the silver mines, and exploration expeditions, these were despicable acts, decimating. But the baptism strikes at the root of the people. Baptism beckons, "the last days of an era and the proximity of a year to end all years…Tzitzimes…would descend from the sky and eat everyone who had not washed off the mark of the priests."

Christiantity gave tepid validity to the slaughter of the new world. Christianity, the religion forced upon the people of Europe. The religion that executed thousands of communal, earth loving peoples in Europe, either through war, hangings, or fire. Christianity, the religion of the kings, emperors, and land owners. Christianity masked the naked viciousness of the emerging capitalist empire of greed that has now "advanced" into american "civilization."

The native peoples could have survived slavery and warfare, but with the toxicity of christianity, they were ensured to never live again. So what is to be said of these genocidal priests? "They must have something terribly wrong with them. They are men without any sense. They seek neither pleasure nor happiness, but sadness and loneliness."

And so all those who spoke this truth, were "captured and beaten, dispossessed and banished." Now, the year to end all years is upon us. Without a language, without a history, without a land, there is no people.

In this "new world," none of us may ever live again.

- Taylor Sparrow

All quotes taken from Eduardo Galeano's "Memory of Fire: Genisis."

inflicted

Teaser: 

by Taylor Sparrow:

A story written from the perspective of an indigent European in mexico city around the beginning of the 18th century. talks about the sickness the Europeans had come with in pandemic proportions and inflicted on everyone. ends with a description of the insurrectionary energy of the multi-racial underclass.

Body: 

inflicted.

i am a child of the royal mother country, the birth brethren of those who spawn the infestation of this so-called new world. and in these lands, older than our written histories may dream, i find, more often than not, that my true brothers and sisters are the desolate and decimated whose tortoured roots sink so deep.

most of my spanish family are inflicted with the rush to wealth and false religion.

most would gourge themselves on stolen people1s crops, build palaces on stolen people's land, and then build jails and asylums for the starving and the petty thieves. most would struggle to squeeze the last gold coin out of maize, while turning a blind eye to the thousands thirsting for the taste of clean water, a luxury carefully restricted by royal design.

in the new world, most of us spaniards have forgotten our old dreams, to be free, to love and be loved, to live comfortably, to live well. my people have come down with a horrible sickness, and it is attacking this land with pandemic proportions.

in an effort to stay free of their disease, i find myself wandering the outskirts of mexico city, piecing together a life on the tattered rags of colonial progress. the roads here are like mazes, full of the naked and the ill, the malnourished and the drunken. we have come here through different paths, though none of us rightfully belong in this wretched state, and all of us are homesick and broken.

the indians are at home, though this mockery of tenochtitlan is not now, and never will be, india. the africans, once a free and proud people, mistaken for chattel, have been sold across oceans, fodder for the ever present wars of conquest, machines for the extraction of precious minerals from these majestic mountains. the mestizos and mulattos, not quite enough "us" to reap the rewards of plunder, and just enough "them," to do the empire's shit work. and the spanish among us, well, we are the desperate, the landless and hungry, the bitter truth that eats through the gold veneer of this bloody beast of a system.

we have been cast out of the center of colonial life, left to wander and beg for leftover, malnutritutious and rotting food.

to the rulers, we are pitiful, to be known, only when they can somehow fuck us. they rape our women, and pay a pittance in cash to save face. they rape us in the factories, working ten, twelve, fourteen hour days to bring home just little enough to return the next day. their churches rape us for their holy 'mission,' chastise, burn and crucify us for the sins of loving our own gods, and protecting the life of bur people. their courts and militaries, rape us, jail us and murder us, in order to maintain order, and so that no one has to know why it is that we exist.

if the crown can not extract something from us, then they can simply lock us away. they blame us when we loot their homes, or assualt them without warning. we dirty their precious city, because we can't afford the clothes the wealthy merchants peddle, and because we have grown addicted to the liquor that they brought here with such fervor. when we become revoltingly ill with the diseases of europe, they seek to force a cure upon us, through leeching out our blood and shaming our traditional medical practices.

the crown insults our intelligence by pretending to care about our existence. they beautify our neighborhod with straight roads or lighting, or they wall us off, so that we become invisible. they say that the same god that burns our brethren at the stake, loves us, and believes that we should have orphanages, asylums and houses for the poor. as the owning class' profits soar, they reek of their great charity, giving alms to those 'deserved' few among us.

in our hearts, we know that the crown is very scared. they have built a precarious empire atop the ravaged lives of millions of once proud and brilliant people. we have not forgotten what it is to be free.

just as we did in 1692, we will rise to our rightful place as equals with all the world's peoples. we will burn down the palaces and institutions of power within your vicious regime. we will loot your inhuman markets, walk out of your factories, and struggle fiercely against the churches and militias sent to subdue us.

we will never be subdued.

you can rob us from our land and cram us into boarding houses, segregated off to the outskirts of your gluttony. you can intoxicate us with your liquor, god, and fantasies of someday being wealthy.

but soon enough, all of your illusions will burn with the courthouses, jails, shops and churches. our time will come.

soon enough, all people will know once again what it is to be free.

- Taylor Sparrow

to breathe together.

Teaser: 

by Taylor Sparrow:

"whiteness sickens me and fails to keep me alive, fails to give me a space to speak and to breathe, particularly because whiteness asks me to strangle and silence my peers who are not white."

Body: 

to breathe together.

whiteness is a trap. a fucking trick bag. a rather demonic game that robs humanity from all involved. a vicious lie with violence as its foundation, its manifestation, and its perpetuation.

whiteness feels omnipresent. when i'm alone, in my dreams, with friends, with enemies, with lovers, with family, in struggle, in silence, in thought, in action and inaction. omnipresent.

and whiteness sickens me and fails to keep me alive, fails to give me a space to speak and to breathe, particularly because whiteness asks me to strangle and silence my peers who are not white.

whiteness is the awkward pause between two people, trying to stretch towards each other but lacking the language to make it known.

whiteness is the horrendous, simple and subtle blindness that sends human beings into oblivion.

whiteness is the poison pie that bribed the masses to defend the masters, that creates masters in attempts at equality, that begs for niggers and secretly smiles with each new innovation in the systems of domination.

and whiteness is hardly ever talked about. especially not as a failure of humanity, a failure to keep folks like me alive.

whiteness is the baseline fuel for the growing conflagration that is me, that is my resistance.

but always, first, we decide we need to talk about whiteness in terms of how it operates as a functional idiocy. our spaces are so often plagued by the unintended cruelty and absent mindedness of folks raised white, and by the denial that comes with this cruelty, that, as a matter of self-defense, to survive, to get by, we choose to intervene.

we seek to stop, moment by moment, what was begun on arawak land, 1492, and done again, and redone, reshaped, reformed, resurrected, reassured, and reified a thousand times over in the past five hundred years.

like a dozen hands shoved against a crumbling dam, we seek to simply stop the onslaught.

and in this stopping, we forget about the human who has been carefully sculpted and crafted, indoctrinated and infected to the point of being a conduit for this great outpouring, this terrifying overflow of an internalized, and uncontainable violence.

whiteness violates those it chooses as hosts, begging them, demanding them to house an un-comprehendable viciousness and disregard for life, dignity and affinity, such that they are left no choice but to let the sickness bleed out their pores.

if the toxic lies of whiteness were better contained by some, there would be others who would step in their place, and still more who would choose to chastise and punish them for their break with the brutal consensus. there is a certain inherent messiness in the continuation of whiteness; an ugliness unparalleled in its sheer vastness, its seemingly insurmountable seamless-ness.

if we could find the language to do so, we might begin to describe whiteness as a process whereby a third of the world's people are forever buried by the devastating terror that has been perpetuated in their name and through their cohesion as one definable group. and in saying this, we are of course speaking also to the despicable slaughter of the rest of humanity: carpetbombed, lynched, disappeared, crowded into houses and burned alive, in mass graves, in chains at the bottom of transatlantic trading vessels, in napalm downpours, through nuclear incineration, with charity smallpox blankets, forced syphilis infections and government imported cocaine.

perhaps in the presence of this growing stench of death, we could begin to find the words to grapple with the grave depravity of the lives that we are all said to be living.

it is only through wrestling with this profound un-alive quality of everyone's existence that we might begin to create a circumstance in which we can remember how to speak and be heard, and how to share in one another's breath.

- Taylor Sparrow

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