AMERICA: Desperate Times Demand Revolutionary Measures Towards
Sociopolitical-environmental Collapse
Sociopolitical-environmental Collapse
by Prof. Peter Phillips
re-posted from globalresearch.ca
“Don't
waste any more time or energy on the presidential election than it
takes to get to your polling station and pull a lever for a third-party
candidate-—just enough to register your obstruction and defiance—and
then get back out onto the street. That is where the question of real
power is being decided.” Chris Hedges, May 2012
Runway
capitalism is moving unrelentingly towards sociopolitical-environmental
collapse—cheered on by a two-headed single party machine known as US
Congress. Activists, who see the coming disasters as catastrophic, are
seeking revolutionary change through non-cooperation, and occupy
disruptions. Yet, many are the still delusional hopefuls desperately
fumbling with traditional responses; including "Kum ba yah"
marches, and the futile support for progressive left-leaning candidates
seeking positions of influence inside the Washington beltway.
Do
we understand that habeas corpus is no longer a legal protection in the
US or that the US president can torture and kill American citizens, let
along anyone in the world? How can we ignore the inconvenient truths of
warrentless wire taps and electronic monitoring for everyone? Why do we
tolerate that US-NATO forces killing people in over one hundred
countries in the world using special service operatives, private
assassins and drones—a million civilians deaths in Iraq alone? How can
we be so blind as not to see our corporate media is a propaganda fog
machine for the one percent? These
questions, reflecting the reality of America today, are so far from the
values of our traditions that accepting any aspect of authority from
Washington DC is a sacrilege to our honor. We are in desperate times.
In Congress, wealth begets membership, and wealth is the reward for correct action. The members in the House and Senate have a collective net worth of $2.04 billion, up from $1.65 billion, in 2008. While
at the same time, Americans' household net worth has continued to
declined and the number of people living in poverty has risen for the
fifth year in a row.
The
American Congress is in reality an artificial organization serving as
cheerleader to the transnational corporate class of the world. Congress
offers its members little more than a transitional path into the good
life of corporate affluence as long as the members remain loyal to party
discipline. Our legitimate electoral process has been completely
usurped by the Supreme Court ruling that a corporation’s free speech
rights allow unlimited campaign spending, and congressional lobbying
knows no bounds. Any candidate willing to serve in the Democrat or
Republican parties in the US congress today, even as a gadfly of
resistance, is stepping beyond the pale of constitutional government.
Even
if a Progressive Democrat of America—Moves On into the congressional
circle, the magnitude of compromise demanded makes effective action
impossible other than occasional symbolic votes of resistance. Those
stepping out of party lines will invariably result in orchestrated
opposition during the next selection cycle—Just ask Cynthia McKinney.
Reform
is not an option. The only action possible is a complete and total
return to the social justice values of our US Constitution and the Bill
of rights. We cannot allow extrajudicial killings, privacy invasions
into our homes, and police state interceptions in the commons. We cannot
allow global capitalism to continue to kill and impoverish billions of
people and destroy the planet
Protecting
and even rewriting our Constitution and our Bill of Rights will require
revolutionary acts. We must retool our elections and eliminate/ignore
the dark clouds of corporate media. A mass movement at this level
requires grass roots action by a core of at least ten percent of our
population. Getting one out of ten people actively involved is not at
all impossible; this is where our traditional values meet human rights.
We are a people of hope that only need to overcome our fears and find
the voice of our values by using radical democracy for human betterment
for all.
The
right to vote is a long held value. We are often asked, “Why waste your
vote on an independent third party candidate, they will never has a
chance to win.” Can voting for a candidate who reflects your own
political values and beliefs be a wasted vote? It seems that voting for
your true beliefs is a self-actualizing act, and compromising one’s
values to pick the lesser of two evils is self-alienating. Therefore, we
urge all to continue to vote, but find candidates outside of the two
party oligopoly. Maybe someday, self-actualized voting will be
fashionable.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/27/opinion/sunday/lets-be-less-productive.html?_r=1
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