Thursday, July 23, 2020

Federal Government Terrorizes Protesters - A Study in White Fragility


An Op Ed Piece

Unlawfully unmarked Federal Troops have invaded the city of Portland Oregon to provide a show of Federal force with which to threaten and bully other cities in other states into suppressing protests supporting societal change for equality and justice for people of color in the United States. Now the tide of bullying extends to other states as well.

The true message of Portland and what is going on these days is one of white fragility in its most eloquently elevated condition. The greater the push for equality the greater the use of force to keep that change from taking place, once again reinforcing the underlying purpose of law enforcement in this country as being that of protecting the institutions and systems that keep white privilege in place. As the voices of change call out for equalization, those steeping in the security of white privilege feel threatened, become extremely alarmed and call for help to keep their institutions in place.  After all, says the white privileged person, we are all good people. We mean no one any harm. Please protect us from these irate and disturbed unhappy people. Please make them go away so everything can stay the comfortable same. Call in the military if needed! Do not let our way of life perish! Taking no responsibility for the systemic suppression they live in that directly harms huge portions of the population and therefore they are able to claim innocence and cry for protection. The use of force is then justified to protect their very white way of life and the systems they are comfortable with. 

Does this somehow not remind one of the French Revolution? The simple happy playing of the days by those with income, wealth and the means for a happy life that allowed the aristocracy to ignore their responsibility to the people upon whom their way of life depended until an uprising of what finally became utter hatred was spawned that brought them to their death and ushered in a military coup? Is this not the basis of white fragility? The heart-felt fear of loss of those with privilege? And is not that fear the basis of class war and revolution? Is it not the lesson of history – that those who ignore the cries of their brothers and sisters do so to their peril? That the innocently guilty cry innocent on their way to the guillotine? That a whole class of people is punished for its blind existence in and dependence upon the privileges it refused to acknowledge and felt entitled to?

Can we not learn anything from history? Must we repeat the blindness over and over again? Will we not listen – listen to the voices crying in our streets and take a second look at ourselves? True disaster will be heralded by the deaf and the blind. The very worst that they fear and fight to keep from happening will come upon us all collectively unless we begin to move toward change. Toward equality. Toward true freedom for all. The human spirit will not suffer constant suppression and oppression. The blood of our brothers and sisters killed through oppression, repression, and violence calls to us from the streets. The cries of those standing for them call to us from the streets. For all the Evangelicals out there – God is listening. Not to your prayers and cries for help, and remonstrances of innocence, but to the cries of the blood of the dead and their brothers and sisters calling to Him in the street. Wake Up.

Tell your dog to lay off. Quell his military trained private forces sent to defend and preserve your  way of life and your dominance and supremacy by attacking and suppressing "others",  and put your hearing aides on and listen. We are all hanging in the balance waiting for you to wake up. Sitting on the precipice of your disaster. This whole society with all its light and freedom will go down the slide into autocracy and military dominance with you, if you, the good white people, choose to stay deaf. The light of freedom will go out in America because of you. And you will think it is everyone else's fault. You will not even see it happening. It will feel like "the right thing" to you....until it is far too late. Wake UP. 

Saturday, July 11, 2020

It's NOT About the Economy


It is about living - The quality of it
As determined and powered by our creation

Fueled by
  • Acquisition – maintenance – expansion
  • Fear – survival - insufficiency
  • Or by sustenance, pace and peacefulness



This time of economic shut down has birthed new realities

There are many who cannot survive without constant work at low pay to maintain minimum standards of the ability to live safely with basic needs met

There are many who have not needed to hop on the nearest airplane and go off to a business gathering to make more stuff or to a vacation place to relax and get away from it all

Staying home is not a bad place
Spending a lot of time with your family is not a bad thing
Not having the basics to stay home and be well with your family is not a good thing
Being well is everything

How shall we re-purpose our economy – can we re-purpose it into meaningful work with meaningful income for the support of living in a place of health and sufficiency for everyone? What might this take?

Perhaps a realignment of thinking in terms of the belief system that says if I have less it will not be enough and if you have enough I will have less because there is not enough for all. Understanding the economic thinking behind our work-based society that must continually escalate to provide more and more and more to stave off having less is critical to changing the balance of work and living. Changing the balance of work and living is essential to our health and well-being.

Economy is not about work. It is about creating the ability to live. Living is not about being in constant physical need and it is not about being in a constant state of feeling that one needs more more. Both are fear-based systems.

Perhaps during this time of shut down some of us have learned to live a little more simply. 

To spend a little less money going after things and a little more time with ourselves and our loved ones. Perhaps we can be quite content with what we have. Perhaps we can live a little more simply and still be happy.

Perhaps we have realized through this time of shut down that no matter what we have tried to do all our lives it has not been enough to bring us security and sufficiency. We cannot create sufficiency for ourselves and our families. This needs and calls for change.

Perhaps we have learned during this time to help our neighbors. To notice need locally around us and take care of it rather than rushing off to work and letting an agency do the work of caring for those in need around us.  

Maybe we are simplifying and localizing just a bit, and maybe, as the “economy” re-opens, we will bring some altered values with us to the workplace – seeing and realizing it as the means to and end of living more simply and helping others more personally, rather than as a personal statement of success, a way to stave off some ill-defined value of not having enough, and all the trimmings that can go with our actioning on that value in our lives. Maybe we have become more aware of the escalating state of working harder for more and more of whatever means success to us with less real living.

Maybe we are going back to work with a new understanding and a raised self-appreciation that will not stand for inequitable and unlivable wages and an unhealthy lifestyle.

This time of shutdown has been a time to experience new values and ponder that effect in our lives going forward. Yes, business will not be as usual. There will be a new normal. But let us look at that new normal from the place of altered values as well as from the place of altered operations. The eruption of awareness around racism and injustice of this current time is not a coincidence. It is an uncovering of the values that are not working in our society – and the economic as well as social impact of these values on populations that are marginalized for the purpose of creating abundance for other segments of our population.

This is an opportunity to re-purpose rather than re-open the economy. Re-envisioning the values that underscore our work and life to create a more equitable society that allows abundance to flow to all its members in good measure – less for some, more for others. 

Can we do it? Can you do it? Can I do it?

What would that look like and how can we do it together?