"The dichotomous world in which we live is becoming more dramatic everyday, so naturally it gets dramatized in the form of film and television. The subterranean pressure that moves culture and people isn't all that easy to see, except for when it comes popping up in movies and TV shows. Like some malignant and massive mycelium that stretches around the globe, it makes both toadstools and movies. It might seem like it just magically sprouted overnight, but there is a vast network of lines of control just beneath the surface of things."
Dorothy Woodend, Today, The Tyee.
Saturday, 30 November 2013
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Dark Politics: the effect of power on living systems
The best article I have read which explains to me that general feeling of dread I have about the future, is written by Heather Morgan on rabble.
Morgan says that Dark Politics is an ideology "which seeks to obfuscate, misinform, change the rules of conduct and flourishes most when no light of truth is shone upon it."
While Rob Ford appears to be pathetic, Morgan questions his actual role as a political clown.
Reasonable people may think our political representatives should have a code of behavior that inspires us, or a sense of responsibility towards the people he or she serves. But the mainstream media says he still has supporters, which suggests that there is a block of citizens who are willing to trade in honesty, sobriety and service for low taxes.
Dark politics is not interested in the way life endures, supports or celebrates beauty, or hope for a better future. Dark politics does not understand nuance and diversity. It is the task of humanity to uphold justice for civil society to survive. It is up to us to vote for social justice and to use our power to nurture a society built on a reverence for life.
Morgan says that Dark Politics is an ideology "which seeks to obfuscate, misinform, change the rules of conduct and flourishes most when no light of truth is shone upon it."
While Rob Ford appears to be pathetic, Morgan questions his actual role as a political clown.
Reasonable people may think our political representatives should have a code of behavior that inspires us, or a sense of responsibility towards the people he or she serves. But the mainstream media says he still has supporters, which suggests that there is a block of citizens who are willing to trade in honesty, sobriety and service for low taxes.
Ideas such as the notion that the role of government should be increasingly inched towards the ultimate goal of doing little more than reducing taxes while begrudgingly still paying for things like the military and a few other "essential" services. That government should largely divorce itself from civic engagement or from acting as an equalizing mechanism. From fulfilling the collective will of the people.
Dark politics is not interested in the way life endures, supports or celebrates beauty, or hope for a better future. Dark politics does not understand nuance and diversity. It is the task of humanity to uphold justice for civil society to survive. It is up to us to vote for social justice and to use our power to nurture a society built on a reverence for life.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Desire, Design and the Operating System
It appears to me that human history and all its inventions dwell within a circle of power. The glorification, the use and abuse of power interacts with our human endeavours mostly beyond our control. There are nations and people who possess power but not forever. Anyone who has had power over others or things fears they cannot hold their control forever. As individuals and institutions we create laws, culture (media) and ideology in order to maintain an illusion of control, to protect ourselves from chaos. If I were to say this is the truth - it would be my attempt to wield power over this instant. If I were to study philosophy, science, law and culture to the breadth and depth of my capacity it would be in order to influence the world. It's too late in my life to attempt this even if I could, and even if I achieved it (500 years after William Shakespeare), it would be for a brief moment in time and place, and it would be a call for the next player to deconstruct this theory.
As news stories appear daily about our prime minister, the mayor of Toronto, or the president of the United States as they play out the extent of their given powers while they can, some may believe they possess powers beyond their position and that all they have to do is manage it well. But all political leaders must negotiate with the ever changing directions of power in their lives - the interests that support them and attack them are like tennis balls on a court which they must hit and send back to their opponents.
All that we desire and design is negotiated with other desires and designs which we cannot see or even plan for. There is always the pressure of the operating system projecting and sabotaging our strategies.
Our human history has led us to believe that we possess the power to control the world and we give those willing to stand up as leaders our loyalty, as long as they convince us they can protect us from the chaos of invading interests. But when our leaders break or reveal cracks in this promise we sack them with derision and ridicule.
This is a very violent game - to the senses of all who are involved. It seeks scapegoats and sacrifices. It allows millions to suffer starvation, genocide, indignity and madness, mostly because we cannot see power as something beyond our will, that no matter how much we worship and strategize, we can never control.
Because we are addicted to our own sense of entitlement we believe our leaders hold the key to our security through some kind of magic. The esoteric rites are for high priests only, who are trained to keep the secrets of their submission to powers we cannot name or see.
So how can we live free of oppression? First by understanding that the oppressor is not a person or party or nation or corporation - it is a co-dependent game of denial. They play their part sometimes well, sometimes appallingly, but the news reveals they are exhausted. Even the largest corporation treating civil society like an obstruction to their goals, installing puppet governments to do their bidding, can only maintain their illusion if we keep believing in it.
If power is within and beyond us then we must learn how to negotiate with power as we would with nature - that it belongs to history and the future, to our ancestors and our great-grandchildren. This requires a sense of shared ownership and responsibility.
Monday, 11 November 2013
The Inescapable Network of Mutuality - by Martin Luther King Jr.
We
are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of
destiny.
Injustice anywhere is a threat to
justice everywhere.
There
are some things in our social system to which all of us ought to be
maladjusted.
Hatred and bitterness can never cure the
disease of fear, only love can do that.
We
must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression,
and retaliation.
The foundation of such a method is love.
Before
it is too late, we must narrow the gaping chasm between our proclamations of
peace and our lowly deeds which precipitate and perpetuate war.
One day we must come to see that peace
is not merely a distant goal that we seek but a means by which we arrive at
that goal.
We
must pursue peaceful ends through peaceful means.
We shall hew out of the mountain of
despair, a stone of hope.
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Civil Society Dying Slowly and Painfully
Listening to CBC radio this morning I heard someone say that the federal government would not openly challenge Rob Ford in a call to dislodge or demand he resign as Mayor of Toronto because his supporters commonly termed "Ford Nation" are the same base as the "Harper Nation."
Chantal Hébert writes in the Toronto Star "There is a jarring disconnect between the Conservatives’ punitive judicial agenda, their much proclaimed law-and-order principles and their efforts to look away from the public transgressions of the man who runs Canada’s biggest city and the disruptions to Toronto’s municipal life that result from them."
What kind of people support political representatives who appear to have a contempt for their responsibility to uphold the laws of Canada?
What qualities do those in the Ford or Harper nation possess? What is their world view besides repeating the mantra "low taxes" and "the economy"?
Are they addicted to a drug-like notion, that our society is a shopping mall, where you choose the world you want to live in just as you choose commodities from a shelf? That virtues such as hard work, intelligence and self-preservation will keep them safe, no matter how many others suffer?
Or are these "nations" invented/manufactured by corporate sponsored media?
Institutions and national identities have largely been built on the addictions of the privileged, and sooner or later, we shall see clearly that we have spent and wasted our achievements in an inebriated stupor of self-congratulation. Our governments and institutions uphold our delusions and cannot afford to save us from them. We must re-invent ourselves within a just society if we want our species to survive.
Chantal Hébert writes in the Toronto Star "There is a jarring disconnect between the Conservatives’ punitive judicial agenda, their much proclaimed law-and-order principles and their efforts to look away from the public transgressions of the man who runs Canada’s biggest city and the disruptions to Toronto’s municipal life that result from them."
What kind of people support political representatives who appear to have a contempt for their responsibility to uphold the laws of Canada?
What qualities do those in the Ford or Harper nation possess? What is their world view besides repeating the mantra "low taxes" and "the economy"?
Are they addicted to a drug-like notion, that our society is a shopping mall, where you choose the world you want to live in just as you choose commodities from a shelf? That virtues such as hard work, intelligence and self-preservation will keep them safe, no matter how many others suffer?
Or are these "nations" invented/manufactured by corporate sponsored media?
Institutions and national identities have largely been built on the addictions of the privileged, and sooner or later, we shall see clearly that we have spent and wasted our achievements in an inebriated stupor of self-congratulation. Our governments and institutions uphold our delusions and cannot afford to save us from them. We must re-invent ourselves within a just society if we want our species to survive.
Monday, 14 October 2013
Extracting the Poetry from Power and Politics
The final days of empire give ample employment and power to the feckless, the insane and the idiotic. These politicians and court propagandists, hired to be the public faces on the sinking ship, mask the real work of the crew, which is systematically robbing the passengers as the vessel goes down.
Read the rest here: The Folly of Empire.
And another poetic observer, George Monbiot, alerts us to the threat of an empire poised to take it all for free through the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership:
They want it; they’re getting it. New intellectual property laws that they have long demanded, but which sovereign governments have so far resisted – not least because of the mass mobilisation against the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act in the US(11) – are back on the table, but this time largely inaccessible to public protest.
Read Elite Insurgency here.
But the question that comes to me, time and time again, is what can be done, and more importantly what will I do about it? The most eloquent answer comes from âpihtawikosisân and you will find her wisdom in what a revolution looks like:- here.
Tuesday, 17 September 2013
Ten Tips on How to Save the World
![]() |
photo from NASA/Wikimedia |
The instructions are simple. Learn from the bees, use your
caring mind to gaze at the world, reclaim your power, reclaim your nature, hold
onto curiosity, celebrate your creativity, give up blaming, live from a place
of love, acknowledge your political self, and honour your spirit.
1. Learn from the
bees.
Marilyn Hamilton, CEO of Integral City, told a children’s
story not long ago, that is easy to remember.
Three key strategies enable bee hives to survive, which can teach us how to
sustain the human hive – take care of
you, take care of others, take care of this place. Our ancestors learned how to
do this but sophisticated social systems have alienated us from our own capacity to manage the hive. However, world
crises shows we must re-engage in the process now.
2. Use your caring
mind to gaze at the world.
Look closely at the operating system, or the ‘apparatus’ as
Simone Weil put it. Read ideas and opinions wherever you can find them. Ask
yourself who benefits? Expand your gaze beyond your own immediate interests.
Prepare to be disturbed but not defeated.
2. Reclaim power.
Power and all its parts: politics, wealth, language, science,
economics, institutional religion, is not evil. What is
evil is the way institutions have been corrupted from their original purpose – to serve civil society – into clubs of privilege. Good leadership is the conduit of responsible power which demonstrates humility, vulnerability, and serves the greater good. Good leaders spend their powers to affirm and highlight the power in all. Infinite
power is not a zero sum game, it is natural, inclusive and intelligent.
3. Reclaim our
nature.
We are resourceful workers and stakeholders in our society.
We are not a resource or a job description. We are not left, right,
conservative or liberal – we are organic, politically mobile beings. Labels are assigned to influence and control
masses. We have courage, fear, anger, love and wisdom but they are not commodities, they are strengths that emerge and hide. The
deadliest weapon of oppression is that which turns humanity and all of nature
into a thing, a resource.
4. Hold onto Curiosity.
This is what keeps us exploring, examining, interrogating
the conditions we live under or in. As long as curiosity is alive we shall
never be content with serving an oppressive and corrupt social order.
Music, theatre, farmers’ markets, poetry, gardens, maps, new
political parties, conversations – are
the means of expressing and sharing our humanity. Art is the what, where, how and who of our species as it yearns and evolves.
6. Give up blaming.
Blaming is not problem solving and the problem is not what
other people do. To solve problems we
need to re-engage our power to care creatively, with curiosity and love.
8. Live from a place
of Love
Love breaks apart the structures of false hierarchies. It
demands attention to suffering and violence, and calls for healing. It insists on
life as the source of knowledge. Love is
what drives great minds to take courageous stands outside of their particular disciplines
for the greater good. Love is the openness to pain that makes injustice,
corruption, cynicism and oppression unbearable.
9. Life is political.
You are an integral, intelligent, reflective part of a
larger organism. Whether we survive as a species depends on protecting our
earthly home from a system that enables a few egos to hold this planet
ransom for the sake of temporary profit. There is no escape from politics. Its
apparatus has been built on a grandiose delusion that refuses to see the natural world as sacred, and ourselves
dependent upon its health. To be apolitical is to be a doctor standing at the
bed of a dying patient, refusing to be involved because the disease is dirty. To
dismiss the world stage and our part in it is to lobotomize the future.
10. Honour the spirit
The spirit is our energy. It imparts our intentions before
we see them. It allows us to dream and care for the world beyond our own life span. Imagination and love is the immortal legacy we leave for our great-grandchildren.
These are just my thoughts.
What are yours? What would you list as the top ten tips on saving the
world?
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