From our overstocked archives
Sam Smith,
2011 -
More and more, living in America seems like living up in a badly dysfunctional
family. I sometimes imagine the Republicans as being a collective version of an
alcoholic, abusive husband and father while the Democrats are the battered but completely
submissive spouse. And the rest of us are the mistreated, powerless kids.
But as some in such situations learn, one is not powerless. You are weak but
not helpless. You have to find ways to build a new rational reality, something
that can happen even in the midst of madness. Neither one's father nor mother will
help with you with this. Your condition is not your fault, but your response is
up to you.
A good place to start is with the fact that dysfunction is not normal. Test it
out. Count in your own community the percent of people as dishonest and
irrational as many of our leading politicians and other establishment figures.
Yes, they're there, but typically they're in jail, on probation or in therapy.
They are not dominating the whole culture.
Or read some history and be reminded how rare and frightening is our
establishment.
I was reminded of this the other day as I spent six hours at a community
agriculture and education center where I'm on the board, participating in a
planning meeting with five farmers, a university expert, and a cooperative
extension official. During that entire six hours nobody said anything stupid,
mean, meaningless, deceptive or destructive. They just made good sense. As I
sat there, I thought: if this were Washington I would have been out of here
long ago, angry, or sound asleep.
Yet that's the way it has always worked, Roman emperors and British kings could
make life harder or easier for the average farmer, but it was still the demands
of nature and one's response to it that failed or triumphed. Read 1984 and
you'll find that only ten percent of those in the book lived in the distorted
culture that Orwell describes. The rest - not part of the inner and outer party
- lived the lives of 1940s English proletarians. In East Germany only ten
percent of the population were members of the Communist Party. And a woman who
had spent her childhood in Hungary during the same period once said to me,
"You know, even during the Cold War our village was run
democratically."
So here we are with only a handful of national figures making much sense or
even trying to. We have a major media that has largely lost its ability to
think independently of this elite. And we live in a time in which everyone's
visual and auditory space is overwhelmingly filled with images that are either
commercial or political fantasy and largely unrelated to the lives we actually
live each day. The diaspora of dysfunction has swept over our lives.
And nobody can change it but us.
And there are choices. Simply witnessing your personal and political values on
a daily basis, for example. The choices of what you buy, where you go, what you
say and what you do.
Peace activist David Swanson recently suggested one: "Small groups (5-12
people) regularly meeting together in a format the Swedes call "study circles,"
to reach consensus
on the problems they face and what to do about them. . . [Another] model
permitting these study circles to knit themselves together into an organization
large enough to tackle the problems they unearth yet supple enough to operate
without bureaucracy, hierarchy, or top-down control. This model -- "citizen's
assemblies"-was
conceived by Thomas Jefferson and unearthed by one of his African-American
descendants, lawyer Don Anderson [who] wrote much of the War on Poverty
legislation."
Boycotts are yet another underused approach
But most of all, we need to rediscover the local … the local that doesn't
require national legislation, national television, or national advertising and
propaganda.
There are lots of reasons for doing so. For one thing, it is ecologically
sound. Humans were not physically or psychologically created to live in the
world of presidential campaigns, offshore banking, or Hollywood or humans
massed into six or seven digit size. We were designed to live, help, and
benefit from, other real humans doing real things. We need an ecological
movement to save the endangered species that is ourselves.
For another thing, the local is politically sound. Despite what federally
obsessed liberals tell you, nearly all important political change has come from
the bottom up. And in a time when the elites of both parties are destroying our
environment, our economy, our schools and our democracy, the local becomes the
main fort of humanity. Explore it, test it, act with it, join it, use it and
then share it what you have found with others on the Internet.
As with the children of dysfunctional families, if we go by the rules of those
with the most power, we become a part of their madness. We must create - on a
human scale - alternative ways of being, alternative systems and alternative
solutions. As we do so, we will start to build a new America, one that is both
decent and sensible.
In the near future, of course, we can not destroy the madness at the top. We
can, however, follow the lead of the beat generation of the 1950s, once
described by someone this way: "Our goal wasn't to overthrow the
establishment, but to make it irrelevant."
The more irrelevant we make the establishment, its theories, its elites, its
media, and its attempt to invade every corner of our souls, the closer we will
be to saving and rebuilding America.
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