A short article from last year, that generated a fair bit of buzz, reproduced in its entirety:
The
independent media have been telling us for several years now that the
US is no longer a free country, nor is it any longer a democracy. It is
a corporatist aristocracy -- a corpocracy -- where the laws are written
and enforced for the benefit of a small elite of corporate oligopolies
and their political benefactors, and where thanks to a two-party
political hegemony, a corrupt electoral system, gerrymandering,
vote-machine rigging, and repression of minority voting
rights, even the vote, the last vestige of democracy, is meaningless.
For
those of us who do not live in the US, the situation is hardly better.
The corporate oligopolies own or control most of the industry, land and
resources in most of the world's struggling nations and many affluent
nations, and anti-democratic 'free' trade agreements subvert domestic
laws to the 'right' of global corporate oligopolies to freedom from
regulation or restriction of trade in any signatory nation, regardless
of the social and environmental damage that 'right' brings with it.
As a consequence, the systems that govern us are not governed in our interest:
You can either work obediently for a
large corporation that is part of an industry-controlling oligopoly, or
you can struggle on the Edge of that economy.
You
have
no say in how your tax money is spent, so most of it is spent on
subsidies and bailouts to the corporate oligopolies and military and
other adventures that secure resources for those
oligopolies.Substantially all of the additional wealth created (at
enormous social and environmental cost) in
the last generation has, as a result, accrued to a tiny elite.
You
have no say in what happens to the land in the community where you
live. The municipal politicians are owned outright by the development
industry, and they encourage development that extinguishes all
non-human life and any natural features, and replaces them with bland,
artificial, homogeneous subdivisions which are unsustainable, wasteful
and anonymous -- convenient only to the corporate employers who want
pliable, transient and undemanding workers and consumers.
The
education system brainwashes us that our way of living is the only way
to live, that things are better than they have ever been, and that the
only way to make a living is to start at the bottom of a corporate
oligopoly company and crawl your way up. Entrepreneurship is portrayed
as a brutal, risky struggle.
The mainstream media are
propaganda machines designed to dumb us
down so we don't realize what has happened to us, and they never
present information threatening to or critical of the corpocracy. 1984
has arrived, while we weren't paying attention. Orwellian ('Leave No
Child Behind', 'Clear Skies Initiative') slogans and messages are
everywhere, and they're unchallenged by the complacent media.
The
US war of independence was fought against an elite occupying force
imposing its will on the majority. The only differences today are that
the occupation is global, and that the means of control are more
technologically advanced and pervasive.
So how could we take back our land, our resources, our civil freedoms, our democracy, our economic and education systems?
The
first step, I think, is to realize that we still have the power, if we
have the will to exercise it. This world is too vast and complex for
any group to control it, and even its human systems cannot be
controlled by any elite without the acquiescence of the large majority.
The
second step is to realize that Bucky was right: "You never change
things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a
new model that makes the existing model obsolete." We won't win zoning
battles or economic control battles or electoral system battles or
proportionate representation battles in the courts or the election
campaigns or the markets that are controlled by the elite. We must
instead walk away from these corrupt and dysfunctional systems and
build new ones, responsive and responsible and sustainable alternatives
that others can look at and say "yes, that works much better".
So here is what we need to do:
Organize
in our own communities to create principled local economies that make
us self-sufficient. Decide what we need and then create it, locally,
responsibly, sustainably, entrepreneurially. Local natural foods,
durable hand-made clothing, natural buildings,
local theatre, information, entertainment and recreation, renewable
energy co-ops. These local economies will let us work, shop and live in
our own communities, without the need for private automobiles or any of
the addictions of corporatist culture. Then we can easily boycott
everything made wastefully, elsewhere.
Take responsibility for
our own education. Deschool our communities and learn independently and
from each other how to learn, how to think critically and creatively,
and the other essential skills that make us self-sufficient and
responsible, not unthinking consumers, cogs in the corporatist machine.
Patiently
and relentlessly blockade development of community resources by
outsiders. Make it more trouble than it's worth for them to exploit and
degrade local land and resources. When they give up and go away, when
the land become worth less to them, quietly acquire it and create local
community trusts in perpetuity that prohibit exploitation or sale to
outsiders forever, and which are governed by principles of stewardship
and respect for the land and for all those living on it.
Because
these local economies are not profit-oriented and are self-sufficient,
by doing these things we are effectively starving the corpocracy of the only four things it values
-- our tax dollars, our cheap obedient labour, our consumption of their
crap, and our attention to their propaganda. Without these things they
cannot survive. They need to sell more and more every year just to keep
their share prices from crashing. They need our tax dollars to finance
their global wars to acquire the remaining scarce resources. They
need our eyeballs glued to the idiot box to hawk their products and
propaganda. They need us indebted to them. They need us fearful and
helpless. They need us to be dependent.
We do not need them. That is the power we have that they do not. All it takes is a willingness to use it.
I
think it's just a matter of time. I believe more and more of us are
realizing what we have lost, including our independence. It is human
nature to want to be independent, to be self-sufficient, to seek
meaningful community, and if necessary to fight for these things. We've
done without them long enough. It's time to build a new model, a better
way of living. We need to be free.
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