BLOG It's Our Turn to
Eat: How Politics Works and Why Activism is So Important
After
the Bioneers conference last year, I wrote about the
24 steps to make political activism more effective.
And, as the chart above shows, activism has long been part of my "what
you can do to help save the world" list.
Recently, however, I've become more skeptical in my writing about
whether or not political activism really has any effect. Most of my
attention has been focused on personal change, on adapting to the world
rather than trying to make it better.
More recently still, I've begun to think that personal change is
equally futile: that we cannot be other than who we are, and that the
best personal coping strategy is to know and accept yourself. My friend
Janene has tempered my thoughts on this somewhat; she says that while
we may not be able to change who we are,
we can change what we do.
To some extent this takes us full circle. If we have the opportunity
and responsibility to change our behaviour, our activities, to make
different choices about what we do, and don't do, what is this if not
political activism? And if those actions do make a difference, then
skepticism about the effectiveness of political activism is at best
unwarranted, and at worst defeatist. My political activist friends have
called me on this, and I promised to recant any suggestion on these
pages that political activism is a waste of time and energy.
So I'm doing so. As Margaret Mead said, "Never doubt that a small group
of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is
the only thing that ever has." She was right. Social and political
movements have always pushed people and institutions to make important
and meaningful change that they would not otherwise make, by appealing
in part to their sense of what's fair and just and reasonable (an
intellectual appeal), but more importantly by appealing to human
emotion, by moving
them. Without such movements there would be no movement, and we would
probably be living in a world with much more slavery,
violence, destruction and tyranny than the one we live in now.
I've been trying to figure out why this is so. I have a fairly
optimistic view of human intention and behaviour, as befits an
incurable
idealist. But I also confess to being misanthropic -- I don't much like
most people. I find them stupid, unimaginative, indifferent to the
suffering of others, and conveniently ignorant and agnostic. It is easy
to give up hope on people, and to blame "the system" that grinds the
sense and sensibility out of them, and just give up.
I believe, as John Gray has argued, that we humans, like most
creatures, are preoccupied with the needs of the moment. We are myopic,
both in time and space -- unable to really care about what we cannot
see and feel, or about what the future consequences of our actions
might be. That's not a criticism, just a Darwinian truth. That is who
we are.
The problem is one of scale.
When something affects us, or our immediate circle, personally, it is
in our nature to care about it, and, with some struggle (because in our
modern world we do not get much practice building consensus, resolving
conflicts, and really caring about those we haven't personally selected
to be part of our networks) to resolve it congenially, fairly and
effectively.
But the further away something gets from those intimate circles, the
less capacity we have to understand it, to care about it, or to deal
with it effectively. With distance and size it becomes remote,
invisible, complex, unfathomable. We introduce hierarchy (whose effect
is to increase efficiency and the concentration of power and reduce
effectiveness, resilience, information-sharing and peer communication).
We introduce agents, brokers, intermediaries, media and
'representatives' to
whom we cede power and responsibility.
As we become more distant and as the circle
becomes much larger, we cannot care as much.
Soon it takes a massive fear-based propaganda machine just to make us
vote, or
fight a foreign 'enemy' thousands of miles away. Likewise, when
politicians are far removed from their constituents, they cease to know
or care what those constituents individually want or feel, and focus
instead on how to broadcast messages to get re-elected. If they're
business leaders, likewise removed by many layers and floors and oceans
from the front line people, they cease to care about those people, and
begin to think of them merely as 'resources' to be managed.
There's a new book out about government corruption in Kenya called It's Our Turn to Eat.
The title refers to the appeal of each elected government to its own
tribal supporters that they have to seize power and gorge themselves
quickly because after the next election some other tribe will be in
power and
they too will look after 'their own'. The twist is that the elite in
Kenya, across all tribal groups, exploits this tribal animosity and
fear to distract the electorate from the fact that, whoever is in
power, the elite still pull the strings, pay off the politicians, and
hoard the resulting wealth. The objective is to subjugate and
discourage the people, because that allows the elite to continue to
rule unopposed. Then it all becomes a game of perpetuating power and
wealth -- stealing elections, ever-increasing disparity, police state
laws, bribes, pork, subsidies and payoffs, propaganda, intimidation,
media control,
divide and conquer, and massive corruption. US 2000, Kenya or Iran
2009, it
doesn't matter. To think that this is a struggling-nation problem only
is pure conceit. Thanks to distance, size, and scale, the benign
inclinations of human nature are coopted, perverted and corrupted.
Everything that works at a community level fails at the level of
corporation and nation. We have shown, all over the world, again and
again, that once we reach a certain size we become depraved,
ungovernable.
The role of the activist is to act as a counterbalance to this
perversion, to speak truth to power, to bridge the distance, to hold
those who are irresponsible and unaccountable, responsible and
accountable. To intervene. To break down what is already broken. To
enable what
the people really want to be realized, despite everything. A step
forward for every step back. A holding action.
This is thankless work. So I want to say thank you.
Without activists, the Republican neocons would still and forever
control the US government. Without activists, the world would be full
of gulags, torture prisons, brutalized, silent spouses and children.
Without activists, the forests would all be gone, the air fouled, the
oceans dead, the glaciers and ice-cap and permafrost melted into a
brown sea. Without activists, women would have no vote and no right to
choose, and people of colour would have no freedom. Without activists,
the books with the most important ideas in human history would be
banned, or never published. Without activists, the world's children
would be working in mines, and the world's adults would be working in
chains. Without activists, we would all be addicted to the poisons that
Big Tobacco and Big Agribiz and Big Pharma and Big Energy try to
convince us we cannot live without. Without activists, the only
non-human animals would be farmed animals. Without activists, the world
would be awash in billions of unwanted children.
All of us must be activists, if we are to give this world a fighting
chance.
What should you do? Picking your cause is just like picking the work
you're meant to do, as I explain in my book Finding the Sweet Spot.
This is not work for the half-hearted or easily-discouraged. So, just
as in choosing the paying work that gives your life meaning, you need
to identify and choose a cause that's in your 'sweet spot' -- something
you love doing, and that you're good at, and that is needed in the
world, and that you care about. If you are no good at it you'll get
discouraged or burned out. If you don't love the cause, you'll end up
disengaged. If it's not really needed, if the world's not ready for it,
you'll be unappreciated and frustrated.
To find this, you must learn something about yourself, and then do some
research about the world, about what's really going on, about the
points of intervention that will allow you to make a difference. There
are a few ideas in the brown box in the top chart above, but it's only
a tiny segment of the work that needs to be done. Whether your cause is
health or corruption or energy or pollution or water or food or
conservation or animal welfare or urban despair or suburban sprawl or
power or inequity, the process is the same: Find partners, a community
of people who share your purpose and your cause and whose work and
strengths complement your own, so that you get to do what you love and
are good at and so that the sum of the team's work is greater than its
parts.
Next, you need to be for something,
not just against something. Always fighting against, as important as
that work is, will drain your energy unless you also have a vision of a
better way, something to replace what you're battling. So you need to
be not only an informed warrier but also an innovator, an entrepreneur,
a visionary.
And you need to be prepared to search insatiably and undogmatically for
the truth, because ultimately that is your most powerful, and sometimes
your only, weapon. Without it, your belief and passion are not enough.
You also need to be able to articulate, simply, clearly and honestly,
what you believe and why. There is power in intention and strength in
numbers, but you will be unable to achieve either unless you are able
to convey what is, and what needs to be done, to those who are ready to
listen and to make common cause with you. You cannot do it alone, and
you have to pace yourself. You need to understand too that many people
will not be ready for your explanation, and that your response when you
meet them is to be polite and to move on, not waste your energies
trying to make them believe what they are not ready to believe. You
must have faith that they will come around, in time, and you or one of
those you have joined in common cause will be there, then, to welcome
them.
And at times you need to be ready to fight. You might think this would
require courage, but if you believe in the cause, and you know it's
right, fighting for it will not be hard; in your mind there will be no
choice.
(What else, activists? What am I missing? Lessons from the trenches?
Secrets of success?)
We must all be activists, and relentless, and patient, and brilliant at
it, because as long as the majority are hopeless, there is no hope. And
because we cannot fail. We cannot.
Until the day when it's no one group's turn to eat. Until there is
enough for all, and more.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
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