The Accepted System of DissentA Veteran’s Speech on March 18,
2006
By Mike Kress
03/23/06 "ICH'
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Why are we here today?
We are here because we oppose the war on Iraq. We are here
because gathering together in one place makes a statement, and
might have an impact on those who are afraid to question our
government’s actions.
Why are we here today?
We are here because standing in solidarity with others who are
outraged about the war on Iraq helps us feel better. It helps us
feel sane to find others who reject the lies of our government.
It helps us feel grounded to know that other people don’t buy
the propaganda fed to us by the mainstream media.
We are here because we know that what’s happening in Iraq - and
what’s likely to occur in Iran - is morally and criminally
wrong. We are here because we hope that our presence, in
conjunction with others doing the same thing across the nation
and around the world, will make a positive difference.
And yet, these statements don’t really answer the question: Why
are we here today?
I would say we are here today because we believe that if we
amass enough demonstrators, hold enough rallies, and walk in
enough marches, we will turn the tide of war.
We are here today because we believe that if we say the right
words and carry the right signs we will get our foot in the door
of democratic debate.
In short, we are here because we believe in an illusion. That
illusion is an accepted system of dissent that ensures our
resistance doesn’t go beyond boundaries established by the
government and the corporate media.
Methods that worked 40 years ago have been gradually homogenized
into a manageable system of dissent that channels our moral
outrage and our demands for peace into predictable,
self-censoring, and largely ineffective protest.
Like cattle penned inside corrals and channeled down chutes to
the killing floor, we are following a blueprint for dissent that
the people in power have basically designed for us. Is it any
wonder that we find ourselves doing the same things we did
before (and after) every previous war?
If we want to end the occupation of Iraq, or stop the war on
Iran – if we want the power to decide our own future – we must
stop focusing on a particular war, a particular president, or a
particular policy. Instead, we must focus on creating a sane new
world by demolishing the illusions in which we live and
rewriting the rules under which we are little more than slaves.
Before we can figure out how to build that new world, we must
first realize that the wars, presidents, and policies we
routinely oppose are part of a system wherein governments,
militaries, police, and the courts work for corporations and the
wealthy – not We the People. And we must recognize that our
predictable, conventional methods of protest are simply figured
into their cost of doing business.
Make no mistake: Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Wolfowitz, Snow,
the Clintons, the Kerrys, the Supreme Court, the CIA, the WTO,
the IMF, the World Bank, the fossil fuels industry, the
military-industrial complex, and everyone controlling this
system, are not incompetent or stupid. They are corporatists,
and they know what they are doing. They are deliberately
dismantling our freedoms and protections so that corporate
capitalism - backed by military and police power - can become a
global reality.
“But wait,” you say. Don't Americans have free speech? Can’t we
vote the bums out? Well, what is free speech when it falls on
deaf ears? What is voting when corporations manufacture hackable
electronic voting machines that leave no paper trail? What is an
election when the major political parties are two sides of a
counterfeit coin?
It’s time to throw away our misplaced faith in this corrupt,
undemocratic system and build alternatives to it. “Another world
is possible” isn’t possible if we keep supporting a system
that’s rigged against us.
Martin Luther King Jr. recognized this reality when he spoke at
New York’s Riverside Church in 1967. He said:
…[W]e as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values.
We must rapidly begin the shift from a thing-oriented society to
a person-oriented society. When machines and computers, profit
motives and property rights, are considered more important than
people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and
militarism are incapable of being conquered.…A nation that
continues year after year to spend more money on military
defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching
spiritual death.
Sadly, America has reached spiritual death. But the beautiful
thing about the spirit is that it can be revived, reawakened,
and renewed! Our spirits can rise from the dead.
Gandhi said, “Be the change you wish to see in the world.” If we
follow his wisdom, we will see today’s protest not as an end,
but as a beginning. Think of this gathering as a town hall
meeting – a community meeting where we educate each other and
organize. This protest should be the first step in a revolution
wherein we transform ourselves, and then our communities, into
the world we wish to see.
We can control our future by rejecting the system of death and
lies and wasteful corporate capitalism that we’ve been
brainwashed to believe is the American Way. By acting in
revolutionary ways we can begin building a new and sustainable
world that prevents our children from dying in (or protesting)
more immoral and unnecessary wars.
We must think creatively and wisely. We must build our own
media, newspapers, websites; and our own cooperative networks,
to include independent unions, banks, shops, farms, and housing.
We must join with the men and women around the world who oppose
the undemocratic, unaccountable, inhuman corporate structure
that is destroying our planet.
Peak oil, global warming, and dwindling natural resources
require that we start now. It won’t be easy. The mainstream
media will not inform us; there is no charismatic leader to lead
us, and no political party can save us. It falls upon “We the
People” to free our minds and claim our own destiny.
The alternative is to accept a fate that others have chosen for
us.
Mike Kress served two tours in the Persian Gulf prior to
leaving the Air Force as a conscientious objector. He has served
as vice-chair of the Spokane Human Rights Commission and is the
producer and host of “Take the Power” on KYRS FM in Spokane, WA
(www.kyrs.org). Comments welcome at
shrcmike@yahoo.com.
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