MAY DAY SPECIAL
By Mike David
readersupportednews.org
Of
course, most of us know what's wrong with the world. We know about the
poverty, war, violence and disease. We're conscious of the injustice,
but not fully conscious of it, because frankly, we have enough to worry
about in our own lives. As such, we've come to accept these injustices
as simple facts of life - prepackaged side effects of the human
condition, as natural and intertwined with our existence as water to a
stream, beyond our capacity to effect in any significant way. This
collective sense of powerlessness and default apathy is why we're
striking.
Our growing sense of isolation and disconnection,
whether from ourselves, from those next door to us, or from those
producing our food and products halfway across the globe, is why we're
striking. Our forced support of perpetual war waged for and by the 1% -
whether explicitly with speech, or implicitly with inaction and tax
dollars - without ever paying mind to the true causes and motives behind
it, is why we're striking. Our failure uptil now to connect the dots
and realize that the benefits of a cheap iPod, lovely as it may be,
would be far outweighed by the benefits of a truly just world free of
exploitation, is why we're striking.
The fact that most of us are too busy being exploited
to realize we're being exploited - too busy greasing the cogs of our
economic system to notice how the fruits of our labor never fail to
float up and out of our reach - is why we're striking, as is the fact
that most aren't able to do anything about this exploitation even when
we do notice it. While some of us are lucky enough to have jobs and
careers that give real meaning to our lives, allowing us to take full
advantage of our talents and fulfill our destiny, most of us have jobs
devoid of meaning and dignity, yet full of the feeling that we are
fulfilling someone else's destiny. Our recognition that the ruling
class's seat at the top of the pyramid is prepared and propped up by the
working class is why we're striking. Our knowledge that it's actually
the CEO who is the most dependent among us, and that the ones truly
indispensable to our society are not bankers, lobbyists and politicians,
but workers, teachers and engineers, is why we're striking.
Indeed, the fact that we have an economic system which
functions in the same manner as a virus is why we're striking. Just as a
virus's only reason for existence is to expand, without regard or
awareness of the effect of its expansion on its host body, our economic
system pursues its infinite expansion without regard or awareness of its
effect on human welfare or the environment. Though the earth is finite,
it is sustainable, so we reject, in the words of Michael Nagler, "the
inherent contradiction of an economy based on indefinitely increasing
wants - instead of on human needs that the planet has ample resources to
fulfill."
We're striking because we also reject the notion that
selfishness must be the driving force in our world. We believe, contrary
to propaganda, that most people in our world are not selfish, and would
rather work together than constantly compete against each other. We
believe that the only people who really care about things like power,
corporate monopolies and global dominance only make up, say, 1% of the
population, making it seem only logical that we should have an economic
system which reflects the values of the 99% of us who don't care about
such things. The fact that most of the decisions which have a profound
impact on how we go about our daily lives are made by folks in
Washington or Wall Street, rather than in our communities by the people
actually affected by those decisions, is why we're striking. The fact
that power rests only with those who lust after it is why we're
striking.
We're striking because another notion we don't buy
into is the presumption that the profit motive can have no outcome other
than the best possible one. We understand that the success of
McDonald's has nothing to do with having the best burger, and everything
to do with having the most cutthroat business plan. We understand that
building prisons, waging wars, polluting the environment, and paying
employees inadequate wages are actually quite profitable.
Sustainability, economic justice and true equality? Not so much. We
understand that being ruthless and unscrupulous is an economic
advantage, and being truthful and virtuous is an economic disadvantage.
We understand that money is treated as more natural and inviolable as
nature itself, and that too often our place and perceived value in
society is determined solely by how much of it we make, or how much of
it we make for someone else. We understand that, whether or not you
believe in climate change, our ability to adequately address it or any
other pressing issue is greatly compromised when our shortsighted need
for profit skews our vision of the whole. We're striking to suggest new
motives and new values going forward.
The fact that you might not have known why we're
striking, and you didn't get and maybe still don't get what Occupy Wall
Street is about, is why we're striking. And who can blame you? Just like
you don't have the time or energy to really do anything about the
world's problems, you probably don't have the time or energy to do the
deep digging required to get your news from any source other than the
corporate outlets conveniently floating on the surface. It's
understandable that you wouldn't see the inherent conflict of interest
of a handful of for-profit corporations with their own interests telling
the world's story to the majority of people in this country. The fact
that it's so hard to be truly informed, and that it's in the 1%'s
interest for the majority of us to be uninformed, is why we're striking.
The fact that it's entirely possible you could go about your day today
and not hear a thing about the general strike, is why we're striking.
To counter the charge that it's unrealistic, and
overly idealistic, to want to bring about real change in our world, as
well as the trusty "life isn't fair" rationale always used to justify
injustice, is why we're striking. We didn't accept that line of
reasoning during the civil rights movement, and we don't accept it now.
We think it's far more unrealistic to think that a small cadre of elites
will be able to keep up their never-ending pursuit of power
consolidation and mass manipulation without waking us up in the process.
We think it's far more unlikely that in 1000 years, humanity will still
be playing this game of perpetual one-upmanship, instead of picking up
the far more efficient and beneficial manner of interacting with each
other in honesty, cooperation and genuine respect.
Perhaps the biggest reason we're striking is to simply exercise that ever-cherished American value of freedom. Just as our business leaders are free to use every means at their disposal to maximize profit, we are free to use every means at our disposal to maximize the realization of whatever objective we feel is worth pursuing. And by the way, even if you don't support the Occupy movement, whatever you think the Occupy movement is about, we respect your view, because another reason we're striking has to do with our political system - the way it thrives and prospers by pitting us against ourselves, encouraging us to demonize each other while discouraging us from disagreeing civilly.
The fact that this post is completely and utterly
inadequate in expressing why we're striking, is why we're striking. But
that's OK, because like May 1st, this post is just the beginning.
Happy striking!
Mike David is an occupier in San Francisco. He blogs at www.primitivetimes.com.
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