For days now, we have endured
demonstrably false propaganda that the fallen soldiers of U.S. wars
sacrificed their lives for "our freedoms." Yet, as that noxious
nonsense still lingers in the air, militarized police have invaded OWS sites in
numerous cities, including Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan ,
and, in the boilerplate description of the witless courtesans of the corporate
media, with the mission to "evict the occupiers".
Hundreds of NYC riot police
forcibly evicted Occupy Wall Street from Zuccotti Park
early on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011.U.S soldiers died protecting what and who
again? These actions should make this much clear: The U.S. military and the
police exist to protect the 1%. At this point, the ideal of freedom will be
carried by those willing to resist cops and soldiers. There have been many who
have struggled and often died for freedom--but scant few were clad in uniforms
issued by governments.
Freedom rises despite cops
and soldiers not because of them. And that is exactly why those who despise
freedom propagate military hagiography and fetishize those wearing uniforms--so
they can give the idea of liberty lip service as all the while they order it
crushed.
When anyone tells you that
dead soldiers and veterans died for your freedom, it is your duty to occupy
reality and inform them of just how mistaken they are. And if you truly cherish
the concepts of freedom and liberty, you just might be called on to face
mindless arrays of fascist cops and lose your freedom, for a time, going to
jail, so others might, at some point, gain their freedom.
I was born in Birmingham Alabama ,
at slightly past the mid-point of the decade of the 1950s. Many of my earliest
memories involve the struggle for civil rights that was transpiring on the
streets of my hometown.
My father was employed at a
scrap metal yard but also worked as a freelance photojournalist who hawked his
work to media photo syndicates such as Black Star who then sold his wares to
the major newsmagazines of the day. A number of the iconic photographs of the
era were captured by his Nikon camera e.g., of vicious police dogs unleashed on
peaceful demonstrators; of demonstrators cartwheeled down city streets by the
force of fire hoses; of Dr. King and other civil rights marchers kneeled in
prayer before arrays of Police Chief Bull Connor's thuggish ranks of racist
cops.
In Birmingham , racist laws and racial and
economic inequality were the progenitors of acts of official viciousness. The
social structure in place was indefensible. Reason and common decency held no
dominion in the justifications for the established order that was posited by
the system's apologists and enforcers; therefore, brutality filled the void
created by the absence of their humanity.
And the same situation is
extant in the growing suppression of the OWS movement in various cities,
nationwide, including Liberty Park in Lower Manhattan .
The 1% and their paid operatives--local city officials--are striving to protect
an unjust, inherently dishonest status quo. Lacking a moral mandate, they are
prone to the use of police state forms of repression.
Dr. King et al faced their
oppressors on the streets of my hometown. Civil Rights activists knew that they
had to hold their ground to retain their dignity…that it was imperative to sit
down in those Jim Crow-tyrannized streets when necessary in order to stand up
against the forces of oppression.
At present, we have arrived
at a similar moment. If justice is to prevail, it seems, the air of U.S. cities
will hold the acrid sting of tear gas, the jails will again be filled, the
brave will endure brutality--yet the corrupt system will crumble. Because the
system's protectors themselves will bring it down by revealing its empty
nature, and the corrupt structure will collapse from within.
Yet, when riot police attack
unarmed, peacefully resisting protesters, the mainstream media often describes
the events with standard boilerplate such as "police clash with
demonstrators."
This is inaccurate (at best)
reportage. It suggest that both parties are equal aggressors in the situation,
and the motive of the police is to restore order and maintain the peace, as
opposed to, inflicting pain and creating an aura of intimidation.
This is analogous to
describing a mugging as simply: two parties engaging in a financial
transaction.
Although mainstream media
demurred from limning the upwelling of mob violence at Penn. State
as involving any criteria deeper than the mindless rage of a few
football-besotted students unloosed by the dismissal of beloved sport figure.
Yet there exists an element
that the Penn. State belligerents and OWS activists
have in common: a sense of alienation.
Penn. State students rioted
because life in the corporate state is so devoid of meaning...that
identification with a sports team gives an empty existence said meaning…These
are young people, coming of age in a time of debt-slavery and diminished job
prospects, who were born and raised in, and know of no existence other than,
life as lived in U.S. nothingvilles i.e., a public realm devoid of just that--a
public realm--an atomizing center-bereft culture of strip malls, office parks,
fast food eateries and the electronic ghosts wafting the air of social media.
Contrived sport spectacles
provisionally give an empty life meaning…Take that away, and a mindless rampage
might ensue…Anything but face the emptiness and acknowledge one's complicity
therein, and then direct one's fury at the creators of the stultified
conditions of this culture.
It is a given, the cameras
of corporate media swivel towards reckless actions not mindful commitment…are
attuned to verbal contretemps not thoughtful conviction--and then move on. And
we will click our TV remotes and scan the Internet…restless, hollowed
out…eating empty memes…skimming the surface of the electronic sheen…
These are the areas we are
induced to direct our attention--as the oceans of the earth are dying…these
massive life-sustaining bodies of water have less then 50 years before they
will be dead. This fact alone should knock us to our knees in
lamentation…should sent us reeling into the streets in displays of public
grief…
Accordingly, we should not
only occupy--but inhabit our rage. No more tittering at celebrity/political
class contretemps--it is time for focused fury. The machinery of the
corporate/police state must be dismantled.
If the corporate boardrooms
have to be emptied--for the oceans to be replenished with abundant life--then
so be it. If one must go to jail for committing acts of civil disobedience to
free one's heart--then it must be done.
Yet why does the act of
challenging the degraded status quo provoke such a high decree of
misapprehension, anxiety, and outright hostility from many, both in positions
of authority and among so many of the exploited and dispossessed of the
corporate/consumer state.
For example, why did the
fatal shooting incident in Oakland ,
California , Nov. 1, that occurred
near the Occupy Oakland Encampment--but, apparently, was wholly unrelated to
OWS activity cause a firestorm of reckless speculation and false associations.
Because any exercise in
freedom makes people in our habitually authoritarian nation damn uneasy…a sense
of uncertainty brings on dread--the feeling that something terrible is to come
from challenging a prevailing order, even as degraded as it is.
Tyrants always promise safety;
their apologist warn of chaos if and when the soul-numbing order is challenged.
Granted, it is a given that
there exists a sense of certainty in a prison routine: high walls and guards
and gun mounts ensure continuity; an uncertainty-banishing schedule is
enforced. Moreover, solitary confinement offers an even more orderly situation …uncertainty
is circumscribed as freedom is banished.
The corporate/national
security state, by its very nature is anti-liberty and anti-freedom. Of course,
its defenders give lip service to the concept of freedom...much in the manner a
pick-pocket working a subway train is very much in favor of the virtues of
public transportation.
A heavy police presence has
ringed Zuccotti Park from the get-go, and whose ranks
have now staged a military style raid upon it, a defacto search and destroy
mission--because the ruling elite want to suppress the very impulse of freedom.
These authoritarian bullies don't want the concept to escape the collective
prison of the mind erected and maintained by the corrupt jailers comprising the
1% who claim they offer us protection as, all the while, they hold our
chains…all for our own good, they insist…for our safety and the safety of
others.
Although, from studying on
these prison walls, the thought occurs to me…that what we might need is
protection from all this safety.
Phil Rockstroh is a poet,
lyricist and philosopher bard living in New
York City . He may be contacted at: phil@philrockstroh.com.
Visit Phil's website or
at FaceBook.
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