Voting
With Our Feet
By Chris Hedge
Bernie
Sanders’ political corpse in the presidential race
is still warm, but some of his prominent liberal
supporters already are urging us to flee to Hillary
Clinton. Sanders, who knows
the game is up, will soon become the Democrats’
pied piper. He will seek to entice his supporters
into the Democratic Party rattrap. He has decried
the disruption of Trump rallies—denigrating the only
power we have left—saying “people should not disrupt
anybody’s meetings.” His “political revolution,”
like his promise of a movement, is a cynical form of
advertising. Sanders will, like the Barack Obama of
2008, end as an impediment to the mass movements he
claims to represent. And mass movements in our
system of
“inverted totalitarianism” are our final and
only hope.
I
understand the fear over Donald Trump. I too want to
crush the growing fascist sentiments rising up from
the rot and decay of American society. But voting
for Clinton and supporting the Democratic Party will
not halt our descent into despotism. It will only
accelerate it. Trump is not creating phenomena. He
is responding to them. It is up to us to halt the
array of forces, including the Trump campaign, that
are preparing a species of American fascism and
orchestrating a global ecocide. The only way we have
left to vote is with our feet.
When
fundamental rights are abolished by the state, as
novelist and activist Arundhati Roy has pointed out,
“they are almost always won back only through
revolution.” And it is not as if we have much time
left. Josh Fox, in his brutally honest film about
the looming effects of climate change, “How
to Let Go of the World (and Love All the Things
Climate Can’t Change),” notes that we have to cut 80
percent of all carbon emissions by 2020 if we are to
have any hope of saving the Greenland ice sheet. The
Paris climate talks were a step backward. The loss
of the polar ice will flood coastal cities around
the globe. It will trigger a global ecological
catastrophe. It will displace hundreds of millions
of people. It will bring, if not revolution,
violence, anarchy, chaos, suffering and death that
will rival the black plague. And our elites intend
to do nothing to stop it. That fact alone should
send us into the streets.
The
Democrats, and in particular Hillary and Bill
Clinton, are responsible as much as anyone on the
right for our being sacrificed on the altar of
corporate profit. They told the same lies as the
right-wingers. They fed the same hate. They too
orchestrated the corporate coup. The Clintons
removed from the Democratic Party platform the
progressive stances championed by
Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition. They spoke
early in their careers in the coded racism of “law
and order.” They transformed the Democratic Party
into the old Republican Party. They unleashed the
predators of Wall Street and the fossil fuel
industry. They stripped us of our civil liberties,
championed endless war and empowered the arms
industry and agencies such as Homeland Security to
suck the marrow out of the federal budget. The
Clintons and the Democratic Party filled the prisons
and destroyed welfare. And under President Obama it
has gotten worse. Obama authorized the
assassination of U.S. citizens. He signed into
law legislation that permits the military to act as
a domestic police force and detain U.S. citizens
indefinitely without due process. He and the
Democratic Party establishment are attempting to ram
new trade agreements down our throats.
It pays to
betray the citizenry. The Clintons have made more
than
$153 million for paid speeches alone since 2001.
The Democratic Party is awash in corporate cash. And
the Obamas will soon, like the Clintons, be
multimillionaires.
The two
parties colluded to turn American politics into
anti-politics. The culture wars replaced political
debate. The Democrats co-opted the liberal elites
and unions. The Republican Party embraced the
lunatics of the Christian right, nativists and
opponents of abortion rights. The Republicans and
the Democrats looked at their supporters as useful
idiots. It worked for a while. Then the manipulated
and the abandoned sent the elites back to their
gated estates. Voters flocked to Trump hate rallies
and fueled Sanders’ political insurgency.
It was a
bankrupt liberal establishment that made possible
the rise of totalitarianism in Germany and Russia in
the 20th century. The great intellectuals, writers,
philosophers and artists—from Fyodor Dostoevsky to
Hannah Arendt—who fought against emergent fascism
and communism warned about a failed liberalism. They
understood that stories of rage were, first of all,
stories of despair. Liberalism, by constantly
betraying its stated values, neutered and
discredited itself as a political force. Its
self-destruction left the working poor bereft of
their only means of halting their abject
exploitation and abuse. Incremental and piecemeal
reform became impossible. When the underclasses
turned against the liberal establishment they
rejected not only its representatives but also the
values liberals claimed to represent. And they
searched for a leader who promised new glory, moral
renewal and vengeance.
In his book
“The Politics of Cultural Despair: A Study in the
Rise of the Germanic Ideology,” Fritz Stern, a
refugee from Nazi Germany and later a scholar of
fascism, examined the roots of fascist ideology. He
singled out as fundamental to the rise of fascism
the collapse of liberalism as a political force and
a government crippled by infighting and paralysis.
He wrote of the nascent German fascists:
They
attacked liberalism because it seemed to them
the principal premise of modern society;
everything they dreaded seemed to spring from
it: the bourgeois life, Manchesterism
[laissez-faire capitalism], materialism,
parliament and the parties, the lack of
political leadership. Even more, they sensed in
liberalism the source of all their inner
sufferings. Theirs was a resentment of
loneliness; their one desire was for a new
faith, a new community of believers, a world
with fixed standards and no doubts, a new
national religion that would bind all Germans
together. All this, liberalism denied. Hence,
they hated liberalism, blamed it for making
outcasts of them, for uprooting them from their
imaginary past, and from their faith.
Who wants
to support liberals when, year after year, they
demonstrate that they stand for nothing? Who can
trust liberals when they routinely sell out because
they are afraid? (You cannot truly claim you oppose
the apartheid state of Israel, endless war, mass
incarceration, the ravaging of the environment or
wholesale state surveillance and then go vote for
Clinton.) How can you build a movement to blunt the
legitimate rage of the underclasses if you are not
willing to defend their most basic rights?
There are
mechanisms to wrest back our democracy. Voting in
presidential elections is not one of them. Shutting
down Trump rallies,
as took place in Chicago, and blocking fracking
sites are examples of the only form of direct
democracy left. We must begin to mobilize around
mass actions. We must, in large and small ways,
disrupt the system.
Street
demonstrations to denounce the party conventions in
Cleveland and Philadelphia would expose the
political theater. Unfortunately, the state, whose
fear of protests is pathological, will impose de
facto martial law in the host cities during the
conventions, as it has in the past. It will flood
the streets with militarized police, set up mazes of
barricades and deploy the usual array of militarized
hardware—including drones and helicopters—and crowd
control technology. The state has, I suspect,
already infiltrated and is monitoring any group it
believes might attempt to protest. Authorities will
work to make it impossible for any demonstrator to
get within blocks of the convention halls.
Sustained, mass civil disobedience—if not in
Cleveland and Philadelphia then in other parts of
the country—that can impede the machinery of
corporate power is our only hope.
There were
once radicals in America, people who held fast to
moral imperatives. They fought for the oppressed
because it was right, not because it was easy or
practical. They were willing to accept the state
persecution that comes with open defiance. They had
the courage of their convictions. They were not
afraid. It is only by reclaiming this radicalism
that the left can regain its credibility and effect
change. It was the radical left that amid the
breakdown of capitalism in the 1930s ensured we had
the New Deal rather than American fascism, which
many U.S. industrialists openly championed. Franklin
Delano Roosevelt told his fellow oligarchs that it
was either the New Deal or a revolution. Better to
lose some of your wealth, he warned them, rather
than all of it.
We need to
once again make the power elites afraid.
Ask
yourself, what would
Ida B. Wells,
Mother Jones,
Jane Addams,
Randolph Bourne,
Emma Goldman or
“Big Bill” Haywood do? What would Martin Luther
King Jr., Malcolm X, James Baldwin,
Fannie Lou Hamer,
Ella Baker or
Fred Hampton do?
“They were
madmen [and madwomen],” Pierre-Auguste Renoir said
of the radicals who rose up and led the
Paris Commune, “but they had in them that little
flame which never dies.”
These
radicals understood that plutocrats and the armed
goons who kept them in power had to be fought. There
was not enough money, power or fear to get them to
surrender their integrity. And because they did not
waver, indeed were willing to suffer persecution and
in some cases death to speak truth and demand
justice, they inspired those around them to resist.
Present-day protesters in the United States, such as
those in Chicago after the police murder of Laquan
McDonald and those who were targets of arrest or
violence at or near two Trump rallies in Arizona,
grasp this fundamental truth about power. These men
and women did not wait for police permits to march
or protest. They defied the law. Some of them went
to jail. We will embrace this inspiration and
courage, handed down by earlier generations of
radicals, or we will stumble like sleepwalkers
toward catastrophe.
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more
than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years. |