Category Archives: Democracy

The Unbearable Heaviness of Quiet Murder

I write this in honor of Michael Parenti – working class hero!

His book, Blackshirts and Reds is one that I recommend to everyone looking to do self-study.

Amid everything that’s going on – it’s been a time of such raw emotion. But what finally broke through the numbness for me was this: 

I saw this in my local newsfeed and I couldn’t hold in the tears any longer. It’s from a local news report – presumably placed by “law enforcement” – that lists a bunch of petty infractions (basically, the crime of being too poor to renew your license, get your car inspected, or pay a speeding ticket). What I cropped out of this screenshot is that the news published these peoples’ names. Their NAMES. Their counties. And their “crimes”. Essentially enlisting the help of the public to “hunt them down”. 

I started riffing some words that come to mind when I think about the condition of our class. Hunted. Disparaged. Slandered. Criminalized. Caged. Ripped apart. Humiliated. Demeaned. Hidden. Disregarded. Exploited. Forgotten. Attacked. Killed. Denied. Oppressed. What comes to mind for you? What are you seeing and experiencing in your community and in your family? 

ICE killings are murder out loud. One of the most visible expressions of state violence in this time. 

We have to join the outrage about the loud murder with a deeper agitation and understanding of the quiet murder. 

Rugged individualism is embedded in everything we do – even “social justice”. 

We get trained in individualism:

  • Individual stories
  • Individual impacts
  • Individuals matter and move people

We don’t get taught to see patterns or the interconnection between things. We get trained neither to zoom out to the big picture, nor to dig deep and understand the root of the problem. We just see what is right in front of us.  

We generally aren’t moved by the mass struggle of life and death for our class. Not yet. 

Developing class consciousness means understanding that these different tentacles of the fundamental problem are not separate from each other. 

It means facing and feeling the quiet murder of letting pandemic protections expire in the Great Medicaid Purge of 2023 when 27 million people were kicked off of Medicaid leading to at least 15,000 additional deaths. 

It means facing and feeling the 73% decline in wildlife populations; and 42 million people killed by sanctions – both since 1970.

It means facing and feeling the 25-30 year reduction in the life expectancy for people who are unhoused, while 20-30 homes sit vacant for every person who doesn’t have a place to stay. 

It means facing and feeling the reality that nursing homes controlled by private equity have led to an increase of 10-15% in mortality rates, or 22,000 additional deaths over the course of 12 years.

It means facing and feeling that poverty kills 800 people every day, or 292,000 people every year in the United States.  

It means facing and feeling the reality that there are  48,000 suicides yearly, many linked to the chronic stress of living in this society. Alcohol and drug related deaths – coping behaviors – lead to 100,000 deaths yearly. The police killings of 1,000 humans and 10,000 dogs on average each year. The microplastics and forever chemicals in our bodies linked to heart disease deaths – and much more. 

All the centers of profit-making and the forces of capital are arrayed against our very lives and existence. 

These are systemic crimes, but the perpetrators of these crimes don’t get put on blast in the newspaper, they own the newspaper. And social media. And the private equity firms. And the stock market. And Silicon Valley. And our political system is the committee for managing their affairs. 

It is the millions suffering from quiet murder that will make history. Our task is to build the necessary unity, organization and understanding to assist in that process. 

Some sources:

https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/db526.pdf

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11066981/?utm_

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/article-abstract/2806963

https://www.nber.org/digest/202402/estimating-mortality-rates-us-homeless-population?page=1&perPage=50

https://www.optimalhealthsystems.com/blogs/wellness/as-studies-mount-researchers-estimate-microplastics-cause-356000-heart-disease-deaths-each-year?utm_source=chatgpt.com

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(25)00189-5/fulltext

The Problem with the “Hands Off” Protests Is Not What You Think

First off I just want to say that this is a stressful time for almost everyone. This is not an easy period that we are living through – whether we’re accustomed to ongoing crises or we’re more recently waking up and feeling it. My heart and love goes out in solidarity to all of us who are experiencing fear, grief, anger, uncertainty, disillusionment, and many other challenging emotional states and real life consequences resulting from the crisis in the capitalist system. 

But there is “hope”, many say, as evidenced by participation in the April 5th protests around the United States, broadly cast as “anti-Trump and Musk”.

My socials are filled with folks proclaiming how “hopeful” it is to see so many people take to the streets in these symbolic protest actions. And along with that “hope” comes the withering criticism of those of us with a “critique”. 

We’re just so naive/misguided they say. “How can anyone sit there and criticize folks who are getting activated for not being “correct” or “radical” enough? We have to meet people where they are!” 

And to that – I completely and unequivocally agree! My criticism is not with the people who showed up for this rally. That would be ridiculous. We need masses of people taking action together, now and always! 

But I don’t believe that the turn-out is in and of itself a beacon of hope. It’s an indication of possibility, but it will take much more to turn that possibility into real hope. Just as faith without works is dead, hope without clear, connected, competent and committed leaders is empty. 

Do you remember, or have you ever heard or read about what happened on February 15, 2003? 6-10 million people worldwide took to the streets to protest the Second Gulf War. The largest protest in human history, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. 

Wall Street interests prevailed, the war proceeded, slaughtering 1,000,000 Iraqi people in the course of the war and its aftermath. The U.S. service members who were forced to wage this war were crushed by Gulf War Syndrome, depression, and PTSD, as well as chronic health conditions from toxic exposures.  

On November 4, 2023, the largest protest in solidarity with the Palestinian people took place around the globe, with estimates of more than half a million in the streets. The Israel-led and U.S. backed genocide rages more ferociously than ever. One child is killed every 30 minutes in Gaza. 

In the course of the summer of 2020, an estimated 26 million people participated in protests connected to the George Floyd uprising. 4,600 people were killed by the police in the U.S. during the Biden administration. White people comprise the largest number of those killed by the police, while Black people are 3 times more likely to be killed by police with figures for Indigenous people ranging from 3-7 times more likely. 

In his important book “If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution”, journalist and author Vincent Bevins examines the global wave of protests between 2011 and 2021, asking the critical question: Why have the upsurge of protest movements around the world not resulted in serious and lasting change?

Which brings me back to my point – what exactly is my criticism? Do I stand against “hope”? 

Of course not!

And yet, I do believe that our hope must be based in reality, not fantasy. 

Our hope must be based in each other, not the misleaders who have kept us on a treadmill of hope and despair, mobilization and demobilization, lying to us about the source of why things have gotten steadily worse across the entire working class in this country for the last 50 years. 

Our hope must be based in each other, not the party that the ruling class used to continue to degrade the position of the working class through NAFTA – the North American Free Trade Agreement (1993) which resulted in massive industrial job loss; Welfare Reform (1996) which replaced a social safety net with market-driven “workfare”; the Telecommunications Act (1996) which led to the rise of media monopolies and the age of disinformation; financial deregulation and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (1999) which led to the 2007-2008 financial crisis; the Troubled Asset Relief Program (2008), or the bailout of Wall Street at the expense of the working class, and the Affordable Care Act (2010) which preserved, expanded and protected the private insurance system that profits off our sickness and death.**

These are among the policies that helped pave the way for the degradation of our living conditions such that we now count 140 million people in the ranks of the poor or those of us one healthcare or housing emergency away – nearly half the country. 

Just like we can’t expect an engine that runs on fossil fuels to belch out anything but polluted air, we can’t expect an economic and political system that runs on systemic racism, poverty, environmental devastation and militarism to produce anything but more of the same. 

So I’m here for the big tent – believe me! The tent I’m building is big enough for 140 million people – and guess what – those people are hurting – across the color line, the party line, and the urban/rural divide. I’m not here to listen to anyone speaking from the podium who says that the problem is chiefly or exclusively Trump. I don’t want to go back to the normal of 2023-2024, when 25 million people were kicked off of Medicaid in this country. We need to go forward.

I’m here for the big tent – but my tent does not include the billionaires and Wall Street – the economic forces behind the two party system in this country. 

I’m here for the big tent – but I refuse to be operationalized and co-opted by one section of the capitalist class in order for another section to prevail. We’ve been there before – we went from the period of Reconstruction after the civil war to the backlash of the Redeemers. We went from the upsurge of independent working class organization in the wake of the Great Depression to the New Deal Coalition which saved capitalism from itself. I refuse to set the table for the capitalist class to continue to eat while we starve. 

The nationwide rallies can be hopeful IF:

The people attending and organizations turning out their members demand of the official sponsors that no politicians be allowed to speak from the podium. The primary task of these figureheads is yoking us to a hamster wheel of 1) mobilization, 2) demobilization and 3) voting for the bad or the worse because they are yoked to a system that puts profit over our lives and planet. Here’s a great example of what it means when poor folks take the stage. 

They become moments to raise class consciousness, unite across issue silos, and talk about the fundamental problem. We are not a compendium of identity groups who need “allies”. We are a diverse working class trying to survive a war being waged on us by Wall Street, whether we currently know it as such or not. We need to get together, desperately, and see our common problems. We need people from the ranks of the organized poor to grab the mic, teach the historical and economic roots of this current crisis, shift the focus away from “experts” and “VIPs” and help the poor and dispossessed to understand ourselves as the only people capable of unsettling this society and putting us on a path of transformation. Here’s a great example from the Rev. Joe Paparone in Albany, NY.

We use them to bring people into the politically independent organizations of the poor and dispossessed. Many people are ready to mobilize, but not yet ready to organize. However, we need to train thousands of leaders NOW as we prepare for much bigger eruptions and outbursts that will inevitably result from the unsustainable organization of and relationships that govern our global economy. Those upswings and outbursts will not as easily be led, co-opted, and directed by the powers that be. As we raise the consciousness of the people turning out for “Hands Off”-style demonstrations, we can immediately begin to help those who gravitate toward us to see themselves as PART of the working class, not simply the “middle class”. This is the beginning of the journey for many folks getting mobilized right now. The work of member-led, staff free networks like the National Union of the Homeless and the Nonviolent Medicaid Army point the way forward. 

Thank you for all that you do every day to put people first.

Some more helpful reading:

**[For further reflection: For those of us who voted for this party that has pursued these policies for the last 50 years – have we been voting against our own interests? Should we be held accountable – as everyday people with no property and power to speak of – for the massive social dislocations, hollowing out of our industrial base, depression of wages, culture of misinformation, out of control healthcare costs, the opioid crisis, deaths of despair? Are these things our fault for voting this way? Or were we simply making the best choice we felt we had at the time?]

Don’t Believe Billionaires, Ever

There is a broad and fundamental misunderstanding of the role of the state in our society today.

The state is not merely elected politicians. As we’re (re)learning in real time, the state is an incredibly deep far-reaching apparatus of 3 million people who carry out the functions of the executive, legislative and judicial branches.

It’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), it’s USAID, it’s the Pentagon, it’s FEMA. It’s the IRS and the EPA. It’s 438 federal agencies and sub-agencies.

Speaking of USAID…

From USAID at 60, An Enduring Purpose, a Complex Legacy
From USAID at 60, An Enduring Purpose, a Complex Legacy

The state is an instrument of the class that rules. And what class rules, you ask? Well, spoiler alert, it’s not the working class. The Trump administration is funneling state control to an even fewer number of billionaires, but the reality has been (and will continue to be, should the nation be able to flip flop back to Democratic control in 2028):

Vox Article from 2015 Study: Politicians Listen to Rich People, Not You
Vox Article from 2015 Study: Politicians Listen to Rich People, Not You

Which all goes to show why this tweet is a great example of our miseducation as a class:

I hope you’re getting the point here – even before the intensifying and direct billionaire takeover of the state now playing out before our eyes, the politicians were “an executive committee to manage the affairs of the [capitalist class]”

The guts of the state apparatus are being exposed for the first time in our lifetimes. Let’s learn the right lessons, and not allow the billionaires to continue to confuse us anymore about the role of the state.

Stay tuned for part 2: Why I Don’t Believe in Comparing Social Change to Science Fiction where I will look at some current and historical examples of the state working in the interests of the vast majority (true democracy) rather than in the interest of a tiny minority.