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Activists, Teachers: Don't Give Up

By Rev. Jim Rigby, AlterNet. Posted August 4, 2006.


The more hopeless the political situation, the more important are those who live and teach the principles of human decency.
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Activists and Teachers: Don't Give Up

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As we rise to another day of struggle on behalf of our planet and species, it is important to remember what it is that gives us hope.

The political sphere can seem like a hopeless shell game. Activists toil to get someone they believe to be an idealist elected only to see those ideals slowly abandoned. Human rights activists can work lifetimes to reduce suffering only to have that work destroyed by one thoughtless generation. What is the point of working so hard to change the world if at some point all our great ideals will dissolve into political compromise?

It is important to remember that the political sphere is only a stage upon which we live out our larger principles. We are not mere foot soldiers in a partisan struggle. We must be teachers of humankind. Our values are not on the table to be won or lost. We use defeat as easily as victory to teach and learn what it is to be human.

When our own time seems grim, we look back to a "golden age" when we imagine it was different, when social justice was on the march. Who has not wished to stand shoulder to shoulder with Martin Luther King Jr. or some other pioneer of human rights? But we must remember such prophets lived in bleak and lonely times. Human rights are not won solely with political victories or large rallies. They are forged in the furnace of political disappointments and begin in poorly attended meetings. By the time the crowds start showing up, the hardest work has been done.

Long before a Martin Luther King Jr. is possible, numberless and nameless champions have laid the foundation where his message could even be understood. Leaders do not create social movements; they are created by those movements. Political victories are mere stopgaps until the founding principles of a universal humanity have been taught to the people.

Victory added nothing to Gandhi's truth nor would have defeat in his own time detracted from it. In our struggle, we do not fight against human beings but on behalf of all humanity against inhuman systems. All true revolution is a call to return to our humanity in inhuman times. In such times, remaining human is itself a victory.

This is not to minimize the consequences of the struggle. We realize more than most that lives are on the line, lives of those usually far less privileged than we. At night, the dedicated activist hears the cries from sweatshops or from deep within unsafe mines. We feel the shiver of the young soldier who is slowly taking aim to snuff out a stranger's life and to forever wound his own.

We feel the urgency and know what is at stake, but we also understand that without calmness we cannot teach and without ethical clarity we ourselves fall into the storm. We are like experts who must disarm a bomb in a populated area. We stay patient and calm precisely because so much is on the line.

Nothing great was ever accomplished in a single lifetime. We must emblazon those words in our hearts. The struggle is always worth it. For, if we do not improve our own time we have made possible some future happiness. If all around us is hopeless it is the perfect time to begin loosening the soil for future planters. The more hopeless the political situation, the more important are those who live and teach the principles of human decency.

Those who live by great principles are above the ebb and flow of political circumstance. They carry their treasure with them. And, really, the struggle offers so much more than hope. Even if we knew we would lose every campaign between here and the grave, we should still choose this path of service to humanity because it is the only road that leads to a life worth living.

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The Rev. Jim Rigby is pastor of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Austin, Texas, and a longtime activist in movements concerned with gender, racial and economic justice. He can be reached at jrigby0000@aol.com.

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Yeah - good luck in fascist America fellow educators . .
Posted by: FauxPorteno on Aug 4, 2006 12:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a history/social studies and foreign language teacher who has been informed on at least 3 occasions now that if I continue to teach my brand of history (the truth) then I will no longer be occupying the post of "educator" for much longer. It may appear simple, but teaching young adults that most wars are not fought in order to stave off "the pink menace" or preserve human dignity but rather out of sheer avarice is nearly impossible in this day and age.

I have been told that "genocide" is not the proper terminology to employ when describing the extermination of US Native Americans. I was informed that the US, and principally IBM, did not in fact conduct business with Germany whilst the Wermacht was disposing of American boys and Jews and Poles and . . . . I have been reprimanded for pointing out that American armed forces were known to burn a village or two in Vietnam and I am hardly permitted to touch on the subject of American meddling in Latin American affairs. The mere mention of CIA death squads in El Salvador and CIA torture training in Honduras was almost enough to get my ass canned for good . . . Parents - you have your local school boards to thank for this.

To all my fellow educators, keep up the good fight as long as you can . . .

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» RE: The anti-reliagious left. Posted by: Maryanne
» RE: The anti-reliagious left. Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: The anti-reliagious left. Posted by: Conservasaurus
» You're teaching in the wrong forum Posted by: sirossisofliver
» RE: truth is uglier then fiction Posted by: FauxPorteno
» unhindered truth/universities Posted by: Michelle
I see your point, Rev Jim
Posted by: revcarln on Aug 4, 2006 4:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is true that we need to remain stalwart, consistent in our beliefs, and speak out at every opportunity with friends and those standing in the line with us at the super-market. Not to "preach", though, just to calmly say what is true. And, sometimes we get discouraged at the gross ignorance of so many. Rev Jim is reminding us to keep on keeping on.

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This is why I fight for liberty.
Posted by: BJT on Aug 4, 2006 4:25 AM   
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I think it's sad that such a profound and urgent call to endurance is getting applied to this New Left "movement" centering around bellyaching about a lack of government freebies, or the military being mean to brown people. MLK and Gandhi went so much farther than that.

The article is 100% correct. It may take longer than my lifetime for the concepts of liberty to even be understood again in this country. For every million left- or right-wingnuts striking at the branches of evil, there might be one liberty lover striking at the root.

Gandhi harvested salt without government permission, and incited a revolution. Do you have any idea how much more control our government has over us than the British did over the Indians then? I wish I could incite the same kind of movement by deciding to get married without government permission, or drive a car without government permission, or open a business without government permission, or open a bank account without a government number, or stop paying the illegal Income Tax, or stop paying government tribute for owning a house. I wish I could incite Americans by ceasing to cooperate with any one of the hundreds of ways our government unjustly regiments our lives. But liberty is NO LONGER UNDERSTOOD in America, so I would be dismissed as some uncooperative and selfish nuisance to society.

The Left would feel that way about me even more so.

We live in a country where you will be thrown to the ground and/or arrested for approaching an IRS office with flyers or giving a manicure without government permission. Soon, like communist Russia, we will have a national ID, an internal passport, without which we will be unable to travel or do business.

The problem that has made our government so huge and oppressive, our military so gigantic and uncontrollable, and our laws so numerous and stupid, is very simple but SO VERY HARD for most to understand.

The solution is this: We need to abolish the Federal Reserve, imprison or even execute its board members for treason and fraud, abolish the IRS, and re-institute a Constitutional currency backed by gold and silver.

If we do that, everything else falls into place. Government will then HAVE to be fiscally responsible, it will have to be small and unintrusive. It won't commit human rights violations because it won't be big enough to get away with it.

But unfortunately, the most rabid political movments in this country center mostly on furthering dependence on a big government, which can only be funded by our inflationary system and draconian, illegal taxes and the current de facto abolition of private property. The Communist Party in America isn't concerned to do much anymore because the jackyderms have completed the revolution on their own.

If you want to learn more about what liberty is, try these websites:
The Free State Project
Freedom Force International
America: Freedom to Fascism - most important film you may ever see

Liberty is the answer. What's the question?

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correct but
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 4, 2006 4:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Highminded thoughts are quite rational and good and correct but what do you do when legitimate government has been hijacked by criminal elements like the Bushies and many legislators and many supreme court justices and many oil corporations and media moguls and many intelligence agents?

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» RE: correct but Posted by: Lincoln fan
Nothing great was ever accomplished in a single lifetime.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 4, 2006 7:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This may or may not be true but it doesn't matter. At some time great things come to fruition. At some time a victory is won. If everybody believes that he/she is working for future generations then he/she will miss the opportunity knocking at the door today.

It has been several generations since Abraham Lincoln expressed his ideal for our government, "government of the people, by the people, and for the people". Of course that didn't come to pass in his lifetime nor in the lifetimes of anyone since.

I believe that now is the time to make that ideal a reality. And I believe it can be done because it is an idea who's time has come. Now, when our government is controlled by unbridled capitalism that will surely destroy our civilization. Recent history should prove to anyone that we can't depend on either of our political parties to take control of the corporatocracy, We must take control of both parties and force them to do our will.

It can be done with a powerful grassroots movement, but it must be done before the next election. Join the Lincoln Initiative today. There are less than 100 days left to accomplish this in this election cycle.
Bob Reichenbach
lincoln0212@msn.com

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Corporate America owns education now.
Posted by: jreinhart1 on Aug 4, 2006 8:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Due to underfunding, schools from local districts to the Ivy League and high dollar private schools have had to depend on corporate "donations" and grants to survive. The result is that education is hamstrung to teach and promote the ideals of corporatism as well as perpetuation of false information about our history and heritage.

This is evident in the professional journals that have now taken up corporate sponsers to make ends meet as well. The journals of medical, engineering, physical sciences, business finance, accounting... all have corporate sponsership and have moved from independent thought to become just another cog in the wheel of multinational banks and corporations and regurgitate findings that are in line with their sponsers. The Meninger clinic, which used to be in Topeka but has moved to Baylor University, is a fine example of such a situation. What used to be considered the one of the highest programs in psychological and neurological sciences now advertises for numerous drug companies.

How can there be any people to fight against actions taken that continue to distress others when freedom of thought is barely alive due to character assassination, free speech zones and a media that doesn't care?Due to underfunding, schools from local districts to the Ivy League and high dollar private schools have had to depend on corporate "donations" and grants to survive. The result is that education is hamstrung to teach and promote the ideals of corporatism as well as perpetuation of false information about our history and heritage.

This is evident in the professional journals that have now taken up corporate sponsors to make ends meet as well. The journals of medical, engineering, physical sciences, business finance, accounting... all have corporate sponsorship and have moved from independent thought to become just another cog in the wheel of multinational banks and corporations and regurgitate findings that are in line with their sponsors. The Meninger clinic, which used to be in Topeka but has moved to Baylor University, is a fine example of such a situation. What used to be considered the one of the highest programs in psychological and neurological sciences now advertises for numerous drug companies.

How can there be any people to fight against actions taken that continue to distress others when freedom of thought is barely alive due to character assassination, free speech zones and a media that doesn't care?

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What Rigby describes is called "vocation." In these dark times, we can only hope to survive.
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 4, 2006 1:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was my privilege to march with MLK, Jr. No, not quite shoulder-to-shoulder, but as a follower who stood outside on the sidewalk in front of the courthouse and statehouse while he was inside negotiating for allowing the legal privileges of free speech demonstrations.

As Rigby wrote, it is the movement that makes the leader. We could not have won without him, and he could not have won without us, the nameless singing protestors (who drove the posseemen crazy).

It could not be called a "vocation" if it was easy. I cannot begin to express how disappointed I am with how far short the US has fallen of vision that was taken forgranted before the days of Reagan and his ilk.

Alterman's blog yesterday (re: book by Garfinkle on value-creation versus wealth-creation) described the difference between demand-side and so-called supply-side economics; he nailed it. One invests in people; the other invests in riches.

Growing up, we all knew that difference. Today it has been shoved aside. "Keep hope alive." Keep singing freedom songs. Hold your head up high. Honk if you love people. And "Patience, patience, we shall win at the last" says Emerson. Damn straight!

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How far?...
Posted by: blackinjun on Aug 5, 2006 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Truth is elusive and subjective. Can America or any society that's hierarchical based with privilege granted to a certain segment allow truth? Do they want truth or just their truth? For example one truth is that Gandhi was a stone cold racist. He felt blacks were inferior and that his "Hindu" class was best suited to serve white interest. A real historical champion of truth and justice huh? Another truth that's a little more controversial is religion. Would the author of this article admit to the historical truths about his religion and accept them? Once proven, could he denounce it as fallacy to advance human understanding and evolution? I say no, I believe he could never allow that in his psyche on so many levels.

The truth for a conscious Black person and "socialized" White person is at odds and I believe can't be reconciled with parity. And since this society is based in white supremacy and white domination, our Black truth (for those who are aware of it) can't be applicable.

Some teachers (such as myself) have no slot in this country whether "activist" or not, because the truth of our activism is unacceptable, even when true. It's shunned and discounted even if it's for the advancement of human consciousness. This is another reason why I strongly advocate paying Reparations so those Black people of conscious who wish to move on, may do so with the payment from their ancestors labor and past discrimination that hampered their economic and social advancements.

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» RE: I would like some money, too. Posted by: blackinjun
Thanks. This was really nice.
Posted by: owleyes on Aug 5, 2006 6:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Encouragement always feels great. It's hard when you're out there bending over backward to teach these kids something while simultaneously watching your mouth every second for fear someone's going to report you for having a "liberal bias" or practicing "liberal indoctrination." I wouldn't be afraid if I hadn't seen it happen. I feel all I can really do is be a positive role model and let my actions speak louder than words.

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Did you know..
Posted by: blackinjun on Aug 6, 2006 2:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that I believe Huffpost censures comments or holds them until the page is about ready to drop before entering them...this is so "neoconish"..lol..for example..Bill Maher's comment: "Can you imagine what Bush would do if a terrorist organization took over Canada and was lobbing missiles into Montana, Maine and Illinois?" Hell I wrote that the only analogy that would be comparable would be if a Native American "terrorist organization" lobbed missiles into the U.S. then ask Bush what would he do with a group trying to reclaim their land.

It didn't make the cut on liberal/progressive Huff&Puff....so can you imagine such ideas being exchanged in public schools??? And forget the Gary Hart comments..

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Here here
Posted by: Entheogenic on Aug 6, 2006 4:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a staunch atheist, but Reverend, Amen! A great article, and--I think--just the kind of idealism the left needs more of. One of the best pieces I've seen on Alternet in a while. Bravo.


Entheogenic

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