Thinking About: Interesting Times
Anyone who has picked up a newspaper recently or has tuned
into a decent news programme cannot have failed to notice that we live in
interesting times. Not only do we live in an era with a background of Global
Warming rumbling on apparently inexorably we are now faced with what seems to
be an ever widening revolt of the people against their leaders. It’s something
else that has been quietly building during the past few decades. I suppose that
it really hit the headlines with the anti-globalisation movement that was
becoming increasing more organised and more effective against what many
previously believed to be the inevitable process of turning the world into
variations of western democracies all operating under one form or another of
universal capitalism. Many commentators saw this as some kind of end point in
human progress. Despite all of the evidence to the contrary I suppose that many
of them still do.
Looking back, if you can use such a phrase about something
that is still unfolding in front of us, the latest iteration of the global
revolt happened during the Arab Spring which, with winter here, is still
blossoming feed by the blood of martyrs in Syria and in Egypt (again). No one
saw it coming and no one could’ve imagined that we in the west would begin to emulate
it so effectively. What has become known as the Occupy movement could have
equally been called the Western Winter of Discontent (and may well be by future
historians). Interestingly it is not confined to nations too poor to cope with
the austerity measures brought on by the global economic problems created by
the staggering greed of the already super-rich. Protests have sprung up
throughout the west in a decentralised ad hoc fashion that has surprised
supposedly acute political commentators on all sides of the issue. The people –
the much vaunted 99% - seem to finally be saying that they have had enough. For
far too long, they appear to be saying, they have been taken for granted. No
longer. They have found their voice and their voice will be heard despite often
being ignored by the media or suppressed by the authorities. Oh, and what a
huge mistake that suppression has been – when combat veterans are hospitalised for
defending free speech and free assembly, when peaceful protesters are pepper
sprayed and tear gassed, when celebrities, University professors and police
captains are arrested on camera for questioning the actions of an elected
government we know that something is deeply wrong with the way things are.
Throughout Europe and increasingly the United States people are waking up
to the fact that politicians no longer believe that they work for us and not
the other way around. People are waking up to the fact that electing an
official and getting that official to act on their promises and pledges are two
very different things. People have moved from passively not voting to actively
marching and occupying to show their deep disgust and distrust of those
supposedly in power to do our bidding.
2 comments:
So often in my political posts I'm aware of having no meaningful analysis to contribute and no new information to put forth: I'm just needing to vent my frustration and the bile that comes from the injustice we see all around the world.
But I guess there's another point to it all. I think our mainstream news media are not doing a very good job of reporting what is ACTUALLY going on (as opposed to reporting the approved talking points). I feel like we need to keep the real stories before our eyes and our friends' eyes until we accomplish a change in the status quo. Here's hoping we're all making at least a small contribution.
wunelle said: Here's hoping we're all making at least a small contribution.
We each do what we can. It's all that we can do as individuals.
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