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A Movement Too Big to Fail
There is no danger that the protesters who have occupied squares, parks and plazas across the nation in defiance of the corporate state will be co-opted by the Democratic Party or groups like MoveOn. The faux liberal reformers, whose abject failure to stand up for the rights of the poor and the working class, have signed on to this movement because they fear becoming irrelevant. Union leaders, who pull down salaries five times that of the rank and file as they bargain away rights and benefits, know the foundations are shaking. So do Democratic politicians from Barack Obama to Nancy Pelosi. So do the array of “liberal” groups and institutions, including the press, that have worked to funnel discontented voters back into the swamp of electoral politics and mocked those who called for profound structural reform.
Resistance, real resistance, to the corporate state was displayed when a couple of thousand protesters, clutching mops and brooms, early Friday morning forced the owners of Zuccotti Park and the New York City police to back down from a proposed attempt to expel them in order to “clean” the premises. These protesters in that one glorious moment did what the traditional “liberal” establishment has steadily refused to do—fight back. And it was deeply moving to watch the corporate rats scamper back to their holes on Wall Street. It lent a whole new meaning to the phrase “too big to fail.”
Tinkering with the corporate state will not work. We will either be plunged into neo-feudalism and environmental catastrophe or we will wrest power from corporate hands. This radical message, one that demands a reversal of the corporate coup, is one the power elite, including the liberal class, is desperately trying to thwart. But the liberal class has no credibility left. It collaborated with corporate lobbyists to neglect the rights of tens of millions of Americans, as well as the innocents in our imperial wars. The best that liberals can do is sheepishly pretend this is what they wanted all along. Groups such as MoveOn and organized labor will find themselves without a constituency unless they at least pay lip service to the protests. The Teamsters’ arrival Friday morning to help defend the park signaled an infusion of this new radicalism into moribund unions rather than a co-opting of the protest movement by the traditional liberal establishment. The union bosses, in short, had no choice.
photo: Daniel Oliverio
The Occupy Wall Street movement, like all radical movements, has obliterated the narrow political parameters. It proposes something new. It will not make concessions with corrupt systems of corporate power. It holds fast to moral imperatives regardless of the cost. It confronts authority out of a sense of responsibility. It is not interested in formal positions of power. It is not seeking office. It is not trying to get people to vote. It has no resources. It can’t carry suitcases of money to congressional offices or run millions of dollars of advertisements. All it can do is ask us to use our bodies and voices, often at personal risk, to fight back. It has no other way of defying the corporate state. This rebellion creates a real community instead of a managed or virtual one. It affirms our dignity. It permits us to become free and independent human beings.
Martin Luther King was repeatedly betrayed by liberal supporters, especially when he began to challenge economic forms of discrimination, which demanded that liberals, rather than simply white Southern racists, begin to make sacrifices. King too was a radical. He would not compromise on nonviolence, racism or justice. He understood that movements—such as the Liberty Party, which fought slavery, the suffragists, who fought for women’s rights, the labor movement and the civil rights movement—have always been the true correctives in American democracy. None of those movements achieved formal political power. But by holding fast to moral imperatives they made the powerful fear them. King knew that racial equality was impossible without economic justice and an end to militarism. And he had no intention of ceding to the demands of the liberal establishment that called on him to be calm and patience. “For years, I labored with the idea of reforming the existing institutions in the South, a little change here, a little change there,” King said shortly before he was assassinated. “Now I feel quite differently. I think you’ve got to have a reconstruction of the entire system, a revolution of values.”
King was killed in 1968 when he was in Memphis to support a strike by sanitation workers. By then he had begun to say that his dream, the one that the corporate state has frozen into a few safe clichés from his 1963 speech in Washington, had turned into a nightmare. King called at the end of his life for massive federal funds to rebuild inner cities, what he called “a radical redistribution of economic and political power,” a complete restructuring of “the architecture of American society.” He grasped that the inequities of capitalism had become the instrument by which the poor would always remain poor. “Call it democracy, or call it democratic socialism,” King said, “but there must be a better distribution of wealth within this country for all of God’s children.” On the eve of King’s murder he was preparing to organize a poor people’s march on Washington, D.C., designed to cause “major, massive dislocations,” a nonviolent demand by the poor, including the white underclass, for a system of economic equality. It would be 43 years before his vision was realized by an eclectic group of protesters who gathered before the gates of Wall Street.
The truth of America is understood only when you listen to voices in our impoverished rural enclaves, prisons and the urban slums, when you hear the words of our unemployed, those who have lost their homes or cannot pay their medical bills, our elderly and our children, especially the quarter of the nation’s children who depend on food stamps to eat, and all who are marginalized. There is more reality expressed about the American experience by the debt-burdened young men and women protesting in the parks than by all the chatter of the well-paid pundits and experts that pollutes the airwaves.
What kind of nation is it that spends far more to kill enemy combatants and Afghan and Iraqi civilians than it does to help its own citizens who live below the poverty line? What kind of nation is it that permits corporations to hold sick children hostage while their parents frantically bankrupt themselves to save their sons and daughters? What kind of nation is it that tosses its mentally ill onto urban heating grates? What kind of nation is it that abandons its unemployed while it loots its treasury on behalf of speculators? What kind of nation is it that ignores due process to torture and assassinate its own citizens? What kind of nation is it that refuses to halt the destruction of the ecosystem by the fossil fuel industry, dooming our children and our children’s children?
“America,” Langston Hughes wrote, “never was America to me.”
“The black vote mean [nothing],” the rapper Nas intones. “Who you gunna elect/ Satan or Satan? In the hood nothing is changing,/ We aint got no choices.”
Or listen to hip-hop artist Talib Kweli: “Back in the ’60s, there was a big push for black … politicians, and now we have more than we ever had before, but our communities are so much worse. A lot of people died for us to vote, I’m aware of that history, but these politicians are not in touch with people at all. Politics is not the truth to me, it’s an illusion.”
The liberal class functions in a traditional, capitalist democracy as a safety valve. It lets off enough steam to keep the system intact. It makes piecemeal and incremental reform possible. This is what happened during the Great Depression and the New Deal. Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s greatest achievement was that he saved capitalism. Liberals in a functioning capitalist democracy are at the same time tasked with discrediting radicals, whether it is King, especially after he denounced the war in Vietnam, or later Noam Chomsky or Ralph Nader.
The stupidity of the corporate state is that it thought it could dispense with the liberal class. It thought it could shut off that safety valve in order to loot and pillage with no impediments. Corporate power forgot that the liberal class, when it functions, gives legitimacy to the power elite. And the reduction of the liberal class to silly courtiers, who have nothing to offer but empty rhetoric, meant that the growing discontent found other mechanisms and outlets. Liberals were reduced to stick figures, part of an elaborate pantomime, as they acted in preordained roles to give legitimacy to meaningless and useless political theater. But that game is over.
Human history has amply demonstrated that once those in positions of power become redundant and impotent, yet retain the trappings and privileges of power, they are brutally discarded. The liberal class, which insists on clinging to its positions of privilege while at the same time refusing to play its traditional role within the democratic state, has become a useless and despised appendage of corporate power. And as the engines of corporate power pollute and poison the ecosystem and propel us into a world where there will be only masters and serfs, the liberal class, which serves no purpose in the new configuration, is being abandoned and discarded by both the corporate state and radical dissidents. The best it can do is attach itself meekly to the new political configuration rising up to replace it.
An ineffectual liberal class means there is no hope of a correction or a reversal through the formal mechanisms of power. It ensures that the frustration and anger among the working and the middle class will find expression now in these protests that lie outside the confines of democratic institutions and the civilities of a liberal democracy. By emasculating the liberal class, which once ensured that restive citizens could institute moderate reforms, the corporate state has created a closed system defined by polarization, gridlock and political charades. It has removed the veneer of virtue and goodness that the liberal class offered to the power elite.
Liberal institutions, including the church, the press, the university, the Democratic Party, the arts and labor unions, set the parameters for limited self-criticism in a functioning democracy as well as small, incremental reforms. The liberal class is permitted to decry the worst excesses of power and champion basic human rights while at the same time endowing systems of power with a morality and virtue it does not possess. Liberals posit themselves as the conscience of the nation. They permit us, through their appeal to public virtues and the public good, to see ourselves and our state as fundamentally good.
But the liberal class, by having refused to question the utopian promises of unfettered capitalism and globalization and by condemning those who did, severed itself from the roots of creative and bold thought, the only forces that could have prevented the liberal class from merging completely with the power elite. The liberal class, which at once was betrayed and betrayed itself, has no role left to play in the battle between us and corporate dominance. All hope lies now with those in the street.
Liberals lack the vision and fortitude to challenge dominant free market ideologies. They have no ideological alternatives even as the Democratic Party openly betrays every principle the liberal class claims to espouse, from universal health care to an end to our permanent war economy to a demand for quality and affordable public education to a return of civil liberties to a demand for jobs and welfare of the working class. The corporate state forced the liberal class to join in the nation’s death march that began with the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Liberals such as Bill Clinton, for corporate money, accelerated the dismantling of our manufacturing base, the gutting of our regulatory agencies, the destruction of our social service programs and the empowerment of speculators who have trashed our economy. The liberal class, stripped of power, could only retreat into its atrophied institutions, where it busied itself with the boutique activism of political correctness and embraced positions it had previously condemned.
Russell Jacoby writes: “The left once dismissed the market as exploitative; it now honors the market as rational and humane. The left once disdained mass culture as exploitative; now it celebrates it as rebellious. The left once honored independent intellectuals as courageous; now it sneers at them as elitist. The left once rejected pluralism as superficial; now it worships it as profound. We are witnessing not simply a defeat of the left, but its conversion and perhaps inversion.”
Hope in this age of bankrupt capitalism comes with the return of the language of class conflict and rebellion, language that has been purged from the lexicon of the liberal class, language that defines this new movement. This does not mean we have to agree with Karl Marx, who advocated violence and whose worship of the state as a utopian mechanism led to another form of enslavement of the working class, but we have to learn again to speak in the vocabulary Marx employed. We have to grasp, as Marx and Adam Smith did, that corporations are not concerned with the common good. They exploit, pollute, impoverish, repress, kill and lie to make money. They throw poor families out of homes, let the uninsured die, wage useless wars to make profits, poison and pollute the ecosystem, slash social assistance programs, gut public education, trash the global economy, plunder the U.S. Treasury and crush all popular movements that seek justice for working men and women. They worship money and power. And, as Marx knew, unfettered capitalism is a revolutionary force that consumes greater and greater numbers of human lives until it finally consumes itself. The dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico is the perfect metaphor for the corporate state. It is part of the same nightmare experienced in postindustrial mill towns of New England and the abandoned steel mills of Ohio. It is a nightmare that Iraqis, Pakistanis and Afghans, living in terror and mourning their dead, endure daily.
What took place early Friday morning in Zuccotti Park was the first salvo in a long struggle for justice. It signaled a step backward by the corporate state in the face of popular pressure. And it was carried out by ordinary men and women who sleep at night on concrete, get soaked in rainstorms, eat donated food and have nothing as weapons but their dignity, resilience and courage. It is they, and they alone, who hold out the possibility of salvation. And if we join them we might have a chance.
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225 Comments so far
Show All"What took place early Friday morning in Zuccotti Park was the first salvo in a long struggle for justice. It signaled a step backward by the corporate state in the face of popular pressure. And it was carried out by ordinary men and women who sleep at night on concrete, get soaked in rainstorms, eat donated food and have nothing as weapons but their dignity, resilience and courage. It is they, and they alone, who hold out the possibility of salvation. And if we join them we might have a chance."
Eloquently spoken. The actions of these people are more of a memorial to Dr. King than a memorial constructed of Chinese marble by a Chinese artist.
fellowgardener, I'm not looking for trouble, but does it matter who designed the memorial or where the marble comes from? King spoke of an all inclusive human community. One World.
Point was cheap exploited Chinese labor, surely you get that first and foremost Marxist guy?
Oh no! I'm being stalked by a musician that speaks for my fellow gardener and calls misdirected names. What will I ever do?
Would it be better to use cheap exploited homegrown labor and materials?
"Would it be better to use cheap exploited homegrown labor and materials?"
Well, it would have kept some money at home for a change. Just kidding (almost) :)
With apologies to J D Salinger...
Deflection!
GO LISTEN TO MLK'S SPEECH: "BEYOND VIETNAM"
You can hear the speech here. :~D
http://youtu.be/Q5VhCvrEcPY
Hedges, in addition to his eloquence, deserves admiration for explaining OWS with brutal clarity, by adding his voice as one of the many, instead of seeking any "cult of personality".
Your last line, however, betrays the eloquence and clear-thinking we could do more of for the movement. It belies a racist hatred against anything falling into a vastness of vague notion that is China to Americans: for a quick wiki show Maya Lin was born in America to immigrant parents from China, and is largely a product of American upbringing - or is that the another pink elephant in the room, that some people still need several reincarnations before being accepted as truly "American"?
As for the granites, GC Veterans page cites a largely non-mainland Chinese participation in the manufacture process: "Granite for the wall came from Bangalore, Karnataka, India, and was deliberately chosen because of its reflective quality. Stone cutting and fabrication was done in Barre, Vermont. Stones were then shipped to Memphis, Tennessee where the names were etched. The etching was completed using a photoemulsion and sandblasting process. The negatives used in the process are in storage at the Smithsonian Institution."
May Hedges' eloquence and clear-thinking continue to rub off on more of us!
I love Chinese culture. I've taught myself Chinese calligraphy. But I hate that so-called memorial for King, because it's just bizarre to me that it looks so Chinese. Weren't there any African-American sculptors who could have made this thing? Do we even need to outsource the design and construction of a national shrine these days?
The sculptor's name is Lei Yixin, not Maya Lin. Lei Yixin was not born in America, he has no connection to America prior to this contract that I know of. Maya Lin is the American sculptor who designed the beautiful Vietnam memorial.
The figure in the King memorial stands with his arms regally folded, like a noble, aloof Mandarin. "I was a drum-major for justice" the inscription boasts.
The Martin Luther King, Jr in history never stood like that or spoke like that. Nothing against Chinese culture, but Yixin obviously understood nothing about Martin Luther King, Jr. Whoever the hell this memorial is supposed to be remembering, it isn't King. I wish they'd tear it down and start over.
Very well-stated by Hedges. And the poster-child for the liberal class is Obama (although he is the furthest thing from "liberal" possible), who - because he supposedly represents "the left" - was able to enshrine all the worst obscenities of "the right" as accepted status quo. If a Republican president murdered an American citizen, the "left" would be foaming at the mouth. But Obama does it and they cheer. If a Republican president did any of the things that Obama has done, they would be demonized by the "left." Obama does them, and they cheer. That is the brilliance of the Plutocracy electing Obama, and the brilliance of having a Washington Generals team like the Democrats on hand to present the illusion that there is still a champion for the "99%", when in fact both Dems and Repubs represent the 1% Plutocracy. As Hedges stated, this charade is wearing thin, and people might possibly be starting to see through the BS. One can only hope.
I like you am totally disenchanted with "Obama". I say let's all get behind Cain and elect a black republican and see if anything changes. It can't possibly get worse. If we hold all these clowns to just four years, perhaps eventually someone of worth will rise to the surface. At least we could keep them off balance and prevent them from becoming entrenched.
The problem is not who is in the White House (Obama showed that), but with the people he appoints - Geithner, Summers, Holder, Petraeus, etc. - and with the people they appoint. A deputy undersecretary of Commerce can do a lot of harm while staying under the radar.
Boy! That was well said!
"The problem is not who is in the White House (Obama showed that), but with the people he appoints - Geithner, Summers, Holder, Petraeus, etc. - and with the people they appoint."
I don't know if you were being sarcastic, but these appointments were and are part of a plan. The plan is simply to conitnue selling out "our democracy" and transfering power to the bankers and Wall Street.
In this plan, Obama gets to have a second term, and he and the "cat food" commission he set up with Congress will slash social securtiy, medicare and medicaid and other sundry social programs. The money garnered or saved will go to bail out the banks who are in financial trouble due to the austerity program imposed on the public. People will not have the means to pay off their morgages and loans.
The Republicans are in on the plan and will sponser effectively an unelectable candidate for office, giving Obama his second term. Yes, the Dems and Repugs are actually working together, to support the financial sector at the expense of the rest of the American Public.
Well that plan is out. Obama does not get a second term. It matters little if it;'s Romney. Perry or Cain, they will be elected baring the second coming.
Yeah, but at the moment Obama's got more campaign money than all the Republican candidates combined. He can buy the election.
"The problem is not who is in the White House (Obama showed that), but with the people he appoints"
If the "who" in the White House is the who who makes the appointments, then of course it matters who the who is. But if the who is just a charming puppet, then no, the only thing that really matters is that who continues to be charming - in the literal sense - and that its strings and movable parts are constructed from the most durable of materials. I believe Harvard maintains its own puppet factory in the basement of Austin Hall.
Harvard didn't create Obama. He is a Company creation for sure.
Harvard is THE company school (among other more and less admirable things).
Denruter: "It can't possibly get worse."
"Oh yes. It can get worse. And it WILL get worse regardless of which Corporate shill of one stripe or another gets elected."
True. But Chris is getting better. "If you don't stand up for something, you'll fall for anything." - Malcolm X
It can get a lot worse. And one way to guarantee that is to get behind Cain.
Cool. Maybe the Dims will start caring.
Yup, backing Cain for the republican nomination should make all those Tea Party racists' heads smoke. Even better if he got to be the nominee.
Yup, if Cain wins the Republican nomination, it'll make all those Tea Party racists' heads smoke.
"One can only hope."
Now there is a hope we can believe in!
The Democratic party as the Washington Nationals is an apt comparison. Thank you, Demon, for a good laugh. I needed that.
Demonstorm,
Quite right.
The FAKE democratic institutions of the USA are here for all to see along with the monstrous destructive hope killing war machine wreaking havoc for corporate profit:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AzULm4d8h8w&feature=youtu.be
The above video shows how the Democratic party has coopted genuine populist movements in the USA from the late 19th century to the present Obama brand.
Well yes. The Democrat Party is in charge of coopting left wing populism, especially unions. (They did a stand up job with boomer/ex-hippie activists also) The Republican Party manages traditionalists, Protestants and increasingly Catholics and racists and homophobes of all ilk.
But the unions are showing definite signs of waking from their Dumbocratic haze and shifting resources away from the Dems and into union building.
The AFL-CIO has given crucial support, including calling on its activist network to rally to the protection of Zuchotti Park. Furthermore, the AFL endorsement ensured that a sweep of the park would result in union supported legal action and mass lawsuits supported by the AFL-CIO.
These were crucial gestures of solidarity, and OWS has also shown that solidarity is synergistic as OWS solidarity with local union struggles has strengthened those workers campaign for fair union contracts.
Many out of touch individuals on these boards portray the OWS and the unions as antagonistic, but in fact the movements are natural allies and both OWS and the AFL-CIO recognize this fact and are already demonstrating the strength of solidarity.
Thank you again, Chris, for verbalizing what I feel deep down but am not eloquent enough to express.
Excellent piece. I am sending it to my friends and posting the link on several web sites.
I Watched Cross Talk on RTAmerica. they were talking about the global Occupy Wall Street demonstrations. A person from the Heritage Foundation let it slip that we have a competition between Corporations and the Government. Corporations are suppose to compete with each other not the government. the last statement illustrates why the Capitalist system isn't working.
Corporations/Wall Street RUN the government. Read Democracy Incorporated by Sheldon S. Wolin, who calls the economic/political system that we have here "inverted totalitarianism".
There is no competition between the corporation and the government. There is complete cooperation with the government operating as the enforcement arm of the corporation.
Actually the government acts as the distributers of tax money TO the corporations in the form of government contracts.
That and they act as guarantors when corporations lose money.
"Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s greatest achievement was that he saved capitalism."
"... the liberal class, when it functions, gives legitimacy to the power elite ..."
"Liberals lack the vision and fortitude to challenge dominant free market ideologies."
"This does not mean we have to agree with Karl Marx, who advocated violence and whose worship of the state as a utopian mechanism led to another form of enslavement of the working class ..."
but,
" ... as Marx knew, unfettered capitalism is a revolutionary force that consumes greater and greater numbers of human lives until it finally consumes itself."
Hedges is a great spokesperson for this New awakening.
He has been steadfast in word and deed.
Many have labeled him a pessimist, when the opposite is true.
Identifying a diseased condition does not make a doctor a pessimist. A pessimist would sit back and accept the perceived inevitable doom. He has done the opposite.
He has been a relentless optimist, proven by his unending quest for an equitable sustainable world.
Please don't soil this call for a global community with poisonous darts. A New Age is dawning, rub the past from your eyes. Instead, stretch your arms, legs and minds. Join the call for the advancement of Life and Love.
Nice summary...
Well said, Buck. I particularly like your last paragraph. I am surprised that some people are offended or distracted by certain words in this obviously sincere article by Chris Hedges.
For all those who posted demands for violent revolution, now there is evidence of the absolute necessity of non-violence, persistence and dignity. It is through the learning process of holding firm to dignity, seeing the least amongst us as our brothers and sisters in the most elemental sense, that the veils of illusion begin to reval themselves.
Abusive systems obscure the extent to which 'cleansing' is employed on a constant basis. One need only pause and contemplate why the creativity and horizontal / cyclical diversity of nature is abhored and ignored by the industrial paradigm. It channels the cyclical as its own severed device. Throughout the history of the industrial revolution, the system has been dependent on the dehumanization, the desacralization of the elgant balances of the creation, the ethnic cleansing of peoples historically on the land. Agraphic encyclopedic wisdom that has functioned for hundreds of thousands of years is scorned by predatory systems. The cleansing is going on right now - land grabs all over the world under the pretext of the existing system being the only viable reality. The charade of the green revolution an appalling system of ethnic cleansing.
Even more to the root is contemplation of the calendar and time-keeping system that is fully removed from the wisdom generating alignment of natural cycles. This is not 'quaint', it is fundamental to wresting the right to voice and knowledge. Try beginning to keep a lunar calendar parallel with the Gregorian calendar - easiest access to aspects for a start is the Farmer's Almanac. Ask why it is that October - oct=8, is the in fact the tenth month. Why are the months named as they are? We are conditioned to utterly ignore the basis on which our time and voices are regulated. As Shakespeare posed: What's in a name? To wit: to know the meaning of a rose, grow them, talk with people who grow them, breathe deep with your nose deep amid its petals.
As someone once said, every indigenous language is an old growth forest of the mind, a manifestation of the exquisite genius of the creation, where the western system is only one thread of choices made, albeit for a time successful. That time and that hegemony have outlived their usefulness and need to now bend radically to the roots that gave rise to the creativity before it was hijacked many centuries ago.
Good post, I agree non violence and rooted in our communities like indigenous people will get the goods, and with more "dignity" tro boot.
fuck dignity
I want a meal , freedom and for my children to live
They aren't mutually incompatible you know, the strikers in Harlan County had tremendous dignity, so do the people sleeping outside in the cold at the Occupies all around the world.
Absolutely good post. Those that call for violent revolution, violence in any manner, obviously have never seen it.
I have seen violence. The violence committed against my brothers and sisters
who die from lack of medical care
who have the highest infant mortality in the west
the violence of deprivation
the violence of exploitation
That is violence.
When people talk about class warfare they aren't using a metaphor.
Excellently stated! That everyday violence is never shown by the Fawning Corporate Media but is just as real and horrific as the headline-grabbing crimes and accidents usually featured.
Keeping people ignorant of the systemic violence meted out by a cruel, inhumane economic/political system is the main function of corporate media.
People such as you, Morticia, stand up to them and pierce through their fog of ignorance. Bravo!
I wasn't speaking of that Morticia, I was speaking of the fool's that call for real violence, real violent revolution, the kind that really leaves people dead in the streets. Not to disagree with the impacts you note, which are real, but only someone who has never seen what real revolution brings, the death and destruction involved with armed factions, could advocate armed violence.
There is a great difference.
Dead is Dead.
By starvation or a bullet, it makes no difference.
The difference in dead is in volume. I didn't dismiss your point, I simply say there is no comparison in numbers.
How many people do you think will die because of the "austerity measures"?
because of cuts in health, food , housing , schooling, jobs
I've read estimates in the tens of thousands. ( i'll get some back up on that number, mmmkay, )
I don't advocate responding to violence with violence but Morticia has an excellent point. Dead is dead. Whether by malnutrition, denial of health care, or stress induced heart failure. Just as dead is dead. Violence is violence. Violence does not always originate at the barrel of a gun or the point of a knife. Put the end does not justify the means and violence in response to violence is still violence. Peaceful non-violent solidarity is the road to an equitable and sustainable future.