Mar 31, 2012
Environmental activist Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi, the young Tibetan monk who set himself on fire last week, are more alike than might first meet the eye.
DeChristopher, one of the founders of the group Peaceful Uprising, took direct action to disrupt the sale of wilderness to mining companies in a closed Federal auction. He ended up in prison, but he also did a tremendous amount to raise public awareness about the issue of land sales to corporate industry, and inspired the PeaceUp folks to greater activism.
Jamphel Yeshi also took a dramatic personal action at huge cost to himself--he lost not just his liberty, but his life. He and the 30 other monks who have taken this drastic step in the past have succeeded in letting the world know how deeply the Tibetan people are suffering under Chinese repression, and how passionately they yearn for autonomy to practice their religion and preserve their culture.
Dramatic personal action is definitely a good tool to use in raising public awareness about an issue.
The problem with it is that one leader standing alone is an easy target--and if the action is a suicide, that heroic action is always going to be a one-time event.
That the Occupy movement has so far eschewed the single, high-profile leader model is a sign of the solidity of this nascent social movement.
Despite demands from the media and others for a leader to step out of the shadows and announce himself (the leader is always presumed to be male), Occupy has held firm to its founding principle of being a "leaderless movement."
This is true in the way the different "chapters" of Occupy, springing up at will anywhere in the world, are completely autonomous from the Occupy Wall Street folks who initially launched the movement last August; and it is true in the way that any passerby can join a General Assembly and have a chance to speak and influence or inspire the group. It's true in the various Occupy online platforms that give anyone with an internet connection the ability to communicate with the world, and it's true with the Occupy media, which are collective and often anonymous publications of strategies, theories and praxes of resistance.
I feel a tremendous sense of loss and rage that obvious, powerful leaders like Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi are driven by frustration with the system and anger at injustice to commit acts of activist resistance that are either outright suicidal, or land them swiftly behind bars.
This is the approach the Chinese take to anyone seeking to challenge the entrenched status-quo leadership and social structure, and we in the West like to howl about human rights violations every time they throw another idealistic young activist in jail.
But we do the same thing here.
We reward the best and brightest of our young people as long as they play by the rules of the game and never question the wisdom of their elders in setting up those rules.
The Ivy league grads who will go on to become Goldman Sachs executives or corporate CEOs or weapons systems engineers--they are our golden children who can do no wrong.
But those young people who look out at what is and see the waste, the greed, the desecration of the planet, the horrendous danger in which the old game has placed us, as we cross the threshold of the 21stcentury into the new era of global heating, overpopulation, extreme inequality, toxic chemical poisoning, militarization...those young people are considered by the power elites to be annoying, pie-in-the-sky, unreasonable idealists who need to grow up and get a job.
In other words, they need to shut up and join the system.
The reason the Occupy movement is gaining steam is because the system no longer has enough places for all the smart, talented young people we are producing.
We can't all join Goldman Sachs, now can we?
We can't all join Greenpeace either.
When young people can't pay off their student loans and can't find jobs, and their parents can't help them because they themselves can barely keep up with the mortgage payments...these young people are naturally going to be much more open to the possibility that something is quite wrong with the established system.
That's where we are now. That's why suddenly we have not one or two extraordinary young leaders like Tim DeChristopher or Jamphel Yeshi stepping up, but a whole tide of young people who have the time, the talent and the energy to tackle the problems of our American society, and our global human civilization, head on.
One General Assembly at a time, they are creating a new vision of society and a new model of leadership.
It couldn't be more different from the corrupt talking heads they grew up watching on TV.
It is, as Tom Hayden shared with us eloquently this week in The Nation, a return to the SDS and SNCC vision of true participatory democracy in action.
This spring and summer, it's the numbers that will make all the difference. They can't lock up a million idealistic Americans whose only crime was to want to change our country for the better.
Did I say a million? Let's make it 10 million, all across the country, coming out and taking a stand for a new rules to the game of life that are based above all on respect for the planet and her creatures.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, says the Scripture.
No wiser words have ever been spoken. Let's stop the hypocrisy and start practicing what we preach. Let's do it soon, before any more brave young leaders have to martyr themselves on our account, trying so desperately to wake us up.
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Jennifer Browdy De Hernandez
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez teaches comparative literature and gender studies with an activist bent at Bard College at Simon's Rock in Great Barrington, MA and blogs at Transition Times.
Environmental activist Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi, the young Tibetan monk who set himself on fire last week, are more alike than might first meet the eye.
DeChristopher, one of the founders of the group Peaceful Uprising, took direct action to disrupt the sale of wilderness to mining companies in a closed Federal auction. He ended up in prison, but he also did a tremendous amount to raise public awareness about the issue of land sales to corporate industry, and inspired the PeaceUp folks to greater activism.
Jamphel Yeshi also took a dramatic personal action at huge cost to himself--he lost not just his liberty, but his life. He and the 30 other monks who have taken this drastic step in the past have succeeded in letting the world know how deeply the Tibetan people are suffering under Chinese repression, and how passionately they yearn for autonomy to practice their religion and preserve their culture.
Dramatic personal action is definitely a good tool to use in raising public awareness about an issue.
The problem with it is that one leader standing alone is an easy target--and if the action is a suicide, that heroic action is always going to be a one-time event.
That the Occupy movement has so far eschewed the single, high-profile leader model is a sign of the solidity of this nascent social movement.
Despite demands from the media and others for a leader to step out of the shadows and announce himself (the leader is always presumed to be male), Occupy has held firm to its founding principle of being a "leaderless movement."
This is true in the way the different "chapters" of Occupy, springing up at will anywhere in the world, are completely autonomous from the Occupy Wall Street folks who initially launched the movement last August; and it is true in the way that any passerby can join a General Assembly and have a chance to speak and influence or inspire the group. It's true in the various Occupy online platforms that give anyone with an internet connection the ability to communicate with the world, and it's true with the Occupy media, which are collective and often anonymous publications of strategies, theories and praxes of resistance.
I feel a tremendous sense of loss and rage that obvious, powerful leaders like Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi are driven by frustration with the system and anger at injustice to commit acts of activist resistance that are either outright suicidal, or land them swiftly behind bars.
This is the approach the Chinese take to anyone seeking to challenge the entrenched status-quo leadership and social structure, and we in the West like to howl about human rights violations every time they throw another idealistic young activist in jail.
But we do the same thing here.
We reward the best and brightest of our young people as long as they play by the rules of the game and never question the wisdom of their elders in setting up those rules.
The Ivy league grads who will go on to become Goldman Sachs executives or corporate CEOs or weapons systems engineers--they are our golden children who can do no wrong.
But those young people who look out at what is and see the waste, the greed, the desecration of the planet, the horrendous danger in which the old game has placed us, as we cross the threshold of the 21stcentury into the new era of global heating, overpopulation, extreme inequality, toxic chemical poisoning, militarization...those young people are considered by the power elites to be annoying, pie-in-the-sky, unreasonable idealists who need to grow up and get a job.
In other words, they need to shut up and join the system.
The reason the Occupy movement is gaining steam is because the system no longer has enough places for all the smart, talented young people we are producing.
We can't all join Goldman Sachs, now can we?
We can't all join Greenpeace either.
When young people can't pay off their student loans and can't find jobs, and their parents can't help them because they themselves can barely keep up with the mortgage payments...these young people are naturally going to be much more open to the possibility that something is quite wrong with the established system.
That's where we are now. That's why suddenly we have not one or two extraordinary young leaders like Tim DeChristopher or Jamphel Yeshi stepping up, but a whole tide of young people who have the time, the talent and the energy to tackle the problems of our American society, and our global human civilization, head on.
One General Assembly at a time, they are creating a new vision of society and a new model of leadership.
It couldn't be more different from the corrupt talking heads they grew up watching on TV.
It is, as Tom Hayden shared with us eloquently this week in The Nation, a return to the SDS and SNCC vision of true participatory democracy in action.
This spring and summer, it's the numbers that will make all the difference. They can't lock up a million idealistic Americans whose only crime was to want to change our country for the better.
Did I say a million? Let's make it 10 million, all across the country, coming out and taking a stand for a new rules to the game of life that are based above all on respect for the planet and her creatures.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, says the Scripture.
No wiser words have ever been spoken. Let's stop the hypocrisy and start practicing what we preach. Let's do it soon, before any more brave young leaders have to martyr themselves on our account, trying so desperately to wake us up.
Jennifer Browdy De Hernandez
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez teaches comparative literature and gender studies with an activist bent at Bard College at Simon's Rock in Great Barrington, MA and blogs at Transition Times.
Environmental activist Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi, the young Tibetan monk who set himself on fire last week, are more alike than might first meet the eye.
DeChristopher, one of the founders of the group Peaceful Uprising, took direct action to disrupt the sale of wilderness to mining companies in a closed Federal auction. He ended up in prison, but he also did a tremendous amount to raise public awareness about the issue of land sales to corporate industry, and inspired the PeaceUp folks to greater activism.
Jamphel Yeshi also took a dramatic personal action at huge cost to himself--he lost not just his liberty, but his life. He and the 30 other monks who have taken this drastic step in the past have succeeded in letting the world know how deeply the Tibetan people are suffering under Chinese repression, and how passionately they yearn for autonomy to practice their religion and preserve their culture.
Dramatic personal action is definitely a good tool to use in raising public awareness about an issue.
The problem with it is that one leader standing alone is an easy target--and if the action is a suicide, that heroic action is always going to be a one-time event.
That the Occupy movement has so far eschewed the single, high-profile leader model is a sign of the solidity of this nascent social movement.
Despite demands from the media and others for a leader to step out of the shadows and announce himself (the leader is always presumed to be male), Occupy has held firm to its founding principle of being a "leaderless movement."
This is true in the way the different "chapters" of Occupy, springing up at will anywhere in the world, are completely autonomous from the Occupy Wall Street folks who initially launched the movement last August; and it is true in the way that any passerby can join a General Assembly and have a chance to speak and influence or inspire the group. It's true in the various Occupy online platforms that give anyone with an internet connection the ability to communicate with the world, and it's true with the Occupy media, which are collective and often anonymous publications of strategies, theories and praxes of resistance.
I feel a tremendous sense of loss and rage that obvious, powerful leaders like Tim DeChristopher and Jamphel Yeshi are driven by frustration with the system and anger at injustice to commit acts of activist resistance that are either outright suicidal, or land them swiftly behind bars.
This is the approach the Chinese take to anyone seeking to challenge the entrenched status-quo leadership and social structure, and we in the West like to howl about human rights violations every time they throw another idealistic young activist in jail.
But we do the same thing here.
We reward the best and brightest of our young people as long as they play by the rules of the game and never question the wisdom of their elders in setting up those rules.
The Ivy league grads who will go on to become Goldman Sachs executives or corporate CEOs or weapons systems engineers--they are our golden children who can do no wrong.
But those young people who look out at what is and see the waste, the greed, the desecration of the planet, the horrendous danger in which the old game has placed us, as we cross the threshold of the 21stcentury into the new era of global heating, overpopulation, extreme inequality, toxic chemical poisoning, militarization...those young people are considered by the power elites to be annoying, pie-in-the-sky, unreasonable idealists who need to grow up and get a job.
In other words, they need to shut up and join the system.
The reason the Occupy movement is gaining steam is because the system no longer has enough places for all the smart, talented young people we are producing.
We can't all join Goldman Sachs, now can we?
We can't all join Greenpeace either.
When young people can't pay off their student loans and can't find jobs, and their parents can't help them because they themselves can barely keep up with the mortgage payments...these young people are naturally going to be much more open to the possibility that something is quite wrong with the established system.
That's where we are now. That's why suddenly we have not one or two extraordinary young leaders like Tim DeChristopher or Jamphel Yeshi stepping up, but a whole tide of young people who have the time, the talent and the energy to tackle the problems of our American society, and our global human civilization, head on.
One General Assembly at a time, they are creating a new vision of society and a new model of leadership.
It couldn't be more different from the corrupt talking heads they grew up watching on TV.
It is, as Tom Hayden shared with us eloquently this week in The Nation, a return to the SDS and SNCC vision of true participatory democracy in action.
This spring and summer, it's the numbers that will make all the difference. They can't lock up a million idealistic Americans whose only crime was to want to change our country for the better.
Did I say a million? Let's make it 10 million, all across the country, coming out and taking a stand for a new rules to the game of life that are based above all on respect for the planet and her creatures.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, says the Scripture.
No wiser words have ever been spoken. Let's stop the hypocrisy and start practicing what we preach. Let's do it soon, before any more brave young leaders have to martyr themselves on our account, trying so desperately to wake us up.
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