Tuesday, November 2, 2010

It's time to stop waiting for change

It’s a near-certainty that repressive, even malignant, backward-looking forces will once again wield dominant political power and control more of the public purse strings than ever before. That makes the necessity for tangible and highly visible progressive projects even more urgent. Though many of the efforts towards progressive change may seem foolish, even simple-minded or ‘primitive’ and smacking of ‘socialism’, that is no reason to turn your back on them. In this era of corporate domination of nearly every aspect of our lives and culture from finances to entertainment to food, it is more important than ever to engage in real resistive actions. Politics as played today is not merely moribund, it is destructive and counter-productive. By all means, vote, but, unless you are absolutely dedicated to disappointment, giving any of your time and energy and money to the current political process is usually worse than pissing in the wind.

There are other, more effective ways to initiate and promote change. If you like and are comfortable with some of the good things about socializing and politicking, then you should consider getting involved in a Transition Initiative. This movement, now an international one with efforts in countries from Europe to the US to the Orient, is one place to find like-minded people who are committed to working towards a more congenial and equitable future. I applaud their endeavors and their spirit. And I whole-heartedly agree with their goals. But there may not be enough time for the Transitioners to accomplish their agenda. Their goal is ambitious and lofty: TO craft a sane, sensible and just living accommodation to a changed world, in which energy and other resources that we currently assume are abundant and take for granted will be greatly diminished. Who wouldn’t sign on for that? But their methodology for getting there may be too cumbersome and wearying for many. Trying to achieve consensus can take too much time and, as we see all the time, may precipitate watered-down and insufficient responses. TO have any substantial clout, Transition has to begin to embrace dis-sensus (a word coined by the Arch-Druid, John Michael Greer) as heartily as it embraces consensus. And ultimately I think they will.

BUT even more importantly, Transition has to get past the stage of talking and talking and talking. They’ve pulled that off in some of the places in Great Britain, where the movement started. Over there they’ve had successful nut tree planting projects and community gardens and other tangible manifestations of Transition’s goals. There hasn’t been so much of that here in the US. Granted TI is still in its formative stages, and awareness/education is a key component to its growth and success, BUT there has to be, and damn soon, an active cadre of people, clearly identified as being involved with Transition, who are actually making and creating tangible, visible projects. This isn’t the time to knit and fiddle. The wolves are circling our straw house culture. The continuing insistence by many Transition advocate leaders to rely primarily on a consensus-based (i.e., politically accepted and acceptable) EDAP – Energy Descent Action Plans -- to kick-start or initiate actual work on the ground and in the streets is unrealistic. Putting together these plans is certainly rewarding and enlightening. But, despite being infinitely more warm and fuzzy, it’s as ponderous and precarious as relying on conventional/traditional political action. The many houses of Transition need to make more room for tangible action-oriented folks as well as those who are more comfortable with process. No one should expect all, maybe not even most, of these on-and-in-the-ground projects to be ‘successful’, let alone enduring, but there needs to be some touchable, viewable, even smellable evidence of action from the folks in Transition. Otherwise the movement risks suffering from the failures that have so far bedeviled Presiident Obama and his administration.

In a spirit of lively dis-sensus and good faith, go out and build something. Start with your place. Create a food garden; better yet, join with your neighbors to make a neighborhood garden. Then start learning how to cook, if you don’t already have those skills, and share your successes and failures with family and friends. These are not empty, windy, wordy gestures; these are concrete, and, ultimately, highly political actions. They’ll even help restore your faith in your own abilities to accomplish something. DO they involve spending and giving of your body and spirit, your time and labor, even, lord forgive us, your $$$? Yep. Got any ideas of a better investment that will give you a more satisfactory, as well as a very pleasureful, return? I’ll bet you don’t. (Well, maybe making your own brew would stand next to it on the awards stand, but this is easier to pull off.) It may be ‘4th and long’ but go for it.

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