We Shall Not Be Moved:
Police repression, official mendacity and why OWS has already overcome
by Phil Rockstroh
Until recent events proved otherwise, the
hyper-commercialized surface of the corporate state gave the appearance of
being too diffuse--too devoid of a center to pose a threat of totalitarian
excess.
Accordingly, as of late, due to the violent response to OWS protesters
by local police departments in Oakland, Atlanta, Chicago, and in other U.S.
cities, the repressive nature of the faux republic is beginning to be revealed.
Behind the bland face of the
political establishment (purchased by the bloated profits of the plundering
class) are riot cops, outfitted and armed with the accoutrements of oppression,
who are ready and willing to enforce the dictates of the elitist beneficiaries
of the degraded status quo.
In deed and action, as of late, the police state
embedded within neo-liberal economic oligarchy is showing its
hyper-authoritarian proclivities to the world.
In general, existence within
the present societal structure inflicts on the individual a sense of
atomization and its concomitant feelings of alienation, vague unease, free
floating anxiety and anomie. The coercion is implicit and internalized.
Because of its mundane,
ubiquitous nature, the system is reliant on an individual's sense of isolation
(even ignorance of the existence of the structure itself) to remain in place.
In short, the exploitive system continues to exist because its denizens are
bereft of other models of comparison.
The public commons inherent
in the OWS movement provides a model of comparison. Apropos, that is why we are
beginning to receive reports such as the following:
On Tuesday Oct. 25, 2011,
the Oakland Tribune reported that police raided and demolished the local OWS
encampment after declaring the area a "crime scene". This is revelatory
regarding the character of the enforcers of the present order: Those in
positions of power within a police state view freedom of assembly and freedom
of expression as a punishable offense.
It is a given that:
Authoritarian personality types take particular umbrage when citizens are
expressing their displeasure with official abuses of power and begin to do so
in an effective manner.
Too many in the U.S. have
bought the fiction that the nation was, is and will remain a democratic
republic. Therefore, by drawing its brutal operatives and mendacious apologist
into the open, the state will reveal itself in all its ugliness. As a result,
all concerned will be able to observe the true nature of the police/national
security/oligarchic state in place in the U.S.
Ideally, few illusions will
remain intact regarding the ruthless, brutal forces against which we struggle.
Moreover, the actions of the
police in regard to public protest are premeditated tactics aimed at the
suppression of the right to public assembly. The goal of the power brokers,
their political operatives and police enforcers is to render one's (allegedly)
constitutionally guaranteed right to dissent too prohibitive to be practiced.
The economically
dispossessed and members of minority communities have known for many years what
OWSers are suffering, presently, at the hands of official power and its
enforcers.
In turn, individual police
officers are well aware of whom they are sworn to protect (and it isn't those
who desire to exercise their rights to free assembly and free speech). In most
cases, if an individual police officer ever refused an order to make an
unconstitutional arrest, he/she would be committing an act of careercide; their
chance of advancement within the department would have to be scraped off the
sidewalk on the spot and transported to the city morgue.
Are you willing to leave the
confines of your comfort zone and go to jail for justice?
Rarely, does reform arrive
without the arrest of frontline agitators. Power does not yield without a
fight, without attempting to silence dissent by brutality and forced detention.
The powerful demand that those of us who notice their excesses and crimes be
placed out of sight and out of mind.
Hence, in Oakland, the local
corporate news affiliates, to their shame, turned off their cameras when the
violent attacks and mass arrest of protesters began.
Are you willing to risk
injury to body and reputation to bear witness? The survival of the OWS movement
depends on having bodies on the ground and eyes (as well as cameras) on the
thugs in uniform.
True to form, a servile
corporate media will proclaim how unsightly dissenters are, inferring that
sensible folk, simply as a matter of good taste and public propriety should
disregard the protesters' entreaties and that these malcontents and cranks
should be denied entrance into the realm of legitimate discourse, that these
disheveled interlopers be barred by walls of silence.
To be in the world is to be
confronted with walls. How we respond to these barriers is called character and
art.
Many brave souls have
confronted walls such as these.
Often, as I gaze upon the
blue wall of mindless repression surrounding Zuccotti Park and reflect on other
OWS sites nationwide, I am induced to feel the sadness and longing of the
repressed souls of the earth, of those throughout time who have met walls of
blind hatred, of economic exploitation, of institutional repression.
I empathize with all of
those who faced walls of smug indifference, walls of internalized shame and
walls of official lies--those who stood powerless before the stark reality of
seemingly implacable circumstances. I reflect upon the lives and work of itinerate
blues musicians of the U.S. Deep South and the manner they met walls of both
official repression and collective blind, ignorant fear and hatred, and how
they transformed those prison walls into the numinous architecture of The
Blues…How they alchemicalized the barriers into guitar technique.
Musical instruments, like
word meeting meter to a poet, serve as both barrier and salvation; the limits
of the self are tested, explored, and by effort, failure and moments of elation
are transformed by confrontation and union with the instrument, personal
circumstance and audience.
As is the case with those on
the front lines of OWS encampments, millions of people throughout history have
met seemingly implacable barriers in the form of walls of human brutality e.g.,
Jim Crow laws, union busting management goon squads, the Zionist apartheid
wall, various secret police and public bullies--but they weren't going to let
the bastards "turn them 'round!"
If you choose to resist
entrenched power, when confronted by mindless authority, your heart will know
the drill; it will guide you--its natural trajectory is towards freedom. Hence,
you will know what to do when the moment arrives--and will gain the knowledge
that your predecessors discovered in their struggle for justice…that the cry arose
forth from deep in their souls, "We shall not be moved."
The practitioners of the
Delta Blues came upon walls of oppression, walls of raging hatred, and responded
by passing through those walls, to inhabit a landscape more alive, more
resonant, more ensouled than their oppressors will ever know possible. They
occupied their own hearts and draw us still into the immediacy of the world by
their victory over their degraded circumstances by their appropriating the very
barriers that were placed in their path by their oppressors and transforming
the criteria of their oppression into the living architecture of the soul.
Those who know this--have
already won; have already overcome.
Lorca limned the situation
(one extant as well in the enfolding OWS movement)
in his theory of "the
duende". His concept of the duende reveals why people, when faced by the
ossified order of an inhuman system, either become caught up--even
compelled--by the challenge to begin to make the world anew--while others are
seized with mortification, indifference, resignation and hostility.
In which direction does your
soul wend? "The arrival of the duende always presupposes a
transformation on every plane. It produces a feeling of totally unedited
freshness. It bears the quality of a newly created rose, of a miracle that
produces an almost religious enthusiasm." -- from The Havana Lectures,
Federico Garcia Lorca.
When I witness police
harassing, arresting and brutalizing those exercising their rights to free
assembly, I find myself gripped by a surge of rage: The rage rises in me in an
animalistic fury--an urge to fight tooth and nail, to tear at the throats of
these vicious intruders into the territory of authentic social discourse.
As of late, instead of
pushing down the fury rising from within me or acting upon it, I let it
inundate my being. As a result, the coursing rage transforms into a
penetrating, powerful force--enveloping and demarcating the geography of my
convictions, arriving to bring acceptance and to define and defend the contours
of my true self.
Rage can appear as an angel
of self-definition, the protector of one's authentic nature and a source of
personal power: "ain't gonna let nobody turn me around, turn me 'round!"
One's anger is vital to
one's existence; it is a valuable gift; therefore, it should not be
squandered; no need to waste it on fools and idiots.
When rage arrives, invite
him in; his presence will fill the room with alacrity, and his surging vitality
will allow you to push farther and deeper into the unexplored regions of your
soul.
In contrast, the world of
the neoliberal oligarchs, the duopolistic political class and of the cops has
been called into question. They have grown accustomed to having their way, of
having a compliant and complicit peasantry. In this they are not unique; what
they are experiencing is universal: The world we know (or at least believe we
do) and struggle to maintain, from time to time, is apt to reveal an aspect of
itself that seems alien and unmanageable e.g., the growing dissent across the
nation, perhaps too vast and potent to be kettled, penned, tear gassed, cuffed
and detained. The otherness of the world seems too large…has become an army of
aggrieved angels
I once saw a Great Dane on
Second Avenue attempt to engage in canine communion with his fellows. In order
to display his intentions were benign, friendly, he crouched down on the
sidewalk, making his massive frame as small as possible, even placing his large
head on the concrete; doing all he could to produce the artifice of submission,
to even the smallest dog that approached him. In other words, to enlarge his
world he created the illusion of smallness. He did not reduce his essence; he
created the artifice of smallness so he could grow larger than himself by his
union with the otherness of the world.
We are not requesting that cops crouch before us. They just need not
bristle so. To grow in each other's presence, we are required to meet the
other at eye level, even if one has to descend a bit from a habitual position
of power and authority.
Officers, your guns, rubber
bullets, nightsticks, pepper spray--the looming wall of blue intimidation that
you brandish merely creates the illusion of strength. If you truly want to grow
strong, meet us on these sidewalks, sans the display of empty power.
Phil
Rockstroh is a poet, lyricist and philosopher bard living in New York City. He
may be contacted at:
phil@philrockstroh.com.
Visit Phil’s website:
http://philrockstroh.com/
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