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Fighting alienation in the USA
By Robert Jensen
I have lived in the United States all my life, and for personal and political
reasons I expect to live out my life here. It is my home.
But after the US attack on Iraq, I feel more alienated from my homeland
than ever before. Judging from my mail and conversations I have had around
the country, many anti-war activists feel the same.
This is a serious problem, not just personally for individuals but for
the movement. For those of us trying to oppose the US empire, our primary
task is organizing people in the United States to resist these imperial
policies. That will be difficult if we feel increasingly alienated, and
become more isolated, from ordinary Americans.
But that is exactly how I feel alienated and isolated, and I see
no reason to pretend otherwise. Since 9/11, the number of people in my
daily life with whom I can talk honestly has dwindled to a handful. I
have been less interested in attending routine social gatherings outside
of my political circle. I have found myself more frequently communicating
over email with like-minded people in other cities rather than chatting
with colleagues in the hallway. Instead of looking for ways to expand
my social circle, I have let it contract.
None of this is because Im inherently anti-social; its a distinct
change since 9/11. I have not been doing any of these things consciously,
but instead have been drifting away from ways I used to interact with
others because it has become more and more difficult to fit into these
normal situations. I have struggled much of my adult life
with the realization that my values were at odds with most of the people
around me, but after 9/11 those awkward gaps began to feel like unbridgeable
gulfs.
This is not just because of the celebratory reaction to the recent wars
by so many Americans. While it can be difficult to be around people who
crow about how the United States kicked butt in Iraq, in some
ways those interactions are simple; I know how to respond. I have a set
of questions I ask to try to get people with that view to reconsider some
of their assumptions and to consider the effects of this victory
on people in other places. I can make an argument about the real reasons
behind the war. I can point out the lies of the Bush administration. Unless
people start screaming, its surprisingly easy to have that kind
of discussion in many though certainly not all cases.
My real difficulty and the main cause of my increasing sense of
isolation comes in dealing with people who seem detached, who dont
react at all. There are a lot of people around me (I work at a large university)
who seem to be doing their best to avoid the questions of war and empire.
In a small number of cases, this may stem from some fundamental amorality,
truly not caring. But my sense is that many of the people who are trying
to avoid the question have some sort of anti-war leanings they
know theres something wrong with the way the United States has gone
forward in the world since 9/11, and, if not against the wars, they are
at least skeptical. But they seem to be walking through life with eyes
closed, purposefully.
Those are the people I have the most trouble interacting with. When I
raise the issue of war they sometimes attempt to divert the conversation
toward less contentious subjects. More often people are willing to let
me talk but refuse to engage, or sometimes refuse to even acknowledge
what I am saying. There have been times I literally wanted to grab people
and shout, You know these wars are wrong. You know these policies
are crazy. Why wont you help do something about it? Why wont
you at least admit to me that you know?
While I dont want to generalize too broadly from my life, I have
a sense this experience is not idiosyncratic. And it is crucial to come
to terms with, especially at this point in the movement.
Like thousands of others around the country, for the past two years I
have put more time and energy into political work than ever before in
my life. And because I have been spending so much time organizing, writing,
and speaking, I have taken it for granted that I was doing all that I
could do. Because I have been working more than ever on a variety of political
projects, it didnt occur to me until recently to evaluate how my
alienation was affecting the prospects for that political activity.
Sometimes this problem gets reduced to the charge that middle-class activists
simply are elitists who dont know how to interact with real
people. That may be true in some cases, but it strikes me as a gross oversimplification
and a way to avoid difficult questions. The alienation I am talking about
is not so much around class or the politics of lifestyle choices (though
I think those questions are important) but about whether one is willing
to confront the American ideology in public. Some of my most frustrating
experiences have been with other middle-class people. The alienation I
have felt comes from living in a country in which one segment of the population
is drunk on triumphalism and another is hiding from the pressing issues
and there are people from all classes in each of those categories.
In such an environment, anti-war activists need to come together often,
not just for political organizing but for support. We need to engage in
internal discussions to sharpen our analysis and rethink strategy. But
at the same time I think we need to be careful not to withdraw too much
from these other spaces in our lives, even if they feel alien or alienating
to us. Whether or not we are actively organizing in those spaces at the
moment, its important to stay rooted in the larger communities in
which we live. The struggle against the US empire will be a long one,
and we need to be connected to the people we are trying to organize.
I recommend this fully aware that my own instinct is to want to withdraw
into spaces that feel safe. In politics it often is most effective to
follow our gut, but there also are time when its important to overcome
some instincts. I think this is one of those times.
Robert Jensen is an associate professor of journalism at the University
of Texas at Austin
Source: CounterPunch
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