How we’re feeling

How are you? Fine? Really? I don’t believe it. Nobody’s fine right now.

I wanted to communicate some good news today, but I couldn’t find any. Some things do give me hope for the long term. Short-term, with Trump doing all the harm he can, the world ignoring climate change, and the virus running rampant through the US, I got nothin’.

It’s not my personal situation. I’m way luckier than most Americans: so far, so good. I just get panic attacks several times a week and fight depression every day. But money is no more of a problem than usual and nobody I love is sick. We’re all just having panic attacks and fighting depression.

If a household didn’t depend on my health, I’d have been in the street with Black Lives Matter for a month. There is joy and uplift in a crowd like that, gathered for a righteous purpose and determined to be peaceful in spite of the worst police can do. There is community, creativity, relief in taking action together. I’m very grateful to all those who do show up, and a little envious. I miss that feeling.

I miss a lot of things, a lot of people. I’ve been missing peace of mind since the 2016 presidential election. None of my friends has slept well since then. Now it’s hard to escape the feeling of nightmare while we’re wide awake.

So how do we get back to feeling okay? Counting blessings helps; so does counting breaths, and slowing them down when we’re anxious. Communicating with people we love. Being in nature, which remains beautiful. Making things, whether it’s music or masks or gardens.

What helps me most is remembering that the real problem is not individual people but the culture we have created. And culture changes all the time. We each change it, with every word and act, everything we buy or avoid buying, our tones of voice and our body language, even what we click and like on social media.

What becomes of humanity is up to humans. We can move toward destruction, or we can move toward sustainability and loving-kindness. We know what we must do. I believe we might yet even do it.

Victories large and small

On June 19, 1865, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation, slaves in Texas were finally freed. Juneteenth, the anniversary of that event, gives America a formal moment to recognize all the emancipation that still hasn’t happened, a century and a half later. Millions across the world remind us that black Americans are not free from fear of police, not free of public or private racism, not free to start a business or buy a home or even vote the way white Americans are.

Earth is in our hands

Humanity has barely begun to meet our many pressing challenges: racism, pandemics, overpopulation, poverty, tyranny, pollution, war, nuclear proliferation, climate change. We must not be discouraged. Centuries of struggle against cruelty, self-interest, and short-sightedness might be starting to turn the tide. Recent events prove the following principles:

Protests work. They changed the culture in the 1960s, and they are changing the culture now. A strong majority of the American public finally acknowledges that racism is a terrible and enduring problem. Police who killed unarmed black people are facing murder charges. Racist symbols from statues to cereals are going down. Many cities and states seem ready to move funds from police departments to mental health services, education, and housing. So far, these are small victories, but they have momentum.

Sustained pressure works. Years of public education and lobbying have even reached the Supreme Court. Two very conservative judges voted with the majority to give LGBTQ people the right to be free of workplace discrimination, and to stop Trump’s effort to deport the young “Dreamers” protected by DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals). These are both major victories. They reward many years of committed activism.

Science works. Scientists told us this would happen: in states and countries where almost everyone wears a mask outside the home, COVID-19 infection rates are falling steeply. Where people refuse to take this elementary precaution, the virus is spreading by leaps and bounds. Science also gives us new ways of getting energy without burning fossil fuels, and tells us what will happen if we don’t use them. Science allows women to control reproduction; politics too often won’t let them, leaving many women in desperate situations. The moral here is, when politicians and scientists disagree, listen to science.

Voting works. Protests and science can only do so much. In the end, we get what we vote for. If all the people who believe in one person, one vote, had actually voted, we’d have gotten rid of the Electoral College by now. The Senate would be representative instead of giving lopsided power to the old slave states regardless of population. If more of us voted, we’d have gotten Gore instead of George W, Clinton instead of Trump. Trump detained 70,000 immigrant children last year, and since then has destroyed our economy, done his best to ruin the environment, and cost hundreds of thousands of American lives. This November, we have a chance to vote that evil, lying, cynical schmuck out of office. That would be the biggest victory in a long, long time.

The uses of despair

I wouldn’t trust anyone who has not despaired. How is it possible to look at the world we have made and still believe humanity can, or should, survive? If you have never felt hopeless, as they say, you haven’t been paying enough attention.

That despair is where our true hope begins. Being human means learning and changing, every day. When we face what our civilization has done to our beautiful world, what terrible things people have done to other people, and how little our governments have done to stop all this harm, that knowledge changes us. We can give up and withdraw to our own lives and pleasures. Or we can turn sorrow into outrage, and fight.

The situation is dire. Consumer culture is based on the assumption that earth’s resources are infinite, and we can keep mining them forever to make more stuff. Now that we know this assumption is wrong, and that our greed has poisoned the earth, the air, and the water to a degree that threatens human survival, what can we do about it?

The key to our survival is non-violent revolution. Revolution is change. Violence is only more of the same damn thing. Real revolution is what we see in the Black Lives Matter movement in streets around the world: the peaceful insistence that human life means more than money or power. This belief can change everything.

In the USA, we face almost seven more months of Trump in the best of circumstances. He will do as much harm as he can in that time. COVID-19 will kill hundreds of thousands because of his carelessness, depriving us of the wisdom of our elders when we need it more than ever. He will continue to whip up hatred and fear. He will destroy the environment to make his rich friends richer. So we must continue to fight, until the election and then far beyond it.

Despair stops being useful when it makes us stop trying. Take a break. Listen to music. Walk by a river. Talk with a friend. Then get back to work, because, my friends, we have an awful lot of work to do. We have to reboot human civilization. We’ve based it on selfishness. Now we need to base it on caring. The turn begins in each of our troubled, doubting, loving hearts.

Asleep at the Wheel

BLM 2014

I’ve been going to protests for 50 years. I’ve protested racism, sexism, homophobia, book burning, environmental devastation, income inequality, US treatment of immigrants and refugees, and three wars. I’ve marched with Black Lives Matter since 2014. Not since the late 1960s have I felt as much hope for real, lasting change as I do now.

BLM 2017

The more brutally the police respond to protests against police brutality toward black people, the more they show the world the protesters are right. Racism is everywhere. The US was built on slavery and genocide. White people continue to reap the benefits of all that unpaid labor and stolen land. People of color continue to suffer without any compensation for their terrible losses.

Climate Change March NYC 2014

Black people led the way in the 1960s as they are leading now. The civil rights movement showed America how you make real change. You hit the streets with as many people as you can, raise your voices together, resist violence, and don’t stop until you get what you need. Not just civil rights laws but the anti-Vietnam War, women’s liberation, gay rights, and environmental movements were the result.

ACT UP in NYC 1987

For a few years, it seemed that America was waking up. Laws were passed. Attitudes shifted. Then Reagan came along in 1980, and progress stopped. AIDS activists, their horror and rage burning brightly in a dark time, eventually forced America to take another few steps forward on gender issues. Regarding poverty, war, racism, and the environment, Reagan pushed us backward. Since then: no progress to speak of.

For the past 40 years, almost half of the US population has behaved as though our federal government is not our concern. This is supposed to be a democracy; the people are supposed to be driving this car. Instead, we’ve been asleep at the wheel. If we don’t take control, rich white men do all the steering. The pandemic demonstrates that they don’t know where the hell they’re going, except toward human extinction. The people in the streets today are struggling to steer us in a different direction. The odds are long as always. But maybe this time, America will wake up — and STAY woke.

Signs of Hope

Police use tear gas on DC protesters

We have many reasons to despair. Trump threatens to turn the US military against our own people. He urges state governors to “dominate” the protests, encouraging police to use tear gas and rubber bullets on angry crowds instead of trying to calm them down. COVID-19 is still roaring through the country, with the black death rate twice that of whites. Now one-quarter of workers are out of a job, and desperation is surging in all communities but the richest. And police murders of unarmed black people continue, without meaningful consequence. The US has done nothing in decades to fight structural racism.

Louisville KY protester urges nonviolence

Reasons to hope are not so easy to see, but important to recognize. Unlike the protests in the ’60s, crowds are diverse in age, gender, and color. Unlike the police of that era, some — not enough, but some — police understand and support the protests. At the bottom of this piece, you’ll find heartening examples.

On point in DC

It is perfectly clear what changes this country has to make. We have to toss all the Republicans out of office, not just Trump. Almost without exception, they ignore the terrible harm he does in return for low tax rates for the rich. Once they’re gone, we must take money out of the biggest military budget on earth and put it into public education, affordable housing, health care for all, and fighting climate change. We can never heal all the damage done by slavery and the centuries of racism that followed. But we can make it easier for black communities to build housing, businesses, and healthy environments. We can legislate deep changes in the ways police interact with black people, through hiring, training, practices, and communication with the people they’re supposed to serve and protect.

We can end bail. We can end mass incarceration. We can release nonviolent offenders. We can build services to help former prisoners return to their lives. And we can fund reparations. Capitalism only works if you have capital. Never in the history of black people in America have they had the kind of access to capital white people have. We can change that, if we will.

The protests are making many more people aware that racism is at least as active, widespread, and deadly as the corona virus. The protesters are telling us that we must fight racism the way we fought the Nazis in World War II: with all our resources, all our people, and all our hearts.

Are you too good to vote Democratic?

The only way we can stop Trump is to vote him out in November. It’s horrible that the Wall Street Democrats picked Joe Biden, by far the worst of the 29 Democratic candidates. He’s definitely gropey, possibly rapey, and beyond a doubt incoherent, mentally failing, and unpersuasive. Do we really have to vote for this guy if he’s the nominee?

Yes, sadly, we do. The alternatives are to vote for a third-party candidate, or refuse to vote. Either alternative will bring us a second term of Trump. If you think the US or humanity could survive that, you have not been paying attention for at least 3-1/2 years.

A little recent historical background. In 2000, the race was between Al Gore, an early climate change visionary, and clueless George W. Bush, who brought on the Great Recession of 2008. Gore won 48.38% of the popular vote. W won 47.87%. Ralph Nader, running on the Green Party ticket, won 2.74%, votes that might have tipped the race to Gore. Eventually Gore lost the Electoral College vote 271/266, because the Supreme Court majority of judges appointed by W’s daddy stopped the vote recount in Florida.

If Gore had been president instead of W, we’d be far better equipped to deal with catastrophic climate change. Taxes would be easier on working people and harder on the rich. The US might have responded to 9/11 with global police action instead of two unprovoked and unfunded wars. We also might have avoided the vast “Homeland Security” surveillance apparatus that has focused on peaceable American Muslims and ignored the real threat, White Supremacists.

In 2016, again, third-party voters might have tipped the race. Hillary Clinton got 48% of the popular vote. Trump got 46%. Libertarian Gary Johnson got 3% and Green Party Jill Stein got 1%. Johnson and Stein knew quite well what a disaster Trump would be. The only reason they kept running was ego. Their supporters thought they were avoiding moral compromise by voting third party. We all paid a heavy price for their purity.

Trump creeps up on Hillary

Let’s call bullshit on non-voting as well as third parties. 40% of eligible voters do not cast a ballot. Most of these non-voters lean Democratic. They think their vote won’t make a difference; or they think both parties are too corrupt to support; or they’re too busy or tired or distracted to bother. As a group, non-voters are younger, poorer, and less white than voters. The people who don’t vote are exactly the ones who could use the most help from the federal government: affordable health care, housing, and education.

AOC and sq

The Blue Wave in 2018 pushed progressives into the heart of the Democratic party. (Thanks again, black women!) This year, we can begin real change in the right direction. But not if we vote third party and not if we fail to vote. Don’t let them divide us. Stand together. Vote Blue.

What heals us

It’s been a warm winter here, followed by a cold spring. We’ve felt terrible fear, followed by great danger for some, boredom for others, loneliness for most. Yet trees are flowering and birds are nesting. We will emerge from this nightmare with fresh appreciation for many things we used to take for granted.

There is balm for the spirit, no matter what you believe. Music and art, virtual hugs, rivers and oceans, lizards in the desert and rabbits in the garden. There is a new sense of respect for the people we all depend on. Everyone now understands how much we need front-line workers, not just to nurse us when we’re sick but to keep the lights on, water flowing from the taps, grocery shelves stocked, garbage picked up, and the rest of civilization going during this emergency.

No matter what should change in our educational systems, parents, teachers, and children will be thrilled when schools reopen. When we can once again enjoy our national parks and forests, maybe people will rally to stop Trump from selling them off.

And when Americans get a chance to vote this November, maybe we will use our ballots to throw Trump and his evil cabal out of power, so this nation, and the world, can begin to heal.

Another brilliant Trump idea

Joe Will Do

Belief in Trump can be fatal.

Believing in Trump can be fatal. His supporters are now defending their right to go back to work and bring home the virus. They are still falling for the con. Even his suggestion that they inject themselves with bleach has not made them hesitate. Their death rate will be tragic. Anybody who watches “Fail Army” knows you can survive being stupid, but Trump is reaching levels of stupid never seen before. He might survive because he’s got all the advantages that come with being rich and powerful, but few of his followers have any such protections.

Trump will soon be killing officers in training. He plans to speak at the West Point graduation in June, calling back a thousand cadets who have already been sent home. Trump wants the ceremony to look “nice and tight” without social distancing, because, as we know, it’s all about his crowds.

Health workers need more masks. Trump is stockpiling masks, and no one knows who is getting them.

On top of being a murderer and liar, Trump is a thief. Under his direction, FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) has confiscated hospital supplies from at least seven states. He has stolen a million face masks from South Florida firefighters; testing supplies from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska; and masks from Massachusetts and Texas. The Trump administration is not telling anyone where this federal stockpile is going or how it will be used.

Trump blaming someone else

But we know Trump will take these life-saving materials hostage until governors praise him enough to get some.

We tried to impeach this shameless piece of scum, but Mitch McConnell wouldn’t let witnesses testify. So we’re stuck with him until January. He will go on lying and stealing and killing and ruining the environment and betraying his country until then. That’s why we need to vote for Joe Biden, even in his advanced state of mental decay. If the Dems decide to run an actual real live donkey instead, we need to vote for the donkey.

Trump is a deadly disease. He might be fatal for democracy. The only cure is to vote a Democrat into every single open office in November.  Yes, yes, we know most establishment Dems support Wall Street over Main Street, and few of them stand for real progressive change. But we, the people, need a place to start America’s rehab. And in spite of all his disadvantages, Joe will do.

When Children Ask

Recently an eight-year-old asked me, Is this the Apocalypse? I answered from six feet away, through my mask, Probably not. This self-isolation won’t last forever. It will just feel that way. Besides, I said, Apocalypse means the end of the world as we know it. Maybe when the old world ends, a new world begins.

This child is indignant because people seem to have forgotten about climate change right now. That’s what concerns her most: the oceans rising, species disappearing. I tell her, People knew we had to stop using fossil fuels so we can slow down climate change, but we didn’t know how. Then the virus came along and made us stop driving and flying so much. We found out we could do it. That’s a good start.

I wanted to reassure her with a hug, not with words. Around the world, people are feeling a kind of phantom pain from not being able to hug our loved ones when we all need those hugs so badly. We’re writing, we’re calling, we’re Zooming, sending virtual hugs and kisses until the real things are possible again. This is a feature of the new world. The child is already comfortable with it.

When it’s safer, a month or two or however many down the road, I am going to hug this child so hard her bones will creak. Now we know how much it really means to be able to touch the people we love. We’ll bring that feature of the old one with us into our new world.

Butterflies Take New York

(Report from better days: September 21, 2014) The news media say 310,000 people filled the streets of New York City today, demanding action on climate change. Not all of them were human. There were birds, fish, mermaids, sunflowers, trees, and more than one Mother Earth and Mr. Death. Some species who couldn’t make it in person, like tapirs, sent human ambassadors.

The people who did look human looked like all sorts of human. Indigenous people led the march, wearing gorgeous regalia, drumming and dancing. Great numbers came in from “frontline communities” like Indonesia and poor parishes in New Orleans, the communities least responsible for climate change yet most affected by floods, droughts, and hurricanes. Young people came to fight for their futures. Old people came to fight for their grandchildren.

Some of us have been waiting 45 years to see what we saw in New York: activists for social justice, peace, and the environment joining forces. Out of countless splinter groups, the Movement has finally pulled itself back together. And not a moment too soon.

Fox “news” and Koch-funded “think tanks” might still deny the existence of catastrophic and exponentially accelerating climate change, or the fact that humans have caused it. But nearly all scientists and a growing majority of ordinary people understand what’s going on. It scares us so badly that our instinct for survival is kicking in. We are not threatened only as nations or ethnic groups. We are in danger as a species. For the first time in our history, we must identify ourselves most strongly as humans – a species as vulnerable to extinction as whales and butterflies – if we’re going to overcome our own deadly mistakes.

The Vermont collective Bread and Puppets performed some vivid street theater to get this point across. First came dozens of people dressed as caribou, with branches for antlers. Behind them loomed a huge Tar Sands puppet, with black wings appropriately made of garbage-bag plastic. Behind that puppet came Death.

Whenever the march stopped, the troupe blew horns to signal the advance of Tar Sands. The caribou fell cowering to the street. Death seemed triumphant; its minions danced on stilts. Then the horns blew once more, and from nowhere came the Butterflies Against Climate Change: hurrah! They flew through the crowd, revived the caribou, and defeated the forces of destruction.

So okay, butterflies aren’t going to save us. But think of them as representing creativity, the winged aspect of the human spirit, and this fable makes sense. The more we know, the more frightened we get. Our culture is so deeply rooted in greed, violence, and exploitation; so much needs to change. Our leaders get their power from the way things are, which doesn’t motivate them to change it. It’s hard not to despair.

That’s why this march was so necessary. We desperately need to believe that there is enough creativity, enough spiritual power, enough wisdom and skill in the great mass of “ordinary” people, to save humanity from the mess we have made.

On the last day of summer, hundreds of thousands of people demonstrated these qualities in New York City. Native New Yorkers – not known for their belief in unicorns – smiled and waved and flashed peace signs, hung banners from their balconies, and joined the mermaids and the sunflowers in the street.

So get in touch with your inner butterfly, and stay tuned. The struggle of our lifetimes is just beginning.

Story-Boarding

Sometimes imagination is not so much fun. As part of my new anti-terror routine, I’m trying to notice when my own thoughts make my heart race and my mood drop. It’s kind of amazing how much fantasy my stupid imagination can come up with, and how quickly. Of course, these days, it’s always a Stephen King-type fantasy. I guess evolution prods us to imagine the worst. Not helpful in the current situation though.

I think of this tendency as story-boarding, what you do when you’re writing a movie: no dialogue, just images and general plot. The plot is always X (myself or loved one) gets sick or dies, unless it’s X, Y, and Z getting sick and dying. Such vivid scenes! So much emotional response, in the space of a few breaths! At times like this I totally hate having an imagination. These are movies I don’t want to watch.

We’re all missing friends and family, we’re all scared of this huge change in our lives. Story-boarding can make a difficult situation much worse. I’m learning to put the brakes on as soon as I realize I’m scaring myself. When I manage to be fully conscious of them, these ugly fantasies evaporate.

Evolution, schmevolution. If I need to be scared to survive, I can always watch the news.

An Atheist’s Prayer

God of Cosmos, we who are less than intestinal flora

            in a flea on the arm of a Superbowl fan who is

                        leaving the Big Game forever

salute you; we whom the merest

            breath of the idea of the largeness and smallness

                        and intricacy of things

                                    stuns, like rabbits in a headlight,

beseech you, in the name of all creatures drunk with

            the beauty of their nearest fraction,

to be: that in the minute, crawling, massive, whirling,

            spacious, flashing whole

                        which is beyond our reach forever

Something exults.

Legal Action

Polar bears are demanding restitution.
We melted their ice. They are homeless
and hungry. When they invade,
we shoot them. It’s time for us to pay,
they say.

The bees are demanding restitution.
We’ve poisoned them. They can’t pollinate if they die.
For the bees, we would pay
with our lives.

Frogs demand we replace their marshes.
They have filed a class action suit.
If we don’t pay up, they’ll unleash the bugs.
Then our best points
will be moot.

Women have filed an amicus brief
with the animals, to remind the Court
that their cause is ours, in the long run.
We can make this work for everybody
or we’re done.

Kings for a Day

To be king, who wouldn’t want that for a day?
To give presents, throw parties,
do favors for your friends?
My father’s house has many mansions.
Mi casa es su casa.
Buy the house another round.
Settle all debts, release those wrongly imprisoned,
make peace, distribute the harvest,
cause dancing in the streets?

We just need to be king for a day.

Getting everyone fed and in shelter
will take accountants and lawyers
on the actual day we’re king.
Much of the world will simply go on.
New management, new projects,
new regulations. Nothing new there.

Wouldn’t you like to be part of a revolution
where they’re having more fun than anyone
and no one gets hurt?
Not a break but a change,
a turn toward loving.
The Warm Shift.

Be king in your heart.
Be queen. Get ready for the day.

People of Peace

Now is the time for people of good will
to join together to save all life.
Now is the time to act as brothers and sisters,
to be one people.
Now is the time to make peace.
Now is the time to join up,
all of us together,
one thing, the life force of our species,
nothing but human.
We’re in a tight spot.
Facing the danger means we’ll have to change.
We don’t like change. We like our habits,
all that’s familiar and comfortable.
We won’t move if we don’t have to.
But now we have to.
So we’re going to move.
It took all the skill and energy our ancestors had
to survive hard times, to get us here.
Was all their work in vain?
Whatever they had to do to keep their children safe, they did.
So will we do now.
We are all strangers in this strange land
unless we are all family.
See one another,
love one another,
O people of peace.

Almost Exactly the Same

People are all almost exactly the same. I say almost because, even though we are 99.9% alike, that one-tenth of one percent difference is very important to us. That’s how we tell one another apart. Since we’re social animals, we depend on knowing exactly who another person is, even though she is almost exactly the same as we are. So we make a big deal out of that one-tenth of one percent difference.

Race, gender, class: these things help us tell one from another, along with details like body shape and facial features. But the differences are tiny. If you’ve ever seen a montage of many diverse faces, you have seen what Human looks like. In the same way, if you read the literature of any language or time, you know what Human behaves like. We are fascinated by our tiny differences; we obsess about them. But they remain tiny.

If you doubt how much we are the same, remember what it’s like to see a movie in a theater. You laugh and gasp in the same places as everyone else there. You like the same characters and have no trouble identifying the bad guys. Also consider the fact that a good actor can play almost any role and make us believe it. How is that possible, unless we each contain in ourselves the whole range of human behavior?

There are other ways to tell how small our differences are. We think race, gender, and class are very important, and in some ways of course they are. Yet when you know someone’s race, gender, and class, you still know almost nothing about them that really matters. You don’t know if they’re kind, for example. You don’t know if they’re funny.

We will always be fascinated by the details of how each of us is unique and different from all the rest. We will always be interested in the soap opera of our secret, special, individual lives. But there come times when we have to look up from these details. We have to look at our civilization as a whole. We have to look not at personal behavior but at the behavior of our society.

When civilization has behaved so badly that we have begun to threaten our own survival, it’s time to think about what we can do differently.

Because each of us can be anybody. Each of us is capable, under the right circumstances, of every kind of human behavior. We contain in our own secret selves the complete spectrum of human behaviors. Which of the many possible behaviors we enact in our own lives is decided by our imagination of ourselves and of our circumstances.

Our imagination is tremendously powerful, though we often discount it, and even refuse to believe it affects anything. In our urban world where everything except the sky is a product of people’s imagination, maybe the power of imagination is so obvious that we take it for granted and so fail to see it. Yet imagination is the key to our future. How can we imagine ourselves saving the world?

Instead of thinking about how to change individuals, we should think about how to change culture so as to encourage the creation of healthy, sane, loving, humorous, careful human beings; how to change people’s environments so as to encourage healthy habits; how to create the people humanity needs to become.

How to make it easier to be creative, and not kill imagination first thing in school. How to make it easier to raise a family, to learn new things, to grow old. Movies, tv, video games: what do we need to teach, show, tell one another? What message are we broadcasting? What will it do to the people it reaches?

False optimism is not going to work. We can’t slap a happy face on things: life is too awful for too many. We can’t keep distracting ourselves from what we can see happening more and more clearly: the poisoning of the planet, the whirlwind we have reaped through our bad behavior. The longer we ignore the consequences of our greed, the harder they will be to make right.

If the species is going to survive, it’s time to get serious about it, and figure out how to save ourselves from this mess we have created. We have to look at exactly what our culture is: what we glorify, what we despise, whom we imitate, what values we adopt. This is crisis time. We need to pull an intervention on ourselves.

Anyone who has spent time with babies knows how smart we are and how much we can learn. Our bodies stop growing but our minds never stop. We can learn new ways of doing everything. That’s culture; we do it all the time. Every day we sing a new song.

Until recently, most of us have appeared to be frozen. We’re so used to watching life instead of living it, we’ve become passive. We have forgotten that everything around us has been formed from the action of human imagination upon the materials of the earth. We, ordinary humans, have invented it all. Our power is tremendous when we agree on something to do.

Some events in recent years indicate that we might be waking up to the crisis, and responding appropriately. Our most powerful moments have been singular and quite spontaneous. The Arab Spring, undermined by the usual gangs of thugs though it was; the Occupy movement; the Women’s March; the appearance at U.S. airports of tens of thousands of people to support Muslims when Trump announced his travel ban; these are symptoms of a vital resilience, a resistance to the forces of death.

If we can ever convene the species and discuss the situation with everyone at the table, it is entirely possible that we can agree on our mission and our direction. We will understand one another. Because in spite of our splendidly elaborated cultures, our fascinating personal uniqueness, our endless variety of experience, we are all, finally, almost exactly the same.

Love is Revolution

Love is not dead, not defeated, not damaged, not out of reach. Love has not been bought, sold, or stolen. Love is not a wholly-owned subsidiary of any corporation. The kingdom of loving is within you. Love is not something you fall into. Love is something you make and keep on making. Love is an act of will. Love is a way of life. Love is the opposite of greed. Love is not blind; lust is blind. Love sees truly. Love is the only path to our survival. Love is revolution.

Revolution cannot be violent. Revolution is change. Violence is just more of the same damn thing. There is no use fighting to save the world with violence. The rulers of this world have more weapons and fewer scruples than anyone else. Violence is their game. We cannot win that game. We must stop playing it. To survive, we must play a new game. We have been convinced that we are powerless. That is a lie. Our strength exists in one another. Love is real change. Love is revolution.

The world is changing. Learn to travel light. When catastrophe strikes, none of your stuff will help you. The things you own will mean nothing any more. The people you know will mean everything. Be ready for the change. Pay attention to your friends and your community. Help where you can. We will survive by taking care of one another. You have been told that you have no power; but you have the power to do right by other people. Selfishness is suicide. Love is revolution.

When the old world ends, the new world begins. In the old world, money was power. In the new world, spirit is power. You choose to make the world better or worse with every act. This is your power. Race, nationality, class, gender, physical appearance – these matter in the old world, not in the new. The most important things in the new world are the quality of your awareness and the strength of your relationships. The old world ran on greed. The new world runs on human connection. Love is revolution.

The Sleeping Giant Awakes

It’s rare that we get an archetype as pure as Trump. He’s the apotheosis of greed, its avatar. The brutality, the swagger, the cold-heartedness, the deliberate and constant lying, all to feed his enormous ego: he’s the logical conclusion of basing a culture on the worship of wealth.

How clear does it have to get? Everything about him is so over the top, we hang on to every sliver of breaking news in horrified fascination. This is the worst of America. This is capitalism gone rancid.

Trump is a bully. His answer to everything is to threaten. He’s a spoiled brat who has always cheated to get what he wants, and has never suffered the consequences. He believes that other people are stupid, and his people keep proving him right.

And yet the man has done us a favor. He has shocked us awake.

Democracy is the sleeping giant in America. Theoretically, the government belongs to the people it serves. Theoretically, we can elect representatives to safeguard our interests instead of just shunting more of our wealth to the rich. But 40% of us don’t vote.

Non-voters are largely working class, the very class that has increased productivity and yet lost ground economically ever since the Reagan era. These people have come to believe that all politicians are alike, both parties are owned by large corporations, and their own votes would change nothing. There is just enough truth in these beliefs to make them self-reinforcing. If you don’t believe change is possible, you don’t try to change anything.

In spite of the complete disorganization of the Left, once Trump was elected, women, people of color, immigrants, students, teachers and their friends began to fill our streets in protest. COVID-19 put a stop to street demonstrations. But resistance to Trump’s oligarchy continues online, in ways quite separate from politics as usual. The Democratic party is not organizing protest. Nobody is. It’s happening anyway.

Unfettered greed in the form of anything-goes capitalism has not only ruined millions of lives but is quickly making the earth uninhabitable. When we recognize the crisis, we shake off passivity and begin to fight.

Trump is what happens when Americans abdicate our responsibility. We have been asleep at the wheel. We have to take back control of our country, grab that wheel and change direction. If we don’t stop the greed-heads from running our country, they will run it right over the cliff.

Trump is a symbol of everything this country has done wrong. Democracy is the hope that we can make things right.

Tomorrow

We’re not flying? Good.
We’re working from home? Good.
Soon money will run low and we’ll stop shopping. Good. As long as we can get enough to eat.

There are so many not-good, very bad, seriously horrible things about this pandemic. And not much of an up-side; but it does exist, and maybe it helps a little to think about that.

We’re depending on neighbors.
We’re helping the sick. We’re sacrificing to protect others. We understand that people matter more than anything. Good.

We’re staying home, keeping physical distance, trying to save lives. We’re letting nonviolent offenders out of prison. The unsustainable economy of limitless growth is stalling. Good. Limitless growth is not health; it’s cancer.

We might even stop over-fishing and let the ocean repopulate.

We’re using less fossil fuels. Pollution is dropping. We knew we had to reduce our carbon footprint to be able to moderate and survive climate change. We did not imagine this would be the way to achieve it. Maybe, though, knowing it was necessary might have prepared us to take the steps we have recently taken to moderate and survive COVID-19.

We will need to rebuild when the worse of this crisis is over. With luck and sufficient global consciousness, we will build a greener, more equitable, kinder world.

Now is the time to rethink everything.

I believe in creativity.

I believe in the human imagination.

I believe in working together. I believe we’re in crisis and we need to save ourselves. I believe we have to save ourselves together.

I believe I mess up all the time and so do you. I believe we’re not so different. I believe if we took the time we would understand each other. I believe we never completely understand ourselves.

I believe we’re in too much of a hurry. I believe the situation is urgent and we must act. If we stop doing some things, I believe that is doing something.

I believe that what each of us does is very important. I believe it is more important to be good to other people than to be beautiful or rich or famous. I believe in loving-kindness.

I believe we are just learning to become human. We’re like bees just figuring out how to build a hive.

I believe in the beauty of all that is, the far-flung stars and all the life that ever was or will be.

I hope we can figure out how to be human in time to survive.

I believe we already know what we have to do. I believe we are doing it.