It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
The Tenfold Path to Guts, Solidarity and the Defeat of the Corporate Elite
Wednesday 11 May 2011
by: Bruce E. Levine, Truthout
Many Americans know that the United States is not a democracy but a "corporatocracy," in which we are ruled by a partnership of giant corporations, the extremely wealthy elite and corporate-collaborator government officials. However, the truth of such tyranny is not enough to set most of us free to take action. Too many of us have become pacified by corporatocracy-created institutions and culture.
Some activists insist that this political passivity problem is caused by Americans' ignorance due to corporate media propaganda, and others claim that political passivity is caused by the inability to organize due to a lack of money. However, polls show that on the important issues of our day - from senseless wars, to Wall Street bailouts, to corporate tax-dodging, to health insurance rip-offs - the majority of Americans are not ignorant to the reality that they are being screwed. And American history is replete with organizational examples - from the Underground Railroad, to the Great Populist Revolt, to the Flint sit-down strike, to large wildcat strikes a generation ago - of successful rebels who had little money but lots of guts and solidarity.
The elite spend their lives stockpiling money and have the financial clout to bribe, divide and conquer the rest of us. The only way to overcome the power of money is with the power of courage and solidarity. When we regain our guts and solidarity, we can then more wisely select from - and implement - time-honored strategies and tactics that oppressed peoples have long used to defeat the elite. So, how do we regain our guts and solidarity?
1. Create the Cultural and Psychological "Building Blocks" for Democratic Movements
...(see link for summaries)...
2. Confront and Transform ALL Institutions that Have Destroyed Individual Self-Respect and Collective Self-Confidence
...(see link for summaries)...
3. Side Each Day in Every Way With Anti-Authoritarians
...(see link for summaries)...
4. Regain Morale by Thinking More Critically About Our Critical Thinking
...(see link for summaries)...
5. Restore Courage in Young People
...(see link for summaries)...
6. Focus on Democracy Battlefields Where the Corporate Elite Don't Have Such a Large Financial Advantage
...(see link for summaries)...
7. Heal from "Corporatocracy Abuse" and "Battered People's Syndrome" to Gain Strength
...(see link for summaries)...
8. Unite Populists by Rejecting Corporate Media's Political Divisions
...(see link for summaries)...
9. Unite "Comfortable Anti-Authoritarians" and "Afflicted Anti-Authoritarians
...(see link for summaries)...
10. Do Not Let Debate Divide Anti-Authoritarians
...(see link for summaries)...
Originally posted by BanMePlz
Thank you friend for the article. Its coming. The Tiger waits in the high grass for the perfect moment to strike.
Originally posted by pyrodude
Be careful what you wish for my friends.....
10. Do Not Let Debate Divide Anti-Authoritarians
Originally posted by jeremiah8401
reply to post by NoHierarchy
How do you propose we do this anyway? Sit in front of the white house with signs and protest? I mean I'm all for what your saying but how
Originally posted by pyrodude
Be careful what you wish for my friends.....
Originally posted by TerryMcGuire
reply to post by NoHierarchy
10. Do Not Let Debate Divide Anti-Authoritarians
NoHierachy....
These all sound wonderful. Rousing even. So if you want to discuss, I would like to ask one question about point ten as I see this as a large stumbling block on the path to overcoming authoritarians.
Here at ATS our threads are rife with debate which turns quickly into partisan bickering. So the question I would like to begin with is how do we go about organizing ourselves so that we discuss instead of debate? As I see it, without being able to do this the rest of the points in the OP are moot.
Originally posted by TerryMcGuire
reply to post by NoHierarchy
10. Do Not Let Debate Divide Anti-Authoritarians
NoHierachy....
These all sound wonderful. Rousing even. So if you want to discuss, I would like to ask one question about point ten as I see this as a large stumbling block on the path to overcoming authoritarians.
Here at ATS our threads are rife with debate which turns quickly into partisan bickering. So the question I would like to begin with is how do we go about organizing ourselves so that we discuss instead of debate? As I see it, without being able to do this the rest of the points in the OP are moot.
I think that FIRST when we discuss/debate (at least in a face-to-face setting) we MUST collectively become very AWARE and averse to dead-end partisan bickering. In a real, human discussion, two or more people must be willing to partially or completely shed anything they know/believe in favor of better/clearer facts and vise versa. Also, once again, it's important to focus on COMMON GROUND and to also collectively realize that much of that common ground can be called by different names by different people. It must also be collectively stressed that much of this common ground is FAR MORE IMPORTANT than divisive/knee-jerk issues. Just as when doing business, do you focus on small walls/externalities or do you get your sh*t done whether it's perfect or not?
THAT is what solidarity is about. It's about different people coming together UNITED for undeniable common causes. It's about the various tribes fending off the invading conquerors, so to speak. WE MUST UNITE THE TRIBES!
edit on 11-5-2011 by NoHierarchy because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by TerryMcGuire
reply to post by NoHierarchy
10. Do Not Let Debate Divide Anti-Authoritarians
NoHierachy....
These all sound wonderful. Rousing even. So if you want to discuss, I would like to ask one question about point ten as I see this as a large stumbling block on the path to overcoming authoritarians.
Here at ATS our threads are rife with debate which turns quickly into partisan bickering. So the question I would like to begin with is how do we go about organizing ourselves so that we discuss instead of debate? As I see it, without being able to do this the rest of the points in the OP are moot.
However, polls show that on the important issues of our day - from senseless wars, to Wall Street bailouts, to corporate tax-dodging, to health insurance rip-offs -
Originally posted by BanMePlz
reply to post by pyrodude
The only thing I am wishing for is a better world and a better life for all of mankind.
Individualism is the moral stance, political philosophy, ideology, or social outlook that stresses "the moral worth of the individual".[1] Individualists promote the exercise of one's goals and desires and so independence and self-reliance[2] while opposing most external interference upon one's own interests, whether by society, family or any other group or institution.
An individualist enters into society to further his or her own interests, or at least demands the right to serve his or her own interests, without taking the interests of society into consideration (an individualist need not be an egoist). The individualist does not lend credence to any philosophy that requires the sacrifice of the self-interest of the individual for any higher social causes.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau would argue, however, that his concept of "general will" in the "social contract" is not the simple collection of individual wills and precisely furthers the interests of the individual (the constraint of law itself would be beneficial for the individual, as the lack of respect for the law necessarily entails, in Rousseau's eyes, a form of ignorance and submission to one's passions instead of the preferred autonomy of reason).