PERU SUSPENDS CIVIL LIBERTIES AS 65 INDIGENOUS TRIBES STRUGGLE FOR THEIR LAND
Aug 20th, 2008 by admin

According to the Peruvian Times, President Alan Garcia has declared a 30-day state of emergency and suspended civil liberties for citizens in three Amazonian provinces and one department after negotiations between Environment Minister Antonio Brack and protesting indigenous rights groups broke down last Friday and a violent confrontation left eight police officers and one protester injured on Sunday.
Last spring the U.S. and Peru signed a Free Trade Agreement . The Peruvian government hoped the agreement would result in jobs and opportunities for Peruvian citizens that might begin to alleviate poverty in the cities, and the deal was certainly a win for US businesses because it eliminates duties on 80 percent of US industrial and consumer product exports.


“Our Lands, Our Life”
But the deal is not a win for indigenous and rural people in Peru because their lands are in greater jeopardy now than ever before. As part of the deal, Peru’s President Alan Garcia passed a law earlier this year overturning previous laws that required a two-thirds vote from the community before the government could develop, purchase or lease communal lands. Now only 50 percent approval is required, a simple majority. Indigenous rights groups fear individuals will be more easily coerced, manipulated, paid off in various ways to get them to vote for approval, with the result that international mining and energy companies will quickly buy up indigenous lands. In response to this agreement and these laws, sixty-three indigenous groups in 11 regions have joined forces, laying aside their differences to fight together for their territory, bilingual education, intercultural health, human development, agrarian production and the defense of intellectual property. The protests have involved some 500-700 people who have surrounded two energy installations: an oil pipeline in northern Peru and a lot in a natural gas field in southern Peru that belongs to an Argentine oil company.
The blog La Pagina de Milanta published these statements of a local Aguarauna leader:
What damages does the oil company cause? Deforestation is one. If they drill, where will they toss the waste? How will they remove the oil from there? They are going to affect rivers and forests. The social impact will be huge. They want to work 77 years in the area, seven years of exploration, 30 (years) of petroleum exploitation and 40 for gas. It is an entire generation of inhabitants.
What does the population think? The forest will not be handed over even if the government said so … The oil companies have always caused large damages to nature and human beings. The indigenous do not separate themselves from the nature. We are linked to each other. The government is in its palace; we, in our jungle. We think differently. If we hand over the jungle, where will we live? We will be beggars in our own land. (Translated from Spanish in this fine article from Global Voices.)
De La Selva Su Web posting on the protests by the indigenous groups wrote:
It is unjust how the government and foreign companies have poisoned their forests and their rivers. It is unjust that the lumber and rubber industry have stripped their trees. It is unjust how we waste the money that is for their health and education. It is unjust to make their cultures disappear. It is unjust to continue to exclude them from basic services, which all citizens of the country should be able to access. ((Translated from Spanish in this fine article from Global Voices.)
It’s All Connected: Why This is a Radical Feminist Issue
Oppression and subordination of women do not take place in a vacuum, bracketed off from larger societal, cultural, historical and global systems of oppression and subordination. Here are some thoughts along these lines written by Judi Bari, someone who has become a shero to me ever since I blogged about a film made about her life a while back. The makers of the film sent it to me and I have watched it several times by now. Bari was a feminist, an environmentalist and a labor organizer working among loggers in California who wanted to log sustainably and end over-cutting and who were fighting the timber industry. She was hated by timber multinationals. She was ultimately seriously injured when a pipe bomb went off in her car. She was then framed – charged and arrested – by the FBI and local police, who accused her of having planted the bomb herself. She was ultimately exonerated in 2002, but she didn’t live to see that day. She died of breast cancer in 1997. She was a working class radical ecofeminist with such a deeply integrated radical feminist ethos of love and respect for all life and the earth. Her words:
I was a social justice activist for many years before I ever heard of Earth First!. So it came as a surprise to me, when I joined Earth First! in the 1980s, to find that the radical environmental movement paid little attention to the social causes of ecological destruction. Similarly, the urban-based social justice movement seems to have a hard time admitting the importance of biological issues, often dismissing all but “environmental racism” as trivial. Yet in order to effectively respond to the crises of today, I believe we must merge these two issues.
Starting from the very reasonable, but unfortunately revolutionary concept that social practices which threaten the continuation of life on Earth must be changed, we need a theory of revolutionary ecology that will encompass social and biological issues, class struggle, and a recognition of the role of global corporate capitalism in the oppression of peoples and the destruction of nature.
…I will try to explain, from my perspective as an unabashed leftist, why I think deep ecology is a revolutionary world view. I am not trying to proclaim that my ideas are Absolute Truth, or even that they represent a finished thought process in my own mind. These are just some ideas I have on the subject, and I hope that by airing them, it will spark more debate and advance the discussion.
Deep ecology, or biocentrism, is the belief that nature does not exist to serve humans. Rather, humans are part of nature, one species among many. All species have a right to exist for their own sake, regardless of their usefulness to humans. And biodiversity is a value in itself, essential for the flourishing of both human and nonhuman life.
These principles, I believe, are not just another political theory. Biocentrism is a law of nature, that exists independently of whether humans recognize it or not. It doesn’t matter whether we view the world in a human centered way. Nature still operates in a biocentric way. And the failure of modern society to acknowledge this - as we attempt to subordinate all of nature to human use - has led us to the brink of collapse of the earth’s life support systems.
Biocentrism is not a new theory, and it wasn’t invented by Dave Foreman or Arnie Naas. It is ancient native wisdom, expressed in such sayings as “The earth does not belong to us. We belong to the earth.” But in the context of today’s industrial society, biocentrism is profoundly revolutionary, challenging the system to its core.
The capitalist system is in direct conflict with the natural laws of biocentrism. Capitalism, first of all, is based on the principle of private property — of certain humans owning the earth for the purpose of exploiting it for profit. At an earlier stage, capitalists even believed they could own other humans. But just as slavery has been discredited in the mores of today’s dominant world view, so do the principles of biocentrism discredit the concept that humans can own the earth.
How can corporate raider Charles Hurwitz claim to “own” the 2,000-year-old redwoods of Headwaters Forest, just because he signed a few papers to trade them for a junk bond debt? This concept is absurd. Hurwitz is a mere blip in the life of these ancient trees. Although he may have the power to destroy them, he does not have the right. … You cannot do whatever you want on your own property without affecting surrounding areas, because the earth is interconnected, and nature does not recognize human boundaries.
Even beyond private property, though, capitalism conflicts with biocentrism around the very concept of profit. Profit consists of taking out more than you put in. This is certainly contrary to the fertility cycles of nature, which depend on a balance of give and take. But more important is the question of where this profit is taken from.
According to Marxist theory, profit is stolen from the workers when the capitalists pay them less than the value of what they produce. The portion of the value of the product that the capitalist keeps, rather than pays to the workers, is called surplus value. The amount of surplus value that the capitalist can keep varies with the level of organization of the workers, and with their level of privilege within the world labor pool. But the working class can never be paid the full value of their labor under capitalism, because the capitalist class exists by extracting surplus value from the products of their labor.
Although I basically agree with this analysis, I think there is one big thing missing. I believe that part of the value of a product comes not just from the labor put into it, but also from the natural resources used to make the product. And I believe that surplus value (i.e., profit) is not just stolen from the workers, but also from the earth itself. A clearcut is the perfect example of a part of the earth from which surplus value has been extracted. If human production and consumption is done within the natural limits of the earth’s fertility, then the supply is indeed endless. But this cannot happen under capitalism, because the capitalist class exists by extracting profit not only from the workers, but also from the earth.
…Modern day corporations are the very worst manifestation of this sickness. A small business may survive on profits, but at least its basic purpose is to provide sustenance for the owners, who are human beings with a sense of place in their communities. But a corporation has no purpose for its existence, nor any moral guide to its behavior, other than to make profits. And today’s global corporations are beyond the control of any nation or government. In fact, the government is in the service of the corporations, its armies poised to defend their profits around the world and its secret police ready to infiltrate and disrupt any serious resistance at home.
In other words, this system cannot be reformed. It is based on the destruction of the earth and the exploitation of the people. There is no such thing as green capitalism, and marketing cutesy rainforest products will not bring back the ecosystems that capitalism must destroy to make its profits. This is why I believe that serious ecologists must be revolutionaries.
… communism, socialism, and all other left ideologies that I know of speak only about redistributing the spoils of raping the earth more evenly among classes of humans. They do not even address the relationship of the society to the earth, Or rather, they assume that it will stay the same as it is under capitalism - that of a gluttonous consumer. And that the purpose of the revolution is to find a more efficient and egalitarian way to produce and distribute consumer goods.
…Modern industrial society robs us of community with each other and community with the earth. This creates a great longing inside us, which we are taught to fill with consumer goods. But consumer goods, beyond those needed for basic comfort and survival, are not really what we crave. So our appetite is insatiable, and we turn to more and more efficient and dehumanizing methods of production to make more and more goods that do not satisfy us. If workers really had control of the factories (and I say this as a former factory worker), they would start by smashing the machines and finding a more humane way to decide what we need and how to produce it. So to the credo “production for use, not for profit,” ecological socialism would add, “production for need, not for greed.”
…Patriarchy is the oldest and, I think, deepest form of oppression on Earth. In fact, it’s so old and it’s so deep that we’re discouraged from even naming it. If you’re a white person, you can talk about apartheid; you can say, “I’m against apartheid” without all the white people getting huffy and offended and thinking you’re talking about them. But if you even mention patriarchy, you are met with howls of ridicule and protest from otherwise progressive men who take it as a personal insult that you’re even mentioning the word. But I think that the issue of patriarchy needs to be addressed by any serious revolutionary movement. … Eco-feminism is a holistic view of the earth that is totally consistent with the idea that humans are not separate from nature. I would describe eco-feminism in two separate terms. The first is that there is a parallel between the way this society treats women and the way that it treats the earth. And this is shown in expressions like “virgin redwoods” and “rape of the earth”, for example.
The second thing, which I think is even more important, is the reason for the destruction of nature by this society. Obviously part of the reason is capitalism. But beyond that, destruction of nature in this society stems from the suppression of the feminine.
Let me clarify that I believe men and women have both masculine and feminine traits. I’m not saying “all men are bad - all women are good.” I define “masculine traits” as conquering and dominance, and “feminine traits” as nurturing and life-giving. And I think that the masculine traits of conquering and dominance are valued no matter who exhibits them. As a macho woman, I can tell you, I’ve gotten all kinds of strokes in my lifetime because I can get out there head to head and be just as aggressive as any man. Conversely, the feminine traits of nurturing and life-giving are devalued and suppressed in this society, whether a man or a woman exhibits them. The devaluing and suppression of feminine traits is a major reason for the destruction of the earth. …
The relationship between the suppression of feminine values, and the destruction of the earth is actually much clearer in third world nations than it is in this society. Where colonial powers take over, when nature is to be destroyed by imperialistic corporations coming into third world countries, one of the ways that the colonial powers take over is by forcibly removing the women from their traditional roles as the keepers of the forest and the farmlands. The women’s methods of interacting with the fertility cycles of the earth, is replaced by men and machines. Rather than nurturing the fertility of the earth, these machines rip off the fertility of the earth. For this reason, many of the third world environmental movements are actually women’s movements; the Chipko in India, and the tree-planters in Kenya, Brazil, to mention two. In each of these situations, the way that the feminine is suppressed is very parallel to the way that nature is suppressed.
It’s less obvious, I think, in this society, but it’s still here. Anyone who has ever dealt with the Forest Service, California Department of Forestry, the Endangered Species Act, or anything like that knows that science is used as the authority for the kind of relentless assault on nature in this society. And science is presented to us as neutral, as an objective path to knowledge, as something that’s value-free.
But science is not value-free. The scientific methods (there’s not just one method, despite what we were taught in science class) of western science are not value-free at all. In fact science was openly described by its founders as a masculine system that presupposes the separation of people from nature and presupposes our dominance over nature. …
…The “feminine” methods [I am talking about] were based on observation and interaction with the earth in order to increase the fertility cycles in a way that’s beneficial to all. For example, we learn that if we bury a fish with the corn, the corn grows better - those kind of things. The women’s knowledge of the earth was passed down generation to generation - and was dismissed as mere superstition by the rising scientists with their reductionist methods.
However, reductionist science has indeed had a lot of success. It’s created nuclear bombs, plastic shrink-wrap, Twinkies, Highway 101, all kinds of wonders of the earth! But it has not led us to a true understanding of nature or the earth, because nature’s parts are not separate, they are interdependent. You can’t look at one part without looking at the rest, it is all inextricably interconnected. The way that reductionist science has looked at the world has brought us antibiotics that create super bacteria, and flood control methods that create huger floods than ever existed before and fertilizers that leave us with barren soil. These are all examples of the defects of a reductionist kind of science.
Contrary to this masculine system of separation and dominance, eco-feminism seeks a science of nature. And this science of nature is a holistic and interdependent one, where you look at the whole thing and the way that everything interacts, not just the way that it can be when you separate it. And also it presupposes that humans are part of nature, and that our fates are inseparable; that we have to live within the earth’s fertility cycles and we can enhance those fertility cycles by our informed interaction.
In India, where Chipko began, the women were the keepers of the forest and the keepers of agriculture, as well. So when the women brought the cows up to the trees (probably savannas rather than forests), the cows fertilized the trees, and nibbled at the limbs and branches, helping to trim them so they would produce more nuts or fruit. This kind of interaction enhanced the fertility cycle of nature. So rather than trying to conquer it, or subvert it, or disrupt it, the feminine method is based on interacting and enhancing the fertility cycle. And this is exactly what is supplanted when the colonial powers come in.
The holistic and interdependent eco-feminist view in which humans are inseparable from nature, is not any different than deep ecology or biocentrism. This is simply another way of saying the same thing. And so, to embrace biocentrism or deep ecology, is to challenge the masculine system of knowledge that underlies the destruction of the earth, and that underlies the justification for the way our society is structured.
Eco-feminism, however, does not seek to dominate men as women have been dominated under patriarchy. Instead, it seeks to find a balance. We need both the masculine and the feminine forces. It’s not that we need to get rid of the masculine force. Both of them exist in the world but must exist in balance. We need the conquering and the dominance as well as we need the nurturing. Eco-feminism seeks find that balance.
Because this society is hugely out of balance, we need a huge rise of the feminine. We need a rise of individual women, and also a rise of feminist ideology among both women and men. …Without this balance between the masculine and the feminine, I don’t believe we can make the changes that we need to come back into balance with the earth. For those reasons, I think that deep ecology/biocentrism contradicts patriarchy, and to embrace deep ecology/biocentrism is to challenge the core belief of this masculine, scientific system.
The fact that deep ecology is a revolutionary philosophy is one of the reasons Earth First! was targeted for disruption and annihilation by the FBI. The fact that we did not recognize it as revolutionary is one of the reasons we were so unprepared for the magnitude of the attack. If we are to continue, Earth First! and the entire ecology movement must adjust their tactics to the profound changes that are needed to bring society into balance with nature.
One way that we can do this is to broaden our focus. Of course, sacred places must be preserved, and it is entirely appropriate for an ecology movement to center on protecting irreplaceable wilderness areas But …you cannot seriously address the destruction of wilderness without addressing the society that is destroying it. It’s about time for the ecology movement (and I’m not just talking about Earth First! here) to stop considering itself as separate from the social justice movement. The same power that manifests itself as resource extraction in the countryside manifests itself as racism, classism, and human exploitation in the city. The ecology movement must recognize that we are just one front in a long, proud, history of resistance.
A revolutionary ecology movement must also organize among poor and working people. With the exception of the toxics movement and the native land rights movement most U.S. environmentalists are white and privileged. This group is too invested in the system to pose it much of a threat. A revolutionary ideology in the hands of privileged people can indeed bring about some disruption and change in the system. But a revolutionary ideology in the hands of working people can bring that system to a halt. For it is the working people who have their hands on the machinery. And only by stopping the machinery of destruction can we ever hope to stop this madness.
How can it be that we have neighborhood movements focused on the disposal of toxic wastes, for example, but we don’t have a worker’s movement to stop the production of toxics? It is only when the factory workers refuse to make the stuff, it is only when the loggers refuse to cut the ancient trees, that we can ever hope for real and lasting change. This system cannot be stopped by force. It is violent and ruthless beyond the capacity of any people’s resistance movement. The only way I can even imagine stopping it is through massive non-cooperation.
So let’s keep blocking those bulldozers and hugging those trees. And let’s focus our campaigns on the global corporations that are really at fault. But we have to begin placing our actions in a larger context - the context of revolutionary ecology.
What indigenous Peruvians are standing for (and against) is completely consistent with everything that historical radical feminism stands for. These courageous people deserve all the support we can give to them, if only to spread the word.

“The land is not for sale.”
Communiqué from the National Agrarian Community [es], (Spanish)
Heart
































I could quibble with some of the ways Judi Bari put things, but one in particular I am wondering about.
We need the conquering and the dominance as well as we need the nurturing.
Why? I think she is using excessively loaded terms to describe what she calls the masculine force, which I would prefer to call assertiveness, and to disassociate it from gender. I see no need whatsoever for conquering and dominance, as I define those terms. Those are corruptions of assertiveness, similarly to how aggressiveness is a corruption of assertiveness, and cutthroat competition is a corruption of fair competition. All these corruptions have served to empower men at the expense of the conquered, women, Earth itself, and to some extent, men lower in the arbitrary hierarchy of power created and maintained by these corruptions.
There is a balance between life and death, and neither can exist without the other. This does not mean it is necessary to reinforce the forces of death, but as I see it, this is precisely the role played by conquering and dominance. Assertion and fair competition need not augment the forces of death. Death needs no nurturing, but life does. Life on earth has only survived the onslaught of human conquering and dominance because nurturing forces act to partially check and balance them, but this can only slow down the destruction. No other species has come close to dominating the planet, and if that is not reversed soon, this planet will become extremely inhospitable for intelligent life. That is well under way, and I see both Obama and McCain likely to accelerate the process, though in slightly different ways.
This is a fascinating post, examining ecofeminism and deep ecology and then circling back around to support indigenous peoples’ pleas for land not to be despoiled. Much to think upon.
“No other species has come close to dominating the planet, and if that is not reversed soon, this planet will become extremely inhospitable for intelligent life.”–Aletha
True. On the other hand, though, if we jumped-up primates die out, it might be the best thing imaginable for the restoration of the other species upon the planet.
Yeah, I completely agree, Aletha. Bari often reminded people that she had never studied any of these ideas formally, this is what she put together for herself in living a life dedicated to the earth and to human beings. The words she uses seem particularly loaded in our ears, and especially given the postmodern hell we see now so far as feminism and especially in some of the idiocies of the blogosphere. I think she is really saying what you said there and wouldn’t disagree with you, just as I wouldn’t. I totally agree that we do not need dominance or conquering. If she were here to clarify, I think she’d agree. She’s making the point that male heterosupremacy, patriarchy, values dominance, consumption, greed, might makes right, the traditionally masculine (whether in men or women) and rejects nurturing, compassion, love, caregiving, the traditionally “feminine” (whether in men or women). Attacks and assaults on the land, the earth, marginalized people groups and attacks and assaults on women ultimately all come from the same place.
Even though I do agree the language she uses is troublesome at times, the ideas are beautiful and revolutionary. I find them refreshing in a way– there are all of these people out there who use the right words, or more accurately, who nitpick the words other people use and who think themselves to be progressive or feminist or whatever, when they are nothing of the sort! They are capitalists, they are violent, they celebrate dominance and submission paradigms, they are blind to the way their ideas harm women, children, animals, the earth, they prattle on about being feminists and whatever when in fact, they are patriarchal through and through, but they know what the right words are, by golly! Not saying that’s what you are doing, Aletha, I’m just ranting. :p
This also gets to one of my huge pet peeves, to wit, the way people at times start roiling around because a feminist calls something “feminine” or “masculine,” and where there is roiling, can shrieks of “essentialist!” be far behind? Bitter heh.
I think what Bari is doing there is not prescriptive. She is not saying, “People should be more feminine!” or “People should be less masculine!” She is being DEscriptive. She’s describing the patriarchal construction of masculinity and femininity — i.e., she’s identifying gender — and is going on to show how gender is really about subjugation. Again, it is a postmodern hell we inhabit at the moment where somehow gender is about “performance”, about how people present, about what is between their ears or between their legs or what just mystically exists that they have known about since they were a twinkle in somebody’s eye or whatever, and what gets lost in those machinations is the way gender roles — what is cast as “masculine” and what is cast as “feminine” — are really about subordination. It’s the nuts and bolts of patriarchy, it’s the glue of patriarchy and male supremacy, it’s what makes them work and what makes them tick. We’ve got feminists and progressives and liberals and fundamentalists celebrating gender, idolizing it, fetishizing it, doing every possible thing but critiquing it. What is gender? What is masculinity? It is about dominance. It is about aggression, conquering, taking, force, might makes right. What is femininity? It is about submission, being conquered, being taken, acceding. This is what gender is on a micro scale between men and women, boys and girls, and this is what it is on a macro scale, in imperialism, in colonialism, in the ravaging of the earth, in dominance over creatures, in white supremacy, in class hierarchy, in sexuality. What Bari is saying is, what is constructed masculine has trumped what is constructed feminine to the point that the earth and its creatures may not survive, that those constructed to be masculine — whether individuals or nation states or corporations — will have to begin to think about doing and being all those icky things that equal “feminine”, like caring, compassion, nourishing, respecting, care-giving, honoring, observing, cooperating with, and that those constructed to be feminine — whether individuals or nation states or the workers in the Man’s factories, will have to begin to do what they have not been constructed to do: assert themselves, as the Peruvian indigenous people are doing, as feminists are doing, stand against, resist, refuse to cooperate, don’t run the machines in the Man’s factories, close the suckers down, don’t make that stuff. To do this would be to actually and in fact end gender. It is these acts which are transgressive and which make real revolution. We’ve got a situation now where somebody thinks if they dress a certain way, that’s transgressing gender, when it is just simply irrelevant how people dress. Gender is all about subordination. Describing what is masculine and what is feminine is not essentializing; it is identifying because unless people can see the way gender IS about subordination and not sex or presentation or somebody wearing sparklies who is supposed to wear a tie, or wearing a tie if you are supposed to wear sparklies, if people can’t even get past this latter, then we’re not even going to be able to think intelligently about making revolution.
Level Best, what I love about Bari is, she connects the dots in simple ways we can all understand. Usually when people talk about these issues, they use mind-numbing rhetoric that half the time they don’t even understand. They know there’s some truth in there in all those words but who the hell has time to wade through the muck up to the hip boots.
Looking for an example, I googled the words “colonialism imperialism indigenous” and I immediately came up with many stultifying examples I can use. I mean, who wants to wade through this kind of stuff:
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Imperialism was never about the culture of the colonised and not implicitly about contact between cultures. While in economic terms imperialism was about profit, first and foremost it was about the imperialist psyche, the representation of the white European unto him or herself, be this reflected in the Rousseauean idea of the `noble savage’, or in the Christian missionary project of bringing enlightenment to the `indigenous heathen’. However, from the perspective of the colonised who may have no culturally embedded pre-existing notions of contact with others (the coloniser or imperialist) prior to colonisation, it could be argued that such a process is only recently being reciprocated in literatures written from the perspective of the colonised. Again, Ben Okri’s The Famished Road can be interpreted in this light.
As Spivak has observed, the attribution of a unified speaking voice and an authentic native `essence’ to the colonised, far from destabilising imperialistic cultural practices, actually serves to reconstitute the Subject of the West. As she puts it: “The theory of pluralized ’subject-effects’ gives an illusion of undermining subjective sovereignty while providing a cover for this subject of knowledge. The much publicized critique of the sovereign subject thus actually inaugurates a subject.”
Positioning discourse from colonised peoples into discrete and knowable categories such as non-European or ‘Third-World’ acts so as to traduce the narratives of colonised peoples which are in turn interpolated by Western narratives of identity. Similarly, James Clifford in The Predicament of Culture (1988) discusses the contemporary condition of societies in which it is increasingly difficult to attach identity, meaning, or `authenticity’ to a coherent culture or language or to a (presumably essentially modernist) discourse which attempts to do so.
Clifford argues that the pattern of cross-cultural influences of today no longer involves the gradual absorption of non-modern cultures to modern; rather, the non-modern has an almost equally powerful effect on the modern. Clifford does not envisage the world as populated by endangered authenticities but rather as a globalism that harbours improvisatory and combinational cultural responses in which the Third World plays itself against the First, and vice versa. If, as Clifford suggests, authenticity is relational, then identities can no longer be stable, and self-other relationships are a matter of power, rhetoric, and discourse, rather than cultural `essence’. For Clifford, ‘traditional’ cultures are without regret (or the nostalgia-mode of post-modernism). They are newly syncretised as part of an inevitable, ongoing process. This process is not that of modernisation which is monocultural but of global inteconnectedness in the legacy of imperialism.
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I mean, really. It’s this kind of stuff that has GUTTED the spirit of revolution that once existed in academia. Yeah, let’s all sit around and write nonsense and impress one another.
Well, I guess it’s fine if that’s what people want to do, more likely, if it’s what they have to do in order to get degrees and hence to get connected and have their careers and so on, but it’s death to revolutionary political movements. For those we need real leadership, people who have been true leaders, and language that reflects their real life experiences and process, that inspires and that everybody can understand
Heart, what you said about the right words cracked me up. I am so hypercritical of my own language, I never can seem to find the right words to say what I want to say. Part of this is the wholesale corruption of language, making words I think ought to mean one thing mean something entirely different. I wonder how many blog wars got started because people take loaded words in so many different ways. To some extent, this is due to the inherent ambiguity of language, but postmodern hell thrives on twisting language. Not to mention, the arts of propaganda, public relations, political spin, and advertising.
Level Best, humanity dying out might eventually be the best thing for other species, but that depends on how much damage humans wreak in the meantime. People need not be so careless. What other species is so foolish as to foul their own nest? This world could be such a paradise. It is not impossible to live in harmony with nature, but it is impossible as long as mainstream ideologies determine the way most people live.
I remember when Judi Bari died. I was a subscriber to the Neopagan magazine Green Egg and a member of the Church of All Worlds at the time and I remember CAW was much criticized by some other segments of the Neopagan movement for the founding members’ declared devotion to deep ecology. Eventually the anti-DE folks took over and things fell apart. Anyway…
You might be interested to read Jared Diamond sometime, particularly his essay The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race. Indigenous peoples have a lot more to save than their lands, tremendous as that might be. But it seems that after the advent of grain agriculture, after the creation of civilization, that’s when sexism seems to have begun. Not simply people taking on roles that made childbearing and -rearing easier, but men full-out treating women like beasts of burden. It began with farming and intensified when cities were built.
http://www.awok.org/worst-mistake/
The rewilding movement has a lot of interesting things to say as well. I’m particularly fond of the work of the Anthropik Network and Jason Godesky, who has formulated thirty theses having to do with the effects of civilization on humanity and in particular, human rights. I really feel the agriculture-based Goddess religions were patriarchy’s way of easing us all into that new way of life and then, when women were hooked, they dumped the Goddess as well. Godesky doesn’t mention that as such in his thesis posts (although he may address it elsewhere, I’ve not read the whole blog yet), but I see the patterns.
http://anthropik.com/
It feels weird to be throwing men’s names out about this stuff that is particularly pertinent to women, but maybe women will start looking at this too, once we get past the old stereotypes of Hunter-Gatherer As Troglodyte Man Who Drags Woman By The Hair. I would certainly like to investigate and write more about it.