Making Politics Real
by Mark R. Crovelli
by
Mark R. Crovelli
Recently by Mark R. Crovelli: Government
Extortion: Egyptian-Style and American-Style
If
you ask the people who know me their honest opinion of me, I suspect
that the vast majority of them would tell you that I am often a
pugilistic asshole, always spoiling to start a big, drawn-out debate
about something related to politics. They would probably tell you
that they’ve witnessed me waste many an evening with friends in
the hope of proving some seemingly trivial political, economic or
epistemological point. If you ask them why I always seem to be spoiling
for an intellectual fight, most would no doubt tell you that I enjoy
the thrill of argumentation, or that I am such an arrogant political
junkie that I am incapable of relaxing for a few minutes in order
to talk about something frivolous or funny. A few would tell you
that they don’t know why I care so much about things I clearly cannot
change and that appear to make me so aggravated.
If you
asked me why I am always starting and joining arguments about politics,
however, I would give different reasons for my actions. I would
tell you that I do not consider politics to be an entertaining drinking
game, or a chance to test my debating skills. I would tell you that
I do not view politics as a collection of abstract and irrelevant
philosophical questions which are fascinating yet ultimately inscrutable,
and I would tell you that I certainly don’t give a damn about giving
the appearance that I am some political genius. I would tell you
that the real reason I care so passionately about politics, and
cannot help but provoke or join any political debate that passes
by my face is that there are people like Arkin
and Bahtiyar Mahnut in the world.
In case you
don’t know who Arkin and Bahtiyar Mahnut are, they are two completely
innocent Uighur
brothers, who have been incarcerated at the unconscionable Guantanamo
Bay concentration camp for the past 8 years. They, like the vast
majority of the wretched souls jailed by the U.S. government in
Cuba, were never charged with anything even remotely related to
"terrorism," and indeed have never been charged with any
crime whatsoever. But, thanks to the U.S. government’s reckless
and immoral abduction of them shortly after 9-11, no nation will
now give them refuge, their names and sacred honor have been irreversibly
besmirched, and they remain locked up in cages like animals.
A few weeks
ago, a small island in the Pacific Ocean called Palau extended an
offer Bahtiyar Mahnut to settle on their small island. The offer
would have allowed Bahtiyar to leave his ghastly American-administered
tomb and start what is left of his life over. But, in a move that
cannot but cause one’s throat to knot up, Bahtiyar turned down the
offer because Palau had not extended the same offer to his brother
Arkin, who has since developed serious psychological problems (can
you blame him?). Despite the horrendous travail that he has been
forced to endure at the hands of his disgusting and cruel American
jailers, Bahtiyar has chosen to remain incarcerated in order to
remain close to and help his brother.
This heart-wrenching
story, and the millions upon millions like it that could be told,
should explain why I care so much about politics. Their story illustrates
that politics always and everywhere involves real people,
just like you and me. Arkin and Bahtiyar are not philosophical abstractions.
They are real brothers who have been brutalized beyond the comprehension
of those of us who live in a fantasy world where involvement in
politics is thought to be optional. The treatment they endured was
not the result of some arbitrary natural accident. It was – and
continues to be – the result of policies enacted by people who
claim to act in our names. Worst of all, their incarceration has
been paid for with money taken from you and me.
Think about
that for a minute. You may go to work every day and never think
seriously about politics even once a year. Yet, you have nevertheless
paid a portion of the money you made every day in order to incarcerate
the Mahnut brothers, among many, many others. You have paid to incarcerate
millions of American citizens who have done nothing more than smoke
or sell marijuana or cocaine, or happened to possess a gun when
their "rulers" forbade it. You have paid to send robotic
airplanes over Pakistan in order to bomb wedding parties. Not just
fantasy weddings, but real, live weddings – what is supposed to
be the happiest day of one’s life being interrupted by a bomb that
you and I paid for. You have paid money every year to arm the Israelis
in order that their government can turn around and use those arms
against some of the poorest and most isolated people in the world.
The people of Gaza are real people after all, who, as I write,
are living in conditions that rival Auschwitz. They are real sons,
real daughters, real grandfathers and real mothers living like animals,
thanks to the money and protection the U.S. government provides
to their jailers, the Israelis.
The underlying
reason for my intractable interest in politics, then, is that I
view politics as something real. Our decisions about who,
if anyone, are
to be our "leaders" have far-reaching – indeed global
– consequences. Our action or inaction regarding our government’s
murderous wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and, coming soon,
Iran,
have massive consequences
for both ourselves and the people whose lives are affected and
often ended. Our decisions about whether taxation
is robbery have massive consequences for both ourselves and
those who tax us. These are not pie-in-the-sky philosophical questions
about a hypothetical world occupied by hypothetical people. They
are questions that will be answered by someone. If we choose
to ignore them, our rulers will take advantage of our laziness and
boredom and answer the questions themselves.
To
say that I view politics as something real is also to say that politics
is more fundamental than the partisan games and gossip that goes
on in Washington D.C. Politics to me means the very reverse of simply
joining a political party and doing whatever it takes to get that
party elected. Politics is the very reverse of keeping up on the
latest gossip about Senator A’s love tryst with his aid or Congressman
B’s new bill to "fix" social security. Nor is politics
concerned with "getting out the vote," or any of the other
distracting nonsense that goes on during election time in a democracy.
Politics to me means finding answers to the questions that really
matter – like, is democracy really a good thing, or is it the worst
conceivable system of government? Or, more fundamentally, do
people even need government at all, or is government simply a giant
predatory
beast that man can
and ought to do without? To neglect these fundamental questions
and claim to be engaged in politics is to show oneself to be a dangerous
partisan idiot.
Finally,
politics to me is more than an intellectual quest to find out the
answers to the fundamental questions about how society ought to
be organized. Politics to me means developing the will to fight
for what one knows to be right. For, politics is indeed nothing
more than an entertaining parlor or drinking game if it is not backed
up with the will to fight for what is right. And to say that one
ought to develop the will to fight for what is right brings us back
to the beginning, what ought we to fight for? I, for one, am willing
to fight for the dignity and liberty of the individual person against
the power and violence of the state. I am willing to fight not only
for my own freedom and dignity, but also for the freedom and dignity
of men like Arkin and Bahtiyar Mahnut, who continue to be incarcerated
and degraded at my expense. I am not willing to fight for a political
party, and I am not willing to fight to defend the state against
people who want to be left alone – for example, Pakistanis, Iraqis,
and Americans who don’t want to pay to kill Iraqis and Pakistanis.
Disagree with
what I am willing to fight for? Well, let’s have ourselves a debate,
then!
October
13, 2009
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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