Flight AND Fight
by Lila Rajiva
by Lila Rajiva
My last piece,
"Time
to Run," provoked a lot of reaction, almost all of it positive,
but some negative.
The readers
who liked it wanted advice on where to run. That's a tall order
and I'll come back to them in another piece.
Those who didn't
like it brandished a few arguments that ought to have a stake driven
right through them immediately.
Here goes,
point by point.
1. Running
away doesn't help
1. Actually,
running away is often the best response to a bad situation.
Speaking practically,
when a dump truck turns into your drive, mows down your rhododendrons
and heads toward you, do you stand your ground yelling Sicilian
imprecations at the driver until he rolls over you too? Or do you
leap aside nimbly, take a photo, and call a lawyer? You have as
much chance getting through to the poisonous shills in DC with constitutional
arguments, as you have charming a rabid pit bull with Shakespeare.
Speaking theoretically,
your body and brain are hardwired to either put up or shut up, a
"fight or flight" response built into the structure of the
autonomic nervous system. That is the physiological term for what
you think of as your "lizard brain." Fight or flight is the either/or
response that helped your ancestors survive. It's not the best way
to tackle complex problems, but when it gets down to basic survival,
it's a handy guide.
And how do
you know when your survival is at stake?
Check your
gut response.
[Just make
sure you're not mistaking your complexes, fears, prejudices, and
impulses for your gut.]
2. Running
away is only for the rich
2. Actually,
the only people who can afford to stay put are the rich.
If they have a problem, they can afford the 400-dollar-an-hour suits
needed to sort it out. If they can't sort it out, they have the
means to tie up their opponents in court long enough to do a disappearing
act.
As for our
dear leaders, fight the government in court, post 9-11, and see
what happens if you're poor or middle-class.
Unemployed?
The rich don't have to worry about jobs. They have money enough
that they employ other people or live on their investments.
Dollar collapsing?
No problem.
The rich have
access to alternative investments and financial instruments you
never heard of.
Too busy to
watch the market and too confused to know whom to hire to do it?
The rich have access to money managers whose kids have more money
in their piggy bank than you have in your house.
The rich can
afford not to worry about the government. They have enough to buy
or bribe their way out of trouble anywhere. They have tangible assets
that go up in value during inflation. They have antiques and jewelry
they can cash in during a depression. They have income-producing
businesses that free them from the whims of the job market. You
have a three-month safety net. They have enough to live out the
rest of their lives comfortably.
And when they
can't, they have the contacts and friends who can bail them out
or set them up in something else.
3. Things are
not so bad
3. Not as bad
as what? The Great Depression? There are plenty of people who think
we're in for much worse times than the Great Depression.
But what does
it matter if things are not as bad, just as bad, or
much worse than the 1930s? Leave the measuring and the hand-wringing
to tailors with chubby clients. It's enough to say the times are
likely to be as bad as any you're likely to live through.
Which is to
say, bad enough.
4. Things are
worse elsewhere
4. This is
pure hearsay. Most of the people who are telling you this have never
lived anywhere but the US.
And probably
not many places in the US.
The airwaves
are thick with pundits whose money is not where their mouth is.
They're telling you to stay put and foot the bills at home....
They're telling
you from France...and from Canada... and from Japan...and from Singapore...and
from New Zealand...and yes, from DC – and any of a dozen places
where the far-sighted and the deep-pocketed fled long ago.
Or,
they're telling you to stay put from inside the belly of
the beast. They're part of the infernal money-machine on
Wall Street that depends on yokels like you keeping the casino going.
Meanwhile, the money managers have their assets in life-insurance
or in a sock.
Don't be a
fool. If you want to know how things are somewhere else, talk to
people who've lived there. Research the place. Go visit it. Go –
or don't go. But decide for yourself. Don't let someone else's idle
opinion decide for you.
5. It's too
late to run
5. Too late
for what? It's never too late to visit a foreign country. If nothing
else, it's an education of a kind desperately needed with all the
chauvinism and xenophobia in the air. If you're young, it's the
best possible time for you to try your chances abroad. Why
stay home and let the government stick you with the bill for things
you never bought? If you're a small business man, why market to
a debt-racked population, when foreigners are sitting on piles of
dollars, desperate to get something for their money? Why defend
the values of the free market in a country that rejects it? Plenty
of smaller, less grandiose countries have respect for hard work,
foresight, innovation, and thrift.
It's easier
to follow the old rules in a new language than it is to learn new
and ever-newer rules in your old tongue.
Granted, if
you're retired or have children, your situation is a bit more difficult.
But that still doesn't mean you can't weigh your options. No one
is talking about pulling up your roots forever and fleeing to the
jungles of the Amazon. But, if you're portable, why not consider
living somewhere else, maybe part-time. It could save you some money
and give you a perspective that could change your life. A US passport
is welcome in many countries and can be held along with the passport
of several other countries. Why not take advantage of it? If nothing
else, you'll see how other people manage on much less than what
we have here.
6. Running
away is shirking your duty.
6. This is
a peculiarly despicable objection, coming from people who've done
nothing at all in the way of duty to their community. The most sanctimonious
about civic duty today were the greediest back then, in that orgy
of government-backed gambling that wrecked the economy. It's akin
to the taunts of treachery against antiwar activists, and it's completely
false.
It's simply
not true that you can't help your country from abroad. The very
fact of being an American abroad helps international communication.
See for yourself, hear for yourself what others think. Judge for
yourself, from how others live. And let them see, hear, and judge
you. Know what your money has done unseen by those at home.
See the ravages,
the blood spilled. See the good done. Find out what it once meant
to be an American and find out what it is today. Join forces with
activists abroad and learn that their struggles and yours are not
different. There are many countries where electronic surveillance
is not as far down the road as it is here. Your voice might grow
bolder and more confident, far from home.
The rest of
the world has its own problems, true. Some of them are grave. But
it's here in the US that activism is most sidetracked by partisan
politics, insularity, grandstanding, and politically correct insanity.
Really and truly, there are few countries in the world outside totalitarian
regimes that are as conformist, pervasively and fundamentally, as
this country.
I'd rather
live under a benign despot that left me to my own devices from day
to day, than in a democracy where I'm spied on and manipulated constantly.
I may have theoretical rights, but much good they'll do for me if
they're strangled at birth by spies, PR flacks, and thought-police.
Meanwhile,
half these so-called rights don't exist any more, even in theory.
A government that monkeys around with habeas corpus, privacy, bankruptcy
procedure, eminent domain, and contracts is signalling loud and
clear that it has no respect for the rule of law. It's telling you
as plainly as it can that it's arbitrary. It's telling you that
it's a mass state and not a constitutional republic. It's telling
you that it's on the auction block.
Which part
of all that hasn't got through to you yet?
There are times
to fight and there are times to sit out the battles for the sake
of the war.
On the sidelines,
waiting and watching, you who have left, you who will leave, may
do more to keep alive the spirit of freedom abroad. There, in soil
more fertile than any in your native land today you may discover
America once again.
June
15, 2009
Lila Rajiva
[send her mail]
is the author of the ground-breaking study, The
Language of Empire: Abu Ghraib and the American Media (MR
Press, 2005), and the co-author with Bill Bonner of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). Visit her
blog. All responses to email are posted at my blog in the comment
section after the relevant article, with personal information omitted
to ensure privacy.
Copyright
© 2009 Lila Rajiva
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