Made me laugh.
(via occupyallstreets)
Well… After moving back to the USA on 15 May, 2011, I feel like I have a pretty sophisticated impression of the effects that living here has on me, even if they are not the same as for everyone else. To be honest, I’ve been pretty lucky. I’m on track to have my masters completed a week and a half from today (probably less, since I am talking about the day I started writing this), I have met a few incredible friends and a lot of exceptional passers-by in New York city, and I was one of the first in my masters program to receive a job offer in NYC.
Then again, I’ve gotten a ticket for an open container for drinking on my fire escape, been ticketed hundreds of dollars for speeding on my bicycle, and spent a night in jail for my involvement in the Occupy Wall Street protests (although I absolutely cannot consider OWS to be anything but a positive part of my life).
Due in part to the OWS arrest, Columbia has told me I was not eligible to graduate twice, though I still am. I’ve been banned by the department of education from teaching in New York, though, due to a variety of loopholes and appeals, I still am.
The City has been good to me. Or better to me than a lot of people. Though anyone who has tried here knows that making it is a little bit bitter-sweet. You give up a lot on your way.
I don’t think, though, that these are uniquely the effects of life in New York City. Rather, it seems like they are pretty likely to be side effects of western society as a whole, and particularly, the manifestation of western society in the Untied States. We might refer to this phenominon as representing life through capitalist ideals.
Competition.
Anyone who knows me well will tell you, I can be a bit of a harsh person. When asked about old friends who haven’t seemed to be going anywhere or moving towards their goals/ideals over a significant period, I’ll say that I am worried that they are failing at life. Having taken literally years of time to backpack in different parts of the world, this might sound a little bit ironic, but I see that education as very much connected to my goals of continuing to understand the world, connect with it, and develop as an educator and an activist. I see this as a strength.
But, even for someone with standards as high as my own, there are people in my life whose passion, drive, and work I deeply respect. Unfortunately, under the current framework of our society, it can very difficult to get close with other people who are very good at my craft. After all, we have been trained to compete. The road to success lies in most effectively balancing the highest quality output with the greatest speed, reliability, and efficiency.
Beyond the short term effects of this competition, working towards employment or whatever else, there is one really broad phenomenon: the way our society is structured, that road, or battle, never ends. We never arrive at security or stability or success, we just make it to the next phase of our struggle, and then keep fighting. And this is how a system as exploitative as that of the United States perpetuates itself (as a side note, this is why neoliberal forces in many countries with more public institutions and social support are pushing to change that reality).
For example, the typical, self perpetuating life of a bourgeois in the US:
The hoarding effect
But let’s get back to that $8000 dollar surplus from our “start working” section. That’s a pretty good chunk of money. It could build more than 10 houses for victims of violence in Central Africa. It could provide capital or life saving medical treatment in areas of the world where lack of access to these resources routinely results in death for those people deemed “less important” in the grand capitalist scheme of things.
But at the end of the day, the vast majority of people with access to this chunk of money (and an even more vast majority of people with access to bigger chunks of money) decide to keep it. And because of the way in which our economy is structured, inflation essentially forces us to give our money over to major banking institutions or risk it losing value (well, losing even more value than it will when given to the bank). Often, this involves using it to the advantage of the upper class in this country. So it ends up invested. With the good investments of our society. In case you are wondering, green energy isn’t a good investment. Companies like Chevron, Monsanto, and WalMart are. Because those are the companies that the US government, and the economic culture it fosters, will reliably continue to support.
It’s something of a tough conundrum. In order to be even remotely free to use this cycle, one is seemingly forced to claw their way to a position of relative “security” within the petit bourgeoise. Then they might be able to save enough money to go travelling or wandering about for a period of time.
But in the process, they are expected to become imperializers in their own right, invested in a system that is consuming not only the freedom of others, but also their own.
The American Dream. This is what it’s come to. Or, if we are being a bit more honest, we can point out that this is likely what it’s always been.
The Southern Poverty Law Center is fighting for students at Hardin County High School in Tennessee who were banned from displaying support for LGBT rights in any way.
Isabella Nuzzo and other students were told by an assistant principal that they could not wear rainbows or any other symbols of gay rights because those symbols “advertise or promote sex.” Wait, what?
The group also said the assistant principal terminated a student organized “Week of Pride” event to show support for gay rights and threatened students with suspension, class failure and disqualification from graduations.
“I and many other students were really upset with the school for shutting down free speech about a topic I feel strongly about,” Nuzzo said in the release. “I love my gay friends and life is hard enough without being judged for who you are or for believing in equality.”
I hope SPLC takes this up with a lawsuit, because this is absurd. A rainbow signifies sex? Really? Not only does this perpetuate the flawed but repeated idea that sex is bad bad bad and should never be talked about at school, it likens LGBT rights to purely sexual matters. This deserves attention, and this school deserves a national reality check.
What complete idiots. Suggest everyone in that school take to wearing buttons that say Genesis 9:13 (I will set my bow in the clouds, and it shall be the sign of a covenant between me, and between the earth.)
That ought to fix the know-nothings. What are they going to do, ban Bible Verses in the heart of the Bible Belt?
Hawaii to become first U.S. state to ban plastic bags at checkout in every county
Hawaii is slated to become the first state in the nation to ban plastic bags at checkouts in every county.
“This is groundbreaking,” said Honolulu Mayor Peter Carlisle, according to msnbc.com.
Carlisle signed off on the ban last week, joining Honolulu County with the state’s three other counties, which had already passed the ban.
“By signing this environmentally friendly bill, Honolulu joined our neighbor island countries. Hawaii has become the only state in the United States where every county has plastic bag legislation.” Carlisle said.
The change goes into effect on July 15, 2015, giving retailers “plenty of time to get ready,” he told msnbc.com.
“Retailers will be able to use up their inventory of bags and make arrangements to educate the public on the importance of bringing their own bag,” Carlisle said.
Bans are already enforced in Kauai and Maui counties, and Hawaii County’s takes effect on Jan. 16, 2013.
The news comes on the heels of a report from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography documenting a shocking increase in plastic waste floating in the northeast Pacific Ocean.
Particularly in a region dubbed the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch,” marine life is changing as creatures ingest plastic at alarming rates.
The bans passed after a two-year campaign directed by the Sierra Club, an environmental group.
“Passing the bans did take an effort — change always does — but people seemed to understand the need for such an effort,” Robert Harris, director of the Sierra Club’s Hawaii chapter, told msnbc.com.
“Being a marine state, perhaps, we are exposed more directly to the impacts of plastic pollution and the damage it does to our environment,” he said.
“People in Hawaii are more likely to be in the water or in the outdoors and see the modern-day tumbleweed — plastic bags — in the environment.”
Really and truely. This is a fucking absurd charge. Terrorism charges for Protesters, and the US government sinks lower and lower.
One of the several banners dropped today in Austin, TX in solidarity with those arrested in Chicago.
(via amodernmanifesto)
Chicago police state, May 20, 2012. Top: Cops line the streets prior to the start of anti-NATO demonstration. Bottom: Protester bloodied by police baton.
Photos: World Must Wake Up
The CIA is seeking authority to expand its covert drone campaign in Yemen by launching strikes against terrorism suspects even when it does not know the identities of those who could be killed, U.S. officials said.
Securing permission to use these “signature strikes” would allow the agency to hit targets based solely on intelligence indicating patterns of suspicious behavior, such as imagery showing militants gathering at known al-Qaeda compounds or unloading explosives.
If approved, the change would probably accelerate a campaign of U.S. airstrikes in Yemen that is already on a record pace, with at least eight attacks in the past four months.
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The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien