Sunday, 29 November 2015

My Righteous Indignation with Your Sunday Coffee

In his truthdig article States of Terror, Chris Hedges raises some very interesting and poignant points concerning the continuous “war on terror” which made me reflect on another on-going, seemingly unrelated issue which are receiving very similar approaches and media responses. 

Hedges’s article made me think about the gang “war” in Surrey and the South Fraser area and how similar approaches could easily end the supposed war and hysteria surrounding it.  He made me reflect upon several points I have made in the past regarding social issues which seem to never go away because we continue to take the same heavy-handed, fear based approach to situations which require love and compassion.




CBC Radio One has had a number of excellent interviews lately with journalists and UN aid workers who have had the opportunity to interview either Jihadi and ISIS fighters who have been arrested or people living in Syria and Iraq who have been dealing with occupation for a number of painful years.  The similarity in the stories of those who have joined extremist movements and those who have yet to join them are strikingly similar…duh.  Take a look.  In article after article written by or interviews with psychologists who have studied the minds and souls of “terrorists,” the theme is the same:  creating a world of “other” creates, by necessity, covert or overt cells of “together.”  

Humans die without connection and so will create connection with like-minded/souled people in the absence of connection elsewhere in their lives. 

The result of this isolation: 
Gangs
ISIS
Fraternities
Movements
Rebellion
Revolution

Recruiters focus on forming a “social bond” with their target particularly online, using Skype and instant messaging as tools to build a relationship,” says John Horgan, a Georgia State U psychology prof who specialises in the psychology of extremism, in the Boston Herald article Inside the Mind of a Terrorist.  Another psychologist, interviewed for the same piece, points out that in France, the recruiter pitch resonates particularly strongly.  There Muslims make up about 7 percent of the country’s population, but 70 percent of its prison population.

“There’s no competing message,” said Scott Atran, director of research in anthropology at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris.

THERE IS NO COMPETING MESSAGE. 

The recruiters for gangs/ISIS/Jihadist movements embrace the unemployed, disenfranchised young men (mostly) because their message is different from the one they hear around them which repeats that they are worthless and a problem.

 I wish I could remember the name of the man interviewed on CBC R1 on Tuesday night who was saying that racial profiling and military occupation have created terrorism (not a new message).  Humanitarian approaches and a commitment to enfranchisement of those who feel dispossessed, disconnected, and dishonoured throws a blanket upon the flames of discontent in the areas of the world struggling with it the most.  If the heart of ISIS and other rebel organisations are young, dispossessed, unemployed men who feel no other choice than to use violence to win back a sense of pride and self-respect, why are we as a global community not doing something to eradicate the problems where they start? 




Why are we not creating a competing message?

Many captured fighters who have been interviewed are sharing stories of inter-generational institutional racism, profiling, and poverty under the thumb of imperial oppressors who do not respect or understand cultural differences and whose only interest is, like any imperialistic nation, plundering the human and natural resources and staking political claim.  They build a police state to quash resistance, treat the local population like criminals, and brutally grasp and horde anything they want with complete impunity.

Now tell me, if you grew up in an occupied state – especially as a boy – watching your once proud people beaten down or murdered for protesting the fascist regime; denied work and livelihood because of your religion; witnessed the desecration, denigration, and vilification of your culture and people, what options are you left with?



How would you feel if all you saw or read on news feeds sanctified the dead of the imperial nations but referred to yours as collateral damage or worse, did not acknowledge them at all? (Don’t worry.  I am all too aware, as an Aboriginal woman, how much this sounds like what happened to my ancestors.  The parallel is not lost on me.)

Why are white lives worth more than any other?

We are not separate.  We owe each other compassion and dignity because nothing ever says that because we are privileged, white, educated people that we will never be migrants or fall upon desperate times.  There are no guarantees of anything.  Ever.


How do we end gang violence in Surrey or war in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq?  It is, actually, pretty easy:

Create a competing message to the one of isolation, racism, and rejection.

1.      Treat all people with dignity and compassion – curious compassion…which is based in curiosity around how people need and work with them to get it.

2.      Create opportunities for all peoples’ basic needs to be met:
a.      Food
b.      Shelter – racist-free housing policies world wide
c.       Clean water
d.      Clothing
e.      Connection
f.        Self-respect
3.      Create opportunities for connection.  This starts early but can be rectified later.  KIDS WON’T JOIN GANGS IF THEY FEEL CONNECTED TO SOMEONE THEY KNOW CARES ABOUT THEM. PERIOD.  If we work together to create programs to address the emptiness in the lives of children who feel left behind/out, we create a different message – a new out.  More money for more police only creates more violence.  If we want to reduce the violence, we have to reduce the violence.


People who join groups want a sense of community.  If we provide loving, “healthy” communities aimed at empowering and enfranchising people, they will thrive and flourish in the communities in which they are embraced.  In addition, creating communities which welcome other cultures and seek understanding of differences rather than trying to eliminate them may very well go miles in helping new Canadians feel a part of rather than a part from.

This also means, on a geopolitical level, doing all we can to eradicate imperialism and the death clutch of corporate dominance on the planet.

But…Black Friday and the Christmas shopping rush and…

Why should I give up my hard earned:
Money
Freedom
Security
for a bunch of:
lazy junkies
dirty terrorists
potential threats
idiot delinquents?

Because, people, in the blink of an eye “we” are “them.”


And when those eyes close, how do you want people to treat you when they flash open again?

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