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The Next Attack Is Coming Six Years After 9/11
by David Rovics
My friend Robert woke me up from my slumber at his cabin next to the Hoosier National Forest. Theyre saying were under attack. I came inside and listened to NPR with him.
At this point they werent sure whether it was military or commercial planes involved. My immediate thought was, theres no countrys leadership in the world whod do this, no leader wants to attack the US on US soil and risk having their own nation annihilated by US retaliation. Then the second plane hit, and they were confirming that these were, in fact, commercial planes that had been hijacked.
At that point, like so many others in the US and around the world who had not been living in a cave for the past century, my next thought was, why did it take them so long?
For the past several decades the CIA had been overthrowing
democracies in the Muslim world and installing and supporting vicious
dictatorships. The US government had been supporting every Israeli
aggression against its neighbors, and throughout the 1990s had
imposed with the collaboration of the UN security council genocidal
sanctions on the people of Iraq which had been directly responsible for
the deaths of half a million children, according to UNICEF. Under
Clinton as well as Bush, the US Air Force had been bombing Iraq on a
weekly basis since the invasion of 1990-91.
It seemed obvious
that it was only a matter of time before someone decided that the
indiscriminate slaughter of Arab civilians by the US should be avenged
by another act of indiscriminate slaughter. And given that the targets
appeared to be the symbolic centers of US political, military and
economic might, this slaughter was actually far from indiscriminate!
Every few months I find myself driving down I-95 in Connecticut,
passing the sign on the highway marking the exit for a monument to the
dead from 9/11 in Fairfield, the town that was home to the largest
number of the dead from the World Trade Center. Fairfield, one of the
richest towns in the US, one of the richest towns in the world, in one
of the richest counties in the US, Fairfield County, home also to the
wealthy suburb of Wilton, where I grew up among the children of the
business executives who took the train every morning to New York City
to go to work in places like the World Trade Center.
I thought
about these Republicans who I knew well, these businessmen with their
messianic belief in neoliberal economics and the idea that the US is a
force for good in the world, ignoring all the evidence to the contrary.
I thought about their children, living in their blissfully ignorant
suburban fantasy worlds, some of whom would suddenly discover that
there was a world out there, and it had reached into New York and taken
their fathers from them. I thought about the daycare center at the
federal building in Oklahoma City, and wondered whether the World Trade
Center had a daycare center in it, too. I thought about all the temp
workers who could have been doing data entry for some nasty corporation
in one of those buildings that day. It could easily have been me
instead of them, had it been Boston in 1991 instead of New York City
ten years later.
At the same moment I thought about my friends
from the Muslim world, and their families in the US and abroad. I
wondered whether crazed American mobs would burn down Dearborn,
Michigan. I wondered how many mosques would be firebombed. I wondered
whether Bush would decide to use nuclear weapons against the beautiful
cities of West Asia, in some kind of unimaginable escalation of the
slaughter. I was happy to note, over the days and months following,
that some of the worst-case scenarios that played out in my imagination
did not materialize. The lynch mobs did not take to the streets, and
for the time being, the ICBMs stayed in their silos.
I knew, of
course, that my government would use these attacks to further their
goals of world domination. I knew, as any leftwinger with their eyes
open knew, that the US government would use this as an opportunity to
jump-start Daddy Bushs New World Order and the Monroe Doctrine from
whence it sprang. I knew they would find a way to blame governments for
the crimes of nongovernmental organizations. I was not surprised that
our support for Saudi Arabia and Pakistan would not wane, while blame
would be placed where it was most convenient for the neocons and
neoliberals against any regime that refuses to roll over on command
from the State Department.
And my other thought in those first
few minutes after the second plane hit the towers was, there goes the
global justice movement.
I heard the confused, patriotic
journalist on NPR trying to make sense of the situation. Yesterday
they were protesting the World Trade Organization, and today theyre
attacking the World Trade Center. That was it. This would be their
line. Before Bushs speechwriters could come up with the line, youre
either with us or youre with the terrorists, someone on NPR had made
the point in their own, slightly more subtle way. There is no clear
distinction between those who want to undermine the US empire through
killing thousands of people, and those who sought to change government
policies through peaceful protest. Certainly there was now to be no
distinction between those who would kill thousands of people, and those
who would engage in protest actions involving property destruction or,
God forbid, these terroristic college students who would dare throw the
tear gas canisters back at the police when they landed in their midst.
While this behavior was never tolerated, it would now be considered as
the moral equivalent of Osama bin Laden.
I knew when I heard
those words on NPR that this mostly young movement, these activists
that the pundits had incorrectly dubbed anti-globalization, would be
unprepared to deal with this new challenge. The movement was under
constant, coordinated attack by the powers-that-be with surveillance,
infiltration, and massive police brutality as a matter of course in
dealing with peaceful civil disobedience. The movement was involved
with a big internal dispute over tactics and how to relate to the Black
Block. But the movement was growing, had plenty of vision and analysis,
and was promoting ideas that were gaining increasing popularity.
Along
with so many others around the world with their eyes open, I was living
within an historical moment that could have gone in many different
directions. A window had opened that was dramatically changing the
composition of the air in the room, but now this window would begin to
close, as quickly as it had been blown open only two short years before.
We
on the left are always waiting, organizing, arguing, or some
combination thereof, trying to determine what will be the next spark
that will set off the next powder keg. We exist in the knowledge that
the class divide, the race divide, the impending environmental
holocaust, the growing disparity of wealth in the world are untenable,
unsustainable. We exist in the knowledge that these things cause
stresses in society that can go in many different directions, but that
generally, oppression will breed resistance of one kind or another.
We
are always hoping that this resistance will be a sensible sort of
resistance that can lead to a better world not white power but
peoples power, not survivalism but cooperatives, not nationalism but
internationalism, not religious war but class war, not authoritarianism
and fascism but real democracy and socialism. But we know that these
stresses in society are volatile, and can lead to many different kinds
of developments. Were all trying, in one way or another, to figure out
how to bring things forward. Organizations come into existence, rise
and fall based on whether they seem to know how to bring things forward
or not.
The efforts of the many different groups around the US
struggling for real democracy economic democracy bore fruit and
managed to bring to birth a vital, youthful social movement in the
streets of Seattle in November, 1999, that used mass nonviolent civil
disobedience in a way it had not been used in the US in several
decades. The WTO meetings were shut down. Around the US and around the
world, people took notice, people were inspired, and the ripple effects
rapidly spread across the globe.
Billions of people around the
world who had been fighting the dictates of the US elite and the
institutions doing its bidding the WTO, the IMF, the World Bank, the
free trade deals, NAFTA, GATT, these arrangements that were so
destructive to the working people of both the Third World and the US
itself, so destructive to real democracy, to the environment, to the
idea that the people of a country, not a countrys billionaires, should
be controlling their collective destiny these billions of people had
been wondering, where are the Americans in this equation? Do they not
realize that theyre also being screwed? Do they not have a conscience,
do they not care about the rest of the world at all? And then, after so
long, they received an answer. There was a stirring in the belly of the
beast.
Union leaders, their unions shrinking down to the point
where they only represented 5% of the private sector, had finally begun
to realize that nationalism was not the answer, that internationalism
was. And people, young and old, who cared about the state of the
environment, the welfare of the poor and homeless, the prosperity of
the people of Mexico or Peru, the ability of the women of the world to
have control over their own lives, people who cared about the very idea
of to whom does this green earth rightfully belong, people who didnt
want to see their schools, hospitals and infrastructure privatized
people came together, in large numbers, realizing that what we needed
more than anything was economic democracy. People began to realize that
the vital argument was between the idea of the commons and rights of
living things and the idea of the sanctity of greed obscene profits.
There
in the streets of Seattle, and later in the streets of many other
cities in the US and around the world, was a crystallization of the
battle for the hearts and minds of the people of the world.
On
one side was the government and its servile corporate (and public)
media, spreading disinformation, focusing on the few involved with
trashing, ignoring or distorting the actions of the many involved with
civil disobedience, giving the likes of Milton Friedman complete access
to the newspapers and TV stations to make their case for these trade
deals while almost completely censoring the voices of the global
justice movement.
On one side was all the power of the state and
the repressive arm of the executive branch the police chiefs like
Patrick Timoney and their lackeys, their brutality, arbitrary arrests,
raids and detention, their increased border security, turning away
activists in trying to cross borders in any direction, their
infiltration of groups, their many provocateurs, their armored
vehicles, their threats of deadly force, their fleets of helicopters,
their unlimited supplies of tear gas, their unlimited budgets.
On
the other side were grassroots organizations like Indymedia, the Direct
Action Network, Food Not Bombs, nonprofit groups like Global Exchange
and 50 Years Is Enough, unions like the Longshoremen, lots of college
students and other concerned citizens from all over the place.
And
the ranks were growing. Of course there were (and are) the luminaries
like Subcommandante Marcos, Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, connecting the
historical dots, making the links between US economic, military,
foreign and domestic policies. But largely it was a young,
inexperienced movement, well-informed about US economic policies but
often relatively uninformed about the history of other social
movements, past repression against them, or of the history of US
military adventures around the world faced with a massive,
well-coordinated campaign of disinformation and repression. But still
it was growing, and the air was filled with optimism and possibility.
There
were small and large protests happening everywhere, even a full-time
protest-hopper like myself couldnt get to half of them. Grassroots
organizations were constantly being formed. Bands of hardworking
activists were burning the candle at both ends everywhere, working
hard, taking advantage of what was clearly a historical opportunity to
win the confidence of the majority of the people. Through words and
actions to spread the idea that real, economic democracy belonged to
the people, that 90% of us had common interests, that the elite were
screwing all of us, that we could change this situation.
I
remember talking with a friend who was tirelessly working throughout
the summer of 2001 to organize the next round of protests against the
IMF and World Banks upcoming meetings in Washington, DC. After much
debate and wrangling over the Black Block and other issues, the unions
were coming down on the side of civil disobedience to a degree not seen
in half a century. Tens of thousands of union workers and tens of
thousands of other people from throughout society were preparing to
shut down Washington, DC, to shut down the meetings of these elitist,
anti-democratic institutions that had led to such misery around the
world, that were so intent on causing so much more. My friend and other
organizers were convinced that this protest was going to be much bigger
than Seattle. There were rumors that the IMF and World Bank were
thinking of cancelling this round of meetings, and coming up with an
excuse that would attempt to hide the fact that they were cancelling
them out of fear of the power of this growing movement.
In the
end, they didnt need to fabricate an excuse. The World Trade Center
was destroyed, the IMF and World Bank cancelled their meetings, the
unions cancelled their role in the upcoming protests, and we had a
small conference instead of a large action. Even at that conference,
the seeds of what would become the antiwar movement were being formed,
while at the same time the feeling that this historic window that had
been opened in the struggle for economic democracy was being slammed
shut.
Over the next few months thousands of Afghan civilians
would be killed by our Air Force, the country occupied, Osama nowhere
to be found. Within two years, Iraq would be occupied, with the most
sweeping agenda of economic privatization ever imposed on a country
being put into place, causing unbelievable suffering to the people of
the region, on top of the constant massacres being carried out by our
military and by the civil war the occupation has provoked.
The
movement for economic democracy that was, in part, emboldened by the
protests in Seattle has continued to grow around the world. The forces
of economic democracy have risen up and taken power in Venezuela,
Bolivia, Ecuador and elsewhere, and have, predictably, been denounced
thoroughly by the forces of plutocracy in Washington. The size and
scope of the global justice movement in Europe, Korea and elsewhere has
continued to grow. And just as they did before, US citizens are
actively supporting these movements around the world, actively
organizing protests, writing press releases, building latrines, singing
songs and doing the work of movement-building alongside their global
comrades.
But in the US, for now, the movement is submerged,
thats one word Ive heard used. Of course there are always good people
organizing all sorts of things as always. Large antiwar protests are
being planned for this month and next month all over the country. Many
people are getting more active around climate change and the lack of
any positive initiative being taken by the powers that be. People in
Colorado and Minnesota are organizing civil societys response to the
conventions of our two elite parties in this electoral cycle. Activists
do the work they do as always, organizing, writing, teaching, running
local Peace & Justice Centers, having weekly vigils, feeding the
homeless, and so many other things.
But the IMF, World Bank and other such institutions have their meetings largely unopposed in the US these days.
A
score for the forces of world domination, the forces of the rich and
powerful, for whom 9/11 was a wet dream, a gift, a way out of the
ideological battle they were losing, a way to avoid losing the consent
of the governed in their neoliberal policies, a way to divert attention
from the massive scandals at Enron, Worldcom, Xerox, a way to make
someone like Bush look presidential, a sacrifice well worth making to
allow them to further their sick agenda of full spectrum dominance.
But
once again, their facade is crumbling. Support for Bush and the
Democrat-controlled Congress are at all-time lows, CNN and Newsweek
have to admit it, grudgingly, sporadically. The movement is submerged,
but the bulk of the people of the US are more cynical than ever. It
seems to me that something else is going to happen. Every
self-respecting leftist would like to know exactly what form it will
take, but nobody seems to know for sure. Whats sure is that as long as
there is inequity there will be resistance. As long as people keep
their humanity, they will want to show their solidarity with their
brethren around the world.
The only thing that can temporarily
muzzle this spirit is the maintenance of the idea that the other is
not like us, he is bearded, angry, evil. The powers-that-be can
maintain this idea through propaganda, and they can maintain this idea
by killing enough innocents so that the next Mohammed Atta is a matter
of inevitability.
And ultimately they can maintain this illusion best if the next attack comes soon.
David Rovics has been called the musical voice of the progressive
movement in the US. Amy Goodman has called him "the musical version of
Democracy Now!" Since the mid-90's Rovics has spent most of his time on
the road, playing hundreds of shows every year throughout North
America, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Japan.
He and his
songs have been featured on national radio programs in the US, Canada,
Britain, Ireland, Italy, Sweden, Denmark and elsewhere. He has shared
the stage regularly with leading intellectuals (Noam Chomsky, Howard
Zinn), activists (Medea Benjamin, Ralph Nader), politicians (Dennis
Kucinich, George Galloway), musicians (Billy Bragg, the Indigo Girls),
and celebrities (Martin Sheen, Susan Sarandon).
He has performed at
dozens of massive rallies throughout North America and Europe and at
thousands of conferences, college campuses and folk clubs throughout
the world. He has loads of MP3's available for free download on his
website, www.davidrovics.com, along with CDs, links, etc. More
importantly, he's really good. He will make you laugh, he will make you
cry, and he will make the revolution irresistable.
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