Dec 8, 2011 - Issue 451 |
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Ideological Disability
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Within the
formation called Occupy Oakland, cracks have appeared because of political
immaturity, fear of failure, “experience greed,” and Marxian mistaken-analysis.
All of these and other challenges to the unity, expansion, and progress
of The Movement are predictable and result from social-psychological thought
and discernment handicaps that result from White, Western, European cultural
history. These handicaps afflict most residents of the We all “swim” in the linguistic and cultural values and belief paradigms that channel our perceptions, emotions, and ways of relating to one another and our ways of relating to institutions. This is much like fish that swim in water but do not hold conscious its ubiquity and profound entanglement in the nature of their lives. Not experiencing nor knowing of other’s experiences of sustaining mental environments free of Western imperialist foundational concepts, we subconsciously recoil and fear other paradigms and ways of relating to each other and to institutions. We, too quickly, fall victim to the cultural-centric conceptualizations and assumptions about who we are and what we can do. We are too comfortable with the underlying worldview of imperialism. My latest encountering with this phenomenon was when the indigenous residents, White allies, members of the Ohlone First People of Oakland, and the People-of-color/Queer-People-of-Color Caucus brought a proposal to the Occupy Oakland General Assembly to change the formal name to “Decolonialize Oakland.” The debate took place – online – over many weeks and was emotional in the moment. The proposal failed, receiving only a 68% vote when 70% was needed for reconsideration with friendly amendments and 90% was needed for acceptance. [Despite the description of this voting system as a modified consensus, it is not. It does not start with the underlying values and approaches of consensus; it starts with the competitive, combative, dis-unifying system of individualized representation and twists it into a super-super majority system that empowers a disciplined minority rather than facilitating community consensus decision making. This voting system itself is another example of an inability to change the imperial paradigm.] For Indigenous Peoples in the Some speakers pointed to the Occupy Alcatraz indigenous
peoples’ land take-over. Others defined The Movement’s goal as the occupation
of the “seats of power.” These speakers (hopefully unconsciously) express
their foundational alignment with imperialism’s ideology. Michael Horse
and others are clear that the indigenous action at The revolutionaries of The politically ignorant and immature have no idea
what people’s power looks like. They are desperate and greedy for revolutionary
experience. This is an individualistic greed not a community hunger. It
is the imperialist that believes that associations with the forces of
today are more important than associations with ancestors and justice
fighters of the past. Some Occupy activist feared that Other Occupy activists have been intellectually
blinded by the Marxian dismissal and placement of race and gender in to
secondary status for justice to class considerations. These misguided
leftist think that unity can only be forged through a Western either-or
paradigm that only sees power through individual material means and discounts
community power as integral to all of our success. The indigenous people
of BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Wilson Riles, is a former |
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