As an alternative to blocking traffic and chaining oneself to Bechtel HQ, such activities as 'practicing peace,' reducing consumption, and going to the farmer's market were suggested [by my correspondent].So that was my response, and I'm opening up the options of our mailing list to see what we can come up with.
I've been doing those things most of my life, yet I've noticed that wars keep happening anyway. So I want to try a new approach. I'm attaching my last missive in the discussion, which proposes a collaborative project beyond just plain e-mail writing. If you're interested, opt in my sending me a message at home.
---------------[body of the response sent to correspondent follows]
I like ALL of your suggestions!! And I share your values on these activities. I don't own a car; I volunteer in my community; I support organic farmers. But... Did doing these stop the war?
None of my personal good habits stopped the war. I think many of these things benefit us, and benefit those around us. I think they make the world a better place. But I don't think they make war profiteering less profitable. I don't think they keep the poor from being exploited or bombed. I don't think they are enough to preserve our wild places or ensure that we breathe fresh air.
Every day we come to work on public transit and eat our organic lunches, while Bechtel makes millions of dollars in Iraqi oil trust fund money. I let them do it. You let them do it. Our elected representatives let them do it.
Years from now, I'll be explaining this to my niece. "Well, Bechtel made hundreds of billions of dollars in Iraqi oil money, profiting directly from the US' illegal attack on a sovereign nation, while I was eating organic yogurt and cleaning up my local park." And she'll look at me like I'm speaking Hungarian. And then she'll open her textbooks, and read about how we - grown ups like you and me - did nothing but pen a letter to our congressman once or twice and then went back to using environmentally friendly soap on our dishes, disassociating ourselves from the wars that we're funding.
If people are to criticize people who blocked traffic or chained themselves to Bechtel's front doors, forcing the company HQ to close for a day and costing the company hundreds of thousands of dollars in ill-gotten gains and interrupting their self-righteous, pro-war posturing for a day, I think we'll need to come up with something better than environmentally friendly soap, or not wasting food.
The protesters had a direct impact on a company engaging in a crime. You or I shopping at the farmer's market did not.
We are CONSENTING to the way the world is being run. We are CONSENTING to the way our country is being run. We are RESPONSIBLE for the state of the world around us. I respect the little steps, but that's what they are -- little steps. The personal gestures you have described are little steps. This mailing list is just a little step. It is not a solution. If we are satisfied with the little steps, if we stand still to admire the path we've taken, we will never arrive at our destination - a better, just, peaceful world.
I don't want to discourage you. But I want you, and all of us, to think bigger. We cannot afford to be self-satisfied while landmines maim children in Afghanistan and warmongers get rich off the resources of the poor. We're all in this together.
In the spirit of making a bigger step forward and doing it together, I'm going to make a proposal. I'm going to distribute this proposal to the mailing list, and encourage the people on the mailing list to find like minded friends and involve them. My proposal is that we develop a list of strategies that directly impact the war situation in a concrete way, that we involve others to make our efforts more significant, that act upon our ideas to test their efficacy, and that we publicize our effective ideas widely to encourage others to join us. I would be willing to submit the results of our efforts to magazines and on-line journals for publication.
The ideas would have to be original and on-topic: ideas about topics like conservation that we are already familiar with would have to have some unusual and direct application to make them apply. Some of the ideas may involve some effort -- some time to appear at public meetings to promote a resolution, some time and money mailing educational materials to a group willing to support our effort, money to take out an ad in a newspaper contesting misinformation about the war, evenings spent volunteering with a group that's doing effective peace work. But if our ideas are worthwhile, the effort is worth it.
Protesting works elsewhere, and is a longstanding traditional method of expressing public dissent. I don't think it should be abandoned (although my correspondent notes that the protests didn't stop the war). Nor do I think letter writing (the point of this particular mailing list) should be abandoned: it's a favorite tool of the right wing, because it's simple and it works. But I'd like to brainstorm and work up other options.
I was up until 1 this morning discussion options with S. I spent much of Friday afternoon discussion options with another motivated colleague. We have a few good ideas. It will be worthwhile to discuss our options and see what we come up with.