No War But Class War!
by Beth Moore
September 13, 2005
[newdemocracyworld.org]
Look upon the city of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast now, and you
see the true face of capitalism. Look upon the tens of thousands of people who
were abandoned, displaced, and then even disparaged by our government and its
media minions for being trapped there by poverty, age, youth, or disability.
They lived for days on end with no food, water, or shelter. They lived amidst
corpses and raw sewage, seeing the ill and elderly die with nothing but the odd
blanket or sheet with which to cover their bodies, watching babies being born
with only contaminated water in which to wash their tiny bodies, and being
promised that help would come tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, until
tomorrow never came for thousands.
What you see, in the majority of those people, is the productive labor force
that kept that city alive before Hurricane Katrina. You see the people who rang
up the sales of goods they could never, in their wildest dreams, afford, who
waited and bussed tables, cleaned houses, cared for the children of the wealthy,
and generally did all the work of a service industry that keeps a tourist city
alive. These are the people whose work produced the wealth of those who were
able to leave the city in safety. When, after days without food, water, or
adequate shelter, they attempted to appropriate the goods they had generated the
capital to produce, property abandoned by those whom they had supported by their
labor, they were shot at, vilified, and defined as criminals.
Yes, look at New Orleans, and you see the cold and cynical face of capitalism.
Our right-wing ruling class condemns the teaching of evolution, because it seems
to contradict the "Holy Bible" and the words of Jesus Christ, in whom they
profess to believe, but their brand of capitalism embodies the most cruel and
soulless application of Social Darwinism.
For whom does that process favorably select? It selects for the survival of
those who produce nothing of substance. It favors those who, by inclination and
aptitude, take from society, and from those whom they rule more than they ever
return. It selects favorably for those whose bottomless appetites, ruthless will
to power, and insatiable greed, threaten the survival of our entire planet.
I grew up in Texas, and have lived in the Southern United States all my life. I
immediately understood what the footage shown, and the reports of violence,
looting, and lawlessness were meant to communicate, and the effect they were
meant to have. Yes, the vast majority of faces I saw on the news coverage were
black, and although few in this country would openly admit to racism, I
understood very well the "spin" that the ruling class that controls the news
media intended to communicate, even subliminally.
The majority of the faces I saw on the streets of New Orleans were African
American. Their ancestors, as slaves, built this country, even as its original
inhabitants, Native Americans (whose only sin was not having a strict enough
immigration policy) were nearly eradicated by the divine imperative known as
Manifest Destiny.
But I did not see "black people (I know the word that many used, whether they
spoke it or not) out of control," looting and lawless. I did not see people
undeserving of our compassion because they foolishly "chose" not to flee to
safety, or because they are somehow inferior in their sentience and humanity.
No. Many of us saw ourselves -- working people of all races, who live from week
to week, month to month, often on far less than a living wage. We saw ourselves,
and our mothers and fathers and grandparents and helpless children, abandoned by
those who profit from our labor, but who return barely enough of what we produce
for us to afford shelter, medical care, and food.
I am not African American. Neither are most of my friends and coworkers. It may
then surprise our ruling class, of both parties, that we saw our own faces, our
own children, our own unburied, bloating, dead loved ones in the streets of New
Orleans.
It may surprise them that someone like me, a white woman with a college degree,
would see, in those thousands of stranded, desperate people, my sisters and
brothers, and that my heart would break and that I would be enraged. It has
obviously come as a shock to George W. Bush and his insulated cadre of
neoconservative imperialists that nearly everyone I know shares those feelings.
We have spoken by phone, communicated by email, talked in the break room where I
work, in tears and trembling with helpless outrage, over what appears to have
been criminal negligence approaching genocide.
We have known, at some level, for quite some time, that we are all expendable to
this government, this ruling class, the oligarchy that covets our productivity,
our taxes, and even the blood of our children for its wars for profit. Yes, we
have known this, but the images and reports from New Orleans wrenched our guts
and left us breathless with shock at this blatant and ruthless demonstration of
that fact.
The question we've asked among ourselves over the past week, then, is "What more
will it take?"
Yes, what more will it take for those of us who support the
ruling class in this country with our labor, our taxes, and even the lives of
our children, to say "No more!"
When I have spoken and written of a revolution of the working class against
those who live from the products of our work, and who rule us by propaganda,
lethal force, and murderous negligence, many have objected. Revolution is
equated with violence, and often for good reason. If the ruling class resists
when the people demand the power due them, and reasonable rewards for their
labor, in the form, at least, of living wages, it is in the nature of that
ruling class to resist with lethal force. Lethal force, in self-defense, then,
has often, historically, been the only recourse for those who would demand that
the power reside in the people.
Even now, those who did not leave New Orleans before Hurricane Katrina slammed
into the Gulf Coast are characterized as products of a "welfare state," and as
people who depended upon the government to their own deadly detriment. What the
smug, right-wing pundits do not, or pretend not to understand, is the fact that
resources for evacuation were not available to tens of thousands in that city.
They do not understand what it means to work for the minimum wage, or even for a
few meager dollars above it. A wage of $8/hour cannot pay rent on safe living
quarters, provide health insurance, provide adequate food for a family of two or
three, or pay for a vehicle, or even for the commercial public transportation
out of a city in the face of certain disaster.
The fact is that casualties have already been sustained in this class war. The
dead in New Orleans are only the most dramatic, and most recent, of those
casualties. We cannot doubt that there will be more natural disasters, for which
our government, if it continues in its imperial wars for corporate profit, will
still be unprepared. And in the guise of a "war on terror," there will surely be
more war, more resources diverted from the protection our own people, even
though we pay our taxes, in faith, for that protection.
This is not the last assault upon us. It is also not the last in which the
casualties will be "low-balled," by the corporate media, in which the dead and
dying will be held accountable, and their lives regarded as necessary "culling"
in the scheme of global corporate Social Darwinism. There will be more. There
are, in fact, more being inflicted on a daily basis - silently, without media
attention. The shameful infant mortality rate in this country. The incidence of
homelessness. The fact that racism is one of the several "elephants under the
carpet" that can then be used to divide working
people along class lines, gender and race lines, and dissolve the solidarity
against the ruling class that would be essential to mounting resistance toward
those who practically deny us even the privilege of existence, while profiting
off our labor.
It is time, sisters and brothers, for a revolution. How can we not look at the
city of New Orleans and see that it is time for those of us who work and support
the Bush administration, the Democrats who play polite political games with them
for a chance at the same hegemony they now exercise, for us to band together and
demand a new nation, an new government. How can we not understand that we are
expendable? That we are merely resources that represent the capital they covet,
and for which they produce nothing, but demand everything from us?
New Orleans is now up for grabs by the corporate empire, and Halliburton has
been one of the first to start counting its money before the people of that city
can even begin to count their dead.
How much more do we have to suffer? How many lives? How many lies?
Give me a number. Please. Give me a number.
Tell me, please, how many lives do we, the working people of this country, have
to give up. How many lives, in countries throughout the world, will it take?
One life is precious beyond accounting, but we live in a culture in which
numbers of lives apparently define our response, and can be manipulated by the
news media and government and corporate entities. However many figures they
present to us is simply too many for me, and for many others, who know exactly
why those people are dead, and then there are the numbers of the displaced, who
have lost everything - hundreds of thousands. Is that not a relevant number, as
well?
Give me a number. Tell me what that number will be, tell me what it will take
before we will all arise and shout, with a thunder that will be heard across the
world, "NO MORE!"
This class war has been waged since the first African American slave took flight
from bondage, to be hunted down and killed like a worthless beast.. It has been
waged since the first Native American realized the need to stop the incursion of
the European invaders, and saw entire villages of women and children and elderly
destroyed by the "righteous" wrath of European invaders. This war has been waged
from the first strike by workers who valued their own lives, and believed that
their humanity was worth more than corporate gain, and then found themselves in
the sites of the guns of the corporate empire of the robber barons. It has been
waged from the first time, in all those cases, that those people were injured,
killed, and even set against one another by the ruling class, who hoped they
would do the dirty work of culling the compliant from the defiant for them.
So it seems there are two questions here, that must be answered. How much more
slaughter and mendacity and patronizing platitudes will we endure before we rise
up and take the power that is ours? The power and productivity that support
these parasites, is ours. What will it take for us to force them to face that
fact?
The second question, and one that must be answered even by those on the
so-called left in this country, who have been on vacation this summer, and who
now seem primed to dialectic, but not truly visceral and decisive action, is
this:
"Which side are you on?"
Beth Moore lives on the Gulf Coast of Texas with her two children. She knows
which side she is on. You can reach her at
bhenry1@houston.rr.com.