11-1-10 If You’re Not Insane You’re Not Paying Attention! |
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By Emma Kaplan From World Can't Wait | Original Article I went with World Can’t Wait to Jon Stewart and Steven Colbert’s “Restore Sanity Rally and/or Fear.” Stewart called out people “who are too busy to protest.” He launched this rally in oppostion to what he referred to as two extremes, those who think that “Obama is a socialist” and those who called “Bush a war criminal.” This set the tone for the rally. Walking through the crowds, it was an eclectic circus. Signs degrading protest and political action read, “The Loudest Know The Least" and “I’m Apathetic.” Some people had signs actually challenging the Tea Party that said, “Tea Party: I’m Sorry You Are Losing Your White Power” and another that said “ I love homosexuals, Muslims and socialists.” People were dressed up from everything to Hooters girls to Hugh Hefner to Ronald Regan. I began to realize that even though a large part of what motivated people to come to the rally was a concern for the rise of the Tea Party, the rally was going to be devoid of content, leaving only those like Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert and Obama to define what the content should be and determine what direction people should go in. Colbert and Stewart were filling the role of the Democrats, by playing on people’s genuine outrage about the direction of the country and trying to hold them together in the middle. Ironically, Stewart is more worried about communists than about white supremacy. His last speech consisted of opposing “Stalinists and Marxists.” He and Glenn Beck should get together and play golf. In the name of moderation people are being led to something very bad: to be silent in the face of fascist forces, to pretend that things are sane when they are not. People are being told over and over again that no matter how bad things are, you can never do anything to change it. Sheryl Crow and Kid Rock performed a song about this that said, "I can’t stop the war, shelter homeless or feed the poor. The least I can do is care.” Is there anything more empowering and liberating? It was clear that there was a need for an emergency intervention.Those of us with World Can't Wait set up in a busy area with a lot of foot traffic and unfurled a banner that had pictures of Bush and Obama on it and read “Crimes Are Crimes No Matter Who Does Them.” Some of us put on orange jumpsuits with black hoods and knelt next to the banner. We started agitation on the bullhorn and giving people this flier, telling people that we understood why they were there to oppose what the Tea Party represented with some sharp examples pointing to why they are so dangerous, drawing out their racist and homophobic agenda. At the same time we also pointed out that the drone bombing done by the Democrats who side with war criminals instead of the people, was not an alternative for humanity. Some people said they didn’t agree with us and so we challenged them to come and debate. They argued that it was wrong to blanket ALL Tea Party people as racist. We talked about how it wasn’t about blanketing people, it was about whether it's true or not. What kind of a movement attracts those who call black people the “n” word and gay people “faggots?” What kind of leadership does it have and where is it taking people? The anti-war movement has never held to tell people to leave their racist signs at home. It was clear that the people who didn’t think the Tea Party is racist, really hadn’t paid attention or followed that movement deeply. We were agitating around the orange jumpsuits we were wearing and said, "Insanity is this [pointing to the jumpsuits]. You are living in a country that tortures people." People really responded to that, taking fliers. One person said, “This isn’t a political rally.” We got into what the situation is in this country: the rise of a fascist movement, Obama’s order to put a US citizen on the "to-be-killed list" without charges or trial, the continuing and escalating wars. We challenged people: "In a time like this, do people really need to be less political?” We had something to offer people that Colbert and Stewart could not, the truth.Even though to a great degree, people were being influenced by all the powers that be, it did not have a lot of depth to it and people were not thinking critically about what they were being fed. Some people of conscience were grateful for that we were there. Especially that we were saying, it is TRUE that Bush is a war criminal and we had the facts to back this up.
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