|
Facing the Fourth
Reich
by Carol Brouillet
(This is a 12 minute talk -- (at least
my notes) given at the Redwood Sequoia Congress October
2003.)
9-11 was the biggest ?Special Operation? in human history,
and a desperate attempt by the global elite to cling to
power using their traditional methods of ?terror? and
?war.? Terrorism is the perfect complement to ?corporate
globalization? seeking to dissolve national boundaries,
allow transnational corporations to gain control over
resources worldwide, and to permit mercenaries to dominate
civilian populations. The Patriot Act was written well
before 9-11, and forced, unread, through a terrified Congress.
It was mirrored by legislation passed by other countries
throughout the world, giving a green light to dictators
to crush their ?opposition.?
In the twentieth century, despite the horror
and magnitude of two world wars, more people were killed
by their own governments than by any conflicts between
nations. The old ?national? fascism of Hitler, Mussolini
and Japan are being replaced by a new supranational version
which places the rights of capital, the quests for profits,
above all other concerns. Now we see unprecedented cooperation
between governments, police, intelligence forces as they
redefine 'terrorists' to label those of us peacefully
engaged in opposition to government or corporate policies
which threaten us and the environment.
The 'Big Lie' techniques of the Nazis are
being used again worldwide, and fortunately for us, the
smoke and mirrors of the corporate press are thinning.
It's more obvious to see what is going on from a distance-
in Germany, France, Canada, even Nicaragua than in the
U.S.. The Big questions are whether we can organize resistance
faster than the Bush Administration can organize repression,
and whether we can get rid of national fascism without
inadvertently replacing it with the more deadly form of
transnational fascism. The track record of the I.M.F.,
the World Bank, the U.N. are not encouraging, their one
sure fire recipe for dealing with poverty worldwide has
been to kill the poor- by driving them off their land,
starving them, working them to death, introducing deadly
diseases, using them as fodder in regional conflicts,
and simple murder.
We live in a time of great peril and great
opportunity. Those of us in the 9-11 Truth Alliance believe
that if we can expose 9-11, we can bust the war game once
and for all. This isn't the first time an event has been
staged to gain public support for a war; there is a certain
continuity to the lengths to which governments will go
to tricking the public to support wars of aggression,
the Maine, the Lusitania, Pearl Harbor, the Reichstag
Fire, Gulf of Tonkin are a few incidents that come to
mind. Who benefits from wars? Certainly not those killed
in battle. Fortunes are made by those who sell weapons,
seize lands and resources. Greed and economics generally
have a greater role in instigating wars than the rhetoric
which cloaks them with lofty moral purpose.
It is time to hold the real criminals accountable,
redirect resources from killing and controlling the planet
to nurturing life. The danger is that only a limited version
of truth will surface. A limited version would lay the
blame on the Republicans and Saudi Arabia, ignoring the
Democrats role, to reinforce the myth that Al Qaeda and
terrorists pose a great danger to the world (separate
from the C.I.A.), to funnel more money into policing people
and to justify further wars against Syria, Iran, Korea,
and Saudi Arabia and to create an International Security
State.
My mentors- Bob Swann, a pioneer in land
and monetary reform, and Bill Moyer, author of Doing Democracy,
were both brilliant in analyzing the shortcomings of the
reigning systems, and very effective in nurturing alternatives.
We can hardly tear down the system without providing some
vision of a better world that nurtures hope. For almost
a decade, I've been trying to change the monetary system
and the global economy and have come to realize that solutions
get less press and attention than the root causes of the
world's problems. We know innately that almost everything
needs to be transformed- transportation, energy, housing,
education, agriculture, industry, how our shoes and clothing
are made, and that each action, every purchase, we make
is a political decision which cumulatively pulls or pushes
the world towards a desirable future or oblivion. I try
to juggle and balance my life between challenging oppressive
systems and nurturing the healthy, positive alternatives.
Much has to do with becoming more conscious of ourselves,
our actions, and their impact upon the world, and recognizing
how much power each one of us has.
I met Bill Moyer at a workshop he gave
entitled 'Building Equality in Relationships,' which was
a sneaky way of teaching enlightenment in disguise. All
too often, people behave unconsciously, adopting the modes
of behaviour of the society in which they are growing
up, in our case 'the dominator mode' which is violent
and controlling. This can be applied to men who are abusive
towards their wives and children, as well as to the U.S.
government, which uses military force and a number of
other methods to get other countries to go along with
its demands.
The root of the violent response is in
the psyche of the person (or country) who believes that
their perception of themselves, or their view of the world,
is being threatened. They react in defense of themselves,
as if their entire life depends upon the other supporting
their image of themselves, or their worldview. Generally,
people do this unconsciously. Bill taught us to pay attention,
to be aware of the moment when we feel the urge to passionately
defend or challenge someone who questions us or our beliefs.
A moment of 'fatal peril';he named it. He taught us to
take a deep breath, ground ourselves, and remember - Our
happiness and well being is not contingent upon other
people's perceptions. Accept others views as interesting
information. Engage in genuine dialogue- a free exchange
of views, without attachment to forcing one's views upon
another.
My husband and I have very different political
beliefs and Bill's workshop transformed our marriage and
helped us develop a conscious cooperative relationship
between ourselves and with our three children. Bill's
intent was to empower social movements, by improving the
relationships within the movement, keeping the environmentalists
from killing and battling one another, so that they could
work together.
In an atomized world, people seek community;
by nurturing a respectful, friendly, welcoming climate
within the growing social movements, we attract more people
to become part of a global struggle for peace and justice,
to connect them with humanity and the world in which we
live, to help people see beyond our differences and find
common ground with the deepest human values that we all
share, to match peaceful processes with peaceful goals.
I mention this, because to me, it is evident
that the system is being maintained by fear and greed.
Our greatest hope to change that system is by nurturing
respect, humor, truth, compassion, justice, all that we
wish to flourish, into being, on every level.
There is a scene in the film 'Beyond Rangoon'
when a group of people are escaping the brutal military
junta in Burma, and they are just at the border of Thailand,
which they hope will be a safe refuge, when a soldier
with a machine gun bars their way. The priest reaches
out palm open and says, Join us. And the soldier does.
I don't know the precise percentage of
irredeemable, power hungry, insane mercenaries there are
in the world, but I do believe that the majority of humanity
are good people who love life, who would like to live
in peace, who care about their children and their children's
future. We want to encourage everyone, including the firemen,
the police, the military, even corporate executives to
be on the side of life, and to see that those who choose
to sacrifice thousands or millions of lives knowingly
for oil, gold, power, lucrative contracts are criminals
and a threat to all.
Aung Sung Suu Kyi wrote: "It is not
power that corrupts, but fear -- fear of losing power
and fear of the scourge of those who wield it."
A healthy human being feels empathy and
connection with other people. A 'disconnected person?
is unable to feel love, empathy, respect towards others
or towards those beyond their ?family,? ?tribe?, ?nation,?
?gang,?or ?circle.? Unfortunately there seems to be a
greater allegiance within the global elite to other global
elite than to any particular nation or country. Henry
Kissinger, for example, was hired by Unocal to get the
oil of Turkmenistan, and in the wake of 9-11 was hired
by a Chinese Oil Company; he eventually resigned his position
on the Independent Commission because he didn?t want to
reveal his financial ties, but he clearly reflects elite
rather than ordinary American allegiances.
We have a special responsibility, as Americans,
to hold our government accountable, before China, France,
Germany or the United Nations decides we need help with
our ?regime change.? We would do well, if we could also
dissolve the corporations most responsible for crimes
against humanity and distribute their assets to their
victims, rather than shift the burden of reparations from
some victims to other victims.
How do we do it? When we marched on our
Senator?s office demanding an investigation of 9-11 back
in January 2002, I passed out worksheets that Bill had
made mapping out the 8 stages of social movements, and
the roles, both effective and ineffective that activists
play at various stages. The first stage, can be initiated
by just one person, that is simply to let people know
that a problem exists. We?re beyond that now with 9-11,
Bush actually helped us by appointing Kissinger to head
the Independent Commission. That was raising the red flag
to the whole world that a cover-up was going on, clearly
getting us past stage two- the failure of existing institutions,
propelling us into stage 3, where we are, today, Ripening
Conditions. The tide has turned, more and more people
question the official story, Bush?s credibility and popularity
are plummeting. We have more room to get our message heard,
but there are also strong forces who would prefer to co-opt
or mislead the movement to serve a different agenda.
There are efforts to ?tweak? the Patriot
Act- rather than abolish it. The obscene Homeland Security
is being funded and constructed brick by brick. There
are so many battles- the W.T.O., the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Colombia, the Phillipines, the militarization of space,
corporate control over water and food, the attacks on
immigrants, A.I.D.S., fraudulent elections, the end of
cheap oil, concentration of media control, the attacks
on the environment, so many battles being fought, on so
many fronts, that it is hard for anyone to know where
ones talents, energy, time would be most useful and have
the greatest impact.
?Globalization/Global Economics,? I felt,
was an umbrella issue which contained all the other issues,
so I have been working on that for nearly a decade, and
I have seen the movement, consciousness grow. I was somewhat
shocked when the established Left failed to see how ?terrorism?
was deliberately created to further the agenda of the
corporate elite. There shouldn?t be a false division between
the anti-war and the anti-corporate globalization movements,
a deeper analysis could unite both movements and the entire
country, the world, all of us, by identifying those most
responsible for the violence and fear being unleashed
upon everyone.
I have been told that ?even if what I am
saying is ?true;? It is not strategic to talk about it.?
I agree that there are many different hats we can wear
to further social movements, and that great diversity
in a forest or complex social movement is probably healthy.
When confronted with a life threatening situation, it
is ?normal? for people to go into fear, denial, before
they can bravely face reality and live fully. We still
see many people stuck in fear and denial, paralyzed rather
than energized by the crisis confronting the world at
this time. That is why I am always passing out Bill Moyer?s
worksheets when I table, to empower people to act, and
nurture hope.
I remember Rachel Corrie?s father told
a story about Rachel, and how as a very small child, just
age two, she had posed a question-
?Is being brave, part of growing up??
I believe it is. We need to be brave, to
speak truth, to laugh, to encourage one another, to help
humanity outgrow the ?juvenile leadership? that has seized
the reins and is steering us the wrong way.
I think all of us need to respect one another
and realize that we do need billions of allies in order
to shift humanity?s course, that all the movements and
issues are related and help pull one another along, that
there is no ?one and only way.? In my own path as an activist,
I participated in ?Leadership Mid-Peninsula,? (hoping
to radicalize the local budding leaders.) I failed to
do that, but I did learn a lot, including five very practical,
useful, basic principles of leadership, which I want to
share with all of you; we don?t need one or two great
leaders; we need a leaderful movement?
The principles are-
Challenge the System
Inspire a Vision
Model the Way
Enable Others to Act
Encourage the Heart
The real leaders generally aren?t the ones
at the podium; they are the organizers who create the
space, bring people together, who empower others, and
at the end of the day make everyone feel like ?We did
it!? and ?We shall overcome!?
by Carol Brouillet
9-11 was the biggest ?Special Operation? in human history,
and a desperate attempt by the global elite to cling to
power using their traditional methods of ?terror? and
?war.? Terrorism is the perfect complement to ?corporate
globalization? seeking to dissolve national boundaries,
allow transnational corporations to gain control over
resources worldwide, and to permit mercenaries to dominate
civilian populations. The Patriot Act was written well
before 9-11, and forced, unread, through a terrified Congress.
It was mirrored by legislation passed by other countries
throughout the world, giving a green light to dictators
to crush their ?opposition.?
In the twentieth century, despite the horror
and magnitude of two world wars, more people were killed
by their own governments than by any conflicts between
nations. The old ?national? fascism of Hitler, Mussolini
and Japan are being replaced by a new supranational version
which places the rights of capital, the quests for profits,
above all other concerns. Now we see unprecedented cooperation
between governments, police, intelligence forces as they
redefine ?terrorists? to label those of us peacefully
engaged in opposition to government or corporate policies
which threaten us and the environment.
The ?Big Lie? techniques of the Nazis are
being used again worldwide, and fortunately for us, the
smoke and mirrors of the corporate press are thinning.
It?s more obvious to see what is going on from a distance-
in Germany, France, Canada, even Nicaragua than in the
U.S.. The ?Big? questions are whether we can organize
resistance faster than the Bush Administration can organize
repression, and whether we can get rid of national ?fascism?
without inadvertently replacing it with the more deadly
form of ?transnational fascism.? The track record of the
I.M.F., the World Bank, the U.N. are not encouraging,
their one sure fire recipe for dealing with poverty worldwide
has been to kill the poor- by driving them off their land,
starving them, working them to death, introducing deadly
diseases, using them as fodder in regional conflicts,
and simple murder.
We live in a time of great peril and great
opportunity. Those of us in the 9-11 Truth Alliance believe
that if we can ?expose 9-11,? we can bust the ?war game?
once and for all. This isn?t the first time an event has
been staged to gain public support for a war; there is
a certain continuity to the lengths to which governments
will go to tricking the public to support wars of aggression,
the Maine, the Lusitania, Pearl Harbor, the Reichstag
Fire, Gulf of Tonkin are a few incidents that come to
mind. Who benefits from wars? Certainly not those killed
in battle. Fortunes are made by those who sell weapons,
seize lands and resources. Greed and economics generally
have a greater role in instigating wars than the rhetoric
which cloaks them with lofty moral purpose.
It is time to hold the real criminals accountable,
redirect resources from killing and controlling the planet
to nurturing life. The danger is that only a limited version
of truth will surface. A limited version would lay the
blame on the Republicans and Saudi Arabia, ignoring the
Democrats role, to reinforce the myth that Al Qaeda and
terrorists pose a great danger to the world (separate
from the C.I.A.), to funnel more money into policing people
and to justify further wars against Syria, Iran, Korea,
and Saudi Arabia and to create an International Security
State.
My mentors- Bob Swann, a pioneer in land
and monetary reform, and Bill Moyer, author of Doing Democracy,
were both brilliant in analyzing the shortcomings of the
reigning systems, and very effective in nurturing alternatives.
We can hardly tear down the system without providing some
vision of a better world that nurtures hope. For almost
a decade, I?ve been trying to change the monetary system
and the global economy and have come to realize that ?solutions?
get less press and attention than the root causes of the
world?s problems. We know innately that almost everything
needs to be transformed- transportation, energy, housing,
education, agriculture, industry, how our shoes and clothing
are made, and that each action, every purchase, we make
is a political decision which cumulatively pulls or pushes
the world towards a desirable future or oblivion. I try
to juggle and balance my life between challenging oppressive
systems and nurturing the healthy, positive alternatives.
Much has to do with becoming more conscious of ourselves,
our actions, and their impact upon the world, and recognizing
how much power each one of us has.
I met Bill Moyer at a workshop he gave
entitled ?Building Equality in Relationships,? which was
a sneaky way of teaching ?enlightenment? in disguise.
All too often, people behave unconsciously, adopting the
modes of behaviour of the society in which they are growing
up, in our case ?the dominator mode? which is violent
and controlling. This can be applied to men who are abusive
towards their wives and children, as well as to the U.S.
government, which uses military force and a number of
other methods to get other countries to go along with
its demands.
The root of the violent response is in
the psyche of the person (or country) who believes that
their perception of themselves, or their view of the world,
is being threatened. They react in ?defense? of themselves,
as if their entire life depends upon the other supporting
their image of themselves, or their worldview. Generally,
people do this ?unconsciously.? Bill taught us to pay
attention, to be aware of the moment when we feel the
urge to ?passionately defend or challenge someone who
questions us or our beliefs.? A moment of ?fatal peril;
?he named it. He taught us to take a deep breath, ground
ourselves, and remember - ?Our happiness and well being
is not contingent upon other people?s perceptions. Accept
others views as ?interesting information.? Engage in genuine
dialogue- a free exchange of views, without attachment
to forcing one?s views upon another.
My husband and I have very different political
beliefs and Bill?s workshop transformed our marriage and
helped us develop a conscious cooperative relationship
between ourselves and with our three children. Bill?s
intent was to empower social movements, by improving the
relationships within the movement, keeping the environmentalists
from killing and battling one another, so that they could
work together.
In an atomized world, people seek community;
by nurturing a respectful, friendly, welcoming climate
within the growing social movements, we attract more people
to become part of a global struggle for peace and justice,
to connect them with humanity and the world in which we
live, to help people see beyond our differences and find
common ground with the deepest human values that we all
share, to match peaceful processes with peaceful goals.
I mention this, because to me, it is evident
that the system is being maintained by fear and greed.
Our greatest hope to change that system is by nurturing
respect, humor, truth, compassion, justice, all that we
wish to flourish, into being, on every level.
There is a scene in the film ?Beyond Rangoon?
when a group of people are escaping the brutal military
junta in Burma, and they are just at the border of ? Thailand,
which they hope will be a safe refuge, when a soldier
with a machine gun bars their way. The priest reaches
out palm open and says, ?Join us.? And the soldier does.
I don?t know the precise percentage of
irredeemable, power hungry, insane mercenaries there are
in the world, but I do believe that the majority of humanity
are good people who love life, who would like to live
in peace, who care about their children and their children?s
future. We want to encourage everyone, including the firemen,
the police, the military, even corporate executives to
be on the side of life, and to see that those who choose
to sacrifice thousands or millions of lives knowingly
for oil, gold, power, lucrative contracts are criminals
and a threat to all.
Aung Sung Suu Kyi wrote: "It is not
power that corrupts, but fear -- fear of losing power
and fear of the scourge of those who wield it."
A healthy human being feels empathy and
connection with other people. A ?disconnected person?
is unable to feel love, empathy, respect towards others
or towards those beyond their ?family,? ?tribe?, ?nation,?
?gang,?or ?circle.? Unfortunately there seems to be a
greater allegiance within the global elite to other global
elite than to any particular nation or country. Henry
Kissinger, for example, was hired by Unocal to get the
oil of Turkmenistan, and in the wake of 9-11 was hired
by a Chinese Oil Company; he eventually resigned his position
on the Independent Commission because he didn?t want to
reveal his financial ties, but he clearly reflects elite
rather than ordinary American allegiances.
We have a special responsibility, as Americans,
to hold our government accountable, before China, France,
Germany or the United Nations decides we need help with
our ?regime change.? We would do well, if we could also
dissolve the corporations most responsible for crimes
against humanity and distribute their assets to their
victims, rather than shift the burden of reparations from
some victims to other victims.
How do we do it? When we marched on our
Senator?s office demanding an investigation of 9-11 back
in January 2002, I passed out worksheets that Bill had
made mapping out the 8 stages of social movements, and
the roles, both effective and ineffective that activists
play at various stages. The first stage, can be initiated
by just one person, that is simply to let people know
that a problem exists. We?re beyond that now with 9-11,
Bush actually helped us by appointing Kissinger to head
the Independent Commission. That was raising the red flag
to the whole world that a cover-up was going on, clearly
getting us past stage two- the failure of existing institutions,
propelling us into stage 3, where we are, today, Ripening
Conditions. The tide has turned, more and more people
question the official story, Bush?s credibility and popularity
are plummeting. We have more room to get our message heard,
but there are also strong forces who would prefer to co-opt
or mislead the movement to serve a different agenda.
There are efforts to ?tweak? the Patriot
Act- rather than abolish it. The obscene Homeland Security
is being funded and constructed brick by brick. There
are so many battles- the W.T.O., the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Colombia, the Phillipines, the militarization of space,
corporate control over water and food, the attacks on
immigrants, A.I.D.S., fraudulent elections, the end of
cheap oil, concentration of media control, the attacks
on the environment, so many battles being fought, on so
many fronts, that it is hard for anyone to know where
ones talents, energy, time would be most useful and have
the greatest impact.
?Globalization/Global Economics,? I felt,
was an umbrella issue which contained all the other issues,
so I have been working on that for nearly a decade, and
I have seen the movement, consciousness grow. I was somewhat
shocked when the established Left failed to see how ?terrorism?
was deliberately created to further the agenda of the
corporate elite. There shouldn?t be a false division between
the anti-war and the anti-corporate globalization movements,
a deeper analysis could unite both movements and the entire
country, the world, all of us, by identifying those most
responsible for the violence and fear being unleashed
upon everyone.
I have been told that ?even if what I am
saying is ?true;? It is not strategic to talk about it.?
I agree that there are many different hats we can wear
to further social movements, and that great diversity
in a forest or complex social movement is probably healthy.
When confronted with a life threatening situation, it
is ?normal? for people to go into fear, denial, before
they can bravely face reality and live fully. We still
see many people stuck in fear and denial, paralyzed rather
than energized by the crisis confronting the world at
this time. That is why I am always passing out Bill Moyer?s
worksheets when I table, to empower people to act, and
nurture hope.
I remember Rachel Corrie?s father told
a story about Rachel, and how as a very small child, just
age two, she had posed a question-
?Is being brave, part of growing up??
I believe it is. We need to be brave, to
speak truth, to laugh, to encourage one another, to help
humanity outgrow the ?juvenile leadership? that has seized
the reins and is steering us the wrong way.
I think all of us need to respect one another
and realize that we do need billions of allies in order
to shift humanity?s course, that all the movements and
issues are related and help pull one another along, that
there is no ?one and only way.? In my own path as an activist,
I participated in ?Leadership Mid-Peninsula,? (hoping
to radicalize the local budding leaders.) I failed to
do that, but I did learn a lot, including five very practical,
useful, basic principles of leadership, which I want to
share with all of you; we don?t need one or two great
leaders; we need a leaderful movement?
The principles are-
Challenge the System
Inspire a Vision
Model the Way
Enable Others to Act
Encourage the Heart
The real leaders generally aren?t the ones
at the podium; they are the organizers who create the
space, bring people together, who empower others, and
at the end of the day make everyone feel like ?We did
it!? and ?We shall overcome!? |