Pierce writes: "There is a new kind of systematized cruelty in our daily lives, in how we relate to each other, and in how we treat our fellow citizens, and, therefore, there is a new kind of systematized cruelty in our politics as well."
Graffiti in Detroit. (photo: Getty Images)
The United States of Cruelty
26 June 14
�
We are cheap. We are suspicious. We will shoot first. It does not have to be this way. Like Lincoln before us, it is time to do something about it.
while back, we noted the story of the toddler who was severely injured when, during a drug raid, a local SWAT team came busting in and someone threw a flash-bang grenade into his crib. Well, his mother has written a chilling first-hand account of what happened to her son, and to her, during their encounter with one of our insanely militarized police forces.
My husband's nephew, the one they were looking for, wasn't there. He doesn't even live in that house. After breaking down the door, throwing my husband to the ground, and screaming at my children, the officers - armed with M16s - filed through the house like they were playing war. They searched for drugs and never found any. I heard my baby wailing and asked one of the officers to let me hold him. He screamed at me to sit down and shut up and blocked my view, so I couldn't see my son. I could see a singed crib. And I could see a pool of blood. The officers yelled at me to calm down and told me my son was fine, that he'd just lost a tooth.
This didn't happen in Mosul. This didn't happen in Jalalabad. It happened in Atlanta. Keep this in mind.
In related news, up in Detroit, we discover that drinking water is considered to be a privilege, especially if you're poor. And, if you happen to be in arrears, it's time to pull yourself up by your thirsty bootstraps.
There are 323,900 DWSD accounts in Detroit. Of those, 150,806 are delinquent. Some of those delinquencies are low-income customers who are struggling to keep their utilities on, said some who work in providing assistance to those in need. "The need is huge," said Mia Cupp, director of development and communications for the Wayne Metropolitan Community Action Agency. "There are families that have gone months and months without water." The group is among a handful of local agencies that provide assistance to those who need help with their water bills. The Water Access Volunteer Effort, a Detroit-based nonprofit, is another. Going without water can be dangerous, Cupp said. "You can only imagine, how do go to the bathroom? How do you take showers? How do you clean yourself?" she said. "You can't conduct the normal daily things that you would do." The organization has very limited resources. Cupp said the group raised about $148,000 during a charity walk; that money could go to helping people pay water bills.
There is a new kind of systematized cruelty in our daily lives, in how we relate to each other, and in how we treat our fellow citizens, and, therefore, there is a new kind of systematized cruelty in our politics as well. It is not as though there haven't been times in the history of our country in which cruelty was practiced for political or pecuniary advantage. It is not as though there haven't been times in our history when the circumstances in people's lives did not conspire cruelly against them, or when the various systems that influenced those lives did not conspire in their collective cruelty against their seeking any succor or relief. There was slavery, and the cruel war that ended it. There was the organized cruelty that followed Reconstruction, and the modern, grinding cruelty of the Industrial Revolution and the Gilded Age that followed it. There were two World Wars, the first one featuring a new era in mechanized slaughter and the second featuring a new era in industrialized genocide. There was the Great Depression. There was McCarthyism, and the cruelty that was practiced in Southeast Asia that ended up partly dehumanizing the entire country. There always has been the cruelty of poverty and disease.
But there is something different abroad in the politics now, perhaps because we are in the middle of an era of scarcity and because we have invested ourselves in a timid culture of austerity and doubt. The system seems too full now of opportunities to grind and to bully. We have politicians, most of whom will never have to work another day in their lives, making the argument seriously that there is no role in self-government for the protection and welfare of the political commonwealth as that term applies to the poorest among us. We have politicians, most of whom have gilt-edged health care plans, making the argument seriously that an insurance-friendly system of health-care reform is in some way bad for the people whom it is helping the most, and we have politicians seriously arguing that those without health-care somehow are more free than the people who have turned to their government, their self-government, for help in this area. In the wake of a horrific outbreak of violence in a Connecticut elementary school, we have enacted gun laws now that make it easier to shoot our fellow citizens and not harder to do so. Our police forces equip themselves with weapons of war and then go out and look for wars to fight. We are cheap. We are suspicious. We will shoot first, and we will do it with hearts grown cold and, yes, cruel.
We cheer for cruelty and say that we are asking for personal responsibility among those people who are not us, because the people who are not us do not deserve the same benefits of the political commonwealth that we have. In our politics, we have become masters of camouflage. We practice fiscal cruelty and call it an economy. We practice legal cruelty and call it justice. We practice environmental cruelty and call it opportunity. We practice vicarious cruelty and call it entertainment. We practice rhetorical cruelty and call it debate. We set the best instincts of ourselves in conflict with each other until they tear each other to ribbons, and until they are no longer our best instincts but something dark and bitter and corroborate with itself. And then it fights all the institutions that our best instincts once supported, all the elements of the political commonwealth that we once thought permanent, all the arguments that we once thought settled -- until there is a terrible kind of moral self-destruction that touches those institutions and leaves them soft and fragile and, eventually, evanescent. We do all these things, cruelty running through them like hot blood, and we call it our politics.
Because of that, the daily gunplay no longer surprises us. The rising rates of poverty no longer surprise us. The chaos of our lunatic public discourse no longer surprises us. We make war based on lies and deceit because cruelty is seen to be enough, seen to be the immutable law of the modern world. We make policy based on being as tough as we can on the weakest among us, because cruelty is seen to be enough, seen to be the fundamental morality behind what ultimately is merely the law of the jungle. We do all these things, cruelty running through them like a cold river, and we call it our politics.
It does not have to be this way. After the greatest exercise of systematized cruelty in the country's history, Abraham Lincoln gave the greatest speech ever given by an American president, and in its greatest passage, he called hold, enough.
With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.
On one of the cruelest nights of 1968�which was a very cruel year; indeed, a year the cruelty of which eventually would claim his own life�Robert Kennedy stood in the dark in Indianapolis and offered a similar gathering hymn.
And let's dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago: to tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of this world. Let us dedicate ourselves to that, and say a prayer for our country and for our people.
The time for camouflage is over. Cruelty is cruelty. It should be recognized as a fundamental heresy against the political commonwealth and wrung out of all its institutions. That is the only way out.
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Now, if we can just bring charges against the bankers and Wall Streeters who both caused and profited from the financial crash...
Don't have the power to encourage or force actual prosecution of them (YET), but we did quit doing business with them (withdrawing our accounts) after going to an OWS General Assembly in Riverside California. We had been dumped into BoA years earlier when they took over Security Pacific.
And for those of you in California, you can create your own opportunity any time you want. It's called RECALL.
You mean the one Darrell Issa bankrolled, after the Republican machine primaried the electable Republican (Riordan) for a sufficiently conservative one? Try my little bet winner sometime, where you ask the most Republican person you know (and I knew former Presidents of Republican political organizations in California) who that candidate was. His "unexpected" loss, despite heavy spending, led them to the "do over."
I considered running, myself, in the circus that didn't require massive numbers of signatures to qualify, just paying a $3,500 registration fee to get your name on the ballot (I gave it much more thought and came closer to doing it than many other things in my life).
I've often wondered how much "Candidate for Governor of California" would have added to my resume, but, then, how much did it add to the machine picked candidate that lost to Gray Davis? Go ahead and have some fun seeing if even the most die hard California Republican you know has as much trouble as you might, in remembering or finding out who that was.
But I am really, really angry with all those Americans who still continue to bank with BoA.
Too big to fail? Let's make 'em smaller. Thank you, Mr. Olson for your service.
The American "justice" system just sickens me with its wild-eyed injustice and harsh cruelty to all but the powerful.
"But I am really, really angry with all those Americans who still continue to bank with BoA."
That's why Credit Unions were invented- there's one in your area you're eligible to join- a few minutes research will produce several possibilities. The nice part is YOU can vote for the Board of Directors- if they get pissy, you can vote them out.
AND, a credit union doesn't have to make a profit for the shareholders, so they can afford to give you good service.
For some other interesting history, take a look at how John Reed (and Sandy Weill) have had changes of heart.
See John Reed's change at http://billmoyers.com/segment/john-reed-on-big-banks-power-and-influence/
"I, too am angry at Bank of America." To misquote Robert Kennedy, "Don't get mad, get out (of the system.) Besides ranting on RSN (which I support) what have you actually done to reduce your support, direct and indirect, of the banksters?
Wells Fargo which is using fraudulent means to force foreclosure on property. the method is claiming "incomplete paperwork" and refusing to accept payment, and then foreclosing for non payment.
Bank of America is still doing this too, and neither the Federal Government nor the State will do anything about it.
maybe we need more chalk.
Frontline's "Money, Power, and Wall Street" seemed to match our street view of the relative judgements of the various entities.
I like your comments "Vegan_Girl".
They SAID they paid 6000$. Take that with a BIG grain of salt
"The powerful are beginning to overstep and more people are taking notice" ??????
You MUST be kidding. The powerful have been overstepping for a long time, but NOW more and more people are getting fed up and refuse to take it.
Much of the fault can be blamed on American voters for voting in many of these political ideologues into office. And if they weren't voted into office, but selected by political-ideol ogue people who were ultimately voted into office, then again the voters must take full responsibility, and that was before the use of e-voting machines & extreme gerrymandering efforts.
San Diego I thought is supposed to be an extremely liberal and progressive city. So how did assholes like this get into positions of power? And if San Diego is what I believed it to be, then one has to wonder how much worse things are in states like Texas and Mississippi.
Short of a 1776-style revolution, the only solution to this mess would be massive recall elections (and right now without any delay) to rid ourselves of these assholes and to tell the next (hopefully much better) batch that we vote in that if they screw up in any major way by acting like tyrants just once, that they will also be run out on the rail like their former counterparts.
The only problem we have now, and it's a big one, is that the American people have lost the power to have their vote counted honestly. HAVA now mandates that all elections use e-voting machines manufactured & programmed by private companies that have their own political agenda. No hand-counted ballots allowed anymore!
So, now what?
To do this you would need the so called Lame Stream Media to actually print the news and accurate information.
Could you please tell me where this story appeared in the Lame Stream Media? And appeared with ALL the information.
What we have here is the need for PAID advertising and the submission of the Lame Stream Media to those that pay for the advertising.
The American Public is secondary to the corporate dollar when it comes to our major information source.
With some luck and if we can hold out long enough . . . .
Well you get the picture . . . . . Will we last long enough???
This was a criminal trial, so the state bears its costs and
the defendant bears his.
In a civil trial, the winning side might be able to get
his costs covered by the loser, but it's not typical.
www.moveyourmoneyproject.org
Also he didn't back down, he stood his ground, not knowing if he was going to get a big fine and maybe some time in the slammer.
I also applaud the jury for being smart enough to to find him not guilty.
Bank of America's claim that they paid 6000$ to clean the side walk is ballony.
Or they are stupid. Hosing down a side walk could not possibly cost 6000$
thanks
Up north here in Lake County, California, the voters tossed out their incumbent and corrupt district attorney and sheriff after the equally ridiculous and now infamous Bismarck Dinius case, involving an inappropriately prosecuted case of manslaughter. The crime was actually committed by a ranking member of the sheriff's department. Mr. Dinius was acquitted by the jury prior to the election.
WorldWideChildrenChalkProtestMovement
WWCCPM !
Go Go Go !
I'm so interested to know what will happen to him in the media (both tv and newspapers) in the coming election. Obviously, he won't be getting big contributions from any big corporations, notably not Bank of America or any of its brother banks. Let's see what the media does with him. I hope he wins re-election.
San Diego. A circus is where clowns should be seen, not in the courtrooms of the city.
Iceland or Ecuador? Will American homes have to be converted to safe houses? Watch or participate in the fight for democracy!