Hal Niedzviecki writes in Hello, I'm Special: How Individually Became the New Conformity that:
Pseudo-rebellion blurs into passivity. We start to think that seeing a film or videotaping a protest is is the same thing as actually striking a blow against the evil corporation, tantamount to rejecting the latest ultra-convenient polluting apparatus in favor of some benevolent alternative. Again and again, we see our cultural products actually incorporating this idea of rebellion against the corporate status-quo into the storyline.The same sort of idea that pseudo-rebellion is useless appears in a short video clip made of a Derrick Jensen speech comparing the tactics of the Star Wars Rebels with the way environmentalists act. In some ways the comparison is extreme. In the real world there is not one evil emperor and one deadly machine with an amazing flaw. Instead we have a web of laws and policies that we are told our livelihoods depend upon but which create huge environmental and social injustices. There isn't an easy "put bomb here" answer even if a person was willing to go that way. Nor are we creating a movie, so it doesn't matter if people are on the edges of the seats or bored out of our mind as long as we somehow find a way to create a more just, equitable, sustainable society. Yet there's some good commentary about the way activists work built into the video clip.
One of the things that really hits me is the end line about success being measured as getting some press. Working with my antipoverty group that is one interm measure of success. When we do a stunt or hold a rally, do we get press? Yet that is only the interm measure. The bigger question is can we get a specific policy reversed, or when dealing with individual situations can we get that specific person the funding they require. Those are the real victories. There have been some real successes recently for many Canadian activist organizations. One of the victories that spring to my mind is the stopping of the mega quarry.
I hear people talk about how we need a big change. We need to transform the systems. We need to transform the way we talk about things and we need to transform the rules and regulations. Occasionally I hear people say that fighting these little battles is pointless. That it amounts to whack-a-mole efforts, where whenever one project or bad policy is beaten down another one pops up. Yet I think that we plant a forest by planting trees. We create the big picture change we want by working on one little change after another and as we work to change policies or projects we are also changing the way people talk and think about things.
We need to create change one step at a time. Here's a sort of counter video to the above, an argument about how the nonviolent methods can create change.
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