Give a Little
March 18, 2020Social Solidarity
March 17, 2020Social distancing—it’s an awkward, ugly term as well as an unfamiliar but necessary practice we’re all learning to implement. As we move through these dire and unpredictable times, let’s change that language and call it what it is: social solidarity. We’re all in this together, after all, and among the zillion things we can do to help one another as part of a shared community is to break the chain of contagion and allow some sensible space between us—it’s an act of cooperation, not distance or isolation, and an expression of human harmony.
Pandemic
March 14, 2020Pandemic
What if you thought of it
as the Jews consider the Sabbath—
the most sacred of times?
Cease from travel.
Cease from buying and selling.
Give up, just for now,
on trying to make the world
different than it is.
Sing. Pray. Touch only those
to whom you commit your life.
Center down.
And when your body has become still,
reach out with your heart.
Know that we are connected
in ways that are terrifying and beautiful.
(You could hardly deny it now.)
Know that our lives
are in one another’s hands.
(Surely, that has come clear.)
Do not reach out your hands.
Reach out your heart.
Reach out your words.
Reach out all the tendrils
of compassion that move, invisibly,
where we cannot touch.
Promise this world your love–
for better or for worse,
in sickness and in health,
so long as we all shall live.
–Lynn Ungar 3/11/20
Pandemic
March 14, 2020Pandemic
What if you thought of it
as the Jews consider the Sabbath—
the most sacred of times?
Cease from travel.
Cease from buying and selling.
Give up, just for now,
on trying to make the world
different than it is.
Sing. Pray. Touch only those
to whom you commit your life.
Center down.
And when your body has become still,
reach out with your heart.
Know that we are connected
in ways that are terrifying and beautiful.
(You could hardly deny it now.)
Know that our lives
are in one another’s hands.
(Surely, that has come clear.)
Do not reach out your hands.
Reach out your heart.
Reach out your words.
Reach out all the tendrils
of compassion that move, invisibly,
where we cannot touch.
Promise this world your love–
for better or for worse,
in sickness and in health,
so long as we all shall live.
–Lynn Ungar 3/11/20
The Coronavirus: An Illuminating Bug
March 12, 2020Jack Halberstam’s brilliant book, The Queer Art of Failure, offers an essential insight for these terrible times: when things are “normal”—predictable, common-place, habitual—whether in one’s personal relations, work life, or politics, life putt-putts along at an expected pace with little fanfare, and without much thought or reflection. Then, an unanticipated crisis, a rupture, an upheaval—one’s partner has an affair, one gets laid off, Donald Trump becomes president—and it’s suddenly time to question everything, challenge the taken-for-granted, rethink basic assumptions, reimagine and rebuild.
This is such a time.
Of course I know as much about coronavirus as any other dazed participant-observer—probably more than Donald Trump and Mike Pence combined, but that’s next to nothing.
I do know that the airlines are on life support, that SXSW cancelled, that the NBA suspended the basketball season, and that I can’t meet my classes in person. I know the illness is spreading exponentially, that official inaction wasted precious time at the start, and that a patch-work health care system (“the best in the world!” according to official messaging) and a hollowed out public medical administration has left the country flat-footed.
I also know that the political class and the 1% know what to do for themselves in crisis: remember 9/11? Immediate and huge transfer of wealth from ordinary taxpayers to big corporations, massive military spending, and the surveillance state rolled out at lightning speed.
Remember the 2008 financial crisis? The housing bubble collapsed, gutting home values and resulting in the biggest loss of Black wealth since the Civil War, followed by a $700 billion taxpayer bailout for greedy and incompetent bankers and a strategy called “quantitative easing” which boosted the value of financial assets owned by rich people. The rest of us were hung out to dry. This also marks the re-birth of reactionary right-wing nationalists world-wide, including Trump and company.
Don’t be surprised that as the ruling class weighs in on coronavirus it will come fully stoked with a predatory agenda—to take one example out of zillions: they are proposing a “payroll tax reduction,” which sounds nice, except that the plan amounts to stealing from and starving Social Security. In 5 years these same criminal bastards will say, “Social Security is broke! We must privatize the system (and let’s stay on message and call it reform!).”
To tale another, the question of cost is constantly raised as people come to terms with the scope of the problem. Deborah Burger, president of National Nurses United, had a great response when she was challenged to explain how the US could afford to make a coronavirus vaccine free for everyone once it’s developed: “How insane and cruel is it to suggest that we have to figure out how to pay for it when we can actually go to war and not ask one question, but to prevent this kind of a disease, we have to say, ‘How can we pay for it?’”
RESIST!
Let’s mobilize and develop our own People’s Agenda. After all coronavirus is potentially instructive and educational, revealing more than concealing, but let’s draw the lessons explicitly. In a country characterized by mass incarceration, vast inequality, militarism, white supremacy, a crisis of homelessness and hunger, a political class refusing to face the imminent environmental collapse, and millions without health insurance, we need to get busy—and fast.
Hyper-individualism and weaponized self-reliance is killing the planet, and it’s killing us. Yes, we are each sacred, each the one of one, but we are also each a tiny member of the herd, a bit of the community, a part of the collective. We must rethink, and rebalance, the “me” and the “we” dialectic. When, 65 years ago, Edward R. Murrow asked Jonas Salk, developer of the polio vaccine, who owned the patent for his discovery, Salk said, “There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?” Health care is a human right, and it’s all about the “we.”
Here are things that coronavirus provoked, and that speak volumes about the shabby policies that had become part of our taken-for-granted; take note:
~~Chicago Public Schools announced that they will provide soap in every school bathroom!
~~The New York MTA said that subway cars will be thoroughly cleaned every 3 days!
~~Detroit officials decided to restore water to homes of poor people whose water had been cut off because of unpaid bills!
~~Amazon told sick workers that they will not be docked for staying home and missing a shift!
~~Uber and Lyft will pay sick-leave for workers out with coronavirus!
~~The US Treasury Department said it will lift some sanctions on humanitarian supplies sent to Iran, the country with the third largest outbreak of coronavirus!
~~Big insurance companies announced (with fanfare) that they will waive co-pays for people with coronavirus!
~~And the government is considering proposals that amount to Medicare for All With Coronavirus!
If you’re not pissed off about all of this, you’re not paying attention.
This is a time to get clear, really clear, and rise up.
Let’s together construct a People’s Agenda:
Support the Green New Deal!
Medicare for All! Health care is a Human Right!
Institute a wealth tax (2 cents on every dollar above…)!
Release all elderly prisoners!
A right to paid sick leave for all workers!
A basic right to housing, food, and water!
Cancel student loan debt!
Open access and no tuition at public colleges and universities!
(…)
OK—too depressing?
March 12, 2020Serious, but more hopeful recent reads for these troubling times include:
Rachel DeWoskin: Big Girl Small.
Earnest Gaines: A Gathering of Old Men
Rachel DeWoskin: Blind
Colson Whitehead: The Nickel Boys
Rachel DeWoskin: Someday We Will Fly
Severance
March 12, 2020While you’re quarantined or “social distancing,” read Ling Ma’s stunning short debut novel, Severance. A pandemic strikes, and a culture based on extreme individualism, consumerism, meaningless and repetitive work simply can’t cope. Candace Chen, constantly consuming on-line, isolated at her desk and wrapped up in her tiresome routines in a New York office tower, barely notices when Shen Fever sweeps the city and wipes out almost everyone. Soon entirely alone and still without fever, she photographs the abandoned city and posts her pictures as the NY Ghost. Read it, and let me know.
Education for Liberation
March 12, 2020VOTE NOW!!!
March 9, 2020VOTE EARLY or Vote on March 17 in person!!!
Dear Family, Friends, Colleagues, Cook County Voters,
You have the chance to vote for Cook County State’s Attorney in next Tuesday’s primary and I urge you to vote for KIM FOXX!
She is a woman of great integrity, intelligence, and humanity – she is hard working, thoughtful, and has a deep sense of justice. She has acknowledged making some mistakes with the Jussie Smolett case, but the politics of the case made it difficult to get through that thicket unscathed. And more important, like all of us, she must be judged on the totality of her record. There is no question that Kim Foxx’s office operates with a higher order of fairness and justice than any of the previous administrations — the single most important difference is that each victim and defendant is treated as an individual instead of categorically based on the alleged offense.
Her main opponent is Bill Conway. If for some reason you cannot vote for Kim Foxx look into him closely and do not vote for him. You may be familiar with his name–not because he has experience, dedicated supporters or a clear vision for the office, but because he is able to run unlimited television commercials. His billionaire father, who runs the politically-connected Carlyle Group, is his largest donor and the younger Bill Conway has spent most of his career so far training to follow his father in managing that business — not in understanding weighty issues of crime or justice in Cook County. The Chicago Reporter article below digs into his commercials featuring a young woman he represented—dreadful that he asked one of his clients with an open case to make political ads for him, and it appears that he has an eager willingness to use people to further his public profile.
This is an incredibly important race for Chicago and Cook County. Give Kim another four years to continue her efforts to turn around the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office – it has been and will continue to be an uphill battle and one that she is uniquely qualified to win.
Below are three articles that lay out the case for Kim Foxx:
Why We Can’t Abandon Kim Foxx — the Chicago Reader explains the significance of her reform agenda
Sun-Times editorial board endorsement
Chicago Reporter article explaining Foxx’s record and digging into Bill Conway’s advertisements and history
Jussie Smollett case obscures Kim Foxx’s record and Bill Conway’s conflicts
Posted by billayers