Solidarity flourishes the more adverse our external reality
gets. Somehow during hardship, as humans we have an innate intuition which
draws us closer to each other.
Sure, it seems unreal in a time of such consequential
conflict in the global society we are constructing, to be talking about
fraternal unity. After all, what we are witnessing are the repercussions of a
divided world between the rich and the poor and the East and the West. Despite
all this, the truth remains that if we observe closely enough there is right
now a structural battle being fought which will determine the future of the
next generations and our own.
Yes, it is true that there are unjust wars being fought on
our behalf without our true consent or educated knowledge; the suffering of
innocent people in Gaza, Iraq, Afghanistan, and many others which receive far
less media attention, will sit on our consciousness for generations.
It is also true, that as Westerners we are experiencing the
end of an empire, in Karl Marx’s own words, “the empire had ruined them
economically by the havoc it made of public wealth, by the wholesale swindling
it fostered, by the propos it lent to the artificially accelerated centralization
of capital . . . precipitating them headlong into a war which left only one
equivalent for the ruins it made -- the disappearance of the empire.”
No doubt, there is relatively more hunger today in the world
than there was 100 years ago. If we deem important the International Labour
Office's latest annual Global Employment Trends report, which informs us of the
fact that “the service sector now provides 42.7 percent of the world's jobs,
compared to agriculture's 34.9 per cent” and goes on to say that 39 percent of
the global population of working age were unemployed in 2007.
One cannot deny that corporate greed, political fraud and
financial theft are upon us with such catastrophic magnitudes that the average
citizen has lost all hope in equality and fairness. Democracy has become the
slogan of the powerful to justify their actions before the masses, Christ has
been caricatured as the symbol of irrelevance, and our climate and ultimately
us, are suffering this calamity. All this is within the grasp of anyone who
watches CNN with a bit of intuition and reads between the lines.
What CNN doesn’t reveal is that there has been an increased
awakening in humanity and more and more people are saying stop. Every day that
passes sees one more passive citizen becoming an active one, concerned for his
rights. One more sleeping soul awakening to defend his or her humanity. As the
media reporting continues to reflect the monster which humanity has become, one
more individual is drawn, as Freud eloquently described, towards the “shrunken
residue of a far more comprehensive, indeed all-embracing feeling, which
corresponded to a more intimate bond between the ego and the world around it.”
Everyday more and more people are drawn away from George
Bush and pulled towards Noam Chomsky, or Naomi Klein. More people want to know
what is really happening and more are looking beyond the mainstream. That is
due to the audiovisual reports on CNN. The owners of the media assumed we were
stupid, they underestimated the power of collective consciousness and without
knowing it, have made us repudiate them. We learned to despise them for their
empty promises and wars presented as acts of peace. They presented us
peacekeepers dressed up as soldiers and soon we understood. They talked to us
about atomic energy and never disarmed, it didn’t takes us long to react. The
same happened with those wars on terrorism, soon we understood they were taking
away our rights, airports became intolerable, people kept disappearing, our
democratic governments were torturing and all this without fair trials.
Until recently, watching CNN used to anger me, I could not
cope with the fact that it was one more tentacle of the huge propaganda machine
used to misinform the majority, in benefit of a small yet powerful minority.
Today I realize that CNN is our closest ally, every image that it shows, every
speech that it airs, every conclusion that it draws, calls one more human to
civil disobedience. Past acts of civil disobedience regained for us our stolen
rights and determined our present, today’s acts are shaping our future.
Pablo
Ouziel is a sociologist and a freelance writer based in Spain.