In the Vietnam War protest song, �Five to One,� Jim Morrison
of The Doors sings:
The old get old/And the young get stronger
May take a week/And it may take longer
They got the guns/But we got the numbers
Gonna win, yeah/We�re takin� over
In my youth, I took solace in the whole �we got the numbers� thing. The very idea filled with me
hope . . . but little did I know, the ones with the guns have had it all
figured out for a very, very long time. Philosopher David Hume -- in 1758 --
explained it this way: �As force is always on side of the governed, the
governors have nothing to support them but opinion. It is, therefore, on
opinion only that government is founded and this maxim extends to the most
despotic and most military governments as well as to the most free and most
popular.�
�The corporate grip on opinion in
the United States is one of the wonders of the Western world,� says Gore Vidal.
�No first world country has ever managed to eliminate so entirely from its
media all objectivity -- much less dissent.�
This potent combination of muscle and misinformation
manifested itself in the events leading up to the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.
On February 15 of that year, tens of millions of earthlings marched and carried
signs to declare their unambiguous disapproval of America�s plan to drastically
ratchet up what had essentially been a 12-plus year war against the people of
Iraq.
The massive global protests were
barely noticed. The shock-and-awe invasion went on as planned. The repulsive
occupation continues to this day. Doesn�t say a whole lot for �having the
numbers,� huh?
�We� also had the numbers last summer when it came to who
did and didn�t support Israel�s assault on the Lebanese populace. Outside of a
select few in Israel, Great Britain, and the United States, the vast majority
of our planet�s human population was vociferously against the actions of the
Israeli government and its U.S.-funded armed forces. But once again, the numbers
just didn�t add up. As long as America�s ruling elite avoided any mention of a
ceasefire, Lebanon remained doomed to its fate -- no matter how many of us didn�t
like it.
In these and countless other cases, �we� have had the
numbers. �We� still have the numbers. Morrison�s �they,� however, give no
indication they�ll be surrendering their guns any time soon. As a result,
dissent in America is pretty much limited to marches, protests, boycotts,
petitions, candlelight vigils, Michael Moore documentaries, the occasional vote
for a third party candidate, and articles like this one. All of these methods
(at least in their safe-for-mass-consumption versions) are deemed �legal� by
those with the guns and, in their own way, legitimize the power held by those with
the guns. Thus, all such tactics are ultimately impotent in terms of provoking
systemic, long-term change. If you don�t believe me, ask yourself why you haven�t
taken your rebellion beyond the methods listed above. Your answer is likely the
same as mine: �We�ve got the numbers, but they�ve got
the guns.�
Maybe author Derrick Jensen had it right when he said: �We
still think we have something to lose. That�s what�s stopping us. As soon as we
realize we have nothing left to lose we�ll be dangerous.� After all, as Jim
Morrison sang: �No one here gets out alive.�
Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.