Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Jay Taber
59 Eldridge Ave
Mill Valley CA 94941
415-381-9349
tbarj@yahoo.com
MA Thesis
New College of California, San Francisco
Dr. Jo Sanzgiri
14 December 2002
CONTENTS
THE PROBLEM
Chapter One: Obstacles
Chapter Two: Needs
Chapter Three: Resources
PART TWO
PART FIVE
CASE STUDIES
Chapter Eighteen: Western States Center
Chapter Nineteen: Center for New Community
Chapter Twenty: Public Good Project
PART SEVEN
PROGRAM PROPOSAL
Introduction
Summary
Course Descriptions
Course Readings
Conclusion
Bibliography
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Unfortunately, crediting all the people whove assisted in the development of this
thesis is an impossible task. The authors cited receive their due, but the devotion of a
select few friends, expressed through their kind and generous support, deserves special
mention.
My life partner, Marianne DAngelo, sustained me through the trials and tribulations
of activism, and the subsequent academic process of coming to terms with the lessons
learned. My activism partner, Sherilyn Wells, was steadfast in her personal loyalty,
honoring my integrity, while ignoring my faults. My undergraduate advisor, Dr. Carol
Silverman, became my trusted mentor, reminding me of my potential, and always
offering candid, practical advice. My prior learning advisor, Tom Parsons, was
respectfully unrelenting in his insistence that I obtain the greatest insight possible from
my activist experience. The primary reviewer of my prior learning portfolio, Professor
Heinberg, honored the worthiness of my reflections on activism. My graduate advisor, Dr.
Jo Sanzgiri, offered gentle reassurance when my confidence or enthusiasm wavered. My
boss, Karen Prescher, the school librarian, did more than I could ever ask for in
accommodating my personal and academic needs in order to make the most of my higher
education. Finally, my sleuthing associate, Paul de Armond, who first opened my eyes to
the value of opposition research, and continues to help me put into perspective and
context the challenges I choose.
To each of them, I offer my deepest gratitude.
INTRODUCTION
In the concluding remarks of my Senior Thesis, I observed that effectively pursuing
democratic ideals is a complex, difficult, and risky business in which bad faith
participants must be constrained. To truly make room for democracy, I noted, it is
necessary to circumscribe political violence. The Public Health Model of Community
Organizing, which grew out of my research and conversations since 1994, defines
organized political violence as the suppression of free and open inquiry. The remedy of
rendering ineffective the agents who practice political violence, in my opinion, requires
both training and structured reflective engagement in the methods of doing so.
This MA Thesis, which also serves as justification for my approach to an activist
political science curriculum, relies heavily on the power of moral sanctionboth in
constraining violence, and in overcoming laziness, cowardice, and the desire for
reassurance that leads people to accept and follow dangerous leaders. It also relies on a
respect for the practice and results of research and analysis.
Moral positions, learned slowly over time through social interaction, observation,
reflection, and study, are best internalized absent coercion or indoctrination. Moral
lessons, conveyed by parents, pastors, teachers, and philosophers through the ages, are
woven into the societal myths, laws, and codes of behavior that guide us through life. The
evolution of human consciousness in defining and redefining morality, however, has
encountered a formidable obstacle in the modern spectacles of consumerism and
militarism, amid what I would term the perpetual carpet bombing of advertising,
propaganda, and amusement. Devoting adequate attention to the discussion and
consideration of moral values thus requires the creation of time, space, structures, and
activities conducive to weaning and shielding people from these psychic intrusions.
My current estimate of our social and political situation is that, over time, reactionary
forces can be isolated. In the meantime, we must position ourselves to subvert these
dominant forces while integrating what resistance there is in order to prepare for claiming
power. We must also establish and exercise intelligence and security capabilities.
Otherwise, we risk losing a marvelously inspired and dedicated generation of intellectual
and organizing leadership. With American reactionaries eager to begin nuclear war over
the control of the worlds oil supplies, this is a risk we cannot afford.
The philosophy behind the public health model of community organizing is that the
primary obstacles to engagement are ideological, and that the primary task in overcoming
these obstacles is a communicative one. The purpose of this thesis is to examine the
efficacy of the public health model applied to social and political engagement, and
ultimately to spark discussion of and experimentation with strategies and tactics that
foster greater autonomy and accountability throughout our society.
The antidote to our crisis of values is the articulation and dissemination of moral
sanctions; the eradication of the social cancer of fascism, based on official terror, requires
the informed and careful application of the devices of ideological warfare. Only when
nodes of resistance in the US recognize and coalesce around these principles, will new
leadership find expression capable of mobilizing the social support necessary to catalyze
a mass movement of liberation.
PART ONE
THE PROBLEM
Chapter One
Obstacles
The greatest obstacles to communicating the ideological social transformation needed
to mobilize public support for socioeconomic autonomy and political accountability are
inextricably bound up with our societal mythology regarding democracy and freedom.
One can see, time and again, evidence of this in the persistent adherence to American
exceptionalism--the ideological basis of the extra-terrestrially blessed concepts of
Manifest Destiny and Pax Americana the consequence of what Peddlers of Crisis
author Jerry Sanders describes as, the aggressive huckstering of US commercial,
political, and cultural interests [that] etched empire into the national consciousness as a
deeply engrained way of life (11).
American society, although founded on the institution of slavery and exclusion-especially of minorities, women, and the poor--from normal and meaningful participation
in self-governance; systematic murder of and theft from Native Americans; and robbery
of working class immigrants as well as third and fourth-world resources, nevertheless
believes it saved the world from Fascism and Communism and thereby stands alone as
guarantor of global order and morality.
The creation of a national consensus behind the United States moral mission of
upholding the rule of law in international affairs was initiated under President Truman,
who, in 1947 said, the world must choose between alternative ways of life based on
either free institutions or terror and oppression (Zinn 417). Restoration of the
Amercentric world system, shattered in the Vietnam era, through a revived Containment
Militarism [devised in 1951], relies on the notion [indeed the ideological bond] that
resistance to [American] empire abroad is a threat to security at home (Sanders 18,19).
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As Alan Wolfe states in the 1983 foreword to Peddlers of Crisis, Peddling crisis is not
complicatedIn a world dominated by nuclear weapons, fear is a realityThe
Committee on the Present Danger [CPD] was successful because it understood basic
American ideology and how to manipulate itWar provides a source of unity in a
divided societythat during difficult periods seeks the familiar to relieve its anxiety (36). What is most familiar to Americans is the rule of force and Cold War demonology
promoted by CPD warriors like current and former Nixon White House Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld. As Sanders puts it, To combat non-alignment and selfdetermination in international politics [that] necessitatedthe resort to force must
commend itselfas an inescapable exception to the basic idea of freedom (34,44).
Admittedly, we see cracks in the veneer of American sanctity, most recently
dramatized by global demonstrations against economic and military hegemony, but the
American attitude of arrogance continues largely unabated, as though our relatively high
economic security and political maneuverability is unrelated to our sordid history. As
these cracks widen, hastened by such events as the December 2000 presidential coup
detat by oil and military interests, the September 11 revenge taken by primarily Saudi
militant elements of third world resistance to oil and military domination, and the recent
unraveling of Enrons piratical methods of global energy control, development and
distribution, the sanctuary of American piety becomes increasingly vulnerable to dispute.
Nothing is more revealing than US policy in the Persian Gulf region, the basic thrust
of which is to maintain Arabian Peninsula monarchies as Washingtons chief strategic
allies and to marginalize both Iraq and Iran. As noted in Slow Motion Holocaust by
Stephanie Reich, the US carried out this policy during the Iran-Iraq war by assisting one
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belligerent and then the other, about which Henry Kissinger said at the time: The
ultimate American interest in the war is that both should lose (22). Two administrations
later, responding to reports citing more than half a million Iraqi children killed by UN
economic sanctions, US Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright replied: we think
the price is worth it (26). Coming full circle from the 1985-6 Iran-Contra affair in which
then Vice President George H.W. Bush directed illegal arms smuggling to Iran, the
present Bush administrations characterization of rogue nations like Iran and Iraq
(which resisted first British, then American oil control) as constituting an Axis of Evil,
rings somewhat hollow.
Perhaps most telling in terms of our diminished moral prestige was the removal of the
United States from the United Nations Commission on Human Rights by secret ballot on
May 10, 2001. Writing in January 2002 for the Albion Monitor online newspaper,
Gustavo Capdevila claims, Sources close to the Commission said western Europe
wanted to teach Washington a lesson for its condescending, isolationist behavior in the
Commission and other international fora. According to Capdevila, the US vote against a
resolution on the right to food (the text declared unacceptable 826 million people unable
to meet minimal dietary needs) on top of the United States abrupt withdrawal from the
Kyoto Protocol on global warming created an adverse attitude toward the US. The April
2002 rejection by the US of the International Criminal Court (for prosecuting war crimes,
genocide, or other crimes against humanity), following on the heels of US nonparticipation in the UN conference on racism one week prior to September 11, 2001,
fixes the US position of unilateralism firmly in the mind of the world community. The
moral force behind the Court, which, according to Human Rights Watch spokesman
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Richard Dicker has the potential to be the most important human rights instrument
created in the last 50 years (Bone 1) will unfortunately not extend to the US.
Chapter Two
Needs
The danger associated with confronting the American psyche under such traumatic
and turbulent circumstances lies in the personal and collective limits of our ability to
absorb and internalize this horrific reality. It will take time to digest the fact that, for
many of us, our entire public education and media indoctrination was based on official
lies about American piety and goodwill. Consequently, our perceptions of Americas role
in the world have been turned topsy-turvy, leaving some of us adrift, searching for some
kind of certainty, and others hunkered down in denial. Americans who fought the Nazis,
served in the Peace Corps, or participated in the Civil Rights Movement, rightly feel
bewildered and betrayed.
The primary challenge, for those engaged in the movement against war, racism, and
poverty, is in reaching out to the bewildered and dismayed with firmness and
compassion, anchored by genuine American ideals of equality and justice. Insistence on
accountability from the domestic, anti-democratic elites that brought on the terrible
episode of events under the second Bush administration is fundamental to our ability to
survive psychologically our inevitable epoch of decline, indicated by the accelerating
trends toward isolation of the US by the European Union and the United Nations.
The desire to kill the messenger bearing such discomforting news is most aptly
expressed by the oil-military-financial triumvirate, represented by Cheney, Rumsfeld, and
Bush, who threaten to unilaterally destroy the economies and infrastructures of all who
13
14
threat could justify a departure from distrust of centralized power and excessive spending
(90). The Establishment elite policy of tripling military expenditures [under Truman,
under Reagan, and now under Bush II] required a public campaign to create a mood of
impending crisis to surmount inherent tensions of the democratic political system (114).
Success of CPD is attributed to its control and synchronized manipulation of official
doctrine and popular ideology. According to Sanders, the critical question for CPD in
1976 was how to get President Carter to lead an ideological coup of his own
administration. Their plan, coordinated with the private National Security Information
Center, was to 1)interact with policy echelons in the White House and Pentagon 2) tutor
Congressional staffs and brief members 3) work with trade associations with an interest
in defense 4) generate public information through the Washington press corps (196-7).
CPD not only subverted and attacked the conclusions of their adversaries, which included
Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, and the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, they attacked their credibility and contested their morality. CIA Director George
H.W. Bush, in June 1976, [in anticipation of Carters election] appointed a [CPD] team,
which according to former CIA Deputy Director Herbert Scoville, was dedicated to
proving that the Russians are twenty feet tall (199).
The key connection to Conservative grassroots mobilization, says Sanders, were
people like right-wing direct-mail guru Richard Viguerie, publisher of Conservative
Digest, who with the American Security Council and the AFL-CIO produced the film The
Price of Freedom (208-9). Adolf Hitler, quoted in The Fine Art of Propaganda by Lee and
Lee, observed A lie is believed because of the unconditional and insolent inflexibility
with which it is propagated and because it takes advantage of the sentimental and extreme
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Resources
Strategic solidarity has emerged with the advent of the April 20, 2002 national march
against war, racism, and poverty in cities across the US. The post-demonstration phase of
resistance will require the linking of national, regional, and local movement development
resources through a process of dialogue and integration. The leading involvement of
moral and religious authorities and organizations assures the proper movement emphasis
on moral sanction, central, in my opinion, to rebuilding democratic society. But moral
sanction, alone, is insufficient to constrain reactionary political violence and official
repression; that will require continuous research, analysis, and investigation--the civil
society equivalent of wartime intelligence operationsin order to weather the
psychological warfare associated with the disease of aggression.
Psychological warfare, according to Paul Linebarger of the School of Advanced
International Studies, is a continuous [propaganda] process not controlled by laws,
usages, and customs of warcovert, often disguised as the voice of institutions and
mediaa non-violent persuasion waged before, during, and after war (1). The two
principles of long-range psywar, notes Linebarger, are 1) Given a choice between
conversion and extermination, formal acceptance will become genuine acceptance if all
public media of expression are denied the vanquished faith. 2) The same result can be
effected by toleration of objectionable faith, combined with issuance of privileges to the
preferred faith. If all participation in public life, political, cultural, and economic, is
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17
provoking thought; getting consumers to pause; jarring conscienceis not just the
method of Adbusters Magazine. It can be seen in graffiti, signs, and banners present at
every meeting of the WTO, IMF, and World Bank over the last four years.
Antonio Gramsci, writing in Prison Notebooks, observes that, Civil society operates
without sanctions or compulsory obligations, but nevertheless exerts a collective
pressure and obtains objective results in the form of an evolution of customs, ways of
thinking and acting, and morality. The eclipse of a way of living and thinking cannot take
place without a crisis (242). Civil society today, I would argue, exists in a perpetual state
of crisissome fabricated and some realthat, with the advent of alternative media,
desktop publishing, and Internet communication, offers an unprecedented opportunity to
begin this eclipse. As Gramsci observed from prison in 1930s Fascist Italy, If the ruling
class has lost its consensus, i.e. is no longer leading but only dominant, exercising
coercive force alone, this means the great masses have become detached from their
traditional ideologies and no longer believe what they used tothe exercise of force to
prevent new ideologies from imposing themselves leads to skepticism and a new
arrangementa new culture (275-6). A fine example of this was seen in the November
1999 Battle in Seattle, when new technology enabled millions to simultaneously view
network news talking heads on TV claim that protesters were attacking police, while
satellite-linked Independent Media live video footage played over the Internet exposing
robo-cops beating and pepper-spraying passive protesters engaged in civil disobedience
sit-ins.
Essential to Gramscis approach, according to editors Hoare and Smith, is the notion
that an intellectual revolution is not performed by simply confronting one philosophy
18
with another. It is not just the ideas that require to be confronted but the social forces
behind them and, more directly, the ideology these forces have generated and which has
become the uncritical and largely unconscious way of perceiving and understanding the
world (321-2). As Gramsci asserts, Creating a new culture means the diffusion or
socialization in a critical form of truths already discovered and making them the basis of
vital action, an element of moral orderThe co-existence of two conceptions of the
world (words versus deeds) is the profound contrast of a social historical order and
signifies the social groups conception may be embryonic, manifested in sporadic action
(325-6). Noting that superficial, uncritical, inherited consciousness [as seen in liberal
reform postures] influences moral conduct in that it does not permit any action, decision
or choice, Gramsci observes that insistence on the practical element of the theory-practice
nexus means one is going through a historical phase in which the structural framework
is being quantitatively transformed and the appropriate quality superstructure is in the
process of emerging (333,335).
We can see both of these shifts in the non-hierarchical pro-democracy movements use
of strategical netwar, emphasizing autonomy and accountability both internally and
externally. Using what author Luther Gerlach refers to in his November 17, 2000
presentation to the American Anthropological Association as segmented, polycentric,
interacting, networks, or SPINs, anti-WTO forces combined diverse voluntary tactics
with messages focused on morality and ideology that resonate with American values.
Gramsci claims The history of philosophy is the history of ideological initiatives
undertaken by a specific class of people to change the conceptions of the world that exist
in any particular age and thus to change the norms of conduct. The philosophy of an age,
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20
examples of the vulnerability of the oppressor so that a contrary conviction can begin to
grow within themAs long as the oppressed remain unaware of the causes of their
condition, they fatalistically accept their exploitationIn working towards liberation, one
must neither lose sight of this passivity nor overlook the moment of awakening (51).
Freire warns that The inability to act responsibly causes men to reject their
impotence, often by submitting to or identifying with a person or group having power
(65). These populist manifestations of rebellion seeking a feeling of effective action, as
he calls it, seen in the Wise Use and militia movements, as well as in militarist
nationalism, indicate the need for ideological intervention and subversion of psywar
opponents preventing others from engaging in the process of inquiry through
intimidation--political violence.
Freire asserts, The complex of interacting themes of an epoch constitutes its thematic
universeAs antagonism deepens between themesthere is a tendency for the themes
and reality itself to be mythicized, establishing a climate of irrationality and sectarianism.
In such a situation, myth-creating irrationality itself becomes a fundamental theme
Thematic investigation (the way people think about and face the world)fatalistically,
dynamically, or staticallybecomes a striving towards awareness of reality and selfawareness, a starting point for the educational process or cultural liberation (92). Freire
notes that in order to increase passivity, oppressors develop methods that preclude any
presentation of the world as a problem, showing it rather as a fixed entity to which people
must adapt. Keeping them passive, is accomplished by depositing myths indispensable
to preservation of the status quo: free society; free to work; this order respects human
rights; anyone who is industrious can succeed; equality; ruling class as defenders of
21
PART TWO
22
Chapter Four
23
Isolate
The primary mission of institutions charged with protecting the public health is to
contain outbreaks and to prevent epidemics associated with infectious disease. The first
order of business in the public health regime is to isolate and study the various pathogens
that pose such a threat to society, in order to determine the most effective means of
prevention and containment. Through research, essential characteristics of the disease can
be determined. Through analysis, options for intervention are continually reviewed,
tested, and revised with an eye toward the development of prophylactic measures,
treatment, and medicines, as part of the array of intervention methods at the disposal of
public health professionals. In addition to the biological and infrastructural investigations
conducted, committees, divisions, and departments are established for the purpose of
interdepartmental communication and coordination engaged in developing appropriate
legislation, budgets, and operational manuals for all the ancillary public agencies
necessarily involved in implementing the mission of public health administration.
In the body politic, social pathogens of aggression that surface in the form of such
things as racism, fascism, homophobia, and xenophobia can be viewed and approached in
a similar manner. Each of these ideological cancers have origins, histories, distinct
characteristics, and can be studied, monitored, and analyzed asking the same basic
questions used by the Centers for Disease Control and the Institutes for Public Health:
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25
Chapter Five
Inoculate
With the development of vaccines, public health officials added a powerful defensive
weapon to their arsenal. To varying degrees depending on the disease, the combination of
vaccination programs with the management of host conditions improved life immensely.
People not only lived with less disease; they lived with less fear of disease, and were thus
less susceptible to psychologically disturbing explanations of its causes, previously
associated with such things as morality, magic, and religion.
Likewise, health professionals, through the accumulation of data and the observation
of results of vaccination campaigns, became aware of the differential vulnerability to
contracting disease. Through trial and error and reflection, they came to understand the
plurality of factors that bear on an individuals propensity toward good or poor health.
Over time, a more holistic perspective developed to include consideration of diet, habits,
stress, genetics, age, and gender. Thus informed, guardians of public health are better
prepared to initially target the most vulnerable populations in mobilizing the resources of
disease control and epidemic prevention.
Populations most vulnerable to ideological diseases are equally identifiable,
considering such conditions as employment, education, religion, location, and economic
status. Systematic study, research, and analysis of their historical development within the
current political context allow those considering intervention measures to anticipate and
possibly head off dangerous events. At the very least, operating from an informed
position provides activists with the ability to not make things worse.
By adopting the medical credo do no harm, socio-political public health warriors can
develop an attitude that prepares them for what Laurie Garrett, author of Betrayal of
26
Trust, calls The Coming Plague. Although referring to disease in the microbial sense,
Garretts profound question: Can it still be assumed that government can and will protect
the populaces health? applies as well to sociological pathogens that have found ways to
circumvent normal host defenses. If the answer to this question is, as I contend, no, then
those of us who try to heroically cover for official complacency and public indifference
find ourselves in a position similar to health workers in the developing worldstruggling
without resources against insurmountable odds. Referring to Third World health workers,
Garrett says, It is the paradox of our era that while they struggle, we are so privileged
that we are frequently unaware that their struggle exists (preface).
It is equally true of American society that the beneficiaries of privileged social status
live in comfortable ignorance of the rare and latent social diseases that pose grave risks to
communities, that is, until they amplify in unhealthy environs into terrible epidemics like
the Wise Use and Militia movements. As Garret observes, effective public health
systemsmonitor the health and well-being of its citizens, identify problems in the
environment and among the members of its community and establish public health
practices to address these problems. Her dire warning that, We live in a world in which
new human pathogens emerge and old infectious diseases once thought conquered can
resurface with a vengeance reminds me of a World War II Jewish refugee who made a
comment to the effect that he thought we had ended anti-Semitism with the surrender of
Nazi Germany. The analogy is perhaps best summed up by Garrets remark on the perils
of reliance on pharmaceutical technology, Resilient mutated strainshave evolved and
flourished in part through ignorance of the need to complete a prescribed courseand by
the overuse and misuse of drugsThe challenge is to adapt our public health strategy to
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Chapter Six
28
Educate
Once a disease is contained, educational efforts aimed at broadening public support
for and cooperation with health agencies become part of an ongoing system of
monitoring, reporting, and situational assessment conducive to institutionalizing
practices, behaviors, and investments in achieving optimal health. Wavering commitment
to these educational efforts means that gains made in disease control for one generation
might be lost for the next; betrayal of public trust through laziness, cowardice, or
dishonest acts, especially for political purposes, also endangers the public sense of
citizenship.
Thus, in order to recruit and convert sufficient numbers of the populace to participate
in healthful practices, working relationships need to be built and maintained by honoring
that trust with frankness, obligation, and accountability. When that trust is broken, it must
be painstakingly rebuilt. Similarly, social activists need to be vigilant in not overstating
problems, not underestimating the seriousness of problems, and in not shrinking from
their obligation to articulate and disseminate their assessment candidly and repeatedly,
regardless of the popularity of the message. Eventually, integrity has its reward.
Communicating social transformation based on ideological research, analysis, and
education, within the framework of the public health model, incorporates tools of
intelligence and propaganda from military warfare, applied to community organizing.
Convincing people to participate in, or persuading them to cooperate with, such a
tumultuous endeavor requires the clear articulation of the philosophy behind it.
PART THREE
29
Chapter Seven
Moral Sanction
30
31
would legitimate their efforts in terms of a moral discourse of the common good and
provide an alternative to the culture of individualism (209-10). Rather, the growth of
centralized planning and administration came to symbolize professionalism without
contentwhat Tocqueville foresaw as American administrative despotism (208).
Moral sanction alone (especially in the present where citizenship is so rare), may
be insufficient to constrain political violence or official repression, but it can bring
significant pressures to bear on public behavior as well as within institutions under the
control or influence of civil society. Indeed, reform and revolutionary movements, as
well as other forms of resistance in fundamental conflict with despotic powers, rely on
moral sanction as an essential component of political warfare.
In fact, the commitment of social movement participants and the approbation of noncombatants and potential recruits are largely determined by the ability of resistance
leaders to articulate and disseminate the moral values at issue. In this way, resistors and
allied advocates can gain not only attention, but also recognition of the validity of their
grievances. At the same time, the moral prestige of oppressive or repressive institutions is
diminished, and opportunities to obtain concessions or to leverage discussion and
dialogue are enhanced.
Chapter Eight
Core Values
Patterns of cultural preference, consciously articulated as values, provide continuity
and grounding in times of social disintegration, turmoil, and transition. The core values
expressed in acts of moral sanction, even if they at times motivate righteously indignant
believers to commit violence, are ultimately the foundation on which a new society can
reintegrate around altered relationships of the old. The moral ambivalence, produced by
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the popular confusion associated with sorting out the logic of individualistic ideology in a
complex interdependent society, views entitlementseven morally legitimate claimsas
matters of power, rather than matters of justice. In what Bellah describes as a culture of
self-proclaimed moral equality, the American language of individual rights makes sense,
but the consensual political community commonly envisioned by Americans requires
coming to terms with complexity and developing a conception of society that generates
a language of common good (204-7).
Democratic ideals as expressed in American sacred documents center around notions
of autonomy and accountability. Our statutes and mythology pay more than lip service to
these core values; they interpret the philosophy around which our society has been
constructed, providing doorways to their future realization. The key to the restoration of
our sense of social obligation, in Bellahs view, is found in our community histories
where examples that embody and exemplify the meaning of community, in character,
virtues, and shared suffering, turn us toward the future as communities of hope. People
growing up in communities of memory, as Bellah calls them, participate in practices of
commitment that define patterns of loyalty and obligation that keep the community alive
(153-4). If Americans despair at the corruption of the powerful and privileged, Bellah
argues, relief is to be found in the ancient image of the active citizen contributing to the
public good in a context of moral and religious obligationthe classical republicanism of
early colonial America (142-3).
Communication of these values, I would note, leads to the empowering acts of
individuals that develop commitment to a process of transformation they believe will lead
to greater fulfillment of these values. Faith in the possibility of justice, by a process that
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transcends issues, acknowledges the supremacy of human dignity and the ethical
imperative to act. As Bellah observes in reviewing the observations of Tocqueville, The
habits and practices of religion and democratic participation educate the citizen to a larger
view, leading Bellah to conclude that community responsibilitythe practical
foundation of individual dignity-- is the only reliable bulwark against despotism (38).
These habits of the heart Tocqueville describes in Democracy in America, according to
Bellah, create the kind of person who could sustain a connection to a wider political
community and thus ultimately support the maintenance of free institutions (viii).
Chapter Nine
so inclined, arises when these threats successfully elude popular detection and are able to
spread covertly, infecting unsuspecting target populations, including ones allies, through
lazy and corrupt media habits.
This is not to say that the model is flawed; rather, that the social immune system can
only work when the other systems function properly. The symbiotic relationship and the
guardian cells ability to protect society break down when any of the systems
malfunction.
Debbie Garrett observes that, it was in Gotham at the dawn of the twentieth
century that bands of sanitarians, germ theory zealots, and progressive political leaders
created the worlds first public health infrastructure primarily focused on prevention and
surveillance, rather than cure (2). She notes that society of that era, when strides in public
health far surpassed those of the last half century, needed to take aim at a far more
complexand elusivetarget comprised of science, politics, sociology, economics, and
even elements of religion, philosophy, and psychology. Noting that public health
infrastructures were not terribly resilient in the face of societal stress and economic
difficulty, Garrett forewarns, an unstable, corrupt society is inevitably a public health
catastrophe (4).
In the present era of malign neglect and rampant corruption at the highest levels of
American business and government, it is a dire warning indeedin terms of public
health, safety, freedom, and life itself. So vital to societal stability and so vulnerable to
political disorder, public health in either sensephysiological or psychologicalwhen in
crisis, can bring down a government.
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Chapter Ten
36
For Mahatma Gandhi, like other great souls, the act of resistance was a reclamation of
the soul of his community. He was chosen to lead by his mentors and advisors because of
his spirit, patience, and powers of analysis in communicating the vision of transformation
achieved through the use of moral sanction. This vision of transformation was thus able
to seize the initiative in proclaiming a war of ideas, rather than a war of individualsa
conflict in which ordinary individuals could both participate in a national movement as
well as grow in self-worth. With the help of international media, that was yet to become
amoral, the injustice was made visible to the world, and the power of moral sanction was
exercised.
Key to Gandhis success in mobilizing world opinion and the Indian people, were his
notion of ripeness of issues and the discipline of preparation. From his experience in
South Africa, he realized that people needed time to absorb new ideas, and to develop
convictions based on these ideas, before they could be effectively mobilized. From his
experience in the judicial system, he also knew the importance of honoring the positions
of all parties in a dispute as a means of constructing consent to the resolution reached. A
significant aspect of Gandhis philosophy, rare in the cynical populism of America as we
enter the era of demise of our empire, is his implicit trust in human nature to want to do
what is morally right once the truth is revealed. What today seems nave is, I propose,
misunderstood; Gandhi was referring to the human nature of people living and acting in
harmony with their beliefsnot to the perverted acts of the desperate, of sociopaths, or of
neurotics.
While we tend to focus on heroes at the moments of final victory, the development of
moral sanction often evolves over several generations: witness the progression of
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accommodation; conservative calls for law and order; and reactionary calls for
scapegoating and the crushing of dissent. Poised to pounce on these opportunities for
enhancing political power are social movement entrepreneurs. As predators of social
disintegration and conflict, these individuals, groups, and networks take advantage of
official as well as civil society processes convened for the purpose of resolution. Indeed,
demagogues and associated entrepreneurs whose interests coincide around inequality
often provoke escalation of hostilities in order to create a volatile political climate that
simultaneously attracts violent supporters and repels conflict-averse opponents. Generally
speaking, these situations are created by conservatives who manipulate reactionaries in
order to silence reform liberals and to marginalize revolutionary progressives.
The four conventional liberal models used to frame and contain this anti-democratic
behavior are law enforcement, political diplomacy, military, and interest or pressure
group.
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PART FOUR
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Chapter Eleven
Law Enforcement
The law enforcement model of constraining those who conspire to disrupt legitimate
attempts at societal conflict resolution assumes a faith that agencies so charged will be
able and willing to perform their duties. In reality, they are usually uneducated in the
nuances of political violence, frequently used to interfere with enforcement except for
political purposes, and too often biased to accept the view that the victims are to blame.
Perhaps the most notorious example of this is the US presidential election in which,
between 1998 and Election Day 2000, Florida Secretaries of State Sandra Mortham and
Katherine Harris, under the direction of Governor Jeb Bush, conspired to rig the election
in favor of the governors brother George by ordering the illegal removal from voter rolls
of 57,700 mostly black, nearly all Democrat, voters. Under the guise of removing exfelons, Secretary Harris--also at the time co-chairwoman of Floridas George W. Bush for
President campaign--with knowledge that many, if not most, of these citizens were
innocent of all crimes, paid a multi-million dollar bonus to a Republican-tied database
firm (which originally proposed using address histories and financial records as a crosscheck to confirm the names) to not use manual verification of these purged voters as
required under Florida law. Both Harris and Governor Bush then ordered county officials
to reject attempts by these eligible voters to register, despite an internal Florida State
Association of Supervisors of Elections memo, dated August 1998, which warns that the
Secretary of State had wrongly removed eligible voters. Perhaps more distressing than
these high crimes and felonies committed by elected officials in Florida was the response
by the Supervisors who agreed to keep their misgivings within the confines of the
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bureaucracies in the belief that, entering a public fight with [state officials] would be
counterproductive (Palast).
The post-election strategy choreographed and financed by the Republican National
Committee, in which Congressional staff aides to, among others, House Majority Whip
Tom Delay were dispatched (with travel and expenses paid) to Florida to harass the
canvassing boards attempting to conduct the manual recount, is archetypical of the new
Republicans. Witnessing tactics of intimidation on television, like pounding on
courthouse doors while yelling threatening and intentionally distortive slogans about the
boards trying to steal the election from Bush, I had to ask why the Florida Highway
Patrol were not dispatched to remove them. These angry demonstrations encouraged and
orchestrated by the Republican Party resulted in: a brick thrown through the window of
the Broward County Democratic office; demonstrators in Miami-Dade shouting and
waving fists while rushing the offices of the elections supervisor; one Democratic official
being chased by GOP protesters; Democratic spokesman Luis Rosero getting shoved,
punched, and kicked by Republican demonstrators; and Democratic U.S. Representative
Peter Deutsch being manhandled by what he called an illegal mob. Republican
demonstrators, urged to join the protest by Republican phone banks and bussed to events,
were, in the words of Democratic vice presidential nominee Joseph I. Lieberman,
designed to intimidate elections officials (Milbank).
The answer to my incredulity at the aforementioned political violence allowed to go
unchecked is provided by the actions of Florida police powers themselves: carpools of
African-American voters were stopped by police demanding to see a taxi license; in
Osceola County, Hispanic voters were required to produce two forms of ID when only
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have, to my knowledge, never been charged for inciting assault, arson, and attempted
murder against their political opponents.
When it comes to political violence, used to prevent discussion and open inquiry,
official agencies often ignore behavior or exacerbate tensions by overreacting.
Dismissing concerns of individuals targeted by political violence, or telling them to buy a
gun, leaves people adrift. They are certainly not going to continue to participate in the
societal debates and discussions we need to maintain a democratic society.
Chapter Twelve
Political Diplomacy
The use of political diplomacy for purposes of constraining political violence is not
only ineffective; it is inappropriate and signals those who use violence that their
opponents lack what Marcuse calls the moral dispositionto counter aggressiveness
(10). Faith in diplomacy assumes the possibility of mutual good faith participation in a
process of negotiation and compromise. Political actors who operate from a core agenda
that denies equal protection and opportunity to others; whos strategic formula of fear,
hate, and revenge uses systemic violence to gain or maintain privileges; and who are
willing to commit or abet crimes against their opponents, are neither deserving of trust
nor a public platform for promotion of their ideology. Misguided or cowardly reformers
who engage them thus, do so at grave risk to a community.
One of the greatest perils of piety is the faith that no matter how perverted or distorted
the position of ones opponent, they will be won over with reason and compassion. This
is not to say that they in turn should be demonized; it is simply a plea to acknowledge
that diplomacy has a limited effect on someone who views other segments of society as
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evil or subhuman. Perhaps their hearts and minds can be changed by some transformative
experience, like time in prison or coerced participation in a truth and reconciliation
process, but constraining their behavior is of primary importance to the well-being of
society. As my colleague said, Whats to negotiate with a gay basher or holocaust
denier? That homosexuals deserve three quarters of the rights of heterosexuals? That the
Nazis only killed four instead of six million Jews (de Armond)?
The danger in entering diplomacy with Free Market, White Supremacist, or theocratic
fundamentalists, in the public arena, is that the conservative ideology behind their
reactionary agenda is given legitimacy as a valid, albeit different, point of view. In a
democracy, everyone must be allowed to hold and express their views, no matter how
repugnant, but they neednt be given a public platform to do so. Serious problems arise
when civil responses are overly tolerant of inappropriate behavior, or when official
responses are overly intolerant of unlawful behavior. To me, the organic instincts and
spontaneous reactions of a group of white male college jocks in my former community
were morally sound in spite of their ideological simplicity. When neo-Nazi Skinheads
physically attacked a black male student for walking hand-in-hand with a white female
student in front of their house, the athletes ran from the house and proceeded to enlighten
the Skinheads on the culinary delicacy of force-fed pavement.
Appeasement works no better with new Republicans than with neo-Nazis. When
they are not constrained by societal norms or laws, they need to have their clocks cleaned
it is all some of them understand.
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Chapter Thirteen
Military
Application of the military model for the purpose of constraining domestic political
violence, that is perceived to threaten the healthful functioning of American democracy,
results in tragedies like Jackson State, Kent State, Ruby Ridge, and Waco. Most recently,
the militarization of law enforcement functions, such as border patrol and protest
management, has situationally altered the policing mandate from serve and protect to
search and destroy. This altered relationship between police and some communities and
ethnic groups has the tragic, if unintended consequence, of condoning unregulated
vigilante and paramilitary conduct. When non-violent activities such as civil disobedience
or unlawful border entry encounter a militaristic official response, the message sent to
reactionaries and bigots is that these illegal acts are committed by enemies of the state,
rather than by a loyal opposition or harmless unfortunates.
The use of military forces or tactics against political opponents, even anti-democratic
ones, only harms the health of society. The oppressed live in terror; the repressed shrink
from their duties; and the confused either indulge in other outlets for their aggression or
prepare for civil war. Combined, these conditions are conducive to further deterioration
of democratic society, paving the way for monopoly, tyranny, and the impunity these
conditions enjoy. With the institutionalization and consolidation of the militaristic model
for domestic purposes, constituent advocacy becomes increasingly meaningless.
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Chapter Fourteen
Pressure Group
The pressure group model, designed for the purpose of constituent advocacy, used
both for reform as well as privilege maintenance, is most noted for its success in
generating legislation. The resultant laws and rules, when enforced, provide some degree
of relief or restitution to the groups or constituencies involved, but often do little to
protect or facilitate broad participation in the debate about unjust or insane public
policies. More often than not, this model is used by actors from across the political
spectrum to seek economic or political advantage over others, rather than to protect a fair
and open process in which benefits and burdens are shared equally. Consequently,
unhealthy relationships develop between dominant groups and those in power, to the
detriment of everyone else.
To their credit, some pressure group professionals recognize the need for strategic and
tactical planning and the development of an agenda to development momentum. They
anticipate and prepare for public debate and convey articulately their constituents
entitlement to relief, and rightly focus on the need to demand accountability from
officials. Some of these professionals acknowledge the difference between trivial and
fundamental change that empowers ordinary people, the best of them cognizant of the
need to examine alternatives to achieve their goals.
Those who invoke the values of their audience and identify unsavory aspects of the
opposition come closest to conversion to the public health model. Building solidarity,
reducing isolation, and linking actions to an agenda are all consistent with this model.
The weakness of pressure groups is their focus on their adversary to the exclusion of their
opposition. This notorious blind spot to organizations, movements, networks, ideologies,
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PART FIVE
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Chapter Fifteen
Research
As noted in part two, the successful application of the public health model to
ideological disease control depends on the early detection and analysis of organized antidemocratic aggression, systematic study of and intervention with vulnerable populations,
and educational campaigns aimed at broadening public support for the investments
required. In this chapter, we examine the essential integrative techniques used to
construct the working relationships needed for building a community of sociopolitical
health practitioners.
The first thing to recognize in this endeavor, as noted in chapters three, six, and seven,
is that this is sensitive, potentially dangerous work that should not be undertaken
haphazardly nor alone. The creation of enduring institutionalized programs critical to its
effectiveness, as explored in part four does not come about by bureaucratic meansthey
are created from the ground up, and rely on the participation of local moral authorities.
Consequently, concerned citizens as well as community organizers interested in
personal security, movement continuity, and a politically healthy community, must
establish and operate within a network that involves intentional collaboration between
churches, schools, human rights groups, neighborhood associations, labor and civic
organizations, and individuals who perform research and investigative functions. The
face-to-face networking that takes place in communicating the need for and agenda of
such a network is the adhesive of community-building. The glue that holds us together as
a communitywhether local, national, or globalis our hope for a better world, and,
perhaps more practically, our fear of disaster.
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Lengthy discussions, socials, and workshops organized around timely, accurate, and
relevant information that makes a community threat visible and understandable generates
concern and allows a nascent network to determine its educational and organizing needs
most likely to lead to effective community action. Local research linked with regional
and national resources provides historical background and political context, as well as
presents options and locates targets for this action. Network solidarity, cemented by wellarticulated ideas and based on the experience of other communities, then becomes the
foundation for engaging in personal reflection and community education.
Chapter Sixteen
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The private and popular education functions undertaken by the network thus become
central organizing tools based on ongoing research and analysis in which all movement
participants play a role through observation and dialogue. The formality or informality of
the network is less important than its functionalityactive communication will lead to
some kind of community action.
Chapter Seventeen
Community Action
Community action, whether a containment, prophylactic or remedial intervention,
involves high profile events and public dramas that also serve as educational and
recruitment venues. As such, they should be approached and designed with the assistance
of people who have connections and experience in public relations, theater, media, and
education. Plans, materials and scripts for associated press conferences, speaking
engagements, and literature dissemination should be strategically developed. Timing and
sequence of delivery, when rationally executed, helps to minimize confusion as well as
disarm opposition.
Sticking to the network-adopted mission and objectives reduces the likelihood that
wedges can be driven between network participants. Pre-selected, well-recognized
spokespersons trained and prepared to deliver the message with confidence and
conviction helps to avoid losing the initiative by lapsing into a defensive posture.
The first public impression of the meaning and importance of the action can not only
be manufacturedit can help determine the course of the ensuing conflict and
community discussion. Self-restraint, a sense of humor, and controlled righteous
indignationbeing firm on principle, but fair in application--are powerful attributes
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when delivered by or with the consent of visible moral and religious authorities.
Subsequent cycles of analysis, action, and reflection can then reinforce individual group
actions initiated within the new political context, with the initial joint action and theme
serving as the touchstone. Continuous network communication allows for spotting and
assessing opportunities for advancing its agenda, extending its influence, and
consolidating its power.
Three case studies reviewed in my undergraduate survey report, detailed further in the
archives of the participants, provide concrete examples of the public health model of
community organizing in action.
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PART SIX
CASE STUDIES
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Chapter Eighteen
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The educational programs conducted in churches and labor halls, statewide, led to the
development of a political agenda for the provision of immediate relief to affected
families and communities, as well as lines of communication between previous
adversaries for developing additional political remedies for diversifying rural economic
development. This agenda was then brought forward jointly before the state legislature,
which subsequently funded new programs in job training and environmental restoration
projects that targeted unemployed loggers, miners, and resource dependent communities..
When Western States success resulted in demands for research assistance that
exceeded its capacity, it began to provide research training as well as training in such
areas as fund-raising, organizational development, and leadership. Many of the
organizations it worked with early on were not socially based or engaged in community
organizing, particularly the advocacy organizations that relied on legal and media
strategies, and consequently had difficulty in building power and succeeding on their
issues. Reluctance on the part of these organizations to reconsider their fundamental
strategic approach, according to Western States researcher Tarso Luis Ramos, is based on
a very mistaken notion of power--that information alone is enough to discredit
illegitimate arguments or organizing efforts.
While many grass roots groups Western States worked with lacked the resources to
support independent research, they did become aware of its value in broadening their
recruitment, outreach, and view of potential allies. Thus the importance of linking
community based organizations with regional, national, and freelance local researchers
that can help move their agenda forward. To do this, it is important to link research to
strategy development, defining research needs in relation to that strategy.
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Chapter Nineteen
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leaders who are initially willing to speak out, providing them with research and
organizing support, leaving the development of rhetorical strategies to these leaders who
can speak in a rhetoric that resonates with the particular constituency.
Working in a region that has become a dumping ground for the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, in providing factory farms with cheap labor, BDI tracks nearly
400 white nationalist groups. Initiative training involves a mixture of opposition research,
propaganda analysis, and investigative techniques, depending on the needs and the
interests of the people involved and what theyre facing in their community, as well as
putting it into a framework of how to look at the situation, and what good research can do
for them. The training has helped BDI establish a regional network of organizations that
keep an ear to the ground doing local research, while continuing to develop themselves
organizationally. This base of people, trained in research, allows BDI to look around and
strategically target new problem areas, using locally generated incident reports.
BDI does organizing in a way that respects the importance of research and analysis
within groups, that helps reach a balance between the individuals and the thinking of the
group as a proactive organization, that promotes unity and diversity in a community, as
well as part of the group, that wants to spend more time doing the reactive anti-fascist
work. BDI staff thinks the two views are complementary, and that as long as respect for
the importance of research is built in from the early going, a balance can be maintained.
One of the more fascinating aspects of BDIs work is the interaction generated between
mainstream and fundamentalist churches around Christian Identity, a biblically based
white supremacy ideology. Leadership coming entirely from the religious community, in
towns such as Quincy, Illinois, has been able to turn away Christian Identity leaders, to
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completely keep them out of town. While issues of abortion, homosexuality, or racial
equality may have to be left to another day, a broad swath of the religious community has
come together to say no to demonization and organized violence. In the case of Christian
Identity, it has been particularly useful to show fundamentalist churches how they were
singled out by identity doctrine, and the potentially tragic impacts this can have on
families. Racist beliefs are one thingacting on those beliefs using violence can result in
the loss of life, employment, and personal freedom.
Having a network in place, and having the research to support claims, has been an
essential component of building trust and credibility for BDI as a media source. People
associated with BDI in local communities can then frame stories more appropriately,
helping to avoid the marginalization by media of the allies they need in order to portray
their opinions as representative of large portions of the community. By knowing its
opposition, BDI associates know whom its going to be impossible to work with, as well
as which constituencies those groups are trying to recruit. They can then employ a
strategy to isolate the source of the hatred, and inoculate the potentially vulnerable
constituencies by helping them understand the issue before the other side does.
Consequently, BDI can do educational and organizing work to move beyond short
term problems. It can do better advocacy, because it knows in advance the arguments the
other side is making. It can also plot a better course in dealing with conflict because they
know what their opposition is up to. One learning technique used by BDI is to conduct
workshops involving people from other communities that have dealt with similar
problems. They film peoples stories, take them on the road, and write about them in the
BDI monthly action report.
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BDI staff emphasize the importance of conducting good research, respecting its
findings, expanding institutional memory to keep the information brought in through
research and analysis, disbursement of the information, and internalizing it enough to
keep the information flowing beyond any single persons involvement. By developing
financial and organizational stability, groups avoid ad hoc responses to incidents. By
being engaged with regional and national organizations, they share information that may
be vital to another community. This in turn helps to maintain perspective for those who
might be tempted to think their local community is representative of the entire world.
As BDIs experience demonstrates, research capacity within an established community
based network can be an effective safeguard against obstructionist or subversive
interference. Equally valuable lessons can be drawn from unprepared communities that
had to scramble while under attack.
Chapter Twenty
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Public Goods 1995 report, Wise Use in Northern Puget Sound, uncovered these
economic links and exposed the methods used to incite anti-Semitic, anti-Indian, and
anti-environmentalist individuals and groups to threaten and intimidate political
opponents of the trade and industry groups involved. The documentation and analysis in
this report, that examines the relationships and dynamics between business associations,
media, political parties, government bureaucracies, law enforcement, and advocacy
groups that allowed this tragedy to happen, pays attention to both the unlawful,
unprosecuted activities as well as the legal but deceptive strategies used in the multiple
coups detat of state and county governments.
Similar in many respects to the methods used by our current U.S. President in
obtaining the reins of power, the documentation and exposure of these sordid deeds
served initially to invite moral condemnation and community organizing, later followed
by legal sanctions, destruction of some political careers, and a handful of convictions of
the most violent offenders. It is a story that continues to play itself out a decade later,
ideologically, politically, and socially, as communities experience mixed success in
overcoming initial misperceptions and prejudices, especially where media participation in
the hoax was most egregious.
Nevertheless, the public health model in essence worked, not prophylactically in this
case, but rather by post outbreak research and analysis, containment through exposure,
and rapid response educational efforts through pre-existing advocacy networks, and later
through religious and civic organizations. Linkage with religious and human rights
organizations provides some degree of confidence that future recurrences might be
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government fails to assure people basic human rightslike being safe from attack
networks through social organizations, like churches, provide some degree of security
and resources that can be mobilized.
The reason advocacy groups do not conduct opposition research is that their models of
society do not work. Consequently, there is a tremendous amount of re-education or even
de-education that needs to be done first. Usually people do not do any research at all.
They have what, according to Public Good researcher Paul de Armond, amounts to an
ideological response to the problem in a complete vacuum of information. In
confronting right-wing demagogues, he says, liberal groups frequently get involved in
ineffective responses because they dont know what theyre up against.
Media usually makes matters worse by interviewing clueless people quoting other
clueless people which becomes very circular and hard to break. Operating within a
corporate status quo bias, reporters and editors who view the world more broadly are
filtered out of the hiring and advancement process. Those who are willing to adapt avoid
fundamental issues that address oppression or privilege. On top of all this, concentration
of media monopoly and bottom line emphasis put severe restrictions on time and other
resources available to reporters, who are often young, ignorant, and lacking in
experience. The natural thing for them to do in this situation is to simply phone
prominent activists and recognized authorities to ask their opinions. The he said/she said
articles that substitute for research and hard facts are then edited and titled by superiors
who know what will not offend the local political and economic bosses who provide the
bulk of advertising revenue. By the time this process runs its course, readers are left with
little substance and often a distorted view of reality.
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In the case of the rebellion documented in Wise Use in Northern Puget Sound, the fact
that the real estate development industry was directly responsible for the property-rights
insurrection, that unleashed a white supremacist/militia horror on 14 counties, placed
many reporters in an impossible situation. In several instances, such seemingly venerable
institutions as the Chamber of Commerce, Building Industry Association, and County
Council were actively engaged in promoting racism and in defying state and federal laws.
Beyond the comprehension of most liberals, this disorienting new reality also, upon
reflection, pointed to their complicity through silence. In Ordinary Men: Reserve Police
Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, author Christopher R. Browning observes
that as a methodology, the history of everyday life becomes an evasion only if it fails
to confront the degree to which the criminal policies of the regime inescapably permeated
everyday existence under the NazisNormality itself had become exceedingly abnormal
(xix). The preexisting normalcy prevalent in Puget Sound, relied on habitual opinions
promoted by business through media. Arguments in favor of preserving such a perverse
Establishment, that includes both liberal and conservative privilege, thus serve as hosts
for pathological developments when inevitable social tensions arise. Actors and agents
may exhaust themselves, returning communities to this comforting, familiar normalcy,
but unaltered host conditions that neglect communal health only guarantee future
outbreaks of disease.
By focusing on policy to the exclusion of process, advocacy groups like League of
Women Voters or Common Cause, perceived as guardians of democracy, fail in this task
because they are not engaged in opposition activity. They are engaged in political
diplomacy. Hence, much of the training work done by Public Good is of individuals
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already persuaded of the importance of opposition research. Acting from the public health
modelwhich is to look at the causative mechanism, how the behavior is transmitted,
and what sort of interventions can either prevent or modify itenables these individuals
and associates to respond to the pathology of violence and intimidation that prevents
community participation and conflict resolution.
Institutional change, currently based on the four inapplicable models, is a long way
off, says de Armond. Government and philanthropic funding is almost exclusively
restricted to the four ineffective models. Training around pressure group tactics used to
get laws passed that will not be enforced might be considered a waste of time. Even
human rights groups that do good training and education devoted to tolerance often view
their work in building contacts with law enforcement as educational, when, in fact, they
are often being used as an intelligence sourcefor political intelligence. The buy-in by
most of middle and upper class society to the American system of inequality,
wastefulness, and environmental insanity, required to sustain the existing systemwhen
combined with the enormous resources of the primary beneficiaries of the system
creates a self-perpetuating mechanism that can only be interrupted by severe economic or
moral crisis. The global system of exploitation, however, is so engrained in the American
means of survival that moralitya deep questioning of our humanityis our only hope.
In Marcuses view, In the face of an amoral society, it [morality] becomes a political
weapon(8).
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PART SEVEN
PROGRAM PROPOSAL
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indigenous societies. It is my hope that the program outlined in this proposal will be a
useful contribution toward that goal.
Summary
Communicating Social Transformation comprises six seminars that examine key
factors influencing public participation in the democratic process. The purpose of these
six complementary courses, that, combined, might constitute the core of a graduate level
degree program, is to spark discussion of and experimentation with strategies and tactics
that foster continuous societal debate, dialogue, and discussion regarding the
development and implementation of public policy, active resistance to oppression,
internal truth and reconciliation, and the restoration of honorable relations between
nations. In short, the program focus is on the art of facilitating citizenship.
The program includes analysis of both theory and case studies of the civil society
process of communication essential to breaking the cycles of misinformation and
spectacle generated by state and market sectors, fundamentalist religions, synthetic ngos,
and criminal networks. This knowledge of communication provides a bridge that enables
a social base to find expression of their values and beliefs in a way that leads to
organizing groups and networks, which in turn facilitate democratic community action.
By examining historic examples of communicative projects that moved groups from
apathy or cynicism to concern and commitment, activists and potential activists enrolled
in such a program could become acquainted with the means by which discontent can be
channeled into productive avenues for changing society.
Each course contains readings that relate theory with methodologies used by various
groups in communicating their claims to economic, civil, and human rights in a manner
that generated discovery, revelation, excitement, engagement, and commitment. The
program, adaptive to both formal academic and informal popular-education settings,
builds on social and political awareness gained through academic as well as experiential
learning, and is designed for enriching feedback and interaction between these two
spheres.
Graduates of such a program will have gained an appreciation of alternative
approaches, models, and venues in seeking accountability from power-wielders, mastered
the tools needed for accurately assessing the political sophistication and assets of
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constituencies, as well as learned to do, discuss, and respect the results of research and
analysis critical to functioning better and surviving longer in such hostile settings.
Course Descriptions
The Public Health Model of Community Organizing
Case studies, combined with interviews of political researchers and organizers
engaged in monitoring and exposing anti-democratic groups and movements in the US,
serves as the foundation of this course. Candid reflections on the strengths and
weaknesses of community-based research in protecting democratic electoral,
administrative, judicial, and legislative processes from subversion provide sober analysis
of obstacles to self-governance. Successful methods are explored in detail, with an
emphasis on comparison of commonly-used models of engagement.
Social Movement Development
This course focuses on the dynamics of movement growth and interaction that
positions groups and networks advocating social or political change for opportunities to
seize power or influence. Using such examples as the world indigenous movement and
the transformation of American conservatism, studies look at structural and historic issues
that serve to further or hinder a groups goals.
Society in Conflict
This course provides a framework about societal evolution and the emerging types of
organizations societies are building, with a focus on the movements that launch processes
by contesting established orders, rules, and cultures. Particular attention is given to the
generation of uncertainty, complexity, and turbulence in society as resource management
regimes require greater organization. Dynamics embedded in this framework and some
future implications are discussed. Fresh insights into the influence of organized crime on
governments, financial institutions, and above world enterprise are also reviewed.
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Grassroots Communication
In this course, techniques used to communicate with each other as well as the outside
world are examined through the experiences of such groups as the World Indigenous
Movement, Latvian Independence, Polish Solidarity, the American Negro Revolution,
Italian Social Centers, Palestine Liberation, and Argentine Neighborhood Assemblies.
Emphasis is on integrating formal academic disciplines and perspectives with the
informal, often tense setting of poverty and malign neglect. Comparisons of
communication in violent, non-violent, and hybrid insurgencies and movements are
particularly instructive when viewed in light of the lessons examined under Society in
Conflict.
Psychological Warfare
Psychological warfare, which includes the use of propaganda analysis and
intelligence, focuses on the analysis of basic deceptive devices as used in World Wars one
and two. As an approach to the study of current social issues, familiarization with the
planning and operations of this type of conflict enables activists to be better shielded
from this kind of assault, as well as prepared to use these methods on their opponents.
Analysis of Popular Education
This course examines, through case studies, methods of assisting marginalized and
oppressed peoples to participate in the development of the educational tools they need to
organize themselves into socially-based activists. Attention is given to the analysis of
social control by looking at the effect on society of the sacredness of illusion, in which
simple images become effective motivations of hypnotic behavior.
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Course Justification
Looking at societies, cultures, and individuals as evolving, conscious organisms that
possess organic natures and acquired characteristics--that are both responsive to
conscience and vulnerable to manipulation--encourages research, analysis, and discussion
of how social change happens. Scrutiny of movements, actions, and fundamental
conflicts in multiple eras, societies, and venues provides a context for engagement that
enables both holistic thinking and critical examination of often unquestioned perspectives
and personal positions. Distinction of authentic grassroots activism from more socially
acceptable elite-sponsored activities serves to both inspire and shield the kind-hearted
who choose to engage in public affairs. The application of public health methodology to
the realm of politics is useful both literally and figuratively: Our collective, globallyinterdependent ideological and sentient well-being depends not just on autonomy and
accountabilityit depends on systematic prophylaxis exercised by civil society. Without
it, our mutual destruction as a speciesfrom either microbes or nuclear warheadsis,
indeed, assured.
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CONCLUSION
In writing this paper, it was not my intent to downplay the need for institutionalized
law enforcement, military preparedness, or political diplomacy. Nor was it my intent to
disparage the important efforts of those engaged in social reform. Rather, it was my hope
to examine these approaches vis a vis their ability to protect society from obstructive or
subversive interference that threatens public participation in the regenerative process we
call democracy.
Analyzed from a functional standpoint, it was my expectation that they might be better
understood as models of engagement. Critiqued for their weaknesses, I hoped to provoke
reflection on the need for examining these models within a political context that has an
historical background. Doctrine and dogma is, in my experience, just as debilitating to
reform as it is to reaction.
Contrary to popular views, I contend that what is needed is more thought and less
action. The regular undirected or ill-considered expenditure of energy through ineffective
models produces frustration, that, when repeated, can lead to cynicism. To overcome
forces of reaction requires careful preparation and education based on a clear
understanding of the spectrum of opposition to democracy, its agendas, and its methods
of operation.
It is my opinion that to be prepared for fundamental conflict with an opposition that is
determined to dominate not only our society but the entire world by any means necessary,
organizers need to consider and develop research and analysis capacity in a manner
similar to intelligence and security capabilities conducted during military warfare.
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Mastery of ideological warfare is what has enabled a minority of aggressive elites to rule
it is the field of battle where political outcomes are determined.
To wage ideological war against those who are terrorizing the entire planet requires
serious disciplined investigation and study--not sloganeering, hyperactive zealotry, or
fear-mongering. Those are the methods of militarists and colonialists bent on preventing
open inquiry and freedom of expression. My faith in humanity to resolve conflict when
the white blood cells are functioning depends in part on my ability to persuade readers
that the public health model is appropriate for circumscribing political violence.
That it must incorporate tactics from the other models as well as acknowledge its
location in a world where the operations of these other models are taken into account is
assumed. That we live in a world of perpetual trauma where the temptation to shut down
emotionally is great, and impatience and argumentation has intensified to the point where
many no longer want to stop and listen to the grievances of the deprived, must be
approached in a way that gives people comfort and peace of mind, that restores their
psychic well-being. Peacekeeping, peacemaking, and peace buildingthe public health
model of social changeis a philosophers task. The task is to honor our collective
wisdom.
Leadership is not the ability to get people to follow you; it is the ability to inspire
confidence in others to act on their convictions by helping them articulate the beliefs and
values they hold dear. It implies trust and care, generated by honest and open dialogue,
through which the group wisdom expressed by a leader is composed. This in turn
becomes the basis of the power to endure and create. By exercising this power, we gain
empathy and understandingthe insight needed to dream of a better world. The
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dynamics and relationships explored and communicated through open societal discussion
bring these dreams alive.
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