Paul -I think this is a really thoughtful, measured and useful piece of 
speaking/writing. 
Thanks for sharing it with us & I for one would be interested to read more.best 
wishesmichael


      From: Paul Hertz <igno...@gmail.com>
 To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
<netbehaviour@netbehaviour.org> 
 Sent: Thursday, November 24, 2016 4:43 PM
 Subject: [NetBehaviour] Solidarity in an age of repression
   
Here is the text of some words I spoke at a community meeting to reflect on the 
recent election results in the States, held at the School of the Art Institute 
of Chicago. It comes out of an ongoing conversation with my wife, Paula. There 
are more topics we have touched upon. Energy and time permitting, I will write 
about those, too. Brevity was more in order when I wrote this.
Reflections on SolidarityBefore I moved to Chicago, 33 years ago, I spent 12 
years in Spain. Those were the years of transition from the Fascist 
dictatorship of Francisco Franco to democracy, and also the years when I met my 
future wife, a young political activist. We reflected on those years in 
thinking about our current situation in this country. I want to share a few of 
our observations with you.First of all, an admonishment on the careless use of 
this term "Fascism." In this country we fortunately do not know the full weight 
of its meaning: the militarism, the repression of all other political options, 
of unions, of languages, of the right to attend school, even of the naming of 
children. Of course our election was "rigged" as all our elections are, by the 
paucity of choices given to us and by the manipulation of information--but the 
institutions of democracy are intact and we should all realize that however 
flawed, they are worth defending. This brings me to my second point. The change 
in Spain came from decades of forging solidarity among diverse political 
options, among people who would be political adversaries within a democracy but 
were natural allies within a dictatorship. If you value democracy and you think 
that it is in danger, you will need the help not just of people who share your 
politics, but of everyone who has a fundamental belief in democracy. Some of 
those people voted for Trump. Though Trump himself is most likely a fraud and 
not a Fascist, there are those in his camp who will look to consolidate their 
power permanently: those are the enemies of democracy.And this brings me to my 
last point, the matter of categories. It is easy to blame Hillary Clinton's 
loss on misogyny and racism--they were certainly factors among many others in 
an overdetermined event. Over many years of struggle, we have come to 
understand racism and sexism as something other than personal flaws, though 
this is how they are most often treated in our country. Only recently has an 
understanding of institutional and implicit racism and sexism entered into 
public discourse. I think we all understand the value of that discourse. It 
will be buried, as the right wing in this country would like it to be, if we 
enter into a period of categorizing individuals instead of exposing 
institutions and attitudes. We must not let that happen, even when there are 
some individuals emerging who do deserve the epithets, precisely because they 
would be happy to make a great noise about name-calling.Finally, let me extend 
this question of categories further. It came as quite a shock for my wife to 
realize that in this country she is "non-white." "Don't tell my father," she 
said. Blame that on the category "Hispanic," that conceals all the diversity of 
people who speak Spanish in America and generalizes our ignorance of them. The 
same is true of all the other categories that have been noised about, "black" 
and "white" being no less false than "Hispanic." But I would single out for 
particular wariness the category "without a college education," as education is 
the sector of the economy we are involved in. What is really meant is "working 
class," but it reads as “uneducated” or "stupid." "Working class" is the buried 
category, that cuts across all the others, as Bernie Sanders realized. "Working 
class" is the economic truth that overshadows identity politics as it has so 
far been practiced. We need to come to grips not with categories, but with 
histories. Speaking the truth to power will consist not of defending 
categories, but of never ceasing to recover and reinstate histories. That is 
one of the tasks of art in a time of repression. Art is a demand on the future, 
as Walter Benjamin said—but we can realize the future simply by learning to 
listen to those people whose histories we do not know, whose histories need to 
be heard if we are to forge an idea of what is to be citizens in a democratic 
society. Protest, yes, but organize. Organize, yes, but listen. 
Paul Hertz
Chicago, November 21, 2016
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http://paulhertz.net/
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