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Chris Hedges: Finding Freedom in Handcuffs

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 07:20 AM
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Chris Hedges: Finding Freedom in Handcuffs

from truthdig:



Finding Freedom in Handcuffs

Posted on Nov 7, 2011
By Chris Hedges


Editor’s note: Truthdig columnist Chris Hedges, an activist, an author and a member of a reporting team that won a 2002 Pulitzer Prize, wrote this article after he was released from custody following his arrest last Thursday. He and about 15 other participants in the Occupy Wall Street movement were detained as they protested outside the global headquarters of Goldman Sachs in lower Manhattan.


Faces appeared to me moments before the New York City police arrested us Thursday in front of Goldman Sachs. They were not the faces of the smug Goldman Sachs employees, who peered at us through the revolving glass doors and lobby windows, a pathetic collection of middle-aged fraternity and sorority members. They were not the faces of the blue-uniformed police with their dangling cords of white and black plastic handcuffs, or the thuggish Goldman Sachs security personnel, whose buzz cuts and dead eyes reminded me of the East German secret police, the Stasi. They were not the faces of the demonstrators around me, the ones with massive student debts and no jobs, the ones whose broken dreams weigh them down like a cross, the ones whose anger and betrayal triggered the street demonstrations and occupations for justice. They were not the faces of the onlookers—the construction workers, who seemed cheered by the march on Goldman Sachs, or the suited businessmen who did not. They were faraway faces. They were the faces of children dying. They were tiny, confused, bewildered faces I had seen in the southern Sudan, Gaza and the slums of Brazzaville, Nairobi, Cairo and Delhi and the wars I covered. They were faces with large, glassy eyes, above bloated bellies. They were the small faces of children convulsed by the ravages of starvation and disease.

I carry these faces. They do not leave me. I look at my own children and cannot forget them, these other children who never had a chance. War brings with it a host of horrors, including famine, but the worst is always the human detritus that war and famine leave behind, the small, frail bodies whose tangled limbs and vacant eyes condemn us all. The wealthy and the powerful, the ones behind the glass at Goldman Sachs, laughed and snapped pictures of us as if we were a brief and odd lunchtime diversion from commodities trading, from hoarding and profit, from this collective sickness of money worship, as if we were creatures in a cage, which in fact we soon were.

A glass tower filled with people carefully selected for the polish and self-assurance that come with having been formed in institutions of privilege, whose primary attributes are a lack of consciousness, a penchant for deception and an incapacity for empathy or remorse. The curious onlookers behind the windows and we, arms locked in a circle on the concrete outside, did not speak the same language. Profit. Globalization. War. National security. These are the words they use to justify the snuffing out of tiny lives, acts of radical evil. Goldman Sachs’ commodities index is the most heavily traded in the world. Those who trade it have, by buying up and hoarding commodities futures, doubled and tripled the costs of wheat, rice and corn. Hundreds of millions of poor across the globe are going hungry to feed this mania for profit. The technical jargon, learned in business schools and on trading floors, effectively mask the reality of what is happening—murder. These are words designed to make systems operate, even systems of death, with a cold neutrality. Peace, love and all sane affirmative speech in temples like Goldman Sachs are, as W.H. Auden understood, “soiled, profaned, debased to a horrid mechanical screech.” ..............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/finding_freedom_in_handcuffs_20111107/



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Arctic Dave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 07:56 AM
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1. K&R
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Voice for Peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 09:04 AM
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2. kick
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fasttense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 09:46 AM
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3. Corporations grind away humankind's compassion.
So that all the underlings of greedy, psychopaths, the minions of soulless CEOs, go around saying, "We are only following orders."

"And this is why, as Arendt points out, the only morally reliable people when the chips are down are not those who say “this is wrong,” or “this should not be done,” but those who say “I can’t.”"

I can't force that family out of their home, I can't beat that protester, I can't trade and sell futures because it is causing the starvation of millions.

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Raksha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-08-11 02:09 PM
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8. "I can't" is what will lead to the ultimate victory of the OWS movement.
Not too many people can. Even some that believe they can now, even those who have participated in the foreclosures and the layoffs, etc. will eventually discover that they can't. And I have a feeling it will happen sooner rather than later.
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Citizen Worker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 11:02 AM
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4. Chris Hedges, war correspondent, who has witnessed the ravages of both forms of modern warfare. One
form is that of bullets, bombs and the murder of innocents. The other form of modern warfare is globalization and the results are the same.
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Defectata Donating Member (72 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-07-11 05:25 PM
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5. had to take a moment after reading this.
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dgauss Donating Member (217 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-08-11 12:08 AM
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6. K&R
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Norrin Radd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-08-11 06:06 AM
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7. kr
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