By Chris Hedges
July 2, 2012
Native
Americans’ resistance to the westward expansion of Europeans took two forms.
One was violence. The other was accommodation.
Neither worked.
Their land was stolen, their communities were decimated, their women and
children were gunned down and the environment was ravaged. There was no legal
recourse. There was no justice. There never is for the oppressed.
And as we face
similar forces of predatory, unchecked corporate power intent on ruthless
exploitation and stripping us of legal and physical protection, we must
confront how we will respond.
The ideologues
of rapacious capitalism, like members of a primitive cult, chant the false
mantra that natural resources and expansion are infinite. They dismiss calls
for equitable distribution as unnecessary. They say that all will soon share in
the “expanding” wealth, which in fact is swiftly diminishing.
And as the whole
demented project unravels, the elites flee like roaches to their sanctuaries.
.
Civilizations in the final stages of decay are dominated by elites out of touch with reality.
Societies strain
harder and harder to sustain the decadent opulence of the ruling class, even as
it destroys the foundations of productivity and wealth. Karl Marx was correct
when he called unregulated capitalism “a machine for demolishing limits.”
This failure to
impose limits cannibalizes natural resources and human communities. This time,
the difference is that when we go the whole planet will go with us.
Catastrophic
climate change is inevitable. Arctic ice is in terminal decline. There will
soon be so much heat trapped in the atmosphere that any attempt to scale back
carbon emissions will make no difference.
Droughts. Floods. Heat waves. Killer hurricanes and tornados. Power outages. Freak weather. Rising sea levels. Crop destruction. Food shortages. Plagues.
ExxonMobil, BP
and the coal and natural gas companies ~.like the colonial buffalo hunters who
left thousands of carcasses rotting in the sun after stripping away the hides,
and in some cases carrying away only the tongues ~ will never impose rational
limits on themselves.
They will
exploit, like the hustlers before them who eliminated the animals that
sustained the native peoples of the Great Plains, until there is nothing left
to exploit.
Collective
suicide is never factored into quarterly profit reports.
Forget all those virtuous words they taught you in school about our system of government. The real words to describe American power are “plunder,” “fraud,” “criminality,” “deceit,” “murder” and “repression.”
Those native
communities that were most accommodating to the European colonists, such as the
peaceful California tribes ~ the Chilulas, Chimarikos, Urebures, Nipewais and
Alonas, along with a hundred other bands ~ were the first to be destroyed.
And while I do
not advocate violence, indeed will seek every way to avoid it, I have no
intention of accommodating corporate power whether it hides behind the mask of
Barack Obama or Mitt Romney.
At the same
time, I have to acknowledge that resistance may ultimately be in vain.
Yet to resist is to say something about us as human beings. It keeps alive the possibility of hope, even as all empirical evidence points to inevitable destruction.It makes victory, however remote, possible.And it makes life a little more difficult for the ruling class, which satisfies the very human emotion of vengeance.“Whenever the legislators endeavor to take away and destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power,” wrote the philosopher John Locke, “they put themselves into a state of war with the people who are thereupon absolved from any further obedience.”
The European
colonists signed, and ignored, some 400 treaties with native tribes. They
enticed the native leaders into accords, always to seize land, and then
repeated the betrayal again and again and again until there was nothing left to
steal.
Chiefs such as
Black Kettle who believed the white men did not fare much better than those who
did not. Black Kettle, who outside his lodge often flew a huge American flag
given to him in Washington as a sign of friendship, was shot dead by soldiers
of George Armstrong Custer in November 1868 along with his wife and more than
100 other Cheyenne in his encampment on the Washita River.
The white men “made us many promises, more than I can remember,” Chief Red Cloud said in old age, “but they kept but one. They promised to take our land, and they took it.”
Native
societies, in which people redistributed wealth to gain respect, and in which
those who hoarded were detested, upheld a communal ethic that had to be
obliterated and replaced with the greed, ceaseless exploitation and cult of the
self that fuel capitalist expansion.
Lewis
Henry Morgan in his book “League
of the Iroquois,” written in 1851 after he lived among them, noted that the
Iroquois’
“whole civil policy was averse to the concentration of power in the hands of any single individual, but inclined to the opposite principle of division among a number of equals. …”
This was a way
of relating to each other, as well as to the natural world, that was an
anathema to the European colonizers.
Those who
exploit do so through layers of deceit. They hire charming and eloquent
interlocutors.
How many more times do you want to be lied to by Barack Obama?What is this penchant for self-delusion that makes us unable to see that we are being sold into bondage?Why do we trust those who do not deserve our trust?Why are we repeatedly seduced?The promised closure of Guantanamo.The public option in health care.Reforming the Patriot Act.Environmental protection.Restoring habeas corpus.Regulating Wall Street.Ending the wars.Jobs.Defending labor rights.I could go on.
There are few
resistance figures in American history as noble as Crazy Horse.
He led, long
after he knew that ultimate defeat was inevitable, the most effective revolt on
the plains, wiping out Custer and his men on the Little BigHorn.
“Even the most
basic outline of his life shows how great he was,” Ian Frazier writes in his
book “Great Plains,” “because he remained
himself from the moment of his birth to the moment he died; because he knew
exactly where he wanted to live, and never left; because he may have
surrendered, but he was never defeated in battle; because, although he was
killed, even the Army admitted he was never captured; because he was so free
that he didn’t know what a jail looked like.”
His “dislike of
the oncoming civilization was prophetic,” Frazier writes. “He never met the
President” and “never rode on a train, slept in a boarding house, ate at a
table.” And “unlike many people all over the world, when he met white men he
was not diminished by the encounter.”
Crazy Horse was
bayoneted to death on Sept. 5, 1877, after being tricked into walking toward
the jail at Fort Robinson in Nebraska. The moment he understood the trap he
pulled out a knife and fought back.
Gen. Phil
Sheridan had intended to ship Crazy Horse to the Dry Tortugas, a group of small
islands in the Gulf of Mexico, where a U.S. Army garrison ran a prison with
cells dug out of the coral.
Crazy Horse,
even when dying, refused to lie on the white man’s cot. He insisted on being
placed on the floor. Armed soldiers stood by until he died. And when he
breathed his last, Touch the Clouds, Crazy Horse’s seven-foot-tall Miniconjou
friend, pointed to the blanket that covered the chief’s body and said, “This is
the lodge of Crazy Horse.”
His grieving
parents buried Crazy Horse in an undisclosed location. Legend says that his
bones turned to rocks and his joints to flint. His ferocity of spirit remains a
guiding light for all who seek lives of defiance.
Robbie Robertson ~ Ghost Dance
[ Album: Music For The Native Americans ]
Crow has brought the message
to the children of the sun
for the return of the buffalo
and for a better day to come
You can kill my body
You can damn my soul
for not believing in your god
and some world down below
You don't stand a chance
against my prayers
You don't stand a chance
against my love
They outlawed the Ghost Dance
but we shall live again,
we shall live again
My sister above
She has red paint
She died at Wounded Knee
like a later day saint
You got the big drum in the distance
blackbird in the sky
That's the sound that you hear
when the buffalo cry
You don't stand a chance
against my prayers
You don't stand a chance
against my love
They outlawed the Ghost Dance
but we shall live again,
we shall live again
Crazy Horse was a mystic
He knew the secret of the trance
And Sitting Bull the great apostle
of the Ghost Dance
Come on Comanche
Come on Blackfoot
Come on Shoshone
Come on Cheyenne
We shall live again
Come on Arapaho
Come on Cherokee
Come on Paiute
Come on Sioux
We shall live again
Hedges is a fine writer. It's a real shame he's so clueless about basic facts: 9/11 and Jewish control.
ReplyDeleteThe global warming bit was funny. Think he's right about the rest.
My heart was touched this morning with yor post and the ghost dance song ,miss you my friend ,love and peace ,sandee in phila.pa.
ReplyDelete