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Changing The Face Of Religion : Other Spiritual Pieces Last Updated: Aug 7th, 2008 - 09:48:56


The prophetic challenge: "Few are guilty, but all are responsible"
By Robert Jensen
Aug 7, 2008, 09:28

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OpEdNews

Original Content at http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-prophetic-challenge----by-Robert-Jensen-080806-563.html


August 6, 2008

The prophetic challenge: "Few are guilty, but all are responsible"

By Robert Jensen

One of the common refrains I heard from progressive people in Pakistan and India during my month there this summer was, “We love the American people -- it’s the policies of your government we don’t like.”

 

That sentiment is not unusual in the developing world, and such statements can reduce the tension with some Americans when people criticize U.S. policy, which is more common than ever after the illegal invasions and occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

I used to smile and nod when I heard it, but this summer I stopped agreeing.

 

“You shouldn’t love the American people,” I started saying. “You should hate us -- we’re the enemy.”

 

By that I don’t mean that most Americans are trying to come up with new ways to attack people in the Global South. Instead, I want to challenge the notion that in a relatively open society such as the United States -- where most people can claim extensive guarantees of freedom of expression and political association -- that the problem is leaders and not ordinary citizens. Whatever the reason people in other countries repeat this statement, the stakes today are too high for those of us in the United States to accept these kinds of reassuring platitudes about hating-the-policy but loving-the-people of an imperial state. It is long past time that we the people of the United States started holding ourselves responsible for the crimes our government perpetrates around the world.

 

This is our prophetic challenge, in the tradition of the best of the prophets of the past, who had the courage to name the injustice in a society and demand a reckoning.

 

In the Christian and Jewish traditions, the Old Testament offers us many models -- Amos and Hosea, Jeremiah and Isaiah. The prophets condemned corrupt leaders but also called out all those privileged people in society who had turned from the demands of justice that the faith makes central to human life. In his study of The Prophets, the scholar and activist Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel concluded:

 

Above all, the prophets remind us of the moral state of a people: Few are guilty, but all are responsible. If we admit that the individual is in some measure conditioned or affected by the spirit of society, an individual’s crime discloses society’s corruption. In a community not indifferent to suffering, uncompromisingly impatient with cruelty and falsehood, continually concerned for God and every man, crime would be infrequent rather than common.[1]

 

In our society, crimes by leaders are far too common. George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, as individuals, are guilty of their crime against peace and war crimes in Iraq that have resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands, just as Bill Clinton and Al Gore before them are guilty of the crime against humanity perpetrated through an economic embargo on Iraq that killed hundreds of thousands of innocents as well. These men are guilty, beyond any doubt, and they should be held accountable. But would those kinds of crimes be as frequent if the spirit of society were different? For that, we all are responsible.

 

In assessing that responsibility, we have to be careful about simplistic judgments, for the degree of responsibility depends on privilege and power. In my case, I’m white and male, educated, with easy access to information, working in a professional job with a comfortable income and considerable freedom. People such as me, with the greatest privilege, bear greatest responsibility. But no one escapes responsibility living in an imperial state with the barbaric record of the United States (in my lifetime, we could start with the list of unjust U.S. wars, direct and through proxies, against the people of Latin America, southern Africa, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, resulting in millions of victims). Bush and Clinton couldn’t carry out their crimes in this relatively open and democratic society if we did not allow it.

 

To increase the chance that we can stop those crimes, we also have to be precise about the roadblocks that keep people from acting responsibly: A nominally democratic political system dominated by elites who serve primarily the wealthy in a predatory corporate capitalist system; which utilizes sophisticated propaganda techniques that have been effective in undermining real democracy; aided by mass-media industries dedicated to selling diversions to consumers more than to helping inform citizens in ways that encourage meaningful political action.

 

We must hold ourselves and each other accountable, with a realistic analysis not only of how we have ended up in this dire situation but also a reasonable assessment of how different people react to the spirit of our society.

 

Some in the United States celebrate this unjust system and seek to enrich themselves in it; they deserve the harshest critique and condemnation. Many others simply move with the prevailing winds, taking their place in the hierarchy without much thought and little challenge; they should be challenged to rise above their willed ignorance and passivity. Some others resist, through political organizing or in quieter ways; they should be commended, with the recognition that whatever they have done it hasn’t been enough to end the nation’s imperial crimes. And we must remember that there are people in the United States suffering under such oppressive conditions that they constitute a kind of internal Third World, targeted as much as the most vulnerable people abroad.

 

Of course those are crudely drawn categories that don’t capture the complexity of our lives. But we should draw them to remind ourselves: Those of us with privilege are responsible in some way. If we want to speak in a prophetic voice, as I believe we all can and should, we must start with an honest assessment of ourselves and those closest to us. For example, I consider myself part of the anti-empire/anti-war movement, and for the past decade I have spent considerable energy on those efforts. But I can see many ways in which I could have done more, and could do more today, in more effective fashion. We need not have delusions of grandeur about what we can accomplish, but we do need to avoid a self-satisfied complacency.

 

That kind of complacency is far too easy for those of us living in the most affluent nation in the history of the world. For those of us with privilege, political activism typically comes with very few costs. We work, and often work hard, for justice but when the day is done many of us come home to basic comforts that most people in the world can only dream of. Those comforts are made possible by the very empire we are committed to ending.

 

Does this seem hard to face? Does it spark a twinge of guilt in you? I hope that it does. Here we can distinguish the guilt of those committing the crimes -- the formal kind of guilt of folks such as Bush and Clinton -- from the way in which a vaguer sense of guilt reminds us that we may not be living up to our own principles. That kind of guilty feeling is not a bad thing, if we have not done things that are morally required. If there is a gap between our stated values and our actions -- as there almost surely is for all of us, in varying ways to varying degrees -- then such a feeling of guilt is an appropriate moral reaction. Guilt of that kind is healthy if we face it honestly and use it to strengthen our commitment to justice.

 

This is our fate living in the empire. We must hold ourselves and each other accountable, while knowing that the powerful systems in place are not going to change overnight simply because we have good arguments and are well-intentioned. We must ask ourselves why we don’t do more, while recognizing that none of us can ever do enough. We must be harsh on ourselves and each other, while retaining a loving connection to self and others, for without that love there is no hope.

 

People often say this kind of individual and collective self-assessment is too hard, too depressing. Perhaps, but it is the path we must walk if we wish to hold onto our humanity. As Heschel put it, “the prophets endure and can only be ignored at the risk of our own despair.”[2] To contemplate these harsh realities is not to give in to despair, but to make it possible to resist.

 

If we wish to find our prophetic voice, we must have the courage to speak about the crimes of our leaders and also look at ourselves honestly in the mirror. That requires not just courage but humility. It is in that balance of a righteous anger and rigorous self-reflection that we find not just the strength to go on fighting but also the reason to go on living.



[1] Abraham J. Heschel, The Prophets (New York: Harper & Row, 1962), p. 16.

[2] Ibid., p. xiii.





Authors Website: http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/%7Erjensen/index.html

Authors Bio: Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center http://thirdcoastactivist.org. His latest book is Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity (South End Press, 2007). Jensen is also the author of The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both from City Lights Books); and Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream (Peter Lang). He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.

Candace: The commentary that people post on Op Ed News to the various articles are amongst the best I see on the internet, real thought going into many. Below is a commentary on the above piece, which goes a step further in regards to the idea of responsibility.

Quite a sermon!

I always admire your writing, Bob, and this is no exception. But I disagree with your thesis.

If I witness a murder and do nothing, I am not guilty, but I am responsible.

If I pay somebody to commit a murder, I am guilty even if I do not commit the murder myself. By law, even though I did not act, the fact that I paid for the act makes me equally guilty.

Now suppose that I am on the Board of Directors of a company like Chiquita that paid death squads to murder. I do not murder and I do not pay for the murders. But when the Chairman of the Board proposes that the corporation pay death squads to murder, I vote for his plan. What am I then, guilty or merely responsible? I believe that if I vote for murder I am just as guilty as if I paid for it or carried it out myself.

Perhaps I would have been a minority vote if I had voted against paying for murder and the plan would have been supported by the majority of the Board even without my vote. Does that absolve me of guilt? I don't think so.

In the minds of those who still believe that the U.S. is a democracy and that our votes count, when they vote for a candidate who is committed to wars of aggression, are they guilty or merely responsible?

I advocate that those who oppose war crimes not vote for war criminals. I believe that if you vote for a war criminal, you are not merely responsible but become de facto guilty of that war crime because you voted for it, even if you did not actually carry it out. Certainly, once you vote for it, you become responsible for paying for it, and that alone makes you guilty of it by law.

Of course the U.S. is not a democracy and our votes do not count, but that doesn't absolve anyone either. If I think I'm paying a hitman to kill somebody, even if the "hitman" turns out to be an FBI agent in a sting operation, the courts will still find me just as guilty as if I had paid an actual hitman.

80% of all U.S. votes are counted by central tabulators using undetectably mutable software that cannot be secured from fraud by insiders such as corrupt elections officials or the programmers hired by the right-wing owners of the private corporations that manufacture and sell those tabulators. So even if I were to vote for a candidate who is opposed to wars of aggression and committed to peace (not that any such candidate stands a chance of winning), I would be doing so knowing that there is no way to prevent my vote from being flipped to a candidate who supports wars of aggression and is opposed to peace. If I leave an assault rifle in the room with a known psychopath who has killed people with assault rifles before, am I merely responsible because I didn't know for certain that he would take and use the weapon, or am I guilty for providing him with a temptation I know he is not likely to resist? We know that two previous presidential elections were stolen--are we merely responsible if we allow another election to be stolen, or are we guilty?

Despite my quibbles, I rated your sermon highly and thank you for posting it.

Next is my own comment I posted to the above piece. I spend a goodly deal of time posting here and there on the Internet. I joined Op Ed a few months ago, but have not submitted a piece yet. I still am working on one of interest to me, but it's not done. My post here is in response to one who said that people do have a right to resist knowledge. I disagree, and it is a major problem in this country, because people use their free will to resist knowledge hugely! I have a bumper sticker on my car that says: "This is a free country, You have a right to be uniformed."  Ok, here's my post to the above article:

 

right to reject knowledge

Everyone soul has the right to reject knowledge and it is being rejected hugely at this time in America. I can't believe how many people, when you kindly suggest such things as the Iraq War is wrong, or 911 was an inside job, choose to NOT EVEN LOOK, and the only argument they can give is zelch, none, because they have chosen to reject knowledge. And as long as this attitude continues, America is in for a lot of karma coming its way, what you sow, so shall you reap. So we keep sowing the knowledge anyway, because to sow knowledge is to serve God and ones soul will reap greatly for that.

 

I don't understand this rejection of knowledge. It perplexes me no end. I am seen as evil by many. These people, so many of them on this planet do not think at all, do not have original thought, they buy into everything on TV. Oddly enough, those bright ones, called star seeds have bought this show of not looking at knowledge also, which is just super perplexing.

 

We as a nation are guilty of high crimes. So be it. I don't have an answer. Why man of this country doesn't even desire any truth or real knowledge is beyond me. Some of this, is that many on this planet are not ensouled by God, but I still have troubles with their refusal to wish to grow mentally. I have had an abundance of college teachers who are not ensouled and can only produce that which they were taught and can't discriminate at all.

 These ones could never survive in a jungle, so to speak, they would perish from lack of any problem solving ability. But where are the rest of the people that are ensouled?  Playing in their sand boxes I guess. Those aware on the internet in this country are not only a minority, they are a tiny, tiny number, and we all preach to the choir, over and over and over. How to reach the ones in the clutches of the churches, I haven't a clue. Nothing I attempt works. That is a major problem, the antichrist's own the churches and people going to them in general are not truly seeking of God, or they would not go to church.

Churches and TV hugely restrict the search of knowledge. I don't know why people think God doesn't want them to search!!!!! It is the will of the Father that man become like him, having all knowledge! 

 

Mind is not normal on this planet in general. Something is very wrong. I see more seeking in my cats than I see in many people, who are robots going about their lives. It is said that you are not guilty if you don't know. Matters not, the nation will face its karma whether or not the people know. How else well they awaken? And well they, even then?

Even those in the knowing on the Internet, are in general not sensing the what is coming to this world. They do not realize we don't have 100 years to solve our problems of energy and the like. It is too late. We are too overpopulated and with people who want nothing more than to war, and to follow, rather than find their own minds.  There is NO WAY out of the transition era coming now upon us. We will go through it. It will not be pretty. What we have sowed, shall be experienced.  And during this era which is now upon us, we shall raise up this planet, into the idea of one planet under God, which means the majority of people are in knowledge of the real "what is", and take responsibility, individually and socially for their creations.  So be it. Let's get on with it. Take care, Candace Frieze. www.abundanthope.net/pages

 



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