I quit listening to NPR awhile back. It seemed like every time I turned it on I got pissed off because they were either buying into some stupid Republican bullshit or they were interviewing someone in a kitchen somewhere and the dishes and silverware were clanking so loudly in the "background" (?) I couldn't hear the interviewee.
I'm afraid they are co-opted by corporate cash like most of the rest of the media in this country.
"If a speech falls freely in the forest, and there is no one there to hear it ... is it still free speech?"
-Swami Beyondananda
I was visiting a friend last week who was tuned in to NPR's Weekend Edition, and it brought back nostalgic memories. I used to love listening to NPR, and feeling smarter than the yo-yos and yahoos tuning in to Fox.
NPR's "Weakened Edition"
And What We Can Do Anyway
by Steve Bhaerman
"If a speech falls freely in the forest, and there is no one there to hear it ... is it still free speech?"
-Swami Beyondananda
I was visiting a friend last week who was tuned in to NPR's Weekend Edition, and it brought back nostalgic memories. I used to love listening to NPR, and feeling smarter than the yo-yos and yahoos tuning in to Fox.
All that changed during the Bush era, as I
began noticing what NPR didn't report -- anything significant about the war
machine and corporate state -- and I decided I could do without the luxury of
intellectual superiority.
Now of course we are finding that NPR is as dependent on corporate funds as any
daily newspaper or mainstream media outlet -- so consequently it joined the rest
of the corporate media in ignoring the worldwide March Against Monsanto this past
weekend.
This is simply an expression of the "kinder
and gentler" form of totalitarianism where anything that challenges the
authority of the corporate state (i.e., the coercive power of government in the
service of big money) is simply ignored, and therefore dies from
marginalization. Yes, totalitarianism ... or if you prefer a more creative term,
"neo-feudalism". We are quickly headed to a world where there is one big Company
Store, and with top-down control of what we eat, collectively see and hear, and
what we think.
Unless we wake up, wise up, grow up, and show
up as one powerful movement, that is.
My cosmic comic cohort the Swami has said,
"The truth shall upset you free", and I advise that we waste no time indulging
in despair or denial and embrace and recognize our real power.
To do so, we must temporarily lift ourselves
above and beyond the one or two or three issues we feel most deeply about, and
recognize how each of these issues really boils down to one issue, one question
really:
"Who's in charge of who's in
charge?"
When it comes to trust for the corporate
state, we have a deeply united body politic.
The vast majority of us know that what we have
now is unworkable at best, criminal at worst. Until now, we have been divided
into two ideological/cultural tribes ... and the dysfunctional function of the
corporate media is to make sure the two sides never come together publicly and
engage in civil conversation -- and never discover the fundamental principles
they share in common.
If we keep feuding ... well then, we will
surely have "feudalism".
So ... the first step is to withdraw
attention, energy, time, and money from divisive discourse, and appreciate,
embrace, and use the power we DO have -- and make sure that our political
activities and buying habits are designed to break the real issues "through the
soundless barrier" so that more individuals and communities can awaken together
more rapidly.
Let's imagine -- as Paul Ray (author of The Cultural Creatives) has
suggested -- that 25% to 30% of the 250 million adult Americans are awakened and
"susceptible to" the notion that everything is connected, and we are indeed all
in this together, inside the web of life. If we rounded that off to 70 million
Americans, and let's say each of those individuals shifted just $100 a year from
the corporate media and instead supported a truly independent Citizen's Media,
that's $70 billion. I know. It ain't much, but it's a start.
As to how that media gets convened, and how it
sustains independence ... those are issues to consider. First, though, we need
to have the vision, and begin the conversation.
Meanwhile, there are three things we can do
RIGHT NOW to assert, aggregate, and focus the political, economic, and spiritual
power we do have.
1.
POLITICAL: Move to Amend. Of all the current political movements, the
one with the most single-minded focus on radical (i.e., "to the root") change is
the Move to Amend campaign for a
Constitutional Amendment to end corporate personhood. It reads simply: "We, the
People of the United States of America, reject the U.S. Supreme Court's Citizens
United ruling and other related cases, and move to amend our Constitution to
firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not
corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights."
Historically (e.g. the Equal Right Amendment)
Constitutional amendments are difficult to pass AND at the same time because of
their global nature, they are excellent ways to gather political will and
focus.
Move to Amend calls forth some simple
questions: Should corporations have more power than citizens? Should our
governance be controlled primarily by the power of money? Should money speak so
loud that it drowns out all other speech?
All those who came out to March Against
Monsanto -- or resonated with the cause -- should understand that Move to Amend
is a fundamental step to curtailing the power of Monsanto, the corporate media,
and the corporate state.
2.
ECONOMIC: The "We're Not Buying It" Campaign. To make it easier to vote
with your dollars, the Non-GMO Project has developed a free
iPhone App Shopping Guide so you can instantly find and buy non-GMO brands. Please share this
freely with friends and community, as well as any other technological
innovations that allow us to boycott and buy-cott (support businesses that offer
true alternatives).
3.
SPIRITUAL: Connecting the Good. I mentioned this proactive organization
in my email last week, and now I mention it again. Visionary activist Richard
Flyer appreciates something that both Gandhi and Jefferson knew and spoke of --
small, local networks are the "healthy cells" of a revitalized body politic that
can regrow the Garden -- and just, balanced, ethical governance -- from the
grassroots up. If you like the Swami believe we need more forums and fewer
"againstums" and you are ready for "creation" and not merely "reaction", please
go here and register for a free
orientation call this Wednesday, May 29th, 6-7 PM Pacific Time.
Now is the time to remember Margaret Mead's
classic quote: "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed,
citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
That's
us, folks. Ready to join the upwising?
Steve
Bhaerman is author and humorist and also known by his cosmic comic alter ego
Swami Beyondananda (wakeuplaughing.com). He is also author
with Bruce Lipton of the paradigm-busting book, Spontaneous Evolution: Our Positive Future
and a Way to Get There From Here.
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