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Be the Wind: On the Upcoming Elections
by Starhawk

As you read this, a mother in Iraq is newly wailing over the body of a
dead child.  A nineteen year old kid who used to be the star of his
basketball team is being sent home without legs.  A father in Guantanamo
hasn’t seen his kids, or sunlight, for three years. Another chunk breaks
off the polar ice caps and the heat trapped by greenhouse gases churns the
atmosphere into new swirls of turbulence like those that unleashed four
hurricanes in one season in the Caribbean.  As I type this sentence,
another worker loses her union job, another child is shot in Palestine,
another farmer somewhere drinks pesticides in despair.

The stakes are really high right now. And the future is very unclear. It
seems likely the outcome of the elections will be a cliff hanger until the
very end.  Bush could win.  Kerry could win.  Bush could try to
manipulate, steal, or subvert the outcome.  His forces could manufacture a
last-minute surprise—unearth Bin Laden, say, or stage a terrorist attack. 
They could even try to postpone or cancel elections altogether.  After
all, this particular gang of thugs has for decades plotted, planned,
schemed, manipulated and murdered to consolidate their power—why should
they let it go for anything as simple as a fair election?

I don’t know when I’ve seen so many people so deeply afraid, staring into
the future like a rabbit caught in the headlights of an oncoming truck. 
Will it run us down?  Do we try to deflect its path, or run away?

I’m hearing two schools of thought among progressives.  Some are heading
to swing states to help get out the vote.  Others are saying, ‘Why vote?’
when both candidates are taking such similar positions on the war, and
serve the same corporate interests.

I’m a direct action kind of gal, and I don’t generally put a lot of energy
into electoral politics.  But I believe that we need to vote.  We need to
do all we can to keep the neocons behind Bush from further consolidating
their power.

Voting is not the most empowering of political acts -- but it’s the one
that most people across the political spectrum take part in.  When I stand
in line to vote in my neighborhood, I stand in a crowd that is more
diverse than almost any other political activity I take part in.  Working
class, middle class, old, young, Euro/African/Asian/Latino
Americans—everyone is there.  I don’t see how we can claim to speak to the
communities who are most impacted by the neocons policies, most
disenfranchised, most utterly screwed, if we disdain this simplest, most
basic of political acts.  How do we speak to the parents of kids whose
schools are lacking books and desks and supplies if we can’t get out to
vote for school bonds? In California, we have a chance to vote for
Proposition 66, which would end the worst abuses of our vicious
three-strike law that now condemns mostly black and brown offenders to
life sentences for stealing a few bucks worth of groceries.  If you can’t
be bothered to vote for that, don’t claim to be an ally of communities of
color.  In every area, there are crucial issues on the ballot that go far
beyond just the choice of presidential candidate -- whether they are
initiatives to ban the growing of GMO crops that we need to pass, or
initiatives to ban gay marriage that we need to defeat.

What about voting for Nader, or the Green Party?  I’ve voted for Nader
many times.  I’m registered Green Party.  I strongly support Green Party
candidates in local and regional elections.  I’ve seen what a Green Mayor
and City Council can do in Sebastopol, where they have banned the use of
pesticides on city property, planted a permaculture garden outside the
Police Station, are working on a community garden and skateboard park.  I
think that’s one way we can build a Green Party or other third party as a
counterforce that might pull our national dialogue to the left—from the
bottom up, in places where we can win and build alternatives as examples
of what is possible.  I thought Nader was right to run last time, to
attempt to give voice to issues that other candidates weren’t talking
about, to start to build a new base.  But this time, I see his decisions
as undermining that base.  If by some miracle a candidate with his
policies got elected, she’d need to be a great coalition builder, with a
brilliant sense of how to win over, influence, charm, and yes, and
occasionally arm-twist both allies and enemies -- and I don’t see that in
Nader or the Greens nationally at this time.

I’ve heard it said that “the lesser of two evils is still an evil.”  Kerry
does not perfectly represent my vision for the world, or the policies I
would like to see implemented.  I don’t expect that any candidate for
President will, under the current system which is so driven by money and
corporate influence.  But Kerry does represent change, a refusal to give
the current evil a mandate.  And here let me quote my brother, Mark Simos,
who wrote to me saying:

“I'm choosing to focus on these messages: that voting for change right now
will send the most powerful possible message to the world, that Americans
still have a conscience; that we are not completely controlled by our
media spinmeisters; that the mechanisms of democracy are, somehow, still
intact if compromised on all sides; that we hold our leaders accountable
for the consequences of their policies, even if they themselves refuse to
do so; that we are capable of getting out of denial about realities on the
ground, instead of "changing the facts to suit our position"; and that we
are fundamentally committed to finding more just ways of exercising
leadership in the post 9/11 world. In other words, the act of change
itself will open doors to new alternatives hard to envision right now.’
But won’t things get so bad if Bush gets in again that people will finally
wake up and make the revolution?  Oh, if you believe that you weren’t
around or have forgotten the same arguments in ’68 and ’72 and ’80 and ’84
and on and on. What actually happens when the right wing triumphs is that
progressives become demoralized, the economic elite gains and keeps more
power, the national dialogue shifts further away from progressive goals,
and things get worse.  Maybe it’s hard to imagine that things can get
worse than they are, but I’ve been to Palestine and I’m telling you, they
can get a whole lot worse. And I believe that in many important ways Kerry
will be significantly better than Bush.  On issues of women’s rights and
on the environment, there’s a world of difference between them.  Kerry has
fought to prevent Bush from rolling back clean air and water standards.  
He supports a shift to renewable energy sources, and is aware of the
global warming crisis. He’s a strong supporter of women’s right to choose,
and is pledged to nominate judges to the Federal bench who will support
our liberties.

At minimum, he seems to inhabit roughly the same reality I do, in which
Iraq is a mess, the economy is a disaster, and people all over the world
are suffering.  Listening to Bush in the debates, I began to wonder if he
is actually the president of some other country, where foreign wars are
going well, the economy is booming, African American children are
dutifully doing their homework in the homes their parents own and getting
the test scores they need to go on to college, and the environment is
something invented by liberals to hamper business.  That would explain a
lot, since I know he wasn’t actually elected president of this one.   For
the American people to ratify the Bush policies of greed, lies, empire and
war, or to let them continue out of apathy or misguided principle, would
be to contribute to crimes against humanity. I have no illusions that
Kerry will be a beacon of pacifism and revolution, but at least he knows
that Iraq is a disaster, that nuclear proliferation is a danger, that jobs
are evaporating, and that the environment actually exists and has some
bearing on our quality of life. And Kerry windsurfs.  That’s a quality I
want in a president, because we need to be the wind.

We need to be the force that politicians have to respond to.  It’s useless
complaining about Kerry’s positions or about how frustrating it is to not
have a viable candidate that can really raise the issues of the war and
globalization.  We need to raise those issues, as we have been, and
continue to raise them so strongly and loudly that they cannot be ignored.
 Regardless of who is elected, we need to build the base and the movement
that can shift the political currents away from the right-wing shoals of
empire back to the harbor of real democracy.

If Bush wins the election or steals it, if there is fraud or attempts to
disrupt the process, we can’t sit back this time with that
paralyzed-rabbit-stare.  We need to be organized and prepared to hit the
streets and raise such a ruckus that the fraud cannot be ratified.  We can
complain all we want about Gore and the Democrats rolling over and playing
dead last time—but how many of us were in the streets urging them on to
fight?  This time, we need to be ready.  So at the bottom of this email
you’ll find a call from the NO STOLEN ELECTIONS campaign, and a pledge you
can sign to participate in protests including nonviolent civil
disobedience if fraud occurs.  I’ve signed it:  I hope you will too.

If Kerry wins, we also need to be prepared to hit the streets, to
celebrate but also to agitate, to let him know that we actually do want
health care and good schools, taxes on the rich and the corporations, and
end to the murderous mess in Iraq and our civil liberties back. Oh yes,
and that small problem of the basic life support systems of the planet
heading toward collapse—could we begin to address that?  In San Francisco,
we have demonstrations planned for November 3, regardless of who wins,
calling for Healthcare, not Warfare—beginning with a 9 AM rally at Justin
Herman Plaza, a march through the Tenderloin district and a convergence at
noon at the Federal Building.  It’s part of an overall national campaign,
Beyond Voting, www.beyondvoting.org .  You can check the website to find
out what’s planned in your area, or plan an action of your own.

And whoever wins, we need to actually build the world we want to live in,
street by street, neighborhood by neighborhood. That’s a longterm project,
and I won’t outline the full program here.  But here’s what I intend to do
on November 2:

My house is across the street from our neighborhood polling place.  We’re
going to set up a free café in our garage, and invite the neighbors to
stop by, before or after voting.  For some free coffee, and some homegrown
apple pie, and some conversation about what our neighborhood wants and
needs.  Maybe we’ll set up a mini Really Free Market, and give stuff away.
 Give out sidewalk chalk to the kids and let them draw their visions on
the street.  It’s a small action, but any time we start to reach out
across the barriers that keep us isolated and build community, we
undermine the empire.

A year ago, my friends and I were blockading and dancing outside the walls
of the World Trade Organization’s collapsing Ministerial, chanting in
Spanish, “We are the wind that blows the Empire down.”

We need to be that wind.

------------------------------------------

Copyright (c) 2004 by Starhawk. All rights reserved. This copyright
protects Starhawk's right to future publication of her work. Nonprofit,
activist, and educational groups may circulate this essay (forward it,
reprint it, translate it, post it, or reproduce it) for nonprofit uses.
Please do not change any part of it without permission.

Starhawk is an activist, organizer, and author of Webs of Power: Notes
from the Global Uprising and nine other books on feminism, politics and
earth-based spirituality.  Her latest book, The Earth Path, has just been
published by HarperSanFrancisco.  For details of her upcoming events, see
her schedule page.

-------------------------------------------

NO STOLEN ELECTIONS!
http://www.Nov3.US

Sisters & Brothers,

We all remember the votes that were never counted in Florida 2000.  While
we are all working hard for a positive outcome on November 2nd, we also
have to be prepared for a repeat of a 2000 stolen election.  Below is a
pledge for people to sign, supporting efforts to mobilize and protect the
vote on November 2nd and making a commitment to protest starting on
November 3rd in the case of a fraudulent vote count.  By signing this
pledge, you will be joining with thousands of others in the November 3rd
Urgent Response Network.  Please sign the pledge at www.Nov3.US and pass
it around far and wide.

We are setting up a Fair Elections Advisory Council made up of U.S. and
international elections experts who will give us their assessment on
election day itself. If they find significant fraud, we will activate the
Urgent Response Network on or immediately after November 3rd, calling on
people everywhere to engage in protest, including non-violent civil
disobedience, in front of their local federal buildings and other
appropriate places.  We will also be asking those who can to converge in
the states where the most serious fraud occurred, as well as in Washington
DC.

In addition to signing the pledge, please work with other people and
groups in your area to protect the vote on November 2nd and to build the
Urgent Response Network.  Pick a venue for your local protest in the case
that the Urgent Response Network is activated, and list the time and place
on the website at http://www.Nov3.US We also recommend that you set up a
place to jointly watch the election results on November 2nd.

Let us commit ourselves to making sure that this time around, the person
who occupies the White House is the one who won the election.

No Stolen Election Pledge of Action:

"I remember the stolen presidential election of 2000 and I am willing to
take action in 2004 if the election is stolen again. I support efforts to
protect the right to vote leading up to and on Election Day, November 2nd.
If that right is systematically violated, I pledge to join nationwide
protests starting on November 3rd, either in my community, in the states
where the fraud occurred, or in Washington DC."

Please sign the pledge now at http://www.Nov3.US

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