It's a strange year to be celebrating Independence Day, to be thinking about the founding of the country and what it means for the future. And it's not just citizens of the U.S. doing that. The world seems to have tilted in the past two years, and I think we're all still in a tilting world, and it's unclear where we'll end up. More liberty or less? It's not just the U.S. voting on these ideas. The Supreme Court has weighed in, and I think that the founders would be aghast at giving a President so much power. The founders had seen the problems with having a king, and they wanted to avoid that.
I have spent time thinking about humans during past times of hardship: life in communist Russia/Europe, people trying to survive the U.S. Civil War, all the ways that life unraveled during the long, slow collapse of the Roman empire, among others.
When my brain spirals that direction, I try to remind myself of the times when humans have rallied, worked hard, left the planet a better place than they found it, or at least left their little part of the planet a better place. I'm thinking of the Civil Rights movement and all the movement for human rights that it birthed. I'm thinking of those founders of the U.S. who signed their names to a document that was treason, in the eyes of their government. They pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. Each July 4, I think about my own life, my own beliefs. To what would I pledge my life, my fortune, and my sacred honor?
Most days I'm just trying to fly under the radar of all the powers and principalities that would keep me in bondage, in fear, in slavery of all sorts. I'm trying to take care of friends and loved ones and my immediate community.
I can't resist posting this picture of me and my dad, dressed up as colonist and British soldier, standing in front of a painting of British soldiers:Then I give them a copy of an interview (in the fabulous book We Owe You Nothing: Punk Planet: The Collected Interviews) with Jello Biafra which has this challenge: "It's time to start thinking, 'What do I do if I suddenly find myself in charge?'" (page 46 of the first edition). Many of my students find this idea to be a wonderful writing prompt, even as they're doubtful that they would ever be allowed to be in charge of a national government.
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