My
first venture
into political
activism was in
the feminist
movement to end
men's violence
against women
and men's use of
women in the
sexual-exploitation
industries
(stripping,
pornography,
prostitution),
grounded in a
critique of the
underlying
conception of
what it means to
be a man that
most of us have
been socialized
to accept:
masculinity as a
quest for
control and
domination,
routinely
leading to
aggression and
violence. Our
understanding of
what it means to
be male has to
change, and to
drive home that
point, I often
offer this
challenge to my
brothers:
"You can be
a man, or you
can be a human
being."
The point was
not that we men
should alter our
bodies but that
we couldn't
retain a loyalty
to masculinity
and still live
fully human
lives. I later
adapted that
question for
talks on racism,
United States
foreign policy,
and economics.
We can be white
people, or we
can be human
beings. We can
be Americans, or
we can be human
beings. We can
be affluent, or
we can be human
beings.
The common claim
is simple: to
embrace being a
man in the
conventional
sense is to
accept the
oppression of
women in
patriarchy; to
embrace being a
white person in
a racist society
is to accept the
oppression of
non-white
people; to
embrace being
American in a
world dominated
by our
hyper-violent
nation-state is
to accept
profound
injustice in the
world; and to
embrace being
affluent in a
world structured
by a predatory
corporate
capitalism is to
accept the
deprivation that
billions around
the world
endure.
Underneath
those claims is
a structural
analysis of the
roots of an
unjust and
unsustainable
system, and the
recognition that
for all its
affluence and
military power,
the United
States is in
many ways a
society in
collapse --
politically,
economically,
culturally and
most important,
ecologically. We
live in an
increasingly
callous culture
that exploits
sexuality and
glorifies
violence, often
with racist
images and
themes; embedded
in a
house-of-cards
economy built on
orgiastic
consumption,
deepening
personal and
collective debt,
and an
artificially
inflated dollar;
at the end of an
imperial era
that is grinding
to a potentially
disastrous
demise. And
looming over all
those crises are
the consequences
of ignoring for
too long the
unraveling
ecological
fabric that
makes life
possible.
This framework
no doubt would
seem radical,
even crazy, to
many. It is
radical, in the
foundational
sense of the
term: going to
the root, trying
to understand
the nature of
things. In this
new century, we
need radical
analyses more
than ever.
That's not
crazy, but is in
fact the only
sane response to
a world facing
such crises.
Radical is
realistic, and
realistic is
sane.
When we dare to
be radical, we
confront the
reality that, at
both the
personal and
planetary
levels, we are
surrounded by
systems based on
a
domination/subordination
dynamic, which
we have to
challenge at all
levels. It's
important to be
clear about
these particular
systems -- race,
gender and
sexuality,
capitalism, and
empire -- all of
which must be
examined in the
context of the
coming
ecological
collapse.
A focus on the
first two, race
and gender, is
often dismissed
as mere
"identity
politics,"
and there
certainly is a
way in which a
shallow
"diversity
talk" can
derail radical
politics. But
there is no way
to talk about
progressive
social change in
this country and
the wider world
if we don't
confront the
pathologies of
white supremacy
and patriarchy,
both of which
are woven deeply
into the fabric
of U.S. society.
Such terms may
seem
old-fashioned,
but we live in a
world of
enduring
racialized
disparities in
wealth and
well-being,
rooted not in
the inadequacy
of people of
color but in
white dominance,
and a world in
which women
still face the
social
limitations and
physical threats
that come from
male dominance.
These
ideologies of
white supremacy
and patriarchy
are linked to
the systems of
capitalism and
empire, rooted
in the
glorification of
a
hyper-competitive,
violent
masculinity and
a belief in the
inherent
superiority of
the United
States and
Europe.
Capitalism
creates a world
defined by greed
and attempts to
reduce us to
crass maximizers
of self-interest
-- not exactly a
recipe for
living a decent
life consistent
with our
principles of
equality and the
dignity of all
people. Empire
allows the
extraction of
the wealth of
the many to
enrich an ever
smaller number
of people, not
exactly a
morally
defensible
model.
These systems
leave half of
the people on
the planet to
live on less
than $2.50 a day
(World Bank,
"World
Development
Report
2008," www.worldbank.org/wdr2008).
More than 3
billion people
struggle for
food, shelter,
clothing,
education, and
medical care on
less than what
one of us in the
developed world
might spend on a
fancy cup of
coffee. The
people living at
that level of
poverty are
disproportionately
non-white and
female. They
live mostly in a
Third World that
has suffered,
and continues to
suffer, from
military and/or
economic
domination by
the First World,
especially today
by the United
States. Radical
politics says
not only that
this state of
affairs is
unjust, but that
the systems and
structures of
power that give
rise to it are
fundamentally
unjust and must
be changed.
And then there
is the question
of
sustainability.
Look at any
crucial measure
of the health of
the ecosphere in
which we live --
groundwater
depletion,
topsoil loss,
chemical
contamination,
increased
toxicity in our
own bodies, the
number and size
of "dead
zones" in
the oceans,
accelerating
extinction of
species and
reduction of
bio-diversity --
and ask a simple
question: Where
we are heading?
Remember also
that we live in
an oil-based
world that is
fast running out
of oil, which
means we face a
huge
reconfiguration
of the
infrastructure
that undergirds
our lives. And,
of course, there
is the
undeniable
trajectory of
climate
breakdown.
That's not a
pretty picture,
and it's crucial
we realize that
there are no
technological
fixes that will
rescue us. We
have to go to
the root and
acknowledge that
human attempts
to dominate the
non-human world
have failed. We
are destroying
the planet and
in the process
destroying
ourselves. Here,
just as in human
relationships,
we either
abandon the
domination/subordination
dynamic or we
don't survive.
A
radically
realistic
assessment of
the nature of
contemporary
systems and
institutions is
necessary if we
are to make
progress toward
real justice and
real
sustainability.
It is realistic,
though not
pleasant to
recognize, that
when we draw our
sense of self
from the
privilege and
power that comes
with being in a
dominant
position within
unjust and
immoral
hierarchical
systems --
patriarchy,
white supremacy,
U.S. imperial
domination, and
capitalism -- we
sacrifice some
deeper sense of
our humanity. We
can't accept
those privileges
and that power
without losing a
part of
ourselves, the
part that gives
real meaning to
our lives, the
part with which
we yearn to
connect to
others.
We
can be
men/white/American/affluent,
or we can be
human beings.
That challenge
leaves one
obvious question
unasked and
unanswered: What
does it mean to
be a human
being? Given all
that we know and
don't know in
the modern
world, what does
a claim to be
human really
mean at this
moment in
history? What
qualities are we
most focused on
when we say we
are human, when
we talk about
our humanity? We
appeal to each
other's humanity
all the time,
but with
surprisingly
little
discussion of
what it means in
the modern
context.
As I worked on
political issues
connected to
these systems of
oppression, I
found that the
political
traditions in
which I was
rooted gave me
the tools I
needed to
analyze and
resist those
systems. Radical
feminism,
anti-racist
theory and
practice,
traditional
anti-imperialist
and
anti-capitalist
movements, and
the best
thinking in
ecology -- all
were more than
adequate for
providing an
understanding of
how these
systems work and
for putting
together a
holistic
analysis of a
profoundly
unjust and
immoral modern
world. Those
political
traditions could
take me a long
way, but
increasingly I
had a sense they
could not take
me all the way
home. I had
difficulty
fashioning an
answer to that
nagging
question: What
does it mean to
be human?
So
it was then,
somewhat
reluctantly,
that I turned to
theology and
eventually
joined a
congregation. My
motivation
wasn't a sudden
surge of
interest in the
origins of the
universe or a
concern about
what awaited me
after death; my
focus remains on
the question of
how to live
fully and
responsibly in
the here and
now. The same
questions that
had led me to
radical politics
nudged me to
expand the scope
of my inquiry. I
had no interest
in succumbing to
New Age-style
self-indulgence,
nor did I intend
to give up
politics to
pursue theology.
My goal has been
to deepen my
politics through
theology and
open up to new
ways of thinking
about myself as
well. Whatever I
had thought of
religious
institutions in
the past -- I
had never cared
much for them --
increasingly it
seemed
self-defeating
to avoid
engagement with
religion, which
is so clearly a
powerful force
for so many.
Theology and
organized
religion are
not, of course,
the only routes
to explore these
questions, but
there is no
reason to reject
the wisdom that
theology might
offer.
Our first step
is not to
pretend to
answer questions
but to pose
questions
clearly, in ways
that would allow
people of
different views
at least to
start from some
common ground.
If I were to
condense all
this into one
question, it
would look like
this:
Which practices,
systems, and
fundamental
conceptions of
what it means to
be human,
are consistent
with a
sustainable
human presence
on the earth,
respectful of
other life,
in societies
that provide the
necessary
resources for
all people to
live a decent
life,
within a culture
that fosters
individual
flourishing
alongside a
meaningful sense
of collective
identity,
helping us to
take seriously
our obligations
to ourselves,
each other, and
to the non-human
world?
Embedded
in that one
question are, of
course, many
complex
questions that
people have
pondered for
centuries
without clear
resolution.
Completely new
insights are
unlikely to
emerge here;
maybe there are
no truly
original
insights to be
had by anyone.
But if we want
to take politics
and theology
seriously, we
can't pretend
not to
understand these
questions, and
we can't evade
our
responsibility
to struggle to
understand and
then to act on
that
understanding.