Article 36706 "If you feel safe now, it's an illusion born of your relationship to power."

"If you feel safe now, it's an illusion born of your relationship to power."

by
from Making Light on (#36706)
From a post by Logan Rimel, parish administrator at University Lutheran Chapel of Berkeley, Caifornia.

I outsourced the sin of my violence to them. I asked them to get their hands dirty so I could keep mine clean.

In Charlottesville, my "nonviolent" stance was met with heavily armed men. They came with bats, clubs, plywood shields painted with swastikas, brass knuckles, tear gas canisters, and wooden sticks. Not to mention the guns. The heavily armed militia were everywhere. They liked that they made you feel nervous. It was fun for them.

They came to hurt people, and they did.

Let me take a moment to be clear--I do not advocate for violence. I trust, however pig-headedly, that all of creation--including all people--is both capable and worthy of salvation. That there is no such thing as a lost cause with God. I cannot explain this trust; it is a part of me deeper than rational faculty. To commit violence against another human being is to commit violence against the image of God in them. To me, it is a sin. I do not believe God requires us to sin. But it seems apparent to me that the world sometimes does.

I never felt safer than when I was near antifa. They came to defend people, to put their bodies between these armed white supremacists and those of us who could not or would not fight. They protected a lot of people that day, including groups of clergy. My safety (and safety is relative in these situations) was dependent upon their willingness to commit violence. In effect, I outsourced the sin of my violence to them. I asked them to get their hands dirty so I could keep mine clean. Do you understand? They took that up for me, for the clergy they shielded, for those of us in danger. We cannot claim to be pacifists or nonviolent when our safety requires another to commit violence, and we ask for that safety.

And so I come to this--white liberal Christian friends, I'm talking to you. I've seen a lot of condemnation of "violent response," lots of selective quoting Dr. King, lots of disparagement of antifa and the so-called "alt-left," a moral equivalency from the depths of Hell if I ever saw one. You want to be nonviolent? That is good and noble. I think...I think I do, too. But I want you to understand what you're asking of the people who take this necessary stance against white supremacy, the people who go to look evil in the face. You're asking them to be beaten with brass knuckles, with bats, with fists. To be pounded into the ground, stomped on, and smashed. You're asking them to bleed on the pavement and the grass. Some of them are going to die. And you're asking them to do that without defending themselves.

Are you willing to do that? Are you going to to go out when the Nazis come here, to the Bay Area, next week? Are you going to offer your body to them? No? Are you willing to take a bat to the head? To be surrounded by angry young men who want nothing more than to beat you unconscious, like they did Deandre Harris? Are you going to rely upon a different type of violence--that imposed by the state--to protect you--even knowing it is a danger to your neighbors? To outsource the violence your safety requires to someone else? Or are you just not going to show up, at the rally or afterward? To choose passivity over pacifism--because let's be clear, nonviolence is still about showing up.

If you are unwilling to risk your bodily integrity to stand against literal Nazis, but you are willing to criticize the people out there who are taking this grave threat seriously but not in a way of which you approve....I just don't know what to say to you. Truly. Your moral authority is bankrupt and you're not helping. You're a hypocrite.

Everyone wants to feel safe. You are not safe. Your Muslim neighbors are not safe. Your immigrant neighbors are not safe. Your black neighbors are not safe. Your disabled neighbors are not safe. Your indigenous neighbors are not safe. Your Jewish neighbors are not safe. Your transgender neighbors are not safe. If you feel safe now, it's an illusion born of your relationship to power. But make no mistake--you may not be the canary, but we're all in the same coal mine. These people have been "community organizing" for DECADES. They are base-building and they have the White House. They have infiltrated law enforcement. They are in every legislative body and on every school board. You are not safe.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/atom.xml
Feed Title Making Light
Feed Link https://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/
Reply 0 comments