The Long Blog

“We have to pivot at the inflection point of intersectionality.”   Chairman John

 A few years ago I was trying to think of the most cliché statement one could make using the favorite buzzwords of the day. After further reflection it was more than a little startling to realize that those ten words adequately summarized the tactical changes that the historical moment required. President Abraham Lincoln stated it more elegantly when he said “we must think anew and act anew . . . we must disenthrall ourselves”.

“The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country.” ~ Abraham Lincoln.

This was his state of mind as he was setting the course to remove slavery from the country’s legal structure ‘forevermore’. I’ve quoted Lincoln in that context many times, and have not been hesitant to add Bob Marley’s, “Emancipate yourself from mental slavery none but ourselves can free our minds”. The unique situation of having the worldwide SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the economic consequences of extreme stress to all countries and populations, and the political problems arising from vast wealth inequality and uncontrolled new technologies present a battery of difficulties that humankind doesn’t yet seem to have the skill set to deal with. Perhaps “We all need to grow up a bit,” is a better conclusion and that, with an added dose of humility, might set the table for the massive re-ordering of priorities and actions that climate change and worldwide war will require of all of the citizens of our planet. We need to make epic adjustments even as we discipline ourselves to save as much of the biosphere as we possibly can. There is no Planet B is more than a placard at many street demonstrations; it is the bald truth as to the fundamental injunction that should underline any order of the day.

Although my political career has been adequately composted by the results of nine elections, I will continue to testify and ‘preach to the choir’ from this pulpit. While working on my papers and writing some concluding remarks I will use this platform to, as Frederick Douglass urged us years ago, “Agitate, agitate, agitate”, (while he additionally reminded us that the oppressor never willingly abandons their oppression and must be forced to yield). I think of the famous trek of the Peoples Liberation Army from Jiangxi to Shaanxi Provinces in the middle of the 1930’s and the many rivers and mountains that needed to be crossed while taking fire from all sides and the steady growing of their numbers that year and over  the next dozen years as a good example of the resolve that the non-violent movement will need to succeed; and I can assure you that we will need no less from American patriots than the Chinese needed  from theirs in their drive “To Stand Up”.  

That heroic episode that came to be known as The Long March was essential to creating the Chinese Peoples Republic in October, 1949. We will in all probability need no less of an effort now if we wish to create a democratic republic here in the United States by 2032 and to succeed at even part of our hopes for stabilizing and sustaining the progress that humankind has already made in this world.

Thank You Voters !

Dear Good Friends & Fellow Citizens:

I want to take the opportunity at this time to thank all of you who have supported me and The Cause that I have pursued over the last 50 years of political action, but especially in the races for the House of Representatives and this year’s Presidential election as those contests were particularly focused on the issues of the nation’s misplaced priorities of military might and expanding economic advantage for those who are already privileged at the expense of those in real need. One central feature in that battle has been the fight against the hegemonic power of the two major political parties in the United States, the Democrats & Republicans. The central elite of both those groups are continually willing to sacrifice the many in exchange for power for the few, and while doing that demean the promise of equality and justice upon which the nation is predicated. I continue to maintain that unless we fix that, our current form of government from the Constitution of1787 will no longer obtain and a new manner of governing will be required of us. The essence of non-violent political struggle is the ballot box, and unless security of the vote can be protected and enhanced, and the cash spent by big economic syndicates and individuals can be limited, people will out of frustration give up in believing that non-violent engagement can change the world and will walk a different path. That would be a dangerous distraction from our real problems.

This is not rabble rousing or alarmist conjecture but a measured opinion based on calculating the gap between our present performance and the magnitude of need to change the way we do things. The national government must legislate in many areas; to improve authorization and appropriation procedures, to honor treaty arrangements, especially in regard to control of nuclear weapons and other genocidal armaments, and to bring to heel outright criminal behavior by the entrenched oligarchy which will entail joining the International Criminal Court so as to allow for US citizens to be arraigned there. The way in which corporate control has penetrated the media since the abandonment of the Equal Time and Fairness Doctrine has impoverished public discussion of all of these pressing issues and vitiated the public forum so that propaganda and infotainment flourish with little appeal to fact or reason. The AGYHOOYA battle cry was specifically designed to get in the face of the pharaonic press and challenge every citizen to rethink their facile assumptions. Truth of the matter is, I’m not very good at politics, a fact to which nine election losses adequately testifies. I can therefore say with unequivocal enthusiasm how much I truly appreciate those of you who have stood with me during my political campaigns. I thank you from the bottom of my heart . . .     and the top and the center as well for that matter . . .

Sincerely, John Karl Fredrich                                                                                May Grace, Peace & Love                                                                                              be with you always, JKF                  — 30 —

 

The Biggest Loser

Now that it’s pretty clear that Joe Biden has garnered the Electoral College vote, and also won the popular vote with the greatest tally ever, over 80 million votes to the Republican candidate’s 74 million,  I can safely say that I lost this Presidential election by more than 150,000,000 votes. In fact, I can find no reports that I received any votes at all ! 

What does that mean for the greater picture about the direction of the country and the welfare of its people ? The pandemic rages on, as do wars from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Durand Line, and it doesn’t look good for my central platform planks; less military spending, more health care and housing, women’s rights and voting rights, higher taxes on the plutocrats and corporations, and clear votes in Congress on all the issues of our day put forward in clean bills so the people know where their representatives stand. The lack of regulation of money in elections and the routine denial of the principles of one person/one vote and equal protection under the law mean that our invalid democracy that denies the majority its right to govern and the minorities their claims to equal justice will continue unabated. In short, an awful lot has been heaped on the plate of President-elect Joseph Robert Biden and the administration that he will direct and the Congress and the nation that he will attempt to lead. Deeply divided, critically under-informed, and in some cases clinically depressed, the American public needs both reassurance and action if it is once again to become a force for national and global improvement, ‘an Earth restored’ to use the Society of Friend’s stated goal.

It has been a month now since the polls closed across the nation in one of the most fateful elections in United States history. There are still two Senate seats in Georgia to be determined, and the Electoral College will not certify its decision until December 14th. Meanwhile, Mr. Trump continues to cry foul and fraud in what has to be one of the most transparent swindles in American history by preying upon the credulity of his more benighted supporters to send him money in his struggle to overturn what impartial observers call a free and fair election. Some accounts have him already taking in over $200M with only the vaguest restrictions over for what the funds can be used. We can only hope that that is his final gift/grift to the country.

Imagine my surprise then when after the election and catching up on reading the pile of magazines at my disposal I read some articles in The New Yorker that I felt beautifully examined the troubled conflicts and thwarted promise of our national experiment with creating a new form of government. For those of you trying to run your classes over the internet, they are worth a read for no other reason as to inform the context for your teaching of United States history. The first two were in the November 2 issue and the last in the November 23 issue:  from The Critics section, book reviews written by Philip Deloria and Maya Jasanoff , the first on a new book about Tecumseh, the great American Indian political leader who fought against white incursions into Indian country in the early 19th century, and the second reviewing a number of literary approaches to the blinkered understanding of Britain’s imperial past. The article from the issue dated November 23, 2020, is by Andrew Marantz on The Anti-Coup, “How civil resistance works and wins”. It beautifully summarizes the inclination that direct action is taking and will need to continue along if we are ever to have real democracy in the United States. I do not personally envision any way that the United States can continue without an Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution and also an amendment voiding The Electoral College and establishing election of the President directly by a majority of the nation’s voters. The end of the American empire will need to be prefaced by the elimination of those Constitutional artifices that reflect the pro-slavery and  patriarchal, chauvinistic prejudices of its authors. Just muddling along is not going to cut it since government that is not responsive to the imperatives for human survival cannot in itself survive.