Showing posts with label public outrage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public outrage. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Intelligent Outrage: Taking Action

The worst possible outlook is indifference that says, “I can’t do anything about it; I’ll just get by.” Behaving like that deprives you of one of the essentials of being human: the capacity and the freedom to feel outraged. That freedom is indispensable, as is the political involvement that goes with it. 
(Stéphane Hessel, author of Indignez-vous! English title: A Time for Outrage)


No matter that patriotism is too often the refuge of scoundrels. Dissent, rebellion, and all-around hell-raising remain the true duty of patriots….So my instruction to the class of ’07 [of Haverford College]: Go out there and raise hell. 
(Barbara Ehrenreich, journalist)


Our latest crop of politicians like to hark back to the Founding Fathers and point out how opposing policies and attitudes desecrate the intentions of those first patriots. So long as we’re re-imagining the past, I daresay the Founding Fathers would turn to the audience and ask, “Never mind what this legislator wants to do—how do you feel about it?” And the truth is that most of us wouldn't have an opinion, because most of us have disengaged from socio-political issues. (There are enough cranks and crusaders to go around; get out the nachos and let's see who's going to win tonight's reality-TV contest).

Life was meant to be more than reality TV

You don't have to do or say much, but you do have to take action. It needs to be legal, not violent, and it has to be articulated outrage. Write to your representatives. Donate time or money to a charity, cause, or political campaign. Get the other point of view on the issues; don't foster just like-minded "friends." The internet and social media enable socio-political narcissism; for any viewpoint you favor, you'll be able to find corroborating evidence. The challenge is to find content from opposing viewpoints. 
On social media sites like Facebook, position yourself as a curator of civilized discourse between opposing points of view. 



Find an issue that grips you and follow it: Is it public education? A local labor dispute? The quality of health care for the elderly?...What is the life span of this story in the news? Which reporters are tracking it and why? Which political leaders are positioned around it? And always, always, follow the money, because nothing gets done without adequate resources so if, for example, you feel irate over the quality of computers in your kids' school, maybe track how technology projects are funded in public education — locally, regionally, nationally. You don't need a ton of information, but you need to be more than a frustrated opinion.



Your outrage should speak to accountabilities, because history has shown that when there is no public outcry, crimes go unpunished, innocents are brutalized, and injustices become sanctioned by self-serving thugs masquerading as moral authorities. Simply put, we can no longer afford to be passive, overfed, complacent apathetics.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Where is your outrage?


Where was the public outcry—the outrage?
(Gretchen Morgenson, financial reporter, author of Reckless Endangerment, speaking on public reaction to Fannie Mae financial misconduct)

The opinions expressed below are mine alone: this is not a political blog, but I felt this detour needed to be taken. This needs to be said.

We Americans have become frightened of outrage: we assume it leads to violence. Currently, we’re tired and easily overwhelmed. We’re not merely physically exhausted, trying to dog-paddle our way through this economy, we’re also morally and spiritually worn out, having to witness the unscrupulous or self-serving behaviors around us.

Apathy is a placeholder emotion for extreme anger. Apathy makes passivity easier to handle—“I’m not doing anything about it because frankly I could care less”—yet the anger remains. It’s that sick feeling you experience when you read about another corrupt or inept leader, another convicted felon finagling the legal system to protect his own rights, another innocent victim.

There are people in the world doing wrong with complete impunity: Joseph Kony…Jeff Neely and his cronies at the GSA…perhaps, local to you, the director of a local school or nonprofit who’s using a discretionary slush fund to pay for his next family vacation. We don’t have to like it, and we can do something about it.

Let them know you are not going to put up with it. Blind, frantic outrage leads to violence. And then there's intelligent outrage. I say there’s nothing wrong with the latter. Outrage doesn’t have to lead to violence but to an expression of our rights and beliefs, supported by what Stéphane Hessel calls “a determined will.” How you choose to express your outrage is up to you, but intelligent outrage must bring people together around problem-solving—not divide, shame, or commit further violence against others.

We Americans were not intended to become well-heeled sheep, but to find our way through civil discourse and protest. This was supposed to be the land of solutions and remedies, not disgusted bystanders.

Next month: No more excuses—what to do with your outrage