2011: Time for a New, Clear Vision
Saturday 01 January 2011
by: Randall Amster J.D., Ph.D., t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
For the coming year, rather than short-term resolutions, I'm issuing an ongoing challenge that is at once personal and political. Despite much evidence to the contrary and notwithstanding the relentless news cycle that we frequent, I believe that 2011 will be the year that the majority of people in the world demonstrably turn away from the brink of destruction and embrace a spirit of positive innovation and creative intervention in their communities. This may seem like a preposterous conclusion, but then again, if someone told you in early 2001 that we would be living in a perpetual state of terror/war and that our rights would be wholly eviscerated in short order, you might have said the same thing.
Watershed changes happen, and they needn't always be to the bad side of things. I won't attempt a predictive litany here, but any number of significant events could transpire this year that would forever remake the map of the world. One of the most troubling aspects of the present moment is that we've fostered a sensibility in which crises, conflicts and cataclysms eclipse any comprehension of positive information in our midst. While bad news is trumpeted on every billboard and dutifully reprinted in a preponderance of blogs, the prospects of anything good happening recede farther into the nether regions of our neural and informational networks alike. At this point, it's a fair question: If something monumentally positive were to occur, would anyone be inclined to actually notice and/or report it?
By most accounts, it looks and feels very much as if the fate of the world is approaching a fundamental crossroads, and, for most prognosticators, the future is grim. But that's as much a matter of our willing perception as it is a venal construct of the mass media. While undoubtedly many of the major issues of the day – from politics and culture to economics and climate – are seemingly in a downward spiral, it's also true that this is a time of great innovation, community-building and creative visioning. For every corporate crony, there's a neighborhood activist; for every warmonger, a peacemaker; for every usurer, a microlender; for every profiteer, a volunteer; and for every agribusiness, an urban garden. In each case, we can expound upon the poverty of the former while also highlighting the power of the latter.
Hence, I make this call for a refocusing of our collective energies and a retuning of our antennae to the light side. In this, we need not abandon critical thought, and, of course, we must continue to "speak truth to power" and expose the disconcerting machinations of politicking and profligacy. Can we do this, yet still actively strive to project a positive visage back to the larger world? Indeed, the real challenge would be to become both critical and optimistic at the same time, and, likewise, to be thoroughly steeped in the simultaneous virtues of deconstruction and constructiveness realized in the same breath. I make no pretense that this will be a small task, given the stark realities and incessant crises of the world as it now stands. And yet there is a lingering sense that we are somehow missing the verdant forest for the bare trees.
Undoubtedly, we will have to suspend our disbelief to some extent. But once again, aren't we already asked to do this on a daily basis with everything from manufactured wars and prefabricated terrorist plots to "too big to fail" scams and celebrity gossip passing as news? The version of "reality" that we consume, and are equally consumed by, begs our constant acceptance of its inherent solidity. Thus, raised on morsels of subsidized empty calories, we crave even more to fill the void, only to find that the hunger is never quite sated. This is the trap of the bad-news cycle – and, much like the violence-begets-violence cycle plied by "realists" both among the elites and in the streets, it will take fortitude and vision to break it.
Consider how much of our energy is expended in reactive pursuits rather than proactive measures. As the sense of real-time apocalypse becomes increasingly palpable, the most obvious responses are deepening despair and intentional avoidance. Yet, in both cases, we are constrained to chart our course in response to the narrative being constructed by the purveyors of ostensible hegemony, and within this constraint we are denied the rightful opportunity to develop our own stories, visions and practices in this world, freed from the shackles of inculcated negativism. Again, this doesn't mean that we have to yield our critical thinking capacities, but rather, it is suggested in order to propose that we can use them to guide ourselves and each other away from lives steeped in the faux news that we have confused for real intelligence.
To be sure, I'm not suggesting that this will entail waking up and seeing only sunshine and rainbows everywhere, but that we should try to balance our impressions of and ruminations on current events. Some of the most cogent and persuasive items I've recently read (and perhaps written) that analyze the moment in which we find ourselves tend to the mercilessly despair-laden side of the coin. One of the obligations attendant to being an educator – and punditry is a sort of public educative function, after all – is to take care not to further increase immiseration by highlighting merely that which has gone horribly wrong. In this sense, if we overemphasize the critical to the exclusion of the constructive, we will likely foster greater disempowerment despite our best intentions to the contrary.
In short, we can respect the critical perspective that aims to deconstruct the challenges before us, yet also acknowledge that without an equal emphasis on the productive potentials in our midst, pure critique can foster profound pessimism and lead to further entrenchment in the despair-denial cycle. Thus, my challenge for 2011 is simply to seek a balance and nurture a perspective that remains open to the possibility that good still exists despite the overseers' attempts to abolish it altogether. Indeed, I believe that good never really went anywhere, and that we merely need to adjust our collective vision to see it again. Once we do, we might even be surprised at how pervasive it is, and that the task of unearthing the positive news in our midst is truly a great challenge that will thoroughly engage our searching minds.
In that spirit, I sincerely wish you all a very happy new year – and I look forward to creating it together.

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Comments
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AGAIN; NOTHING Specific.
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 12:16 — Vic Anderson (not verified)AGAIN; NOTHING Specific. Alternately, cut Out the CORPORATE CANCER! "Pro-activity" has been checked for at least 4 DeCADES!! Order more rose-colored bifocals; otherwise!!!
I love an optimist, but I am
Sat, 01/01/2011 - 18:59 — Gart van Gennip (not verified)I love an optimist, but I am a realist. You are talking to an audience of staunch denialists; people who refuse to believe in climate change, despite overwhelming scientific evidence; people who vote politicians who dare to propose tough measures out of office, and who put more faith in God than in science.
Instead of focusing on good news and the good in people (which is wishful thinking at best), let me suggest this for your consideration: politics, culture, the economy; they aren't going to mean a thing unless we get climate change under control within the next five years. Politicians bicker about the economic consequences of drastic measures, unwilling or unable to sacrifice a single job in order to save the planet, and with it, humanity.
Meanwhile, the rainforests continue to shrink, countless plant and animal species go extinct, the oceans are covered by hundreds of thousands of square miles of plastic waste, the icecaps are melting, water levels rising, methane escaping from huge underground reservoirs, glaciers disappearing, and rivers and lakes drying up.
The planet experiences more droughts, flooding, hurricanes and heat waves than ever before. And instead of taking the necessary measures to prevent disaster, people argue about whether humans are to blame for climate change, while they keep driving their SUVs, keep drilling off shore for oil, refuse to stop logging of our rainforests and exploiting fragile natural environments.
Why? Because of money. As long as money trumps common sense, ethics, and the general well-being of the world's population, things aren't going to change. And regarding the corporate take-over of the government, things don’t look like they are improving! Government leaders must STOP doing what's popular, and must start doing what is necessary. People must start realizing that it's going to take sacrifice to save us. It's going to hurt, and hurt badly. But guess what? If we DON'T do what's necessary, and do it now, it's going to hurt a whole lot more. To HELL with your job, to hell with the economy; the planet is DYING! Get it through your thick skulls, already!
I get what you are saying
Sun, 01/02/2011 - 14:23 — Uppity Woman (not verified)I get what you are saying Gart, yet I agree with the author in some important respects. It's true, right now things do look a bit bleak, but if you take the long view, we have done fairly well and we have much that we can build on if we will.
Think back 100 years, then think back 1000 years. We no longer hold other humans in slavery, we no longer burn dissidents at the stake. We no longer have some church with a stranglehold on every aspect of our lives; only those who voluntarily submit to such foolishness are controlled by religion. While it is true that this is not the case everywhere on Earth, it is the case in most nations, and humanity as a whole now has a clear understanding of the right and wrong of these issues.
continued Women can own
Sun, 01/02/2011 - 14:24 — Uppity Woman (not verified)continued
Women can own property, and are no longer the chattel of men. Children are protected from wage slavery and abuse by law.We have many agencies and organizations whose purpose is to look after the vulnerable and dispossessed- they may not function perfectly or thoroughly but at least we have them and have realized that we must take care of one another.
I'm sure there are many more reasons to be hopeful that I can't include her due to space constraints. I invite others to list their favorites!
I choose to remain positive because that is the place I prefer to live. I choose empowering stories about our future to hold in my mind because that is the easiest and most effective way to bring about a better future.
I love the story about how we all wake up in 2012 and use our collective genius to bring peace and justice to the planet. I love the story that this inexorable trend is well know to our oppressors and their current shenanigans are a desperate and futile attempt to grasp their last chance to defeat the coming wave of enlightenment. What stories do you all love?
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Tue, 04/09/2013 - 03:34 — Louis Vuitton (not verified)Doing this is to heighten your own awareness of your own map of the planet.