Brian Holmes on Mon, 10 Aug 2015 04:10:06 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> the date is august 9


Political Ecology Begins When We Say "Black Lives Matter"

http://midwestcompass.org/watersheds/map.html

"They say it's a joke they say it's a game." The slogan was launched on the Chicago streets by the group We Charge Genocide, in the middle of a demo demanding reparations for victims of police torture. The folks on the street chanted those words, we hurled them out of our mouths in staccato bursts, while looking round at the passers-by who pretended not to notice. What the chant means is either enigmatic, or it's painfully obvious. There is a kind of disdain that minimizes a death or a beating or a torture or a life sentence for black people in the name of lawfulness, efficiency, morality and humanist ideals. That kind of disdain has made democracy impossible in the US - and other places too.
Our group, the Compass, allowed two main tracks to run parallel for 
years. Bioregionalism on the one hand, minority rights and prison 
solidarity on the other. We were ecologists and social justice people, 
not the same thing but at the same time. The divide ran less between the 
members than inside each one, a split in a collective personality. At a 
meeting in the city of Madison the group decided that the split could be 
overcome. Political ecology begins when we say "Black Lives Matter."
Alicia Garza, one of the founders of the movement, puts it like this: 
"#BlackLivesMatter doesn't mean your life isn't important - it means 
that black lives, which are seen as without value within white 
supremacy, are important to your liberation." Some would say that 
climate change makes every other issue pale by comparison. But black 
slavery, or the taking of life as a commercial object, started hundreds 
of years before the industrial revolution. The poisoning of the planet 
was built on the way our enlightened societies treat other human beings.
The objectivist poet, Matthias Regan, and the critical cartographer, 
Brian Holmes, put two and two together. Regan worked through hundreds of 
local newspaper articles, distilling social diatribe and media 
obfuscation into concise accounts that shock by their familiarity. 
Holmes situated both the poetic artefacts and the raw documentary 
material on a map of Midwestern watersheds, where the city of Ferguson 
lies at the center of the way things flow down in our region. The aim 
was to bear witness, at least partially and incompletely, to the names 
and the places and the stories of killings that have finally become 
unbearable, thanks to the courage of those who have created and 
sustained the protest movement.
This map only makes sense if you use it to examine the current state of 
American society. One way to use it is to go beyond the provided media 
link (often the first flash report, typically from the police 
viewpoint). The map encourages you to explore the fragmentary and 
conflicting texture of knowledge about police killings. The character of 
the objectivist poems arises precisely from the activity of sifting 
through these reports, with their many voices cold as ice or warm as 
love. Sometimes you will be dismayed and almost paralyzed by the mayhem 
and violence of our impoverished neoliberal cities. Other times you will 
come upon the traces of ongoing struggles.
Another way to use this archive is to pay attention to the places where 
death is delivered. Zoom deep into the map, grab the little "Street 
View" man and place the dotted circle around the gun or at the tail of 
the shooting star icon. The reports typically give a block location, 
sometimes more - in any case, you're in the area. What you will see is 
the everyday landscape of shootings, taserings and physical blows that 
have typically been considered legitimate for the police. This landscape 
is ubiquitous. It's the local environment of normalized disdain that 
confronts black people everywhere in today's society. It's the banal and 
utterly ordinary theater of overwhelming force, whose careless excess 
lies equally at the root of climate change. A tiny "X" up in the 
right-hand corner of the image affords a welcome exit from these urban 
and suburban traps. You can click your way back to safety, go ahead. But 
this isn't a joke, this isn't a game. We won't be liberated so easily.
The counting of the dead and the quest for an end to the abuse are 
far-reaching efforts, involving large numbers of people whose work 
deserves close attention. Below we list the crucial texts and database 
records on which our own work has been founded. Art, in this case, is 
not invention, it's respect. Let everyone do what they can, or what they 
formerly couldn't, for a  transformed world in which black lives really 
do matter.
.
.

--Articles

Alicia Garza, A Herstory of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement
http://www.thefeministwire.com/2014/10/blacklivesmatter-2/

Frank B. Wilderson, "We're trying to destroy the world": Anti-Blackness & Police Violence After Ferguson
http://sfbay-anarchists.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/frank-b-wilderson-iii-were-trying-to-destroy-the-world-antiblackness-police-violence-after-ferguson.pdf

Naomi Klein, Why #BlackLivesMatter Should Transform the Climate Debate
http://www.thenation.com/article/what-does-blacklivesmatter-have-do-climate-change/

--Databases

Operation Ghetto Storm
https://mxgm.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Operation-Ghetto-Storm.pdf

We Charge Genocide Shadow U.N. Report
http://report.wechargegenocide.org/people.html

Killed by Police
http://www.killedbypolice.net

Fatal Police Taserings
https://fatalpolicetaserings.wordpress.com/

Wikipedia list of killings by law enforcement officers in the US
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_killings_by_law_enforcement_officers_in_the_United_States

--Complete book of objectivist poems

Forthcoming


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