Guest Rant Aug 31, 2023 at 9:30 am

Follow the Movement Down to San Francisco

PNW POP coalition protestors march towards the Seattle Convention Center on the second day of APEC ministerial meetings in Seattle. Courtesy of PNW POP

Comments

3

They don't seem opposed to free trade as much as they seem opposed to business making any type of profit whatsoever. It just sounds like as long as a business turns a profit they are exploiting workers? Not sure where they expect to get the food and items they need to survive if a company is unable to make money selling things.

5

how badly did NAFTA
Fuck the Working Man?

are we still
Incentivizing
off-shoring our
Manufacturing - what
little of it that Remains that is?

Capital
is free to
move at Will

why not Labor?

7

@5
People are free to take their labor wherever they’d like.

8

sure
saxxy
Provided
they've Visas

and yes sofi
they redistributed
Manufacturing to wherever the fuck
'wages' & your hated REGUATIONS! are next to Nothing

they did US
a big favor.*

and now we're
Homeless Uninsured
& Praying our Fentanyl's

"clean."

*they made Profiteering
SAFE here in America

thank GOD.

9

@2: Hundreds of protesters! That’s, like, enough to flood almost an entire block! (The short, narrow, crosstown block, not the long, wide avenue thingy. Those are HUGE!)

Why, at their next protest, they’ll have more protesters than downtown has homeless campers!*

*not really, no hope of that at all, nope…

10

Why has the only coverage of this in The Stranger been through two Guest Rants--the first one over a month ago?

No wonder hardly anyone showed up.

Do you cover anything anymore that doesn't involve an ad-buy?

11

moving along
speaking of
Protest-
ations:

Our Collective Trauma is
the Road to Tyranny

American society spawns trauma and this trauma expresses itself in a variety of self-destructive pathologies, including the erosion of democracy and rise of neo-fascism.

Corporate capitalism, defined by the cult of the self and the ruthless exploitation of the natural world and all forms of life for profit, thrives on the fostering of chronic psychological and physical disorders.

The diseases and pathologies of despair — alienation, high blood pressure, diabetes, anxiety, depression, morbid obesity, mass shootings (now almost two per day on average), domestic and sexual violence, drug overdoses (over 100,000 per year) and suicide (49,000 deaths in 2022) — are the consequences of a deeply traumatized society.

The core traits of psychopaths — superficial charm, grandiosity and self-importance, a need for constant stimulation, a penchant for lying, deception, manipulation and the inability to feel remorse or guilt — are celebrated.

The virtues of empathy, compassion and self-sacrifice, are belittled, neglected and crushed. The professions that sustain community, such as teaching, manual labor, the arts, journalism and nursing, are underpaid and overworked.

The professions that exploit, such as those in high finance, Big Pharma, Big Oil and information technology, are lavished with prestige, money and power.

“The fact that millions of people share the same vices does not make these vices virtues, the fact that they share so many errors does not make the errors to be truths, and the fact that millions of people share the same forms of mental pathology does not make these people sane,” Eric Fromm writes in The Sane Society.

The classic works on trauma by Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, Dr. Gabor Maté and Dr. Judith Herman state bluntly that what is accepted as normal behavior in a corporate society is at war with basic human needs and our psychological and physical health.

Huge segments of the American public, especially the tens of millions of people who have been discarded and marginalized, endure chronic trauma. Barbara Ehrenreich in “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America” describes the life of the working poor as one long “emergency.”

This trauma is as destructive to us personally as it is socially and politically. It leaves us in a state of dysphoria where confusion, agitation, emptiness and loneliness define our lives. Whole segments of American society, especially the poor, have been rendered superfluous and invisible. As Dr. van der Kolk writes, “trauma is when we are not seen and known.”

“Our culture teaches us to focus on our personal uniqueness, but at a deeper level we barely exist as individual organisms,” Dr. van der Kolk notes.

Trauma numbs our capacity to feel. It fractures our self. It disconnects us from our bodies. It keeps us in a state of hyperarousal. It makes us confuse our desires, often artificially implanted by the consumer society, with our needs.

Traumatized people view the world around them as hostile and dangerous. They lack a positive image of themselves and lose the capacity to trust.

Many replace intimacy and love with sexual sadism, which is how we became a pornified culture. Trauma creates what the psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton calls a “counterfeit” world defined by phantom enemies, lies and dark conspiracies. It negates a sense of purpose and a life of meaning.

tonnes more
Brilliantly:
https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/our-collective-trauma-is-the-road

does Chris bat 1.000?
does ANYOne?

*GO EMS!
[baseaball)
[being bery
bery GOOD! to
Seattle Right Now!]


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