Thursday, January 23, 2025

The Power and the Limits of Punk

The Power and the Limits of Punk

(Composed when the author was beginning a phase-out of his decade-long involvement in the Chicago hardcore punk scene in the 1980's.)

The power of punk lies in its being a type of culture that is owned and administered by the people who are a part of it. In many instances, punks (many of whom are young) own the means of communication — the record companies, the fanzines, the performance halls. In this light, punk, therefore has a larger possibility of being a truly human culture not alienated from its participants like the “mass culture” of mainstream society….Mass culture doesn’t have at heart the interests of those who involve themselves in it. The means of communication are owned by an elite that has only one interest — money. Music, in this culture, becomes a commodity much like labor has become a commodity in capitalist society. Punk has negated the passive role left for consumers of popular “art” and “music” in America. The interests of its participants are usually (but not always) reflected in punk culture.

BUT PUNK DOES NOT GO FAR ENOUGH, however.

To criticize the conformity and mass boredom of society is a first step, but it isn’t the last one. Or shouldn’t be. Punk does not articulate enough of a critique of politics, economics, and culture. And although there are differing beliefs among punks, those who can see further than mindless rebellion must begin to articulate their concerns in theory and translate this theory into action. If this critique is not formulated or articulated, punk will be INCorporated into American, capitalist society which will degrade punk into being yet one more useless and non-threatening trend.

American capitalist society can and has commodified rebellion ans alienation (even as it has (re)produced this alienation and rebellion itself). Yet punk has already reproduced a very negative aspect of American culture: anti-intellectualism and the fetishism of action. Those concerned with the future of punk and the future of society must first come to value critical thinking as part and parcel of any activist projects. Only then can full-blown resistance take root.

My Last (And Final) Friend with Benefits

My Last (And Final) Friend with Benefits

When I first met my now ex-wife, I’d been single for awhile and had been living alone in a shabby, cluttered and mostly unkempt studio apartment in the rather seedy neighborhood of Uptown, located on Chicago’s north side, about a mile and a half, give or take, from Wrigley Field. The room was wall-to-wall books and filing cabinets, owing (mostly) to the fact that I was both a political activist and the manager of a radical bookstore. The former allowed for little free time, and the latter allowed for little money — but it did provide me with a steep discount on any books I might decide to purchase. So I took advantage….

Mid-gentrification, Uptown had been rechristened as “Sheridan Park”

My ex was never all that impressed with my lifestyle. Same with my neighborhood. And she repeatedly reminded me that my apartment reminded her of Mel Gibson’s “compound” in the film, “Conspiracy Theory.”

Flash-forward to about a month ago, when I’m attempting to forestall a visit to my current home by a female friend whose relationship with me had become…complicated. I’d been to her place; she never to mine. So she wondered if I might be hiding something (or someone) from her. Otherwise, why no invite?

In hope of keeping our friendship intact, while still keeping her at bay, I’d explained that due to my being single for so long, working so much, and sharing my home with animals, the house had fallen into disrepair and was simply not fit for a lady. Not completely sold on that argument, I added, “It’s like ‘Conspiracy Theory’ Lite — plus ‘The Birds.’”

Unfortunately for me, she hadn’t seen either film. Moreover, she reminded me that she was a “huge” animal-lover and would “thoroughly enjoy” meeting all of my birds.

Ultimately I couldn’t put her off any longer without jeopardizing the relationship, so to my house did she come.

Almost immediately I knew that this visit was not going to go well, as she dodged and weaved around the wild flowers I’d planted and grown in my front yard. Upon entering and hearing the mild cacophony of bird chatter being emitted from the room near the front door, she plugged her ears and winced. And that’s also when a small fly nearly ended up in her mouth. “What’s with the swarm of flies?!?!”

In my defense, a few random flies hardly constitute a swarm. And in explanation, I told her that the bait shop where I purchase prey for some of the birds had run short on wax worms, and in lieu of this situation, the owner had substituted spikes to make up the difference. (Spikes, by the way, are also grubs. Commonly referred to as maggots, they are in fact baby flies.) Apparently, I told her, the spikes were not as popular with the birds as the waxworms; so, in time, instead of becoming a meal, the spikes became flies. Just like the one she had nearly swallowed.

No sooner had I finished my response, when she was pointing at the ground and exclaiming, “Oh, my God! You have roaches, too!” I quickly bent down, scooped up what she had thought was a German cockroach, and noted, “No. I have crickets!”

Her last words: “I’m out of here!”

My last words: “This all could have been avoided if you’d have told me that your love for animals only extended to those with four legs and not six!”

Monday, January 20, 2025

The American Horror Story: Death Squads and the Disappeared in Central America



The American Horror Story: Death Squads and the Disappeared in Central America

A lot here, so digest in bite-size morsels. 

I was heavily invested in the antiwar movement during the early 80's, to the degree of spending days and nights in jail and having agents of the FBI showing up at my places of employment a few times; of being abused by cops; of having my phone line tapped; and being followed by persons unknown. So, if I sound a bit "passionate" when these subjects are broached, there is good reason. 

No doubt.... These are touchy political matters. Iran-Contra, to the mind of many, permanently de-legitimized the American political system, if the US-funded and orchestrated "civil wars" in Central America hadn't already. As manager at New World Resource Center and as an active member in the Sanctuary Movement, I had many opportunities to meet both American activists and refugees from Central America, hearing horror story after horror story of friends and family members being killed and/or disappeared simply because the victim happened to be a school teacher, a union member, a religious person, etc. 

Like I said, historical memory is not easily erased. Neither are the cultural and political repercussions linked to those memories. Forty years may seem like a long time ago for those of us living in the spectacular now. But we didn't have our parents macheted to death in front of us; or witness our brother being beaten, kidnapped, thrown into a van, and then driven away--never to be seen again. Again and again and again.

Our tax dollars, just like the massacre of thousands in Gaza, paid for the training of death squads and the endless supply of weapons that killed a countless number of innocent people in Central America. And while we rightfully fear that our complicity in supporting Israel could breed a new generation of bin-Laden-like"terrorists," how could our complicity in the death and destruction in El Salvador, Nicaragua and elsewhere in Central America NOT create its own manifestation of blowback in the form of emigration to here? 

If we are to acknowledge the wrongs of our past, where and when do our responsibilities and obligations end with respect to rectifying them? When did they end for indigenous Americans? For blacks? For women? For gays? For animals? 

***In the wonderful show, Northern Exposure, the Indians celebrate Thanksgiving as the Day of the Dead with various traditions including costumes, parades and throwing tomatoes at white people.***

To quote our new president, "We're not innocent." We may not be able to totally reverse the wrongs of our history, but at minimum we need to own them--to compassionately admit and submit. This country never misses an opportunity to engage in wars; it's long overdue for it to begin waging peace. Let it begin at home. 

The Sanctuary Movement in Chicago

The sanctuary movement in Chicago arose in the aftermath of civil wars in El Salvador and Guatemala, funded in part by the US government, during which nearly one million refugees sought asylum in the United States between 1980 and 1991. Among those who had been killed in El Salvador were four US missionaries, and they became the face of a new organization: the Chicago Religious Task Force for Central America. It advocated for federal foreign policy changes toward Central America and encouraged domestic communities to host Central American refugees. In Chicago, they created a framework that connected undocumented immigrants with churches that were willing to provide them sanctuary.

Central America Wars, 1980's
+During the 1980s, the United States supported a counterinsurgency war in El Salvador and directed a guerrilla insurgency in Nicaragua.
+In December 1981, the Salvadoran Army massacred close to 1,000 men, women, and children in the village of El Mozote and in neighboring hamlets.  +Denying that a war crime had taken place, the Reagan administration certified to Congress that same month that the Salvadoran government was making progress in human rights and requested more U.S. aid for the government.[1]
+In April 1985, former CIA director Admiral Stansfield Turner testified before a Congressional committee that the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan guerrillas, known as Contras, had engaged in numerous acts of “terrorism.”[2]  Only the previous month, President Ronald Reagan had praised the Contras as “the moral equal of our founding fathers.”[3]
+In response to a suit by Nicaragua, the World Court ruled in June 1986 that the U.S.-directed war against Nicaragua constituted illegal aggression under international law and that the U.S. must cease its support for the Contras and make reparation payments to Nicaragua.[4]  The U.S. refused to comply.
+After Congress had temporarily banned aid to the Contras, administration officials illegally raised money through arms sales to Iran and other means.  The covert operation came to light in the Iran-Contra Congressional hearings in the spring of 1987, leading to the prosecution of fourteen U.S. officials and agents.[5]
+Although Congress had banned U.S. aid to the Guatemalan government based on human rights abuses, the Reagan administration aided this government’s counterinsurgency war as well.
+Between 1981 and 1990, an estimated one million refugees from El Salvador and Guatemala fled repression and violence in their homelands and entered the United States.[6]
+In late 1987, the Reagan administration’s Office of Public Diplomacy was forced to shut down after an investigation by the General Accounting Office concluded that the agency had engaged “in prohibited, covert propaganda activities designed to influence the media and the public to support the Administration’s Latin American policies.”[7]
+U.S. citizens opposed to U.S. intervention formed the Central America movement, a loose-knit coalition of over 1,000 local, state, and national organizations.  Their efforts reinforced those of Latin American leaders promoting peace negotiations and an end to foreign intervention.[8]
+In the aftermath of the wars in El Salvador and Guatemala, truth commissions determined that state security forces and associated rightist paramilitary groups were responsible for 85% of assassinations and murders in El Salvador, and 93% in Guatemala, while leftist rebels were responsible for 5% in El Salvador and 3% in Guatemala.[9]

Salvador Film

Romero Film

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Rad Man: The John Jankowski Political Resume

Rad Man

The John Jankowski Political Resume

Police arrest mobile blockader and remove a death squad victim dummy at Rock Island Army Arsenal June 4th. Over 100 were arrested in the protest. — photo Steve Dalber.
  • 1980: Began independent study of socialism and anarchism
  • 1981: Involved in various projects aimed at raising radical political consciousness within the straight-edge movement of the younger faction of the punk rock scene in Chicago
  • 1983: Participated in early attempts to found/establish US Green Party.
  • 1984: Co-founded local chapter of Positive Force, a youth organization concerned with raising awareness of political issues that impacted mainly young people in the punk scene and high schools in Chicago.
  • 1985–1987: Participated in the No Business As Usual antiwar/nuclear disarmament campaign in Illinois
  • 1986: Participated in the Disarm Now Action Group’s civil disobedience action at the Rock Island Arsenal
  • 1986: Participated in the Anti-Imperialist Group in Chicago
  • 1987–1988: Participated in the Anti-Apartheid Solidarity Committee in Chicago, including leafleting on Michigan Avenue and demonstration at Water Tower Place
  • 1987–1988: Participated in anti-racist, anti-Nazi skinhead organizing in coalition with the John Brown Anti-Klan Committee, including the “Stamp-Out Racist Graffiti Campaign”/anti-racist demonstration in Uptown and Lakeview neighborhoods in Chicago
  • 1987: Founded IMPACT--youth group centered on radical/progressive education and activism that resulted in the production of a fanzine that highlighted the political, social and cultural activities of young people in Chicago
  • 1987: Membership in the United Progressives student political organization at the University of Illinois-Champaign
  • 1987: Participated in the Communiversity, a YMCA-based program located in Champaign, Il, which offered the class, “Ethical Leadership in Higher Education”
  • 1987: Helped revive the Champaign Peace Research Center
  • 1988–89: Member of the Open University of the Left and the New World Resource Center
  • 1985-?: Independent course of study philosophy, history, politics and social theory

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