Okay. We can
stop now. Time
to this stop and go. We can stop pretending to be
sane on this cold worn side walk. We look like fools today.
Much like yesterday.
Much
like the times they proved us wrong. We said it couldn't
happen. They made it
happen. History speaks louder than any other word,
not bound and gagged by
passivity or hesitance. Dust bowls blow
with our conjecture. An d I look around and
see rust building up. We can't move even if we try.
Move. We can't move even if we
try. Move. Agitate.
The
praise over the recent
demonstrations in Seattle are testament to the
lack of of realism within the hearts and
minds of many activists fighting
for social justice around the world. Though
the demonstrations were
successful in that they did postpone the
WTO conference and brought
important issues to the front pages of vir
tually every major newspaper for a
full week, they offered only marginal success,
as the WTO still
convened and exists as it did long
before the demonstrations sparked
dis cussion and then quickly faded
with all the expectancy of any other
news story. Though progress is indeed a
process,
we must remember that our
steps towards justice are indeed
only steps, and are only
noteworthy in that they will lead us to
the next step. In praising simple
and limited achievements as great
strides, we ultimately put ourselves at
risk of being discouraged to continue after
learning that our greatest
efforts usually yield only marginal results.