Sunday, June 08, 2025

justice and care

As armed National Guard troops are called to push back on unarmed civilians in Los Angeles protesting masked ICE agents (why on earth are they masked like they're the KKK???!?!?!) who are conducting workplace raids and storming elementary school graduations, this passage from Kelly Hayes and Mariame Kaba's Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care comes to mind:

"If your tactics disrupt the order of things under capitalism, you may well be accused of violence, because "violence" is an elastic term often deployed to vilify people who threaten the status quo... Conditions that the state characterizes as "peaceful" are, in reality, quite violent. Even as people experience the violence of poverty, the torture of imprisonment, the brutality of policing, the denial of health care, and many other violent functions of this system, we are told we are experiencing peace, so long as everyone is cooperating. When state actors refer to "peace," they are really talking about order."

And I like what Rebecca Solnit said today to people in L.A. about creative resistance: "Shut it down. Slow it down. Wake it up with decentralized protests. Military people are good at violence; that's what they're trained for. But Angelenos greatly outnumber them, know the city intimately, have a thousand ways to make a ruckus and gum up the works. I hope people will appeal to the California National Guard that they're on an illegal mission and should never act against their own people like this. Also, Hollywood, pretend you're in an action movie. Because now you are. Deploy your stars, your special effects, your set designers. Maybe a stunt woman or two."

Pic: The bushes by our front gate were so overgrown, they were hazardous. When driving, we just couldn't see traffic while we were turning into the street. Big A started to trim the bushes the other day and stopped when he realized that there was a nest with baby birds. He was upset because one baby had fallen out and he hoped the parents would still come back to the nest and take care of the rest. Yesterday, we peeked, and it seemed like the babies (we think robins) were doing well. I can't say how happy it makes me that he cares about things like this.

19 comments:

Ava Goodwin said...

Thank you for this powerful reflection—it reminds me of how deeply intertwined justice and care truly are. Buy MTP KIT Online with 24hrs delivery

Gillian said...

Take care.

Nance said...

My heart sank when I heard that the National Guard was called out. All I could think of was Kent State.

I'm not surprised that your husband had compassion for the birds. You would not be with someone who didn't. Another example of making a difference in your own corner of the world every single day.

StephLove said...

It's overwhelming what's happening in L.A. and to think that it might be practice for other blue cities.

A bird story with a happy ending! Just what I need today.

Jeanie said...

Oh, I can only imagine the feelings when realizing a nest was there and a bird had fallen out. Good news after. It will be fun to know they are there. As for LA -- I suppose the reaction doesn't shock me anymore, which is shocking in itself. Only to be expected from someone like him. And yes, LA should mobilize lke an action movie.

Nicole said...

Between you and Steph, the baby birds! Eeee! I'm so glad they are doing well okay though (I found a dead bird in my watering can yesterday, RIP birdie)

Jenny said...

Really great quotes. And, I love the baby birds. There's still compassion and kind people in the world!

StephLove said...

I thought I commented on this already, but I don't see it.

Anyway, the news from L.A. is awful and I'm afraid it's just practice for other blue cities.

A baby bird story with a happy ending. Just what I needed to hear. The workers are still tearing up our porch roof and they brought out some more nesting material yesterday, but fortunately it was old and not in use.

maya said...

Thank you.

maya said...

Kent State is the ghost story that haunts me constantly...

Thank you, Nance.

maya said...

I love the idea of a movie-style resolution that is neat and no one gets hurt, Jeanie.

maya said...

Oh, wow! You too, Nicole... I hope our baby robins make it to even things out.

maya said...

I feel like these will stick in my head for a while, Jenny. Especially with the way things are going... You are one of the kind people I know in this world <3

maya said...

Thanks!

StephLove said...

Testing

StephLove said...

I tried commenting twice before and they disappeared, but since the test comment from yesterday is still there, I will try again, but I will be brief.

It's awful what's going on and it was good to hear a baby bird story with a happy ending.

maya said...

Oh, no--Steph! I hope you're not having trouble posting!

maya said...

FTR: I can see your test comment, and the "brief" comment in Blogger--but not here. (So weird! I'm sorry about all the wasted effort.)

maya said...

I'm sorry your starling saga proved so traumatic <3

anticipatory story

my mother is old, my father older the hopes in my heart older too  I will them to come back daily the way every day shows the way every day ...