OPINION: A FUTURE OF MORE FEAR OR MORE CONNECTION?

1

Heron in the Gulf of Mexico. Photo: Russ Vernon-Jones.

Russ Vernon-Jones

What a time we are going through!  I continue to be heartened by the actions many, many people are taking to help avoid spreading the coronavirus.  I’m inspired by reports of heroic health care workers, and volunteers stepping up to help in some of the areas hardest hit by the virus.  People are offering free sing-alongs for children (and their parents) who are cooped up at home.  Mutual aid networks are developing to assist those with limited resources. People are coming to their windows and balconies to applaud health care workers.

At the same time, I think it is useful to acknowledge that this is a scary time.  We don’t know if we will get sick or if we will lose loved ones. We don’t know how bad this will get or how long it will last.  We no longer can go to many of the places we want to go to or be with the people and groups we like to be with.  This loss of freedom can make us feel even more powerless in the face of such a crisis.

Taking a Walk
I walked through my town a few days ago, carefully avoiding getting any closer than six feet of anyone.  The town was relatively deserted (a college town with all the students having departed for their homes), but a few people were out.  We carefully avoided each other.  When I got home, I realized that I had unconsciously viewed every person I encountered as a potential danger – as someone who had the possibility of infecting me, or others, with the virus.  I hadn’t even greeted most of them and they didn’t greet me.  I didn’t feel I had chosen this perspective, it had just taken over my mind without my realizing it.

I went out again the next day, still carefully observing all the physical distancing recommendations, but determined to see everyone as someone who was experiencing this crisis with me, our shared situation acting as a bond between us, focusing on our being in this together.  I greeted complete strangers (from an appropriate distance) and found that people responded with smiles and greetings.  They seemed to come alive, just being acknowledged.  Some of us had brief conversations.  I came home feeling more connected and re-energized.

Mindsets
I tell this story because something I read got me thinking about what our mindsets will be when this crisis eases and we are again able to have closer contact with each other.  We could come out of this fixated on the potential transmission of infectious diseases, with a constant low-level fear or suspicion of each other.  Or we could come out of this feeling triumphant and connected – glad that together we behaved in ways that kept far more people alive, that our caring about each other was real, and with a new sense of all being in it together.  We could come out with greater confidence that we can have a similar united front against climate change and work together to build a future that works for everyone.

We know that when people are more fearful and divided, they are more vulnerable to totalitarian leaders and practices — to yielding basic rights in exchange for promises of safety.  We also know that throughout the world those who seek to consolidate power in a wealthy elite intentionally manipulate people by making them more fearful of each other and disconnected.  Right wing forces within the United States have for decades been successfully using racism and fear of immigrants to divide the population and gain power in this way.

Government Aiding Polluters Under the Cover of the Virus Crisis
Right now, as many of us are focused on staying safe, caring about each other, often helping our neighbors and donating to the needy, others are focused on how this crisis can be used to enhance their wealth and power, and advance other harmful agendas.  The EPA just announced that it will cease enforcing many air, water, and toxic waste pollution regulations because of the virus crisis.  Right wing senators put half a trillion dollars in the stimulus bill to aid big business, including the fossil fuel industry, while refusing to include job-creating funding for clean energy alternatives.  The Trump administration chose last week in the middle of the coronavirus crisis to benefit oil companies by  cutting vehicle mileage standards — dooming us greater air pollution and gutting one of our nation’s biggest efforts against climate change.

Where Will We Head?
The next year will be critical in whether we head in the direction of a Green New Deal that offers jobs, justice, and decisive action to stop climate change, or toward greater oligarchy, hatred, and life-destroying climate change.  If we want to build a world that works for everyone, we will need to constantly affirm that everyone matters, that we are all connected to each other, and that our love for humanity, for all living things, and for the natural world is stronger than the forces of greed and oppression.

In our conversations and social media posts, let’s point to the ways that people’s caring is helping things go better in the virus crisis and showing our potential to make changes together to handle a crisis.  Let’s remind people that we can work together today to stop the virus and work together consistently to stop climate change.  Rather than longing to go back to how things were before the coronavirus, let’s long to go forward with a new sense of what’s possible when we pull together.

Russ Vernon Jones blogs regularly on climate justice at www.RussVernonJones.org
___________________________

Spread the love

1 thought on “OPINION: A FUTURE OF MORE FEAR OR MORE CONNECTION?

  1. Russ is spot on. I make a point of smiling and making eye contact (and often, a verbal greeting) from the other side of the hiking trail when I encounter others. I’m disturbed at how many people look away. I also worry about the groups of clearly unrelated young adults who hike in bunches, don’t wear masks, and take up the entire trail, forcing others off if we are to stay 6 feet apart.

Leave a Reply

The Amherst Indy welcomes your comment on this article. Comments must be signed with your real, full name & contact information; and must be factual and civil. See the Indy comment policy for more information.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.