Resolutions for resistance

From a New Years Eve noise demo outside the Durham, NC jail

Friends, I’ll just say it. At the dawn of the second quarter of the 21st century, the global situation seems admittedly dire. As Kelly Hayes writes,

A new, intimidating year is upon us. Catastrophes abound and the threat of autocracy looms large. As we prepare ourselves for the struggles ahead, many people are feeling discouraged or confused about how to move forward.

Dejection, despair, or a self-protective, fatalistic nihilism aren’t irrational responses. But I think they’re wrong, nonetheless.

I think hopelessness is a self-fulfilling prophecy.

And look: if the resistance in Palestine continues to fight despite decades of apartheid, oppression, and US-sponosored mass murder, what right do those of us in the imperial core have to pre-emptively throw in the towel? How can citizens resign themselves to the fact of mass deportations before they even begin? If you believe in collective, grassroots resistance… this is literally the moment you’ve been training for.

“Intifada, but only if a Democrat is going to win the 2024 US presidential election,” they shouted. “Otherwise we might as well not!”

We should remember that stable empires do not need to resort to promises of ostentatious displays of state violence to maintain themselves. In a poem titled “Patmos,” Friedrich Hölderlin wrote:

Wherein lies the danger

Also grows the saving power

Not only is it darkest before dawn—it’s darkest because it’s about to be dawn. The wild polarization of American politics is a symptom of the global hegemon struggling to address a generational crisis of legitimacy. That is, on the balance, a good thing. There’s no reason for resignation unless we resign ourselves to failure. I want all of us to be connected, supported, grounded, and prepared because a fight is coming. But that fight has been going on for five hundred years. We just gotta bring it all home.

In that spirit, I’m belatedly sharing some resolutions for the coming year. Steal them as you wish; comment your own if you’d like.

2025 Resolutions

To speak and write with unashamed candor

To reject despair as a privilege of the disinterested

To take care of myself and others, to let others care for me

To end the year both safer and more dangerous than when it began

To suspect advocacy, engagement, and recognition: any form of action turns our enemies into mere adversaries, our struggles into a parlor game of representation

To honor those who have invited me into the tradition of resistance, despite my errors and oversights, by repeating the act

To strengthen daily the movements that have made me

To center stability, care, community, and resilience

To complete my projects and foster new openings

To swallow defeat and prepare for victory

To listen fiercely

To fight, always

To live

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This post has been syndicated from In Struggle, where it was published under this address.

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