1. Educate yourself on the
issues.
To stop terror and avoid war, we must first
understand what causes it, and what approaches have, and
haven't, been successful in the past. So far, America's
"War On Terrorism" seems to be focused exclusively on the
movement that has apparently spawned the perpetrators of
the September 11 attacks: radical, violent fringe
conservative Sunni Muslims, from an area that stretches
geographically from Northwest Africa to Southeast Asia.
It can only help if we learn more about the history,
culture, religions and economies of those parts of the
world; the West's historic and current religious,
military, political and economic relationships with them
and with Islam; and how those conditions, from
colonialism through global economic changes and
geopolitical rivalies, have contributed to poverty,
desperation, hatred and, at times, religious fanaticism
today. Part of how we've gotten here is the West's
tendency to impose our own cultures, values and
expectations on these regions without taking the time to
understand where the people we're dealing with are coming
from. People interested in stopping terror and avoiding
war cannot afford to repeat that mistake.
2. Develop a closer, more
respectful relationship to Muslims and the Islamic world.
As the world shrinks, this is actually something we
should be doing with all cultures and religions, but for
the purposes of our current War on Terrorism, it is
particularly important that, much as Christianity and
Judaism have learned to live in greater harmony after two
millennia of tension, Western cultures and religions must
find and develop our common interests with the Islamic
world. Just as with any minority or "other," the more we
each work with and understand people of the Islamic
faith, the less they will seem strange and threatening
and the more we will recognize each other as individuals
and as human beings.
3. Communicate!
Don't be afraid to speak out, and to listen: talk with
your neighbors, your friends, relatives, co-workers,
classmates. Learn from the people you disagree with, but
don't shy away from voicing your opinions in places where
they're unpopular. Call in to radio and television talk
shows. Write letters to the editor and opinion articles
for your local community newspapers. Visit their
editorial boards.
4. Take your case to the
community.
Set up community forums, teach-ins and panels, to educate
the public, to air out differing opinions and to force
politicians to go on the record with their beliefs. Table
at community events. Write and circulate flyers, with
information on the issue, lobbying and contact
information, publicizing events or putting out powerful
graphic images. Circulate petitions that you can then use
both to notify people of future events (and to recruit
volunteers to help organize them!) and to lobby elected
officials or other prominent community figures. Take out
ads in your local newspapers. Make your advocacy visible,
so people will think -- even if local media is hostile --
that your cause is popular and widespread. Set up and
publicize your own web site or list-serve.
5. Raise money for the Third
World.
Rather than collecting money for survivors' families or
to rebuild the World Trade Center, send it where it's
more desperately needed: to the countries whose crushing
poverty helps spawn terrorism. A more economically just
world will be one with less terror. Donate your own
money, or organize events where your whole community can
pitch in and help: benefits, readings, raffles, auctions,
walk-a-thons and so forth. Consider working jointly with
a local mosque or Third World community center.
6. Publicize and oppose racial
profiling, the curbing of civil liberties and the
backlash against immigrants.
This is both a local and a national issue, involving
everything from new INS and Justice Department programs
and regulations to local police behavior and cases of
isolated bigotry. While this is in many ways a separate
issue, bear in mind that it's easier for our government
to pursue an irresponsible or counter-productive
military-oriented solution if more of the public hates
and fears people who look like the enemy. When civil
liberties are taken away in an emergency, they're rarely
restored afterwards; and when a precedent is set whereby
constitutional rights can be denied to any one group, you
could be next.
7. Lobby for Congress and the
White House to pursue policies that minimize civilian
deaths; rethink our national defense and foreign policy
priorities; and change global economic institutions and
trade agreements so that they create less, not more,
poverty and death.
Send a letter (preferably handwritten) or card, make a
phone call (faxes and emails are less effective, but
better than nothing), go to the forums of public
officials, visit their offices. Much of our ability to
minimize future terrorist activity depends not just on
better security at home, but policies abroad that work
consistently to promote the ideals of freedom and
democracy America stands for. Powerful special interests
often keep the White House and Congress from doing the
right thing; it's up to us, the public, to require that
when they act in our name, they treat others the way we
would want to be treated. We, the public, are the people
whose lives are on the line in this conflict; we have a
right to demand that the people acting for us make our
safety a priority, and not put us in further jeopardy by
making matters worse.
8. Participate in or create
visible public events for the same goals.
It's not enough to send a letter. To create the public
momentum to convince an elected official to do something
s/he might think isn't in his personal best interest,
s/he has to think it's the right thing to do and that a
lot of people agree with them. Attend or organize vigils,
rallies, marches, parades, art festivals, music events,
nonviolent direct actions or civil disobedience. Be
creative, have fun, be visible, get the word out.
9. Work the media, or be the
media.
Send out press releases, talk with reporters and editors,
make sure when you're doing public events that local
media outlets know about it, and offer something they'll
want to cover. Train yourself to give interviews and be
articulate. Start your own newsletter or radio or cable
access TV show, or contribute to others. Support
independent media that's willing to provide critical
information and alternative viewpoints not as easily
available in big mainstream outlets.
10. Reclaim patriotism!
We all want the most effective possible course for
stopping terrorism. Disagreeing with our government's
proposed strategies isn't treason -- it's the highest
form of citizenship in a participatory democracy. We're
becoming activists on this issue because we love our
country, as well as our community and the world. Don't
let anybody claim that you're "blaming America" or
"betraying the President." We're proud to live in a
country where we have the right, and the obligation, to
speak out when our government is wrong. We're speaking
out because we care. Unthinking obedience is the point at
which our democracy has broken down.
Geov Parrish is a
political columnist for WorkingforChange.com and a
longtime peace activist.