Power is about choice. It is the attempt to control,
influence or seduce a choice someone is about to make.
This is done through a mechanical process of needs and
abilities. An actor sees a need in a subject. The Actor wants to control the
choice the subject will make. So, they apply their ability to the need of the Subject
and the Subject, motivated by some emotion (usually fear,) makes a choice that
may be different than what they would make without the dynamic of power targeted
on them.
The power does not come from the Actor but from their
ability to impact the Subject’s need. In fact, if the Subject has no need, the
ability of the Actor is meaningless, and no power will be felt. The source of
all power comes from the needs within a Subject.
Everyone always has a need to feel safe.
We want to feel safe from the virus. We want to feel safe
from the imposed solutions to the virus. We want to feel safe from violence.
If protestors are allowed to use violence, then we are
afraid of them. The protestors are afraid that the government will use violence
on them to stop their protest. They are also afraid of being forced to take a
vaccine which they do not believe is safe. They are also afraid of a government
that would control their choices. This causes them to resist the demands of
government.
The fear is real for everyone. The protestors, the other
citizens, the people in government – police, politicians, and bureaucrats.
The protestors have the ability to make the politicians
afraid and unsure. They have the ability to make life unpleasant for the other
citizens. They have the ability to refuse to comply with government mandates.
The politicians have Authority. Authority is a very
different kind of ability.
Authority is the gift to the governors from the people whom
they are to govern. It is given to the politicians and government officials
because of our need for safe, organized and prosperous society.
That authority is particularly meaningful because it comes
with the legal ability to use violence.
The protestors have tried very hard to be peaceful and avoid
violence. They know that the use of violence will trigger the authorities to
use violence against them. If they protest within the limits of the law – the constitution
– they will not provoke the government’s legal ability to use violence on them.
As long as they are not violent, they will not trigger the citizens’
willingness to permit the government to use their authority.
The thing about authority is that it comes with massive
resources and those include a police force and a military which are armed and
trained to be decisively violent.
The ability to use that authority, and that trained force, is only
theirs because we, as people - who elected our government - have given them that
ability. They know that if they use it, everyone is watching and judging.
Most opinion polls show that about 50% of the citizens of
our country are sympathetic to the protestors.
The protestors, save a very few individuals, have been very
peaceful. They have been respectful and kind to the police and others. The
police do not feel threatened, so they have no need to resort to their
authority. That is why we have not seen violence so far.
Authority is power by consent. We consent that a group of
people shall have, at our discretion, the ability to activate a significant force
of police and soldiers to legally use violence for our general benefit.
Security, safety, stability, are all meaningful goals for a society and are
purposes we would consent to our government using force to protect.
We consent to who gets to make those decisions by who we
vote for. We assign those abilities through our constitution. It is the highest
form of law and represents our highest values as a citizenry. Everyone of us has
the ability to consent.
Right now, only half of our country – or less – consents to
this use of violence. Before you consent to the use of this violence - which
our Prime Minister has proposed - we should make sure we know, as best we can,
what is actually happening in Ottawa.
This past weekend we have had dozens of journalists go and
visit Ottawa to see for themselves. I have read five such reports in different
news sources. They all report back that the protestors are peaceful, yet
obnoxiously and disruptively noisy.
To be in a democracy requires a great deal of mental and
emotional effort and strength on everyone’s part. We need to allow people to
disagree with us. We need to allow crazy people to speak what ever they like.
We need to keep ourselves informed and aware of the facts. We need to remember
our collective humanity and always be on guard for those who would abuse their
authority.
These are all hard to do. But freedom requires that we do
it.
Freedom is not something given to us by government. Freedom
is our right by birth. There are those
who might take our freedom away and we should resist those people. But the good
news is that in our practical day to day lives, Freedom is the gift we give
each other. It is all around us. We have witnessed it over and over in our
lives. It is beautiful and it is precious.
Respect and peace are our mutual gifts. We give them because
we want them. We give them because we know that is how we protect them. We give
them because we can see in each other the integrity and humanity we see in
ourselves – regardless of our significant differences of opinion.
Authority is something we consent to. Those in authority
have no power, nor permission, to use violence without our consent. Authority should be seen as a responsibility to serve all those who gave you that authority. Not as a power to be wielded by virtue of your office.
Until the Prime Minister sits down with these people as human beings, respectful of all Canadians regardless of their opinions, and
uses all peaceful means to bring this protest to an end, I do not give my
consent to his extraordinary use of his authority which I gave him.
Authority must be held in check, always. Otherwise, it is no
longer a democracy.
1 comment:
In my experience as an educator dealing with this government, they do what they want.
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