manjula martin

Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Which Side Are You On?

In songs of freedom on December 21, 2011 at 12:51 pm

(photo from May Day, 2006)

[Part of a brief series about protest songs, in honor of the Occupy Movement]

“Which Side Are You On” is a protest song that came out of the labor movement. It was written in the early 1930s by Florence Reece, whose husband was a miner and union organizer in Harlan County, Kentucky. One version of the story that’s told about the song is that Reece and her kids were at home when Sheriff J.H. Blair and his goons violently busted in looking for her husband, at the behest of the mining company boss. They stood guard at the house waiting for Florence’s husband to come home, terrorizing the family. After they left, she wrote this song:


Last week at my new job, we had to tell our “personal stories.” I’ve never done this before; most of the staff jobs I’ve had involved pointedly not telling your personal story, or else having to glean it and its context slowly from one another during the daily press of office-stiff bodies at the coffee shop around 3:30pm. But in a ‘movement’ job, it is expected and understood that our personhood informs and drives our work.

So at a meeting, in the light of a December sun as seen through small windows of a nonprofit organization in an office building that was formerly a hotel, after the cinnamon rolls are all eaten up, we go around the table to say who we are, how we got here, and why we have landed in what is generally called “social/economic/racial justice work.” I’m really nervous, even though my union organizer boyfriend has prepped me for this. I’m wondering what my story even is; there are so many seemingly distinct experiences in my much-lived-in life that I often fear others might view me as patched together, impulse-driven, wild at heart. My coworkers are serious ass-kickers of the system; what am I gonna do, talk about working at a record store and writing poems?

But the basics of storytelling tell us that a turning point in a story may occur when a character’s frustration turns to action. So, I asked myself, when did everything break for me? When was a moment in which I realized that if you’re not on one side, you’re on the other side, and when did I decide that this—whatever this is, this thinking and talking and fighting about making things a little bit different for some people, maybe, we hope—was more important than other things I could do with my days? When did I answer the question, Which side are you on?

Here’s a story I didn’t tell:

It was way past midnight on Christmas day two years ago, in Pennsylvania on a train barreling from Chicago to New York City. The train stopped, which woke me up. Everyone in our car was asleep; Max’s head was on my shoulder and my feet were tucked beneath a large fake-leopard-skin coat I’d borrowed from a friend just for the occasion of a winter vacation spent in a place where it actually gets cold. I looked up, forward, as people on transportation invariably do when their forward-motion ceases. I saw two young men wearing dark blue uniforms. They had guns. They walked down the aisle shaking people and waking them up. They looked at me and then quickly passed me over for two women sitting behind me, students with skin darker than mine. I tapped Max silently, urgently, wake up.

The young men with guns stopped behind me and asked another woman, also with skin darker than mine, for a certain type of piece of paper. She shook her head and motioned as though shaking out the contents of her purse; she didn’t have it. The two young men with guns demanded her papers again. We are on vacation, she said. My papers are at home. The two young men with guns then picked her up from her seat and walked with her, pinning her arms behind her, toward the front of the train. I saw her feet, still in thin pink socks, as they passed me. Max rose to follow and watch them, disappearing to the front of the car where, I could hear, more men with guns restrained the woman’s travel companion as he tried to exit after her, pushing him back into the train car as the doors slid shut.

Seconds later we were back in motion. The woman’s travel companion—her father—sat with me and Max in the observation car looking out at the black snow, moving at 100mph away from the detention cell in which his daughter now sat. As we tried to figure out who to call, which government agency concerns themselves with taking travelers off trains in the middle of the night on Christmas, we told each other little bits about our lives. As he told us his story – his recent marriage to his wife, a lost and re-found love from childhood in the Philippines; this family train trip to New York to celebrate their first anniversary; his earlier years of occupation as an airplane mechanic for the U.S. military; a grown daughter proudly about to finish medical school in Los Angeles—the man couldn’t stop shaking his head. No matter what he said, his body moved back and forth in a silent “no.” He was wearing a baseball cap that said: USA. Beneath the brim of the hat I could read in his eyes a helpless bewilderment—a search for some sort of justification, realization, or understanding of how and who and what had just taken his daughter away from him.

Much later, I helped the man and his wife hail a taxi outside of Port Authority in a freezing rain in the madness of Times Square. It was their first time in New York, and their daughter had planned to take them to museums. Now they would be spending the week trying to get back to Erie, to find their daughter and hopefully take her home. As the man thanked me profusely, I looked at his eyes beneath his baseball cap again, and a bitter grief was forming. All his life, he had told me on the train, he’d thought he was accepted. That he was one of ‘us,’ or ‘them’—American. Those young men with guns had finally made him understand that he never would be. And now he didn’t want to be, anymore.

There isn’t only one of these moments, for me and for others. There are many, and they are cumulative. We have seen more moments like these lately, or at least seen them more publicly: increasingly, people who used to think of themselves as safe realizing they are not safe. We see in these people’s eyes their brutal reckoning. And we’re going to keep seeing more.


I never even really liked “Which side are you on” as a song that much. I tend to resist being a ‘joiner’, and the song always felt… too much. But really, what the song espouses is not even about having loyalty to a union, or following ‘the union’ blindly. Unions are systems like any other; prone to fucking up but also pretty fucking useful at doing what they’re set up to do. A union is a way we have of dealing with problems–namely, the little problem we have in which the people who own things tend to exploit the people who actually make the things or run the things or… you know, do the work. So we have this thing called a union to give some structure to the gathering and exerting of power over those in power. But when we talk about the union, we are really talking about placing ourselves—our bodies, our intelligence, our power, and our weaknesses—in opposition to those who would place us beneath them. That’s all. Which side. People or property. Bootstraps or love. I’m getting sentimental but it’s real, you guys.

At work that day, I didn’t tell the story about the woman on the train in part because I’m not the main character of that story, but also because I wanted to talk about storytelling itself–about who gets to tell their stories and why. So instead I talked about working in a nightclub in New York in the late 90s, and how one night a brilliant and very rich, famous musician wanted me to let him into the club for free, and how at that same rock club where the rockstar didn’t want to pay the $8 entrance fee, I made $20 for an 8-hour shift with no tips, and I couldn’t afford to buy a guitar to replace the one that had just been stolen from my apartment.

I talked about how as a writer, I often see the same people getting to tell their stories, because they have money or power, and then they just go on and tell the same stories again and again, and promote the stories of other people who have similar stories. I talked about how some of the most brilliant artists and thinkers I’ve known have to work to live, and so usually just end up getting drunk after work instead of making art. I talked about how I want to use my working life to tell and promote different stories, even if it means I don’t get to be a prestigious author or a rockstar or a member of the literati, because at some point, you have to look around, and see.

We all have personal moments of realizing: it’s rigged. Then we just have to figure out: are we the ones tying the knots, or the ones making them come undone?


Sometimes I’d flirt with you, machinery of the system, but we never really had a thang.

The Unforgettable Fire

In rawk on March 18, 2011 at 4:24 pm

Island Records, 1984

It’s the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)

Today I have difficulty with the project of listening to the album of the day, U2′s The Unforgettable Fire. I make it loud, then even louder (it needs to be loud, it’s rock!), but it’s only making me distracted. It doesn’t draw my attention; feels sort of lackluster. I think about the rain, the radiation, the internet. And I think about how everyone I know and don’t know seems to be running around this week feeling like it’s the end of the world. (But then I look at this record’s imprint and I see it was made in 1984 and that, too, was supposed to be the end of the world, wasn’t it?)

Maybe my lack of musical concentration has something to do with the devastating triple whammy of this week’s disaster in Japan. Add to that the attendant widespread fear-mongering of related and unrelated impending disasters here in the United States by the news industry and everyone I know on Facebook and Twitter. Add to that the very real acceleration of a right-wing made disaster for the U.S. in the shape of an increasingly crazy and powerful conservative leadership who are actively and rapidly setting about blaming teachers for America’s problems; defunding decent news sources, the NEA, and lifesaving health services for women; effectively outlawing unions; negating key functional aspects of democracy; and more—all in the name of a rich-sponsored “class war” in which the “enemy” is the working poor and those who strive to fight for them? What was I talking about? Oh, right. A bunch of millionaires with guitars.

October

The Unforgettable Fire wasn’t the album that got me into U2 or the album of theirs most closely linked with evocative life memories (although it’s the only one I think I own on vinyl – part of a brief effort to collect “modern classics” that I never finished). That honor goes to October, which buried my feelings about U2 deep within the rubble of the town in which I grew up and the event that changed it forever.

The album October—a cassette, specifically—was the latest in several U2 albums I had special ordered at Rainbow Records on Pacific Avenue in downtown Santa Cruz in the hot, dry fall months of 1989. Remember special orders? That was when you went into a store, in person, and asked the person there if they could order you an album you didn’t see on the shelves. Then they’d likely pick up the phone and call a distributor and get it in, after possibly several weeks of waiting or even months. So when I got really into U2, I took my allowance on downtown to Rainbow, scandalously located right next to the local head shop (I was 12), and I asked them one by one to get me each U2 album. I’d gotten Boy, War, and The Joshua Tree already, and had just found out that October even existed. I’d waited for it to arrive from their distributor. The college students who worked at the small shop in the heart of the sunny and sometimes seedy downtown strip had called and left a message on our family answering machine, and I was going to pick it up after ballet class during the third week of October, 1989.

Then there was an earthquake. Rainbow Records was destroyed, as was most of the street, and the disaster set the scene for an era of new (and often uncharacteristic) development, money, and culture in Santa Cruz—if my hometown was U2, it felt like the town skipped the in-between development phase that was The Unforgettable Fire and went straight from Boy to Pop. And I never got my cassette.

The Fire That Time

Released in 1984, The Unforgettable Fire features the four-piece rock sound that made us all like U2 in the first place: energetic and uplifting rock choruses, actual singing, raw but clean guitar, and Larry Mullen Jr.’s incessant, martial underlying backbeat. (Mullen is the kind of great drummer that makes you faithfully march towards wherever the other musicians in the band go, even if it’s in the direction of cliche.) I read somewhere that this album cemented U2’s status as an “arena rock ” band, although I’m not really sure what that really means. It was the band’s album after War, which made them famous, and before Joshua Tree, which made them pop stars. So, yeah: sort of an in-between moment in the spectrum of U2.

The Unforgettable Fire was famously produced by Brian Eno, he of ambient sounds and Talking Heads fame, and Daniel Lanois, the team that later produced Joshua Tree. The production is a little schizophrenic, with Eno here and there encouraging the sprawly indulgence that is his trademark but Bono’s straight-laced melodies fighting back at every turn. It sounds like an exercise in direction-seeking within the landscape of Mainstream Rock and Roll—complete with clumsy shifts between anthem-rocking tracks and meandering, dream-like, interval-esque songs.

Rock rumor has it that The Unforgettable Fire was named after a photography exhibit the band saw that centered on the nuclear atrocities at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The whole album is pretty obviously occupied with The USA and The Messed Up Stuff We’ve Done. The song titles give it away – “4th of July,” “Elvis Presley and America,” and “MLK” all speak to the US’s fucked-up racial, political, and social problems. Yet it’s also ambivalent—as with much European criticism of the States, you can sense an underlying affection for us and our culture and the uniquely successful way in which we make our problems the world’s problem. Yes, we killed the dream of MLK. But we also invented rock and roll, and musicians tend to have a soft spot in their hearts for that.

Lyrically, the thing is classic U2—earnest, haunted by politics, almost to a fault, but so sincere you can’t bear to disagree. It’s as though after the teenage-style anger of War the boys went to college and learned some bigger words. [From "Bad": Let it go. Dislocate. Who uses the concept of dislocating in a rock song? Fucking brilliant or fucking pretentious, or both.] They sound like young men discovering for the first time that the world is not what they’ve been told (although, if you’re Irish, I would imagine you know that a lot earlier than other so-called first-world folks do). Bono’s straight rhymes here are a little clumsy, actually, in the free-association style of a 20-year-old writing his first poems about politics: Love it or hate it, “light-handed” isn’t a part of it.

It’s good. However, today, I’m just not in the mood for U2’s emo guilt-mope, rockin’ though it may be. Your lyrics are nice and well meaning, dudes, and your drummer is tight, but I’m feeling a little more in the mood for this right now. Or maybe this.