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Endgame book review; Hope Dance periodical; reviewer Kasbarian

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  • Endgame book review; Hope Dance periodical; reviewer Kasbarian

    Jan/Feb 2007 issue #60 of Hope Dance: Radical Solutions Inspiring Hope
    (hopedance.org)


    Endgame Vol I: The Problem of Civilization
    Endgame Vol II: Resistance

    By Derrick Jensen (Seven Stories Press)
    `The world will be saved, if it can be, only by the unsubmissive.'
    -André Gide, as quoted in Endgame

    In "Endgame," Derrick Jensen describes how the End Times may very well
    occur on earth as a consequence of excessive appropriation,
    extraction, misuse and damage upon life, land and the ecosystem. As
    oil companies justify exhausting our natural resources by touting the
    resilience of Mother Earth as `a tough old gal,' the discerning, such
    as Jensen, recognize that resource depletion is irreversible. In this
    book, the environmental activist, teacher, farmer and author of the
    acclaimed "A Language Older than Words" and "The Culture of Make
    Believe" urgently calls upon people of conscience to dismantle
    industrialized civilization-and eradicate an inequitable, toxic and
    unsustainable society until now maintained by violence, hypocrisy,
    occupation, and exploitation -if we are to avert what some say is the
    inevitable Apocalypse.

    Conjuring vivid imagery with passionate prose, Jensen gives us a
    glimpse of what is at stake when governmental and corporate entities
    behave no differently than sociopaths. Jensen (who himself survived
    brutality and rape at the hands of his father) adroitly draws
    connections between marauders, tyrannical regimes and domestic
    abusers. We must hold abusers accountable-whether for ravaging the
    environment or humanity. Since those who render assaults upon
    civilization will likely not reform voluntarily, Jensen proposes that
    we use any means at our disposal to confront those who are `destroying
    the natural world, eliminating indigenous cultures, exploiting the
    poor, and killing those who resist.' In response to pacifists who
    maintain that violence doesn't accomplish anything, Jensen points to
    interlopers who have profited handsomely to demonstrate the
    indisputable gains that violence engenders. He advocates that the
    concerned, powerless, outraged or ill-treated among us fight fire with
    fire when confronting dubious logging companies, dam builders,
    slaughterhouses, and arrogant appropriators and wage an armed
    struggle, if necessary. As such, "Endgame" has the ability to both
    empower and repel survivors of all stripes who have long struggled
    with the knowledge that, like the disappearing salmon Jensen tells us
    just might not regenerate, some of those who are violated develop the
    resilience necessary to fight back, while others never recoverto
    acquire a fighter's attitude.

    Endgame is predicated upon 20 distasteful but all-too-true-premises
    that humanity lives by, all which give insight into the subjective
    justification applied by ruling elites. Would-be Endgame readers
    involved in corporate or colonial enterprises likely wouldn't
    recognize themselves in thesepages, but may more readily see
    themselves as enlightened educators, pioneers, liberators,
    missionaries, capitalists, asylum or fortune seekers, or even
    Darwinians. Does the woman who commands that chainsaw-wielding
    landscapers destroy trees as old as the hills (because the foliage
    compromises the view from her kitchen window) merit having her way
    because accepted standards of land ownership give her the authority to
    do so? If consumption is regulated and eco-villages instituted before
    necessity imposes it, will that erode our constitutional rights? Does
    the Holocaust entitle Zionists to perpetrate genocide againstthe
    Palestinian people and seize land bases in the name of self-defense
    and self-actualization? If we defend the earth from toxic human
    influences by eliminating those elements that imperil life and nature
    when are we entitled to do so, and in which cases might we ourselves
    be committing genocide? Using reasoning, allegory and analogy,
    Jensen's writings elicit moral dilemmas and in so doing, show how our
    own truths can be uniquely personal.

    Although the sort of resistance the author proposes may be shocking to
    the average person, those who have wrestled with the same problems
    Jensen has taken on in Endgame will understand the feelings of
    desperation that provoke the tormented to rise up to injustice. While
    we can surmise that there are security issues that prohibit too much
    disclosure in "Endgame," and the author does cite what other activists
    have done, Jensen does not spell out where and when violence would be
    appropriate or indicated, leaving that up to the reader.

    The author also acknowledges that he, justifiably, does not have the
    stomach to inflict violence. The question remains whether Jensen can
    convince countless wounded others who, with histories and reasons akin
    to his own, are just as loath to commit atrocity or destruction.

    Jensen opens our minds to different ways of seeing, perceiving,
    weighing and considering. His ideas are inspirational, and even
    present paradoxes that can avert us from thinking in absolutes. The
    author stops short of providing road maps on how to grapple with the
    End Times, urging us to consult the myriad ways in which the earth
    continuously flourished prior to the Industrial Revolution. Unlike
    manuals such as IntheWake.org, "Endgame" is not the resource for those
    seeking practical guidance on how the energy descent will occur, or
    how to (hopefully) outlive the crash of modern civilization. But if
    you are looking for provocative, sentient discussions about how and
    why it is our responsibility to preserve planet earth and the marvels
    it contains, then "Endgame" is for you.

    - Lucine Kasbarian's ancestors were forcibly driven from Eastern
    Anatolia during the Turkish Genocide of the Armenians. She studies and
    practices indigenous traditions that face obliteration, and is the
    author of "Armenia: A Rugged Land, an Enduring People" (Dillon Press/
    Simon & Schuster).


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