Resistance Reclaiming an American tradition

Jeff Biggers, 1963-

Book - 2018

"A chronicle of the courageous resistance movements that have insured the benchmarks of our democracy-- movements that served on the front lines of the American Revolution, the defense of the Constitution and Bill of Rights, the defeat of fascism during World War II, and landmark civil rights and environmental protection achievements"--

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Subjects
Published
Berkeley, CA : Counterpoint Press 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Jeff Biggers, 1963- (author)
Edition
First hardcover edition
Physical Description
206 pages ; 24cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781640090477
  • Author's Note: Hope Resists
  • Introduction: Let Us Now Praise Resistance
  • 1. We the People, Resist
  • 2. Let Your Motto Be Resistance
  • 3. Enemy of the People
  • 4. To Undo Mistakes
  • 5. Cities of Resistance
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliographic Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Award-winning journalist and historian Biggers, best known for The United States of Appalachia (2006), here explores America's first decades to show how civic resistance underpins U.S. history and remains an integral force in sustaining democracy. Biggers explains that while the current situations that are fomenting and exploiting political chaos may shock us, these are not new phenomena. He also encourages readers to balance censure with praise when analyzing historic figures. Yes, slavery stained Thomas Jefferson, even as the colonies' anemic opposition to slavery let the British rightfully accuse them of hypocrisy. Despite lip-service respect for Native Americans, most revolutionaries actually viewed indigenous people as mere savages. Alexander Hamilton, of all famous immigrants, argued that President Jefferson's call for unlimited immigration would attract dangerous outsiders. The point is that the messiness of resistance should not make us apolitical. Biggers does not probe contemporary political activism; instead, he provides a wealth of historical detail in this celebration of past American resistance and call for continued dissent.--Dane Carr Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

To make the case for resistance in the age of Trump, Biggers (The United States of Appalachia) traces U.S. opposition movements from pre-Revolutionary times to the present, drawing parallels between the tumultuous present and the early days of the Republic. Well-informed and often witty, Biggers covers the resistance movements-and their many, often unsung heroes-of Native Americans, African-Americans, immigrants, and those fighting for women's rights and environmental justice. Readers meet, among others, Ona Maria Judge, a slave who escaped from George Washington's household in 1796; labor activist and physician Marie Equi, who was physically assaulted for her outspoken dissent against America's entry into WWI; Bree Newsome, who scaled a 30-foot flagpole to remove the Confederate flag from the South Carolina statehouse in 2015; and Lakota historian Ladonna Brave Bull Allard, a leader of the Native American resistance against the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016. Biggers also discusses the restorative processes of "truth and reconciliation commissions" to address centuries of racial injustices and the way some rural areas and U.S. cities are combating climate change in defiance of "the coal-peddling Trump administration." Some sections are cursory, but Biggers succeeds in showing how the long tradition of resistance movements continues today. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A widely ranging history of intellectual and moral resistance within American politics.Biggers (The Trials of a Scold: The Incredible True Story of Writer Anne Royall, 2017, etc.) connects this tradition to the authoritarian tendencies of the Trump presidency, arguing, "the language of Trump's America First narrativereflected [Thomas] Paine's warning of brutish' leadership." This brief survey is structured in five essayistic chapters, each focused on a different era and aspect of resistance. He considers figures both widely known, such as Paine, or his own mentor the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, and more obscuree.g., the anti-World War I protester and activist Marie Equi. Biggers calls out beloved figures who fell on the wrong side of resistance movements, like George Washington, who obsessively pursued runaway house slaves. Slavery provides a fuller fulcrum for the author's discussion; he examines both Frederick Douglass and those who argued against nonviolent resistance to this historical wrong. In "Enemy of the People," Biggers contrasts Trump's brazen attacks on the press with the conflict between free speech and John Adams' Alien and Sedition Acts, which Thomas Jefferson noted "had been designed specifically to suppress oppositional media." In "To Undo Mistakes," the author looks at early American immigration policy debates, as well as the more recent internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, tying them to the resistance sparked by Trump's pursuit of a religion-based travel ban. Unlike previous immigration bans, "a coordinated effort by religious congregations to resist Trump's deportation forces emerged across the country." In the final essay, "Cities of Resistance," Biggers links early interest in environmental preservation (embodied by Thoreau's writings, among others) with attempts to counter the Trump administration's dismantling of key federal oversight. The author writes clearly and with a firm grasp of historical comparison, intimately focused on compelling figures; still, his work could use fuller focus on the actual resistance movements Trump has inspired. An engaging jeremiad proposing that "the resistance is now in the hands of a new generation." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One: Enemy of the People While the infamous "Reynolds Pamphlet" on Alexander Hamilton's sex scandal takes center stage in the Broadway musical phenomenon " Hamilton ," the assault on the free press and the First Amendment in its bitter aftermath might be the most chilling cautionary tale for our times. Move on Alexander Hamilton. Meet Benjamin Franklin Bache, the first journalist "enemy of the people." Politics were bitterly divided in 1798, too. Noah Webster, whose hallowed dictionary we all cherish now, employed a few choice words against the Democratic Republicans and journalists in opposition to the Federalists: "The refuse, the sweepings of the most depraved part of mankind from the most corrupt nations on earth." An inordinate fear and fearmongering over a growing immigrant population took place among politicians in those times, too. President John Adams touted an Aliens Friends Act to deport anyone he deemed dangerous. But an alien invasion from France was the least of his concerns. Adam was a thin-skinned president, vaguely reminiscent of present-day office holders. He brisked at the giggles over his moniker as "His Rotundity," and railed against what he considered deceptive and false characterizations of his administration by certain journalists. Fake news, in today's parlance. Enter Benjamin Franklin Bache, the badass grandson of the inventor, and muckraking editor of the Philadelphia Aurora newspaper, who didn't cower to Adam's monarchical haughtiness. The European-educated Bache had already been banned earlier that year from covering the proceedings of the House of Representative on the floor with the rest of the journalists after his reports exposed some salty language from a brawl. "The right of the people of the United States to listen to the sentiments of their representatives," he declared in vain, "was acknowledged by the first agents whom they appointed to express their voice in that assembly."Adams might recall a certain president today in more than one way. He once wrote about preferring the title of "His Highness, the President of the United State and Protector of the Rights of the Same." Bache simply found him an "old, querulous, Bald, blind, crippled, Toothless Adams."It was Bache's Aurora newspaper that chastised Adams for Alexander Hamilton's infamous case of adultery, after the release of James Thomson Callender's scandalous "Reynolds Pamphlet." Bache didn't earn a musical―and his role as the first journalist to hold the line on the freedom of the press has been forgotten in history. Far from ignoring Bache and others, Adams, and other Federalists, had other ways to deal with journalists they considered the opposition. This is the cautionary tale that didn't go well for Americans. Under the guise of a threatened nation, invoking unholy French alliances among the American press and supposed spies, Congress passed the Sedition Act of 1798 intently to clamp down on the emerging free press hailed by Bache. "To write, print, utter or publish, or cause it to be done, or assist in it, any false, scandalous, and malicious writing against the government of the United States, or either House of Congress, or the President"―-this was now a high misdemeanor, warranting imprisonment for journalists. What President Trump deemed the "enemy of the people," in other words, was not simply dismissed on twitter--but jailed, in a harrowing reminder of political power gone awry.Even before the law was passed, a Federalist-appointed judge issued an arrest warrant for Bache, who was hauled to the Philadelphia jail. He was charged with "tending to excite sedition, and opposition to the laws, by sundry publications." Released from jail, Bache wouldn't back down. His newspaper office was attacked repeatedly with rocks. "Like the British monarch, John Adams now has the Alien and Sedition Acts to silence his critics," he wrote to his readers. He defended the First Amendment in defiance. Legions of other newspapers and critics defied Adams and the Federalists. Unfortunately, Bache would never have his day in court; he died a few months later from the scourge of yellow fever. The scourge of the Sedition Act witch hunts would continue against select journalists for another year, including Hamilton critic Callender, though not without consequence. Every musical has its last epic scene. Igniting a backlash against Adams and the Federalists, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison led a movement in Virginia and Kentucky against the repressive acts against free speech and freedom of the press, leading to Jefferson's presidential election in 1800. The Acts expired three days before Jefferson's inauguration. An unfortunate footnote in history, Bache's admonition to other journalists, and all American citizens, should resonate today: What alternative do we have between an abandonment of the constitution and resistance? It may take a musical on Broadway, unless we see the revival of Alien and Sedition Acts in 2017 from a White House and Congress offended by journalistic inquiry and challenge, to answer that question. Chapter Five: Resist Much, Obey Little THE wind turbines that rise out of the cornfields here reminded me on a recent drive of one postelection truth, even in the red state of Iowa. As President-elect Donald J. Trump considers whether to break the United States commitment to the Paris climate accord, the rise of clean energy across the heartland is already too well entrenched to be reversed.By 2020, thanks to MidAmerican Energy's planned $3.6 billion addition to its enormous wind turbine operations, 85 percent of its Iowa customers will be electrified by clean energy. Meanwhile, Moxie Solar, named the fastest-growing local business by The Corridor Business Journal of Iowa, is installing solar panels on my house, and is part of a solar industry that now employs 200,000 nationwide. Doomsday scenarios about the climate have abounded in the aftermath of the November election. But responsibility for effectively reining in carbon emissions also rests with business, and with the nation's cities and states. Those are the battlegrounds. Worldwide, cities produce as much as 70 percent of greenhouse gas emissions. Many of the planet's cities lie along the coasts and are threatened by slowly rising seas. Seventy percent of those cities are already dealing with extreme weather like drought and flooding. Add in aging infrastructure and waves of migrants and it is obvious that city planners, mayors and governors have had to re-envision how their cities generate energy and provide food and transportation. "The concept of a regenerative city could indeed become a new vision for cities," the Germany-based World Future Council reported recently. "It stands for cities that not only minimize negative impact but can actually have a positive, beneficial role to play within the natural ecosystem from which they depend. Cities have to constantly regenerate the resources they absorb." This idea won broad support at a recent gathering of city leaders from around the world in Quito, Ecuador, hosted by the United Nations. The Habitat III conference approved a "new urban agenda" that urges cities to adapt to climate change but minimize their harm to the environment and move to sustainable economies. In a changing climate, these approaches make sense. As Michael Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York, told the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce recently, "Cities, businesses and citizens will continue reducing emissions, because they have concluded -- just as China has -- that doing so is in their own self-interest." With or without significant federal support, reducing greenhouse gas emissions will require major private investment, as it has here in Iowa, and ambitious private-public initiatives from mayors and governors. We need to activate a new era of cities--and states--of resistance.California's recent move to reduce its carbon emissions by 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 is a hopeful shift that other cities and states should emulate. This would involve setting high benchmarks for developing green enterprise zones, renewable energy, cultivating food locally, restoring biodiversity, planting more trees and emphasizing walkability, low-carbon transportation and zero waste. Following this regenerative approach, the Australian city of Adelaide reduced its carbon emissions by 20 percent from 2007 to 2013, even as the population grew by 27 percent and the economy increased by 28 percent. The city experienced a boom in green jobs, the development of walkable neighborhoods powered by solar energy, the conversion of urban waste to compost and a revamped local food industry. The city also planted three million trees to absorb carbon dioxide. Over 10,000 climate initiatives are underway in cities worldwide, according to the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, which represents 80 major cities. In nearby Des Moines, for instance, Mayor Frank Cownie recently committed the city to reducing its energy consumption 50 percent by 2030 and becoming "carbon neutral" by 2050. Initiatives like those have become a "fill the potholes" reality for many mayors, regardless of political games in Washington. In San Diego, the Republican mayor, Kevin Faulconer, helped to push through a climate action plan that commits the city to 100 percent renewable energy by 2035. Other cities are following his lead. Rural areas, in fact, may be even further ahead in the climate resistance. Negotiators en route to the United Nations conference on climate change in Paris should have taken a detour on rural roads here in Johnson County. A new climate narrative is emerging among farmers in the American heartland that transcends a lot of the old story lines of denial and cynicism, and offers an updated tale of climate hope. Recent polls show that 60 percent of Iowans, now facing flooding and erosion, believe global warming is happening. From Winneshiek County to Washington County, you can count more solar panels on barns than on urban roofs or in suburban parking lots. The state's first major solar farm is not in an urban area like Des Moines or Iowa City, but in rural Frytown, initiated by the Farmers Electric Cooperative. In the meantime, any lingering traces of cynicism will vanish in the town of Crawfordsville, where children in the Waco school district will eventually turn on computers and study under lights powered 90 percent by solar energy. Inspired by local farmers, who now use solar energy to help power some of their operations, the district's move to solar energy will not only cut carbon emissions but also result in enough savings to keep open the town's once financially threatened school doors. This is only a beginning, of course. Dirty coal still accounts for 60 percent of Iowa's electricity needs. But such centralization of electricity will falter, as other towns and cities follow the lead of Bloomfield, which recently announced plans to ramp up energy-efficiency efforts and shift its municipally owned utility -- one of 136 in Iowa -- to 100 percent energy independence, significantly through renewable sources by 2030. But here's the catch: Even if every coal-fired plant shuts down, land misuse still accounts for an estimated 30 percent of the world's carbon emissions. The soils in the United States, like those of nations around the world, have lost calamitous amounts of carbon. Excerpted from Resistance: Reclaiming an American Tradition by Jeff Biggers All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.