Friday, June 19, 2026

Jacob Crosse: “The Obama Presidential Center Is a Monument to Hypocrisy”


I appreciate the following artcle by Jacob Crosse, one which was first published yesterday at the World Socialist Web Site.

To my mind, Crosse’s piece provides a much-needed reality check.

_________________


Obama Center Dedication Turns Presidency
of War and Wall Street Bailouts
Into Democratic Camelot

By Jacob Crosse

World Socialist Web Site
June 18, 2026

The opening of the Obama Presidential Center on Chicago’s South Side was an exercise in political myth-making. The Democratic Party, the Democratic-aligned media, business figures and an assortment of entertainment celebrities assembled Thursday to present the Obama presidency as an American Camelot. Barack and Michelle Obama were cast as the protagonists of a lost age of democratic grace, reason and moral purpose, interrupted by the aberration of Trump.

The $850 million complex, dominated by a massive stone tower that has been derided as an “Obamalisk,” was dedicated from a stage occupied by former presidents and first ladies, before an invited audience featuring a good number of multi-millionaires. For all the rhetoric about democracy and equality, the real social base of the Democratic Party was reflected in the highly privileged and wealthy audience seated before the main stage, while the rabble was relegated to Midway Plaisance Park to watch from the grass.

In attendance were former presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Joe Biden, along with Hillary Clinton, Laura Bush and Jill Biden. The presence of Bush, the war criminal responsible for the invasion of Iraq, who came to power through the theft of the 2000 election, underscored the fundamental unity of the two parties of American imperialism.

The Democratic Party establishment was represented by figures from every wing of the party: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, former Vice President and 2024 presidential candidate Kamala Harris, Illinois U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. Also present was Michigan U.S. Representative Rashida Tlaib, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, who joined in honoring Obama, the president who continued Bush’s “War on Terror” and institutionalized drone assassinations of so-called “enemy combatants,” including U.S. citizens.

The list of foreign dignitaries included former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, former Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, former Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel and former Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj. Also in attendance were Tom Hanks, David Letterman, Stephen Colbert, Bono and the Edge of U2, Christina Aguilera, Marc Anthony, Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, Tems and Eddie Vedder.

The ceremony lasted more than three hours and combined militarism, celebrity worship and nationalist pageantry, overlain with identity and racial politics. Following a benediction, the Illinois National Guard presented the colors, and Jennifer Hudson sang the national anthem. This was followed by a promotional film narrated by Obama, filled with the hollow slogans of his 2008 campaign, including “Yes, we can” and calls to “imagine your impact.”

That Valerie Jarrett, chief executive officer of the Obama Foundation, delivered the first speech was politically significant. Jarrett, a longtime Obama associate, is representative of the reactionary social layer elevated through the Democratic Party and identity politics: wealthy, corporate-connected, deeply embedded in Chicago’s political machine and hostile to the working class.

Before serving as Obama’s senior adviser from 2009 to 2017, Jarrett was CEO of the Habitat Company, a major Chicago real estate firm that managed public housing developments, including Grove Parc Plaza, where poor residents lived in conditions marked by decay, vermin and neglect. Her career has included leading positions on corporate, financial, university and transit boards. Less than three weeks after the murder of George Floyd, amid mass protests against police violence, Jarrett rejected calls to defund the police and suggested that more money was needed for law enforcement.

The central political purpose of the ceremony was expressed in the speeches of Michelle and Barack Obama. Michelle Obama’s remarks are already being hailed by the media as “historic.” But like the rest of the event, they were aimed at rewriting the Obama years as a kind of Garden of Eden, ignoring the social devastation, war, police violence and corporate plunder that defined the period.

Michelle Obama praised her husband’s “dazzling brilliance” and “unshakable moral fiber,” declaring that he had made the country proud by “rescuing our economy, expanding healthcare, ending a war, ordering the Bin Laden raid, saving the auto industry, winning a peace prize, keeping us safe from Ebola, regulating the banks, standing up for marriage equality, listening to science, and comforting an entire nation in the face of unspeakable tragedies.”

Every phrase in this litany is false. “Rescuing our economy” refers to the bailout of Wall Street following the financial crash of 2008, which was initiated under Bush and expanded under Obama. Trillions of dollars in loans, guarantees and cash handouts were funneled to the banks, while millions of workers lost their homes. Not a single major Wall Street executive was prosecuted. When measures were proposed to limit executive pay at bailed-out firms, Obama intervened on behalf of the financial aristocracy. During the Obama presidency, the number of American billionaires rose from 359 to 565, a 57 percent increase.

“Expanding healthcare” refers to the passage of the Affordable Care Act, a program modeled on Romneycare that strengthened the domination of the insurance companies and funneled billions in public subsidies to the private healthcare industry.

“Ending a war” is perhaps the most grotesque claim of all. Obama expanded the war in Afghanistan, continued the occupation of Iraq, oversaw drone assassinations across the Middle East and Africa, initiated the CIA’s Operation Timber Sycamore in Syria and backed the U.S.-NATO war in Libya, which destroyed the country and helped reintroduce open slave markets in North Africa.

The “saving” of the auto industry meant the use of federal bailout funds to impose a historic attack on autoworkers. In the 2009 managed bankruptcies of General Motors and Chrysler, tens of thousands of jobs were destroyed, plants were closed, new-hires’ wages were cut in half, strikes were banned for six years and the United Auto Workers bureaucracy was handed a direct financial stake in the “restructuring” through its control of the VEBA retiree healthcare trust.

Barack Obama’s own speech was no less reactionary. He preached “bipartisanship” and the “shared values” of the two parties of big business and war, declaring that a “sense of duty and honor” was not Republican or Democratic but “American,” and that every president on stage had tried to uphold these values. He explicitly included John McCain and Mitt Romney in this pantheon.

This was the political essence of the ceremony. Obama presents Trump as an interloper, a temporary departure from the “arc” of American democracy. In reality, the fascist Trump embodies the financial oligarchy that rules the U.S. He is the product of the very social order Obama rescued after the 2008 financial crash.

Obama’s reference to the United States as an “undeniable force for good in the world” was the greatest lie of all. In fact, U.S. imperialism is the undeniable center of global reaction, responsible for countless wars, occupations, sanctions, coups, assassinations and, more recently, outright genocide by its Israeli attack dog in Gaza.

The Obama Presidential Center is a monument to hypocrisy. Its purpose is to provide the Democratic Party with a usable myth as it seeks to contain popular hatred of Trump while blocking any independent movement of the working class.

– Jacob Crosse
World Socialist Web Site
June 18, 2026


Related Off-site Link:
Obama Presidential Center Opens with Star-studded Celebration -- Justin Kaufmann (Axios, June 18, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Genny Harrison on Brian Tyler Cohen’s Interview with Obama: “A Careful Meditation That Comforts More Than It Challenges”
Progressives and Obama (Part 1)
Progressives and Obama (Part 2)
Progressives and Obama (Part 3)
Progressives and Obama (Part 4)
Progressives and Obama (Part 5)
Progressives and Obama (Part 6)
Progressives and Obama (Part 7)
Historic (and Wild)!
Reality Check
One of Those Moments
Obama, Ayers, the “S” Word, and the “Most Politically Backward Layers in America”
Obama a Socialist? Hardly
Thoughts on Tomorrow’s Presidential Election (2008)
“Change Has Come to America”
A Night of Celebration
The Challenge for Progressives with an Obama Presidency
Exposing the Dark Money Network Secretly Funding Establishment Democratic Influencers

Opening Image: From left: Former President Joe Biden and former first lady Jill Biden, former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, former President George W. Bush and former first lady Laura Bush, and former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pose ahead of the dedication ceremony for the opening of the Barack Obama Presidential Center. (Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais-Pool/Getty Images)


Remembering How the Freedom of Juneteenth “Did Not Arrive as a Friendly Announcement”


The mainstream narrative of Juneteenth is built on a benevolent myth: that General Gordon Granger stood on a balcony in Galveston, read General Order No. 3, and Texas enslavers immediately followed the law, peacefully freeing 250,000 enslaved people. This completely erases the high stakes and the military reality.

Texas was the last stronghold of the illegal slave empire. Enslavers had been hiding tens of thousands of Black people from the Emancipation Proclamation for two years, believing they were untouched by the war.

Freedom did not arrive as a friendly announcement. It was enforced through a ruthless military occupation. When Granger landed, a massive percentage of his occupying force was made up of thousands of heavily armed men from the United States Colored Troops (USCT). Texas enslavers did not surrender because they heard a speech. They surrendered because thousands of Black Union soldiers seized control of the city, aimed heavy weapons at their homes, and forced the system to collapse on June 19th 1865.

One Mic Black History
June 19, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
Juneteenth Beyond the Celebration: Freedom Delayed, Freedom Denied, Freedom Still Demanded – Joshua Scheer (ScheerPost, June 19, 2026).
Juneteenth and the Distance Between Freedom and Meaning – Anneshia Hardy (Common Dreams, June 19, 2026).
Juneteenth: The Day America Solved Racism by Taking A Day Off From Work – Lawrence Ware (CounterPunch, June 19, 2026).
This Juneteenth, Remember That Organizing Is Key to Democracy – Rev. Ciera Bates-Chamberlain (Common Dreams, June 19, 2026).
The Hidden Hisory of Juneteenth – Gregory P. Downs (Black Agenda Report via ScheerPost, June 19, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed post:
Zaylore Stout on the Meaning of Emancipation Today


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Monday, June 15, 2026

Chris Smalls: The Working-Class Revolution Is Coming

An American hero of mine, Chris Smalls, was recently a guest on The Real News Network. Here’s how his conversation with host Maximillian Alvarez is described on the podcast’s Facebook page:

We sit down with Chris Smalls, co-founder and former president of the Amazon Labor Union, to discuss Smalls’ new book, When the Revolution Comes: A Fight for the Future of the Working Class, the incredible story of the formation of the Amazon Labor Union and the unionization of the first Amazon warehouse in the U.S., and Smalls’ journey from warehouse worker and labor organizer to internationally recognized public figure and human rights activist who has sailed with humanitarian flotilla missions to Gaza and Cuba.


Following is The Real News Network’s full 45-minute interview with Chris Smalls.





Related Off-site Links:
Why Are White Leftists Silent About This? – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, June 10, 2026).
Chris Smalls Is Still Fighting the Bosses – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, June 2, 2026).
“Amazon Is the New Slavery”: Chris Smalls on the Labor Fight of a Lifetime – Sara Franklin (The Nation, June 2, 2026).
A Better World: An Interview with Chris Smalls – Annika Bratton (Publishers Weekly, April 3, 2026).
My Interview with Chris Smalls – Marianne Williamson (Transform, July 31, 2022).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Chris Smalls’ “Unforgivable Sin”: Connecting the Warehouse to the Empire
Kshama Sawant on the Real Reason for Jacobin Magazine’s “Hatchet Job” on Chris Smalls
Steven Donziger’s Shout-Out to Chris Smalls
Chris Smalls: We Need to Escape the “Two-Party Plantation”
Quote of the Day – August 5, 2025
U.S. Labor Leader Chris Smalls Joins the Crew of the Handala


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Christopher Schoenherr on Marianne Williamson’s Politics of Love


“Not an escape from reality
[but] an attempt to look
at reality more honestly.”


At his substack Earth Drama, Christopher Schoenherr writes “essays decoding power, illusion, culture, politics, and the drama of being human.” Earlier today he wrote the following.

For years, Marianne Williamson has been mocked, dismissed, caricatured, and reduced to a collection of labels: crystal lady, orb queen, spiritual guru, New Age candidate. Her critics often assume that because she speaks about love, she must be speaking about something unserious.

But after reading her books Healing the Soul of America and A Politics of Love, I came away with a different conclusion. The most misunderstood thing about Marianne Williamson is not her spirituality. It is her definition of love.

Because in Williamson’s work, love is not an emotion.

It is a way of seeing.

A way of organizing society.

A way of deciding what matters.

A way of deciding who matters.

And ultimately, a way of deciding what civilization is for.

When Williamson talks about love, she is not talking about being nice.

She is not talking about avoiding conflict.

She is not talking about positive thinking.

She is not talking about pretending evil does not exist.

In fact, one of the most striking things about her work is how directly she confronts suffering.

She writes about poverty.

War.

Racism.

Corruption.

Child neglect.

Environmental destruction.

Corporate greed.

Democratic decline.

The politics of love is not an escape from reality.

It is an attempt to look at reality more honestly.

What she is really asking is a deceptively simple question:

What would society look like if human flourishing were the goal?

Not profit.

Not power.

Not partisan victory.

Not endless economic growth for its own sake.

Human flourishing.

The question sounds almost embarrassingly obvious.

Yet once you start asking it, everything changes.


Christopher Schoenherr
From “Marianne Williamson’s Politics of Love
Has Nothing to Do With Feelings

Earth Drama
June 14, 2026


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Yes, Just Imagine
Marianne Williamson’s Politics of Love: The Rich Roll Interview (2022)
Marianne Williamson: We Need an “Expanded Version of What it Means to Be Political”
“A Very Insightful and Constructive Discussion”
Marianne Williamson on the Need for “Radical Love” in Responding to Trump’s Dismantling of Democracy
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Moving Into Totalitarianism”
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 20, 2025
Speaking Truth to Power
Marianne Williamson on MSNBC’s The Weekend – 1/12/25
Breaking the Mold: Why Progressives Should Push for Marianne Williamson to Lead the DNC
Marianne Williamson Is Seeking to Restore Honesty and Integrity to the DNC
Marianne Williamson Makes Her Case for Being the Next DNC Chair
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election
“A New Chapter of the Democratic Party Needs to Begin”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Living in Very Serious Times and We Need to Be Very Serious People”
Marianne Williamson: “I Hope I Will Hear Things from Kamala That I Can Full-on Support”
Marianne Williamson on ABC News Live – 8/20/24
Voices on the Issues That Really Matter
Marianne Williamson: “We Must Challenge the Entire System”
“We Have an Emergency On Our Hands”: Marianne Williamson On the “Freefall” of American Democracy


For highlights of The Wild Reed’s coverage of Marianne Williamson’s 2024 presidential campaign, see the following chronologically-ordered posts:
Marianne 2024
Progressive Perspectives on Marianne Williamson’s Presidential Run
More Progressive Perspectives on Marianne Williamson’s Presidential Run
Ben Burgis: Quote of the Day – March 10, 2023
Despite the Undemocratic Antics of the DNC, Marianne Williamson Plans on “Winning the Nomination”
Marianne Williamson’s Economic Bill of Rights
Voters, Not the DNC, Should Choose the Nominee
Marianne Williamson: “Repairing Our Hearts Is Essential to Repairing Our Country”
Presidential Candidate Marianne Williamson Joins NYC’s March to End Fossil Fuels
Marianne Williamson’s “Radical Idea” of Putting People First
Marianne Williamson: “We Need to Disrupt the Corrupt”
“We Are Surging”
“Let the People Decide”: Marianne Williamson on the DNC’s Efforts to Deny and Suppress the Democratic Process
The Democrats Challenging Biden
Bannering for Marianne
Campaigning for Marianne Williamson in New Hampshire – Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
Marianne Williamson: “I Have Decided to Continue”
Forever Grateful
What Marianne Williamson Learned from Running for President
Marianne Williamson: Playing It Big
Minnesotans Launch Super Tuesday Push for “Suspended But Not Ended” Candidate Marianne Williamson
A Welcome Return
This Super Tuesday, Don’t Be “Uncommitted” . . .
Super Tuesday in Minnesota
Marianne Williamson, the Cassandra of U.S. Politics, on the “True State of the Union”
“This Is the Moment”
For Marianne Williamson, One Season Passes and Another Begins
“What I Want to Remember Are the Moments of Love”
A New Beginning
Marianne Williamson on What Democrats Need to Do to Inspire Voters and Counter the “Hotbed of Grievances That Donald Trump is Offering”
Progressive Perspectives on the Crisis in U.S. Electoral Politics
Yes, Just Imagine
On This Momentous Day in U.S. Politics, a Visit to the Prayer Tree
Marianne Williamson: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is Not Enough to Win in November”
Marianne Williamson: “My Gratitude Is as Deep as the Sea”


For highlights of The Wild Reed’s coverage of Marianne Williamson’s 2020 presidential campaign, see the following chronologically-ordered posts:
Talkin’ ’Bout An Evolution: Marianne Williamson’s Presidential Bid
Why Marianne Williamson Is a Serious and Credible Presidential Candidate
Marianne Williamson: Reaching for Higher Ground
“A Lefty With Soul”: Why Presidential Candidate Marianne Williamson Deserves Some Serious Attention
Marianne Williamson Plans on Sharing Some “Big Truths” on Tonight's Debate Stage
Friar André Maria: Quote of the Day – June 28, 2019
Presidential Candidate Marianne Williamson: “We’re Living at a Critical Moment in Our Democracy”
Caitlin Johnstone: “Status Quo Politicians Are Infinitely ‘Weirder’ Than Marianne Williamson”
Marianne Williamson On What It Will Take to Defeat Donald Trump
“This Woman Is Going to Win the Nomination”: Matt Taibbi on Marianne Williamson in Iowa
The Relevance and Vitality of Marianne Williamson’s 2020 Presidential Campaign
Quote of the Day – November 4, 2019
Marianne Williamson: “Anything That Will Help People Thrive, I’m Interested In”
Marianne Williamson and the Power of Politicized Love
Quote of the Day – December 14, 2019
Marianne Williamson: “I Am Not Suspending My Candidacy”
Marianne Williamson on New Day with Christi Paul – 01/04/20
“A Beautiful Message, So Full of Greatness”
“I Learned So Much From the Experience”
Deep Gratitude

Image: Marianne Williamson in 2019. (Photo: Rozette Rago/The New York Times/Redux)


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Dalloway Day


This Wednesday (June 17) is Dalloway Day, an annual celebration of author Virginia Woolf’s 1925 modernist masterpiece, Mrs. Dalloway.

Dalloway Day takes place globally on the third Wednesday in June, commemorating the fictional day in mid-June 1923 when the protagonist of Woolf’s novel, Clarissa Dalloway, walks through London to buy flowers for a party she’s hosting that night at her Westminster residence.

Through a stream-of-consciousness style that interweaves Clarissa’s experiences with those of other characters, most notably the shell-shocked veteran Septimus Warren Smith, the novel explores not only Clarissa’s inner life, memories, and reflections on life, love, and death, but the social mores and structure of post-World War One England.


Ahead of Dalloway Day, here’s a fascinating 30-minute documentary by award-winning writer and academic Alexandra Harris that explores how Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway “completely re-imagined what a novel might be.”





Related Off-site Links:
Mrs. Dalloway at 100 – Daphne Merkin (Air Mail, September 13, 2025).
Significance of Clarissa’s Parties in Mrs Dalloway – Riya Payal (TJBlogsBlog, August 10, 2018).
The Character of Septimus Warren Smith in Mrs Dalloway – Riya Payal (TJBlogsBlog, July 28, 2020).
The Relationship Between Clarissa and Septimus in Mrs Dalloway – Riya Payal (TJBlogsBlog, April 13, 2021).
Mrs Dalloway’s War Wounds – Lizzie Hibbert (Engelsberg Ideas, May 22, 2025).
Mrs. Dalloway: Secularism and Its Enchantments – Jared Marcel Pollen (Quillette, September 2, 2021).
Clarissa Dalloway’s and Septimus Smith’s Routes Through LondonBritish Literature Wiki.

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Vanessa Redgrave: “Almost a Kind of Jungian Actress”
Something We Dare Call Hope

Opening image: Vanessa Redgrave as the title character in the 1997 film adaptation of Mrs. Dalloway.


Friday, June 12, 2026

Chris Smalls’ “Unforgivable Sin”: Connecting the Warehouse to the Empire


Writes Prince Kapone of Weaponized Information . . .

Jacobin really thought it was doing labor strategy. What it actually did was publish a character assassination of a Black worker who committed the unforgivable sin of connecting the warehouse to the empire.

Chris Smalls helped crack open Amazon – one of the most powerful corporate machines on earth – and then refused to stay in the lane the respectable Left assigned him. He stood with Palestine. He stood with Cuba. He confronted ICE. He confronted [Amazon CEO] Jeff Bezos. He treated labor politics as something larger than contracts, elections, press hits, and polite speeches from politicians who want workers as backdrops.

And that is when the language changed. Suddenly it was not Amazon’s union-busting. Not the rotten labor-law regime. Not the Democratic Party’s graveyard of movements. Not the weakness of the official labor movement. Not the empire behind the boss. No. The problem was Chris Smalls’s “ego.” How convenient.

This is the old trick: when Black radical politics becomes internationalist, the respectable crowd turns the politics into a personality problem. Too loud. Too flashy. Too angry. Too undisciplined. Too much style. Too much confidence. Too much refusal. Too much worker acting like he has the right to speak on Palestine, Cuba, ICE, Bezos, police, politicians, and empire. They wanted him as a poster. They did not want him as a line.

. . . Smalls is not above criticism. No organizer is. Celebrity politics is not enough. Charisma is not organization. A movement cannot live on one face.

But bureaucratic respectability is not enough either. Electoral containment is not enough. A union with no fire becomes an office. A socialist politics afraid of anti-imperialism becomes management of decline.

The working class does not need mascots or managers. It needs organized anti-imperialist labor power. That means labor politics that does not stop at the warehouse gate. It means workers understanding that Amazon is not just a workplace, Bezos is not just a billionaire, Palestine is not just “foreign policy,” Cuba is not just “complicated,” ICE is not just immigration enforcement, and the Met Gala is not just culture.

It is all one system. They called it ego because they could not call it what it was: Black anti-imperialist labor politics.

Prince Kapone
Excerpted from “They Called It Ego: Jacobin, Chris Smalls,
and the Policing of Black Anti-Imperialist Labor

Weaponized Information
June 5, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
Why Are White Leftists Silent About This? – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, June 10, 2026).
Who’s Afraid of Chris Smalls? – Maximillian Alvarez (The Real News Network, June 8, 2026).
Chris Smalls Is Still Fighting the Bosses – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, June 2, 2026).
“Amazon Is the New Slavery”: Chris Smalls on the Labor Fight of a Lifetime – Sara Franklin (The Nation, June 2, 2026).
A Better World: An Interview with Chris Smalls – Annika Bratton (Publishers Weekly, April 3, 2026).
My Interview with Chris Smalls – Marianne Williamson (Transform, July 31, 2022).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Kshama Sawant on the Real Reason for Jacobin Magazine’s “Hatchet Job” on Chris Smalls
Steven Donziger’s Shout-Out to Chris Smalls
Chris Smalls: We Need to Escape the “Two-Party Plantation”
Quote of the Day – August 5, 2025
U.S. Labor Leader Chris Smalls Joins the Crew of the Handala


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Aligning With the Divine


The human will is a magic power.
When it is purified of selfish desire
and aligned with the Great Architect,
it becomes an unstoppable force of nature.

Franz Hartmann


The will is the most misunderstood faculty in the human being.

In popular thinking, willpower is the capacity to force yourself to do things you do not want to do. To override the body, suppress impulse, push through resistance. This conception of will is not wrong, it is simply shallow. It describes the ego’s crude approximation of something that, in its true form, operates entirely differently.

The esoteric traditions drew a sharp distinction between personal will and what Franz Hartmann, following the Rosicrucian and Theosophical lineage, called alignment with the universal will. The personal will, driven by desire, fear, ambition, the need to prove something, is powerful in the short term and self-defeating in the long. It fights against the current of existence. It exhausts itself in the effort of control. The Bhagavad Gita described this as action bound to ego and result, the kind that generates karma rather than liberation.

What Hartmann was pointing toward was something the Hermetic tradition called theurgy, the alignment of the individual will with the divine intelligence that underlies all form. The Great Architect is not a God to be appeased. It is the ordering principle of the cosmos itself, the logos, what the Stoics called the rational fire running through all things. To align with it is not submission. It is the recognition that the deepest current of your own nature and the current of the universe are not separate.

The alchemical process begins with the purification of the base material. In the work of the will, the base material is selfish desire, not desire itself, which is a form of life-force, but desire contracted around the small self. Calcination burns this away. What remains is will in its pure form: intentional, clear, undivided, moving without friction because it no longer moves against anything.

Jung described the individuation process as the ego learning to serve the Self rather than rule it. The will that has undergone this transformation does not push. It draws.

Source


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Aligning With the Living Light
Mystical Participation
Keeping the Spark Alive
Gifts of Abundance
“Everything Is Saturated With the Sacred”
A Season of Listening
Michael Morwood on the Divine Presence
The Source Is Within You
Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee: Quote of the Day – February 8, 2013
Inayat Khan on Mysticism
The Fountain of Happiness Within
The Alchemy of Happiness
A Light That Will Always Shine
A Living Light
A Perpetual Fire Within
One Wisdom
Awakening and Turning
Trusting the Flow

Image: Artist unknown.


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

“This Is Not a Moment to Be Silent”



Rick Chow shot a 14-year-old Cyrus Carmack Belton in the back for water bottles that he never actually stole. Yes, his life was worth less to this man than a bottle of water. A jury in South Carolina acquitted Chow of Cyrus’ murder.

Not even manslaughter?

Although he has shot people in the past, Chow was acquitted and is a free man today. The state of South Carolina also seems to feel that Cyrus’ life was worth less than a bottle of water.

Meanwhile in Texas, 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony was outnumbered and bullied by White teens at a sporting event when one began to shove him. Karmelo stabbed him and, at 19, has been sentenced to 35 years for murder. He will be my age, 54, when released, will spend the next 35 years doing unpaid labor, and will never regain his voting rights. He has been returned to the slavery his ancestors endured. (That is what incarceration is.)

Not even manslaughter?

Our children are not safe in White towns or White spaces. Anti-Blackness in Asian American and Latin American communities makes those folks’ spaces frequently unsafe. This is why I chose to raise my children in Baltimore. The anti-Blackness in the U.S. puts us in far more danger than anything you might’ve seen on The Wire.

Melanie Hood-Wilson
via social media
June 10, 2026


The real racial sickness in the Karmelo Anthony and Austin Metcalf case is not just that America reflexively sees Black boys as threats. It is that this country has a profound, almost religious inability to recognize white boys as violent, dangerous, deviant, and frightening despite this country’s long history of evidence.

White boys can be hulking, aggressive, entitled, bullying, reckless, and cruel, and still the culture rushes to soften them into “sons,” “athletes,” “good kids,” “troubled teens,” or “boys who made a mistake.” But let a Black boy say, “Don’t touch me,” and suddenly everybody and their mama becomes fluent in menace, intent, and criminal psychology.

The fact is, America has trained itself to see danger in Black fear and innocence in white violence, and that is why so many people cannot even ask whether Karmelo Anthony was afraid without first deciding he must have been the threat. This is a country that keeps pretending white aggression is not dangerous until somebody Black survives it.

Stacey Patton
via social media
June 9, 2026


Kyle Rittenhouse crossed state lines with a rifle, killed two people, and went home free.

Karmelo Anthony was scared and defended himself. He faces life in prison.

Cyrus Carmack-Belton was 14 years old, shot in the back while running away. The jury watched it on video. They still said not guilty.

Same country. Same justice system. Completely different outcomes based on the color of their skin.

We are exhausted. We are heartbroken. And some days, if we are being honest, we feel completely hopeless. Because how many verdicts do we have to survive before something changes?

Constance Carter
via social media
June 9, 2026


Austin Metcalf should be alive. His parents should not have had to bury their son. No one should treat that loss like a side note. A child died at a high school track meet, and that grief is real. But grief does not mean silence. Austin’s death does not mean we have to ignore what Texas did to Karmelo Anthony.

Karmelo did not ask Texas for special treatment. He asked Texas to apply the same law it claims belongs to everyone. He asked a jury to believe that a Black teenager, surrounded in a tense confrontation, touched after warning someone not to touch him, could be scared enough to defend himself. Texas said no. Texas said his fear did not count enough. His panic did not matter enough. His life in that moment was not worth enough.

That is the rot in this case. Not because every self-defense claim should win. Not because every death can be excused. Not because a knife is harmless. A knife is deadly. A stab wound to the chest is deadly. Karmelo used deadly force. That is not the question. The question is whether Texas gives a Black teenager the same benefit of the doubt it gives other people when they say they were scared.

Had the roles been reversed, this country would not be struggling so hard to understand fear. If a white teenager had warned a Black teenager not to touch him, had been touched anyway, had said he was surrounded and scared, half this country would already be calling him a victim. They would call it tragic. They would call it complicated. They would call it self-defense. But when the scared teenager is Black, suddenly everyone becomes a prosecutor. Suddenly every second has to be perfect. Suddenly fear is no longer fear. It is treated like aggression.

Karmelo was convicted of murder and sentenced to 35 years in prison. He was 17 when this happened. His defense said he was smaller, outnumbered, frightened, and reacting in chaos. Prosecutors said this was not fear. They said it was escalation. They said it was murder. The jury accepted that story. Reporting from the courtroom said no Black jurors were seated, and the defense objected to the prosecution’s strikes of Black prospective jurors. The judge let the panel stand.

Self-defense is not a magic word. You do not say it and walk free. The law asks whether a person reasonably believed force was needed right then to protect himself. Deadly force has an even higher burden. But “reasonable” is where the bias hides. Reasonable to whom? Reasonable when the person afraid is white, armed, older, angry, or standing on property? Reasonable when the person afraid is Black, young, cornered, touched, and already treated like the threat? In America, white fear gets treated like evidence. Black fear gets treated like an excuse.

This country has spent generations treating Black children like adults whenever it wants to punish them. Black kids are children when America wants to lecture them, but adults when America wants to cage them. They are old enough to fear, old enough to blame, old enough to throw away, but somehow never young enough to protect. Black childhood comes with conditions. Black innocence can be taken back at any moment. Black fear is treated like a lie before the child even opens his mouth.

Karmelo was not some monster. By the accounts offered by his family and supporters, he was a student-athlete with a 3.7 GPA, a team captain, the oldest of four, a kid who worked real jobs at Foot Locker and H-E-B, and someone with no prior criminal record. That should not have to be said for his fear to matter. But in a country always hunting for a reason to strip Black children of innocence, it matters that even the “good kid” facts were not enough to make him fully human in that courtroom.

And no, the comparison cases do not have to be identical. That is the dodge people use when they do not want to face the pattern. Every case has different facts, different witnesses, different wounds, different judges, and different juries. The point is not that every case is the same. The point is that courts keep finding room for fear, panic, mistakes, confusion, and mercy when certain people claim self-defense. Then a Black defendant asks for the same room, and suddenly there is none.

The cleanest Texas comparison is Belton. Caysen Allison, a white student, stabbed Jose “Joe” Ramirez Jr. during a school bathroom fight. Ramirez died. Allison admitted he stabbed him. His defense said he was scared, being attacked, and feared for his safety. The jury did not convict him of murder. It convicted him of criminally negligent homicide, a lesser charge. The system saw a deadly school stabbing, a self-defense argument, and enough room to avoid the harshest label. He received 10 years. Karmelo received 35.

Then there is Kyle Carruth in Lubbock, a grown white man in a heated confrontation with Chad Read. Carruth got a rifle. Read ended up dead. A special grand jury chose not to indict Carruth on any criminal charge. Outside Texas, Rick Chow, a store owner, chased 14-year-old Cyrus Carmack-Belton after wrongly suspecting him of stealing water. Cyrus was shot in the back. Chow claimed he acted to protect his son. A jury acquitted him. Chow belongs in this argument not because he is white, but because the fear the jury accepted was not the fear of the Black child who ended up dead. These cases are not the same, but they show the same ugly truth. The system knows how to understand fear when the person asking for grace is not a Black teenager.

The Kyle Rittenhouse comparison is not about identical facts. It is about the machine that shows up for certain people. Rittenhouse killed two people and wounded a third, claimed self-defense, and was acquitted. But the verdict was only part of the story. Conservatives raised money for him. Politicians defended him. Media figures turned him into a hero. After his acquittal, he was welcomed onto stages as if killing people made him a spokesman for freedom. That machine does not show up for Black children who say they were scared. It calls them thugs, predators, criminals, animals, and monsters, then digs through their lives for anything that makes throwing them away feel easier.

This is not a demand that every Black defendant be acquitted. It is a demand that Black fear be allowed to exist. It is a demand that a Black teenager’s survival instinct not be treated like a crime by default. It is a demand that the same America that can imagine Kyle Rittenhouse as scared, Kyle Carruth as justified, Rick Chow as protective, and Caysen Allison as negligent instead of murderous stop pretending it cannot imagine Karmelo Anthony as terrified. Black people are told self-defense belongs to everyone until they try to use it. They are told the law is neutral until they ask it to recognize their panic. They are told their children are children until those children need mercy, and then suddenly they are men. America did not deny Karmelo Anthony the right to claim self-defense. It did something colder. It let him say the words, then refused to believe a Black child could mean them.

Tony Pentimalli
“The Color of Fear”
via social media
June 11, 2026


I’ve been sitting with the Karmelo Anthony verdict. As a father of two Black boys, and as someone who has walked alongside countless young Black men at Alcorn, I am grieved.

Karmelo, 19 years old, will spend the next 18+ years in a Texas prison, sentenced by a predominantly white jury after prosecutors systematically struck every Black woman from the jury pool. The judge allowed it. The system called it justice.

Whether you agree with his defense or not, that young man deserved to have his humanity weighed by a jury of his actual peers.

He did not get that. The jury took less than three hours to decide his fate. Draw your own conclusions. But when a jury deliberates that quickly on a case this complex, this racially charged, this consequential it at least raises the question of whether they walked in already knowing what they were going to do.

To be sure, I am praying for the Metcalf family, who lost a son and will grieve that loss for the rest of their lives. Their pain is real and it is sacred.

And I am praying for Karmelo and his mother, who asked for mercy and received 35 years.

This is not a moment to be silent. It is a moment to be honest: our system does not weigh Black lives and white lives on the same scale. Until it does, the work continues.

CJ Rhodes
via social media
June 10, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
South Carolina Jury Finds Store Owner Rick Chow Not Guilty of Murder in Killing of Black Teen Cyrus Carmack Belton – Associated Press via CNN (June 1, 2026).
Karmelo Anthony Found Guilty of the Murder of Austin Metcalf and Sentenced to 35 Years – Adria R Walker (The Guardian, June 9, 2026).
Why the Karmelo Anthony Trial Sparks Broader Debate Over Race and Fairness – Safia Samee Ali (NewsNation, June 9, 2026).
Texas Teen Caysen Allison Found Not Guilty of Murder in Stabbing Death of Fellow Student Jose Luis Ramirez Jr. Killed During Bathroom Brawl – Chris Spargo (People, April 26, 2025).


Yep . . .


When people ask about my politics, I tell them Bernie is as far to the right I am ever willing to go.

– Michael Hurwitz
via social media
June 9, 2026


And, actually, you don't need to “watch this space.” You can see what’s already there by clicking here, here, here, here, and here.



Related Off-site Links:
The Democratic Party: Architects of Cowardice, Accomplices to Fascism – Henry A. Giroux (CounterPunch, September 8, 2025).
Liberals Cannot Stop Authoritarianism by Compromising With It – Radley Balko (The UnPopulist, August 28, 2025).
Why the Democratic Party Can’t Save Us From Trump’s Authoritarianism – Henry A. Giroux (Truthout, August 21, 2017).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
The Time for Illusions Is Over: Henry Giroux on the Democratic Party
David Norton: “The Democratic Party Serves Capital, Not You”
“Elected Democrats Have No Real Interest in Doing What the Base Wants”
Tony Pentimalli on the Fallacy of the “Safe Political Center”


Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Quote of the Day

The fact that Kamala Harris [left] walks around being applauded and convinced she “told us so” instead of being treated like someone who had one job and failed so spectacularly that it will go down in history as one of the greatest calamities in American politics, says everything to me about the rot in the Democrat Party.

There is simply not even a little blip of accountability in this institution. She had one job: earn more electoral votes than Donald Trump. She failed. She failed on a level that is nearly impossible to even comprehend, and all she’s done since then is continue sneering at the people whose votes she alienated, and somehow she’s still welcome to show her face in a political party.

The level of entitlement is just beyond comprehension, and it is *literally* anti-democratic. A view of politics that holds a politician is entitled to votes and if they fail to get them then it’s the voters’ fault is fundamentally hostile to democracy.

Adam Bates
via social media
June 9, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
The Democratic Party: Architects of Cowardice, Accomplices to Fascism – Henry A. Giroux (CounterPunch, September 8, 2025).
Liberals Can’t Confront Authoritarianism – Cyrus Gazdar (The Medium, November 17, 2025).
Why the Democratic Party Can’t Save Us From Trump’s Authoritarianism – Henry A. Giroux (Truthout, August 21, 2017).
Kamala Harris: Still Blaming Everyone Else – Tim Black (Tim Black TV, October 6. 2025).
The Corporate Democrats Delivered Donald Trump – Norman Solomon (Common Dreams, October 21, 2025).
Kamala Harris’s Memoir Shows Exactly Why Her Campaign Flopped – Yasmin Nair (Current Affairs, November 12, 2025).
Kamala Harris Admits Biden Administration Failed GazaNovara Media (November 13, 2025).
Report: Kamala Harris Lost 2024 Elections Over GazaMiddle East Eye, March 12, 2026).
Kamala’s Silence on Israel’s Genocide Helped Hand Power to Trump – Joe Glenton (Canary, February 24, 2026).
It’s the Genocide, Stupid – Michael Arria (Mondoweiss, May 22, 2026).
Wrong Voters, Wrong Message: Progressives’ Autopsy Lays Bare Kamala Harris Failures – David Smith (The Guardian, December 10, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Adam Bates on the Team Blue / Kamala “I Told Ya So” Smugness Tour
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’s Book, 107 Days
Touré F. Reed: “Kamala Harris Didn’t Lose Because of Racism”
Authoritarianism With a Blue Sticker
The Time for Illusions Is Over: Henry Giroux on the Democratic Party
David Norton: “The Democratic Party Serves Capital, Not You”
Mike Figueredo: “Elected Democrats Have No Real Interest in Doing What the Base Wants”
Tony Pentimalli on the Fallacy of the “Safe Political Center”
Genny Harrison on Brian Tyler Cohen’s Interview with Obama
Progressives and Obama
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
The Lamentable Legacy of the Biden/Harris Administration
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in 2024
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
David Sirota: Quote of the Day – January 26, 2021
Progressive Perspectives On an American Coronation
Marianne Williamson: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is Not Enough to Win”
Nick Cruse: “‘Vote Blue No Matter Who’ Is the Privileged Position”
Centrist/Corporatist Democrats Have Just Launched “Left Punching” Season
Yes, Just Imagine
Politics 101


Monday, June 08, 2026

Night Blessing


Night is gathering around you now,
drawing a veil between your spirit
and the noise of the world.
May this darkness become a place of rest,
where your heart no longer needs
to carry everything at once.
May you feel protected tonight,
as if unseen hands
have lit small lanterns around your soul,
keeping watch while you sleep.
May troubling thoughts loosen gently,
like knots easing from a ribbon
left for hours in warm sunlight.
And if the world has felt too loud, too hurried,
or too heavy, may this night hold you
like a quiet room filled with candlelight,
and sweet flower fragrance.
May sleep restore what was worn thin,
may peace settle deeply within you,
and may morning find your spirit
softer, steadier, and fully renewed.



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
November Song
“Ice Luminaries” on the Northside
Reclaiming the “Hour of God”
Here in This Falling Darkness


Sunday, June 07, 2026

Quote of the Day

Yes, while Graham Platner [right] does indeed have enough red flags to cancel a soccer tournament, no one who was silent in 2024 about U.S. support for genocide of Palestinians and *still is* silent about it now, with no contrition, remorse, or apology for that silence, gets to lecture anyone about Graham Platner OR ANYTHING ELSE.

Fix your hearts, and beg for forgiveness, or shut up, and buzz off

James A. Robichaux
via social media
June 7, 2026

Related Off-site Links:
Graham Platner’s Billionaire-Bashing Message Resonates in Maine Senate Race, Despite ControversiesDemocracy Now! (June 8, 2026).
Graham Platner vs. the Machine – Andrew Perez (Zeteo, June 8, 2026).
Platner Opens Up 9-Point Lead Even After Pro-Collins PAC Spends Millions on Negative Ads – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, May 27, 2026).
“We Are Coming for You, Susan Collins”: 1,700+ Rally with Graham Platner and Bernie Sanders Against Oligarchy in Maine – Jon Queally and Julia Conley (Common Dreams, May 26, 2026).


UPDATES: Maine Votes as Scandal-Ridden Graham Platner Seeks Senate Primary Win – David Smith (The Guardian, June 9, 2026).
Graham Platner Wins Democratic Nomination to Challenge Susan Collins in November – Steve Mistler (Maine Public, June 9, 2026).
Bernie Sanders’ Candidates Just Keep Winning – William Steakin, Lisa Kashinsky and Andrew Howard (Politico, June 10, 2026).


Friday, June 05, 2026

Kshama Sawant on the Real Reason for Jacobin Magazine’s “Hatchet Job” on Chris Smalls


I’m currently reading Chris Smalls’s recently released memoir, When the Revolution Comes: A Fight for the Future of the Working Class. It just so happens that within days of the book’s release, Jacobin magazine published what many people consider a hit piece on Smalls.

I appreciate Kshama Sawant’s response . . .

Jacobin magazine, the principal mouthpiece of the leadership of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), released a hit piece on Amazon labor leader Chris Smalls.

It could be legit if Jacobin had had an honest critique of Smalls to clarify what class struggle unionist leaders should be doing. But the article is not that at all.

It’s a hatchet job against a leading labor activist who has refused to toe the line of the DSA and the business unionist labor leaders who give cover to the so-called progressive Democrats and to the Democratic Party as a whole, despite shocking betrayals by them against working people.

The crux of the real reason why Jacobin went after Smalls is contained in this sentence: “[Smalls] blames the two-party system for the state of the American labor movement . . .”

Smalls is spot on about this and the need to break from the Democratic and Republican parties. We need a new party of the working class.

The DSA leadership, on the other hand, sees giving cover to the Democratic Party as job number one. The Democratic Party is the party under whom the genocide in Gaza began and which engineered the breaking of the railroad workers’ strike — both under President Joe Biden. ALL Democrats in the House, including DSA star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) voted to break the strike. The Democratic Party is one of the two most powerful capitalist parties in the world, and in no way represents working people or the oppressed.

Business unionist labor leaders are those who have made peace with the capitalist system and are driven by protecting their careers, which means placating the bosses, not organizing the rank and file against the bosses to win substantive working-class victories. Refusing to fight the bosses also means aligning with the parties of the bosses, like the Democratic Party.

The overwhelming majority of the labor leadership today is business unionist, with some crucial exceptions like Smalls. We need a reckoning in the labor movement.

Brother Smalls has put his life on the line for the anti-war movement in solidarity with the Palestinian people against the Israeli state’s genocide bankrolled by both the Democratic and Republican parties. Smalls went on a Gaza aid flotilla carrying food, baby formula, diapers and medicine in the context of catastrophic levels of mass starvation in Gaza. The flotilla was attacked by the Israeli military, who physically assaulted Smalls, and kicked and choked him.

In contrast, AOC has voted for the Iron Dome which is part of the Israeli state’s genocidal apparatus.

For having the temerity to expose AOC and other self-described “progressive” politicians, Smalls is called “narcissistic” by Jacobin [left], a term the magazine’s editors were apparently forced to retract after they got huge amounts of flak on all social media.

Personal attacks and character assassination like in this case are often used by the political establishment’s spokespeople as proxy for their real objections – in this case, the threat they feel from Smalls openly calling out the Democratic Party’s actual role.

The only way of rebuilding a militant labor movement is to pose a concrete threat to both the Democratic and Republican parties, which in turn requires a challenge to the business unionist labor leadership. That is the basis on which I won the nation’s highest minimum wage and the Amazon Tax during the decade I was the sole socialist on the Seattle City Council.

I am now running as an independent revolutionary socialist against genocidal Democrat Adam Smith. I am calling for an end to all military aid to Israel and an end to all weapons and tech for genocide and imperialist war.

– Kshama Sawant
via social media
June 5, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
Chris Smalls Is Still Fighting the Bosses – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, June 2, 2026).
“Amazon Is the New Slavery”: Chris Smalls on the Labor Fight of a Lifetime – Sara Franklin (The Nation, June 2, 2026).
A Better World: An Interview with Chris Smalls – Annika Bratton (Publishers Weekly, April 3, 2026).
My Interview with Chris Smalls – Marianne Williamson (Transform, July 31, 2022).

UPDATES: Who’s Afraid of Chris Smalls? – Maximillian Alvarez (The Real News Network, June 8, 2026).
Why Are White Leftists Silent About This? – Sabrina Salvati (Sabby Sabs, June 10, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Steven Donziger’s Shout-Out to Chris Smalls
Chris Smalls: We Need to Escape the “Two-Party Plantation”
Quote of the Day – August 5, 2025
U.S. Labor Leader Chris Smalls Joins the Crew of the Handala