I have been thinking lately about the plurality of meanings
for the word conviction.
One reading of the word leads to images of quiet strength
and courage. Rosa Parks, for example. I was pleased to learn—finally—that her
act was not a snap decision of human weariness winning out over senseless laws
but the fruit of the long growth of the nonviolent Civil Rights Movement, of
which she was a vital part. Wonderful that she sat, better still that such a
force and solid movement of humane ethics and organization stood behind her
actions.
I find it suspicious that I was taught, essentially, that
she just “got tired” and sat down. Technically, that is a true statement, but
the full story of what she was tired of wasn’t made explicit. That my education
divorced her actions from premeditation, from her convictions, from the hard
truth and long hours of preparation and planning and logistics and harnessed
passion of a group of people who were compelled to break laws to obtain a
better, more just existence. We assume, I think, that the legality of a law
supplants the morality of the law. It takes a deep knowledge of one’s own
truths, and an impressive amount of courage, to tell the difference. To me,
this is the definition of conviction that pulls my best intentions back into my
bones and allows for forward movement.
But, blink and read the word again and the images lead to
courts and prisons and Australia and Abel Magwitch. For those who aren’t
familiar, Abel Magwitch is a strangely glorious character from Dickens’s “Great
Expectations.” He is a convict (embezzlement, debts, attempted murder, chained
to a ship, etc.) whom Pip helps, out of fear of this wild, shackled man who
attacks him in a graveyard. When Pip grows up, Magwitch returns and Dickensian
high jinks ensue. I laughed out loud through “Great Expectations” so don’t want
to spoil another word of it, but Magwitch’s morality is no simple matter.
I freely agree that there are horrible people who are guilty
of terrible things. I’m not trying to dismiss all criminals and convicts as
misunderstood by exploring the word conviction. But I do begin to wonder what
is the relationship of truth and action and law and crime and punishment that
meet in this word.
Last week, I mentioned the duality of conviction to a
friend. It was in the context of an act of protest regarding climate change
that he had participated in. (Specifically, he and another man used a small
boat to block a large boat full of coal from docking and unloading at a coal
burning power plant. Details about this are at: www.coalisstupid.org). Their action
falls into the slightly murky territory of civil disobedience, although it
remains unclear what—if any—laws were broken by their actions and it all sounds
quite civil and obedient, really. I said, “I’m impressed with your conviction,”
and meant the personal truth and active reckoning that finds a gap between
legality and morality.
We talked over the two meanings, and then he mentioned a
third, that conviction also means “to sit quietly and thoughtfully with oneself
and to convict oneself of living in a condition of immorality and participating
in a great wrong—or even evil. As if there were some higher moral and
internal judge, and the truth of how to be a good person in the world were a
code of law, and you must try yourself and you find your self a part of an
immoral system.”
To follow the chain here—and chains seems illustratively
appropriate for this conversation—convictions arise from an internal
recognition, which lead to external actions, which can lead to reactions from
the wider world and its legal articulations of a society’s moral code and
ethics. Once you have found yourself part of the system, you must work to
change either yourself or the system or both. Thoreau says: “things do not
change, we do change.” But, we can also
change things. And should.
With my sunny and Romantic ideas that the laws of this
country were based on the inner convictions of a group of very flawed, but very
well-intentioned and thoughtful and intelligent men, I am upset at the gaps
where our society’s laws—the legal articulation of our priorities and morals
and ethics—seem to have grown so distant from our humanity, from the places
where convictions originally arise.
I believe in good governance, in just laws that protect,
educate, and assist people in their lives, liberties, and pursuits of
happiness. I further think that everyone has a right to be governed thusly, and
for all voices to be heard in a representative governing body. As near as I can
tell, this is what we are supposed to be here in the United States.
But we’re not. Somehow, business and corporate interests
crept into the gap between our personal convictions and our laws. In the last
month alone gun-lobby money has stopped popularly demanded legislation
surrounding gun control; our Supreme Court sided with Monsanto regarding the
Indiana farmer who purchased second-run seeds that contained Monsanto’s
patented GMO seeds from a source other than Monsanto and is deemed to have
stolen Monsanto’s property; and the Keystone Pipeline continues to be
considered by our representative government to be a good and viable project,
despite the obvious detriment to many lives, liberties, and pursuits of happiness
of citizens that the pipeline would entail. This morning I heard that Gina
McCarthy, who is in the confirmation process to become the next director of the
EPA, told senators that the EPA has no plans to limit emissions from existing
power plants.
Without becoming a screaming harpy, a one-trick pony,
regarding the constant issue of profit over people, I cannot say enough how
horrible all these things seem. I find it criminal that our government guards
corporate concerns above the lives and well being of its citizens. Life—we’re
complicit in a system that values guns over innocent life. Liberty—we’re
letting corporations dictate the seeds a farmer can grow, by extension, the
food we eat. Pursuit of happiness—we are sitting by as our silence destroys the
planet with more fossil fuels and power plant emissions. Many of my own sources of
greatest joy and happiness are threatened with certain extinction by fire or
flood. So are yours. All of these actions are legal, perhaps, but they are not
moral and they are not kind. We must bring those words into greater alignment.
I have sat, and I have listened to my heart. I have read a
great deal, and I have traveled widely and kept my eyes and mind open. I know
in my bones some of what I am complicit in, responsible for, and I do not like
to be part of such horror. I want to change. I want to be and do better by this
planet and its people. I may know just enough to get myself into trouble, but
what is at stake is worth making a little trouble over. I have convicted myself
to live within the bounds of an ethos and morality that respects, champions
people and our battered, salvaged, beloved planet over corporate profits. I get
the sense that it’s a life sentence, and that there may be some hard labor
involved in living striving to remake the world along these lines, but this is
my conviction.
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