Political Writer/Cartoonist Ted Rall Predicts the End of the World as We Know It
| Photo by Erik Bojnansky |
| Writer, cartoonist, and activist Ted Rall |
Rall is not a fortune teller. He doesn't claim to have any unique insight into Armageddon from the New Testament's Book of Revelations or any other religious texts, and he isn't receiving prophecies from God. Rall is a writer and a political cartoonist whose controversial illustrations and columns have been published in newspapers such as the L.A. Times, The New York Times and The Washington Post.
He is also a self-described Marxist who blames global free market capitalism for causing global warming and oppressing most of the human race. In recent years, Rall has advocated for the overthrow of the government, both on his blog and in his latest book, published in 2010, titled The Anti-American Manifesto. His main argument for a revolution: Better to replace a decaying system before it implodes on its own. Otherwise, left-wing activists should be prepared to organize when society starts to buckle.
"Things are happening very fast," Rall said last night at his event at Sweat Records. "I think the system is headed toward collapse anyway."
But before that happens, Rall wants to get the participants of the Occupy Wall Street movement, which the 48-year-old cartoonist called the most "important political movements of my lifetime," to decide whether they want to reform the system, or replace it -- before OWS fizzles out completely. "I don't have another 40 years to wait for something else this cool to pop up," Rall said of Occupy. "And I don't think the planet does either."
| Photo by Erik Bojnansky |
| Ted Rall and Stephanie McMillan |
But since getting that new car via revolution means replacing one ruling class with another, such an action tends to be very, very messy, Rall admitted. "There are big negatives [to revolution]," he said. "A lot of stuff gets broke; people get killed. It is brutal, violent, and usually bloody."
That's why, Rall said, he was once content with trying to reform the system as a liberal Democrat. "I worked for Democratic presidential candidates like Mondale and Dukakis," he said. But as the economy worsened, Rall became more radical. In April of 2009, Rall was laid off from his editor job at United Media, a comic strip syndication service. The final straw was when President-elect Barack Obama failed to name even a "token liberal" to his economic council in December 2008. It was then that Rall said he realized that the system has deteriorated beyond repair.
"They can't save themselves," he said of America's corporations and the uber-wealthy. "That is why they are in trouble. It would be so easy to talk their way out or pass a few laws, but they have painted themselves into a corner.... They know it is coming. At this point, they are in the looting phase. It is like Hitler in the bunker. They know."
| Photo by Erik Bojnansky |
| Rall speaks to would-be revolutionaries |
"We don't have much of a chance," Rall admitted to the Leftist audience. "The Right has been prepared for this for a long time. If anyone senses a power vacuum, it will be them.... They are paranoid, crazy, and armed to the teeth."
But if reformers and radicals organize, it is possible that a new and improved society will return. "It is going to be so fluid," Rall said. "If we are smarter we are going to win. If not, they are going to win."
But what should replace our current system of representative democracy? Rall holds out hope for a true communist system that guarantees the equality of everyone, but says whatever arises should be up to the masses. "It is not about Ted Rall, it is about all of us. We're going to fight it out, argue it out," he said.
And that is what is neat about the Occupy Wall Street movement, Rall argued. Besides liberals and radicals, there are also Ron Paul supporters, libertarians and even some Tea Party activists. In fact, Rall believes that the Left should reach out to the Tea Party.
"Personally, I think there is a lot of common ground with some people on the right. The Tea Party knows it is harder to make a living, for some people to work hard and make their fair share," Rall said. "There is a vague sense of injustice in their analysis."
Unfortunately, Tea Partiers are also quick to blame the poor and illegal immigrants, he said. "They are blaming the 99 percent or the lower 99 percent," Rall surmised. "And they should be blaming the one percent."
--Erik Bojnansky
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