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(en) US,Santa Cruz, media, Utah Phillips Campaigns Saturday at Kuumbwa

From Dan Clore <clore@columbia-center.org>
Date Fri, 10 Jan 2003 03:04:22 -0500 (EST)


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By NANCY REDWINE - sentinel staff writer
If U. Utah Phillips is ever elected president, he promises
to do nothing.
"I promise I will sit in the White House, scratch my butt
and shoot pool," said Phillips, storyteller, archivist,
folksinger, peace activist, Grand Duke of Hobos and
candidate on the Sloth and Indolence ticket. 

Is the man, who performs Saturday night at the Kuumbwa, as
lazy as he claims? Phillips says he learned the art of
storytelling to avoid work. He just wants the rest of us to
get out and change the world ourselves.

Telling stories and singing songs of workers and hobos,
Phillips has been spreading the message of spirited
self-determination and social change for more than 30 years.
Though congestive heart failure has slowed his touring
schedule in recent years, he still manages to raise a ruckus
closer to home.

Phillips took time to talk to us from Nevada City about
anarchy and exaggeration.

What do your stories and songs have to offer us now?

Utah Phillips: For many years I sought out elders who had
lived lives of struggle. Many were immigrant loggers or
miners who had committed their lives to struggle. 

I have sat with them in small rooms and flop houses on skid
row. When they gave me their stories, they gave me the
substance of their lives.

They were extraordinary lives that can?t be lived again.
They were passionate and made a commitment for which there
is no language. 

At some point I realized what I had inherited and decided to
put that into the world. I become their voice. 

The question that comes out of the stories is: "You young
people. with all you have, how can you do the same?"

How can we take those examples and apply them in such a
different world?

Phillips: It?s a different world, but it?s the same in many
ways. The boss is still the boss.

People who work for wages are in the working class, whether
they?re a logger or work in a fast-food restaurant. 

People in the working class have something in common,
whether you?re a ditch digger or a college professor, and
that is class consciousness. How you act on that is class
struggle.

Some people say that class struggle is over, but it isn?t.
It?s been going on for thousands of years, and it goes on
every day when you go to work.

Are your stories all true?

Phillips: Most of the stories I?ve collected are really tall
tales, wild exaggerations, fabrications - and I?ve made up
my share. I?m a storyteller and a folk singer. 

There isn?t anything more lethal than an evening of
political music. I can?t just do an evening of
class-conscious music, so I tell stories.

What?s become important to me, particularly if I?m going to
leave home and go some distance to sing, there ought to be
something I want to get at. 

And right now that has to do with war and oil.

Are you still learning songs and stories?

Phillips: I always make songs. It?s like breathing. 

Take for instance the people found dead in a grain car in
Denison, Iowa. They were migrants from a small village in
Mexico. 

I look around for a song about that. If I find one, I learn
it and sing it. If it?s just a story, I?ll turn it into a
song. I never run out of things to make songs about. 

Stories are a little more difficult. With this congestive
heart failure, I can?t get out as much. Before I got sick, I
was visiting 120 cities a year and talking to people. Now
I?m going out of town only once or twice a month, so I feel
marooned. 

So you need to talk to more people in the towns you visit?

Phillips: With coming down to Santa Cruz, I?ve been in
training to give a serious burst of energy. 

I want to learn more about the Homeless Garden, and find out
if the Anarchist Cafe is still happening. 

I want to check in on Free Radio Berkeley and get together
with the Hobos From Hell, those great freight train riders.

So I store up energy like a battery. Go into training. I?m
real careful about my diet. I get plenty of sleep and
exercise and go to cardiac rehab class at the hospital. 

Are you gearing up for your presidential campaign?

Phillips: Campaigning would be antithetical. 

It?s really the campaign of You for President. Elect
yourself to be president of the United States of You. 

You can do things cheaper and better than they can by
forming voluntary combinations with other people, and
getting the work of the world done without boss and without
state. That?s what anarchy is about.

I?m working with a young people?s group called Youth Against
Whatever?s Next. YAWN. We?re getting ready for the next
elections.

Anarchy?s a pretty misunderstood concept these days.

Phillips: Oh, it has been since 1886 and the Haymarket Riot
in Chicago. That movement was the beginning of the fight for
the eight-hour day. It was an anarchist rally and someone
threw a bomb, but they never found out who. 

Since then, the image of the anarchist has been the guy with
the bushy beard with the round bomb with the fuse sticking
out. A lot of people think that anarchy means chaos. But
anarchy is the exact opposite. 

The main struggle I have with young anarchists is that they
assume anarchy means "you can?t tell me what to do," when in
fact it means "you?ve got to learn to tell yourself what to
do."

If you assert the right and ability to make just and humane
decisions in your life - and if, when you blow it, you look
at it as a chance to change - then you?re an anarchist.

Contact Nancy Redwine atnredwine@santa-cruz.com.

If you go

WHAT: Utah Phillips in concert.

WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Saturday.

WHERE: Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz.

TICKETS: $21 plus service charges. Available at EtcEtcEtc
Antiques or online at snazzyproductions.com.

DETAILS: 479-9421.


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