|

Essays Pagan Activism & Leadership
|
Live your
beliefs & you can turn the world around.
-----Henry David Thoreau, Unitarian Mystic and Activist
|
|
No Frames
|
The Trees and the Axe, Aesop
Iraqi
Minorities Face Eradication
Inanna, Mother of the Iraqi People
GreenViews: How 1% of us control the Nation, by
Lowell McFarland
Why Pagans Need
to Come Out of the Broomcloset, by Sophia Pharou
Reaching Left While Holding Onto Our Rights, by Don Chaote
Verbal
Weapons for the Democrats, by KC McGuire
If at first you
don't secede...
Note to
the Left
Hand: Here's What the Right Is Doing, by Khrysso Heart LeFey
Liberals Reclaim Morality, Wm.
Sinkford
Democrats
Needed & Need a Religious/Spiritual Left: The Politics of Meaning, By
Rabbi Lerner
Protest is Good for You, By Donna Henes
Is the Market Moral?: A Dialogue on Religion, Economics & Justice
Ralph
Reed and the Six Mind-Tools, by
Ed Hubbard
I
was asked to spy, by Amitai Etzioni
Pagans and Politics, by Michael Urban
|
|
The
Trees and the Axe
----- Aesop
A MAN
came into a forest and asked the Trees to provide him a handle for his axe.
The Trees consented to his request and gave him a young ash-tree. No sooner
had the man fitted a new handle to his axe from it, than he began to use it
and quickly felled with his strokes the noblest giants of the forest. An old
oak, lamenting when too late the destruction of his companions, said to a
neighboring cedar, "The first step has lost us all. If we had not given up
the rights of the ash, we might yet have retained our own privileges and
have stood for ages." Moral: We need
each other. Support the institutions that support your values!
|
|
GreenViews:
Pagan Commentaries on
the News
|
|
Iraqi Religious Minorities Face Eradication
|
|
Press Release (adapted) from
Minority Rights Group International
Iraqi Minorities Face
Eradication
"Minority groups in Iraq are facing "desperate conditions"," a barrage of
attacks" and the threat of being "eradicated" from their homeland.
In a report published on Monday, the London-based Minority Rights Group
International calls on the Iraqi government to promote the political
participation of religious and ethnic minorities."
"They have also faced "forced conversions to Islam under the threat of
death, rape and forced marriage".
Minorities in the country, including civic leaders and children, have in
addition been the target of abductions, ransoming and murder."
"Subject to a barrage of attacks, kidnappings and threats from all sides,
some communities which have lived in Iraq for two thousand years now face
extinction."
Minority Rights Group International:
http://www.minorityrights.org/
|
EDITORIAL:
From Bad to Worse for Iraqi's Religious Minorities
Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq was probably the most
secular of all Arab/Muslim countries. As the reports indicate, even under
his Baathist dictatorship, 2,000 year old communities were maintained.
It is possible that these minorities being referred to
include many Aboriginal, Atheist, B'Hai, Zoroastrian, and Pagan Iraqis. We
must do more to assist Aboriginals, Atheists and Pagans all over the world
to have crucial universal freedom of beliefs (or non-beliefs).
Loch Sloy!
Tuan Today
"Tuan MacCarrill/MacParthalon, Forever the Celtic story!"
Lowell McFarland <lowell@optonline.net>
NOTE:
Even though America Broke it and now owns it - to paraphrase former US
Secretary of State Powell - America has only accepted about 400 Iraqi
refugees out of the millions that are fleeing Iraq and flooding neighboring
countries. |
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2007
7:36 MECCA TIME, 4:36 GMT
Iraq minorities face 'eradication'
About 30 per cent of Iraqi minorities are seeking refuge in various
countries around the world [Reuters]
Minority groups in Iraq are facing "desperate conditions"," a barrage of
attacks" and the threat of being "eradicated" from their homeland.
In a report published on Monday, the London-based Minority Rights Group
International calls on the Iraqi government to promote the political
participation of religious and ethnic minorities.
It also called on the international community, and not just neighbouring
Middle Eastern countries, to share the growing burden of refugees fleeing
the war-torn country.
The group reports that "chaos has ensued" since a US-led coalition overthrew
then-Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.
"Iraq's minority communities are living in desperate conditions that are
going ignored and unaddressed inside Iraq and in the international arena,"
the report said.
Suffering
Iraq's minority groups have, according to the report, suffered through the
destruction and defacement of their religious buildings and the mass murder
of their congregations.
They have also faced "forced conversions to Islam under the threat of
death, rape and forced marriage".
Minorities in the country, including civic leaders and children, have in
addition been the target of abductions, ransoming and murder.
Mark Lattimer, the group's director, said: "Every day we hear news about the
carnage in Iraq, yet the desperate situation of minority communities is
barely reported.
"Subject to a barrage of attacks, kidnappings and threats from all sides,
some communities which have lived in Iraq for two thousand years now face
extinction."
Though Iraq is dominated by three major groups, Sunni and Shia Muslims, and
Kurds, a tenth of the country's approximately 27 million people are
religious or ethnic minorities.
"Immediate protection for these minorities and adequate consideration and
consultation with them on their future role in the new Iraq is essential if
their voices are not to be lost," the report said.
It also noted that a "huge exodus" of Iraq's minorities is taking place,
citing figures from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
which showed that minorities made up about 30 per cent of the 1.8 million
Iraqis seeking refuge in various countries around the world.
Source: Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera invites you to e-mail this article.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/DD9493F7-EE48-4FE9-BB86-17DC3A1770AE.
htm
|
Inanna:
Mother of the Iraqi Peoples

Babylon in the land now known as Iraq was once the
greatest civilization in the world. Many priceless Pagan artifacts -- some
never photographed -- were lost during the days of "shock and awe" because
the antiquities were not guarded by American troops. This was a crime not only against the Iraqi peoples,
but against Pagans everywhere.
cl, editor.
|
GreenViews: Power & Abdication
-- How 1% Control the Nation
|
How 1% of us control the nation
W.F. Walker Johanson
... How on earth has this small group of 1 percent taken over the country
(and much of the rest of the world, as well)?
As Khrushchev said at the U.N. (way back in those days): "We will bury
you!" But he added that it wouldn't come from without . it would
come from within.
Ta-dah! He was right.
These high school friends - and ones just like them from progressive,
suburban, upscale high schools up and down each coast - went on to become
the college professors, journalists, foreign service officers (at the
State Department, the CIA and elsewhere), Capitol Hill functionaries and
the behind-the-scene leaders of the Democrat Party.
And while the rest of America has just tumbled along - going to school,
getting married, having kids, raising families, going to work, going to
church, watching TV, playing sports, enjoying life as Americans - these
people have been living in a genuine "parallel universe."
Just consider the following handful of examples:
Look at any of your children's K-thru-college textbooks.
Not only are there not-so-well-hidden messages about how America is unfair
to the poor, still racist and bullies the rest of the world, but even the
situational examples used in Math and Science problems are about "global
warming," or "over population," or "AIDS."
"I can only surmise that in this "parallel universe" in which these old
high school friends of mine are living there is no evil.
There is no God.
There is no right and wrong.
They see no value in traditional marriage, nor in being faithful to one's
spouse. "
|
EDITORIAL
by
Lowell McFarland:
This article was selected, not just because the writer is from my home town,
Westport, CT, or that he a financial manager of the Dumbarton Group
(apparently translated as the Parthalon ((MacFarlane)) Fort in Scotland),
but because of its seemingly "loser" message relative to current events and
the possibilities of a better future for Pagans.
Conservatives, now that the Iraq war has been reduced to its elements
concerning whether Saudi Arabia or Iran will annex oil-rich Iraq (Iran is
winning!), now that less than 2% of Americans own over 50% of our wealth,
now that 12 years of conservative mismanagement has collapsed and the
subpoenas are about to fly, now that the election has thrown the bums (many
of them) out, conservatives are rushing to blame America's failures on
stealthy liberals, progressives and moderates.
Frist and Delay are even claiming that had there been 7 more conservatives
in the Senate and 30 more "true" conservatives in the House, America would
still be the land of milk-and-honey!
A major problem is that religious/social conservatives and rich fiscal
conservatives are at each others throat about who deceived who and caused
the crash.
Now, with wide understanding that things are going to get much rougher for
all of them in America's more populist mood, articles like this, blaming
some stealthlike eastern high schoolers, etc., for taking over the country,
abound.
While these revisionist articles will continue endlessly, the sudden
change of America into more of a populist mood, with religious conservatives
losing so badly, with Pagans being one of the most populist religions in
America, has to benefit us.
But, there will be little direct benefits to Pagans, if we continue to
deny our numbers, avoid national congressing and refuse to promote national
and regional public spokespeople.
PS. Westport now does not seem to be the Westport he describes. It now is
highly conservative with property values ruling all. Police, firemen and
town workers cannot afford to live in town. Westport was made famous by its
artists, but no young artists can afford to move here and no nude art is
allowed in the town's art collection. Westport's artistic tradition will
permanently end with this generation. Many question what the Westport
schools are teaching, beyond "...how to be a millionaire by thirty!"
Loch Sloy!
Tuan Today
"Tuan MacCarrill/MacParthalon, Forever the Celtic story! |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
In the last few years, and since November in particular, the
Religious Right has gained a great deal of influence over our lives in
America. In their wake come new laws -- ones restricting access to
birth control and HIV information, anti-welfare resolutions that seem
to target women specifically, and restrictions on electronic
communication. These laws were all passed on the basis of needing to
protect 'morality' and the American family. Emboldened by their
success in Washington, fundamentalists now are pushing for amendments
to allow prayer in the schools and `vouchers' that will funnel tax
money into parochial schools. On May 17, Newt Gingrich stood next to
Ralph Reed on national television in the Capitol - yes, the Capitol -
and promised that the Republican Party would push the Christian
Coalition's ``Contract With the American Family'' through Congress.
Claiming that America is a ``Christian Nation'', Pat Robertson has
said on more than one occasion that his goal is an America guided by
Christian values - values he himself has defined.
These extremists do not represent the opinion of mainstream
Christianity - but they have been allowed to wield a great deal of
power, mostly because of the apathy and ignorance on the part of
voters. Unlike most American citizens, unlike many Pagans,
fundamentalist candidates can rest assured that `their' people will go
to the polls to vote for them. The result, if allowed to go unchecked,
will be a nation where fundamentalist Christianity is a
state-sanctioned religion, and opposing lifestyles will be penalized,
if not outright illegal!
The Case of Iron Oak
I will make this summary brief, since the case is well-publicized
in the Pagan community. The High Priest and Priestess of Iron Oak, a
legal church with a separate building for public activities in
Melbourne, Florida, had their celebrations at home interrupted
repeatedly by the officials in Palm Bay, the city where the high
Priestess lived. They were accused of violating zoning laws, running a
church in an area not zoned for church activity. All for celebrations
held six times a year on their own property! The zoning officials
tried to hold the regulations over their heads, even when local
Christian ministers defended them, saying that they had held weekly
services at their homes unmolested for years. The zoning board, once
it heard all the evidence, decided in Iron Oak's favor unanimously.
The officials involved, however, threatened to appeal the decision,
but subsequently backed down. Iron Oak, afraid that such tactics will
be used on it again, is now in the process of taking the city to
Federal Court for what it rightly views as harassment on religious
grounds. Even if they win in federal court, the Priest and Priestess
have suffered financial losses. They have had to mortgage their home,
and are over $20,000 in debt due to legal costs. How many of us could
suffer such a blow?
Laws were selectively, and not even deservedly, enforced on a group
that the officials involved disapproved of. In many cities, especially
those in conservative areas or the Bible Belt, the law is dished out
with a biased hand where minority religions are concerned. `Freedom of
religion' will only exist for Christians in a fundamentalist-dominated
America.
Custody Battles
Pagan parents have often been threatened with the loss of their
children. At the time of the initial decision of the city zoning board
in Florida in Iron Oak's favor, there were four pending custody cases
reported in Florida involving Pagan parents. In Ohio and Rhode Island,
two women had their foster children removed shortly after it was
learned that they were Pagan.
The 'public stigma' argument the Virginia Supreme Court recently
used to relieve lesbian Sharon Bottoms of her son lends an even more
chilling tone to to such cases: will other courts, following
Virginia's lead, soon use the same argument to justify the removal of
children from Pagan parents?
Attacks on Sexual Freedoms
Since the fall of the `Evil Empire' (i.e. the USSR) in the late
`80s, fundamentalist leaders have had to find a new way to generate
fear in their followers to ensure a continued flow of cash and
devotion. Their new scapegoat? Homosexuals! With the release of the
now-infamous film The Homosexual Agenda, it became good business to
paint gays as the greatest threat to the American family - and ``God's
people''. Robertson even blamed the earthquakes in San Francisco on
the tolerance offered homosexuals there! Portrayed as child molesters,
diseased, and mentally disturbed, hate crimes have risen dramatically
against gays in the last six years.
The threat goes deeper, however. Initiatives have been filed in
states like Washington and Colorado to recriminalise sodomy and deny
Lesbigays any sort of protection against discrimination! These actions
have succeeded in some places - striking down legislations already in
place. Lesbigays have lost protections they once had!
Other targets involve a push on the Coalition's part to penalize
adultery and premarital sex. Pagan handfastings would not count in
their reasoning, and polyamory would definitely be an offense. Public
information and funding for birth control and HIV protection would be
cut off, to enforce that sex they did not approve of had
`consequences'. Finally, in their `Contract With the American Family',
buried inside the `Privatizing the Arts' section, they call for the
Legal Services Corporation (legal assistance for the poor) to be
funded by private donations rather than tax money, because it assists
poor couples in divorces. Thus, private organizations (such as church
charities) could deny funding for legal assistance when they
disapproved of its goal, and the poor would have no recourse. This
would sentence battered women to abused lives, enforce loveless
relationships, and deny the people involved the right to direct their
personal lives.
There is no danger to civil harmony in these activities - they are
merely 'sinful' by Judeo-Christian standards. But our religion does
not share these standards. The majority of Pagans view all forms of
love, sexual or otherwise, as a gift from the Goddess and the God,
sacred and to be respected. They also view personal relationships as a
private matter, with adults capable of deciding for themselves what is
right for their lives. Making one religious group's moral standards
into American law is a violation of the separation of church and
state. And there is no other excuse for these proposed laws and
penalties but the fact that these activities are considered wrong by
Judeo-Christian standards.
The Power of Pagans
Many mainstream and eclectic Christians also support equal rights
and fair treatment for Pagans and Lesbigays, but the Christian
Coalition and similar groups have ignored voices within their own
faith in their quest to impose their punitive views on everyone. As
Pagans, however, we can make a difference: by challenging these
impositions on the grounds that these laws reflect the governmental
sponsorship of one religion's standards, and that our religion does
not have the same values! Furthermore, the persecution of Pagans, or
other non-Christians for that matter, constitutes religious
discrimination! By calling attention to cases of harassment and
asserting our rights as Pagans and followers of a valid religion, we
can benefit not only ourselves, but non-Pagans as well.
What's the Problem, Then?
Unlike the members of the Christian Coalition, however, we Pagans
have few national ties. In fact, the energies of many Pagan groups are
wasted on internal squabbles, rather than being used to protect our
way of life from people wanting to reintroduce Christian prayer into
the schools under the pretense of "student-initiated'' group prayers,
cities like Palm Bay breaking up Pagan celebrations, and groups trying
to strip us of any protection against discrimination by claiming it is
"freedom of religion" that justifies individual employers and
landlords, not just churches, in their denial of jobs and housing to
Pagans and Gays. We have stood apart from political action, believing
that politics is a "game" to be avoided. This belief must be discarded
for our very survival. The players of these "games" are using our
lives as bargaining chips.
Unfortunately, our people are often viewed by society at large as a
group of 'kooks,' because, as a group, we are so rarely visible. We do
not back our spokespeople when they address the public, and we do not
publicly come out in support of other Pagans when they are threatened.
Most of us hide what we are, and thus the public continues to consider
Pagans as people who worship the devil and sacrifice babies.
Anti-abortionists have even claimed that witches view abortion as a
form of child sacrifice! When no one publicly challenges such
assertions, should we be surprised that the public at large mistrusts
us?
'Coming out of the broom-closet' may sound scary, but it is the
only way to ensure our survival in a country teetering on the brink of
theocracy. Unless we act now, we will have no voice at all when the
Congress debates the measures Ralph Reed and the Coalition have
proposed, nor in the 1996 presidential election, with a large
percentage of the candidates involved seeking the CC's endorsement.
They recognize the CC as the political powerhouse it is, with a
guaranteed group of voters that will vote for whomever Reed and Pat
Robertson tell them to. Our pleas will be ignored, regarded as invalid
and unimportant at best, and with with hatred and opposition at worst.
The result? A society where our children can be taken from us with
little recourse on our part, where we will be forced to listen to
Christian prayers in silence at public events, where our tax money
will go to schools run by the very people who oppress us, where,
unless we are reasonably well-heeled, we will be unable to obtain
birth control or legal aid in leaving abusive spouses. Instead, we
will have to turn to Christian-run charities for the latter, who will
have the power to decide if they approve of our actions. It will also
be one in which sexual practices viewed as 'immoral' by a small but
influential group will be made illegal for everyone. And, as the case
of Iron Oak demonstrates, charges of religious discrimination will be
upheld for Christians only in many places.
Things you can do:
- Write your local legislators and state
senators, expressing your
disapproval of measures promoting public or school prayer, and
vouchers of tax money for parochial schools. Most politicians want
to please their voters, and many think that the public wants these
things. How will they know any better if you don't tell them?
- Write letters to the editor of your local
paper, criticizing
legislations and policies that favor one specific religion. If you
are in an area where such expression might prove personally
dangerous, find the paper of the nearest large city and send your
letters there. If you still feel unsafe mentioning Paganism, use
examples involving religions that are better known, like Buddhism.
- Start educating the people around you about Paganism and
Wicca.
This doesn't mean standing in front of the local fundie church
decrying Christianity, although I do know one courageous woman
locally who went to the Ichthus festival held this May at Asbury
Seminary in Wilmore, KY and handed out pamphlets about paganism to
the celebrants! Begin your education program with individuals who
know and like you, ones who trust you not to be involved in
harmful acts. When my father, now a Christian missionary, found
out I was a Pagan, he said that while he didn't know much about
Paganism, he knew that I personally would never do anything evil.
I was able to give him material about our religion (Scott
Cunningham's The Truth About Witchcraft is a good book for such
purposes), which he read. Rather than driving us apart, it
enlivened our future conversations.
- Recommend that your city and university library order books on
Paganism so they can become available for others. Books and
periodicals on the Religious Right are doubly helpful, since many
Christians are equally alarmed at their actions and would find the
information helpful in their own efforts against the Right. The
Freedom Writer and Church and State are excellent
periodicals, while books like Why the Religious Right is Wrong
About Separation of Church and State by Robert Boston are also
good, especially for people wanting to make a constitutional
argument against people like Robertson who claim that the United
States was founded as a "Christian Nation."
- Unite with fellow Pagans in your area to discuss action against
the Right and educating the public about Paganism and Wicca. Set
aside infighting where these important matters are concerned and
coordinate your letter-writing efforts and information gathering.
If some of the people in your group are talented (and many Pagans
are), you may want to start a newsletter or write pamphlets to
ensure that this information gets out, even if the local press is
sympathetic to the Right or fundie-controlled. Form coalitions with other concerned organizations, such as feminist groups and gay
rights advocates. You will make new friends, and will probably get
along better with your fellow Pagans when you all learn to work
together.
I hope that these suggestions will give you some good
starting-places to fight against the Right. The most potent action you
can take, however, is standing up publicly as a Pagan. Many people
have never attached a human face to their ideas of witches and Pagans,
relying instead on the media, the 'traditional' images Christianity
has fostered in our culture, and the efforts of the Right to portray
us as devil-worshippers. Once they know someone who is a Pagan, they
oftentimes change their notions. Studies have shown that people who
know that a friend or relative is gay tend to be more supportive of
gay rights than people who claim to know no one personally. The same
hold true for us. Good luck, and blessed be!
(From the July '95 issue of Rainbow Wind Magazine.)
Used with Sophia's kind permission. Check out her splendid site
by clicking this icon:
|
|
Reaching
Left while Holding on to our Rights
by Don Meinshausen
Many of those who know my background and previous posts have noticed my strategy
on working with the Greens and other non-authoritarian progressives. While there
is much to be accomplished here, there is also much to do with the conservative
movement even if just to maintain balance.
Murray Rothbard and Karl Hess who together were the mind and soul of the early
libertarian movement worked with both. Murray went even further than I would
have gone, working with communists in the 60's anti-war movement and then
working with paleo-conservatives toward the end of his life.
Political dexterity or ambidexterity is a virtue in our movement. It has also
been called political cross-dressing. Be careful of pretending to be something
else for too long or you could lose your identity or integrity. Since our
numbers are so small it is important to make numerous single-issue coalitions
with other points of view not just to prove our worthiness but also to protect
our rights.
After many years of attending both leftist and rightist political conferences,
conventions, demonstrations, chat rooms, etc., a few observations are in order.
The first is that it is always easier to communicate with people out of power.
Maybe this is why conservatives (up until recently) have been easier. Maybe
being in the Northeast where conservatives will always be outnumbered explains
this in my own situation. Liberals are out of power and won't get many jobs out
of this administration and go into the private sector. Then there is the
observation that people who work for the government are rarely happy and know a
lot of inefficiency, waste, and other horror stories that they would like to
share.
So where does one go for converts and conversation? Right or Left? Many people
are so libertarian they refuse to identify or even talk about politics. This
happens a lot in New Age circles and I talk about spirituality, religion,
psychology, film, business or technology all of which can be given a libertarian
spin. It's usually best for others to bring up politics and to give not too much
information so that you leave the person curious to look up more information. It
is not good to be authoritarian in your libertarianism.
If you like some aspects of the left go to those left events where you will meet
them. Ignore authoritarian types, crazies, or people that even if you could
convert them you wouldn't want to be around them. Know when to move on to
another group or person. Complete agreement is not essential. A sense of humor
is a sign of sanity.
Some people are good to know in that they come up with good information from
their own sources that actually buttress libertarian arguments. They might not
even realize they are doing this. Ask them what do they know or think of
libertarianism, CATO, Reason, or Liberty magazine and you might get some
interesting observations from an outsider's point of view. Ask this before you
identify yourself as a libertarian. All of this advice is good for rightist
events and others. Don't be surprised that their groups have the same problems
that we do.
Attend salons, fundraisers and parties where people are people are inclined to
be off guard and open to networking. Use OPH cards after you get the
conversation going. Dress and act to blend.
Are we having fun yet? If you aren't having fun with them then it's probably
true that they are not being persuaded by you. Know what you are looking for and
what you will tolerate and remember that it's good to be surprised once in a
while. Don't bullshit or accept it but appreciate playfulness. Throw events of
your own and ask for help on getting people to attend (entertainment, speakers
that appeal to different groups venues, etc.)
Remember that the political process is designed so that it will discourage you.
At the very least if you can persuade people that they should not respect
politicians, bad laws, or the media that support them you have done something.
Encourage tax avoidance, jury nullification and optimism in pursuing liberty.
Let us know of your successes or how you became aware of liberty.
Please contact me with your comments.
"Don Chaote" is a 3 way
pun. Don Quixote is a classic romantic tale of an anachronistic (anarchronistic?)
hero and fool. "Chaote" is a contraction of chaos and tea. Many psychedelics are
served in a tea and chaos theory is well respected in science. Coyote is known
to the American Indians as a trickster spirit who brings wisdom and amusement.
Back to
Don Meinshausen's Page
Who is Don Chaote?
Don Chaote is otherwise known as Don Meinshausen. In the June 2005 issue of Liberty magazine
there is an autobiographical article in which he describes how he invoked the
libertarian movement by ceremonial magick. He is currently seeking
correspondents while serving a sentence for drugs.
He can be reached at
Don Meinshausen #
08196-050-FCI
Fort Dix Box 2000
Fort Dix, NJ 08460
|
Verbal Weapons for the
Democrats
by KC McGuire
One of my favorite pastimes is figuring out how the Democrats can
effectively combat the unsubstantive sound-bite attacks that are
apparently so effective in swaying voters toward the Republican party
(because it obviously isn't their principles why so many otherwise Freedom
loving individuals would vote for them).
I channeled the spirit of James Carville (...wait... he's not dead...) so
that the typical 2-hour thoughtful Democratic candidate "sentence" could
be condensed into the emotionally charged Karl Rove / Ann Coulter style
soundbite.
I present to you:
Christian McGuire's "verbal weapons" for the DNC. (Would Derrida consider
these Weapons of Mass Deconstruction?)
===
Regarding Bush's "Swagger", "straight talk", and "eyesquint":
"George W. Bush is like John Wayne in that as a Hollywood actor,
he wants the privilege of being a veteran without having to serve as one."
Re:
the constant charge of flip-flopping -- levied by those who do not
critically research the actual records of legislators.
Hand gesture (make a fist, extend only the middle finger so that it faces
the ground)
then say: "Hey buddy, Flip-flop this."
Re:
A play on the NRA's slogan about guns killing people --- in reference to
complaints about government bureacracies, even though treatment is no
different than private corporation "help-lines"
"Bureaucracies don't annoy people. People do."
======
"Support Our Students (or Scholars) - Knowledge is Freedom's Foundation."
=====
"If French Fries are now 'Freedom fries' and French bread is now 'Freedom
bread',
does that mean the France is now 'Land of the Free'?
Re: those Sunday morning Televangelists who preach against "The Lies of
Evolution":
"If
Evolution is a myth
then why did I waste all those summers detasseling in Iowa?"
"Even a fundamental reading of text is STILL a personal
interpretation."
Re: anyone who endorses the soundbite of "Judicial Activism"
"Judicial Activism is the rallying cry
of those who do not understand Constitutional Law."
"The WANTS of the MANY
should NEVER outweigh the NEEDS of the FEW."
"When courts become subject to the desires of the majority,
rather than the
spirit of the law, Freedom is lost."
"Wouldn't a "strict reading" of the Second Amendment
deny the rights of the people to carry arms unless they were part of the
Militia?
After all, it was those "darned activist judges"
who allowed ordinary citizens to carry weapons in the first place."
"I would no sooner want my plumber conducting brain surgery
than have a populist legislator manipulating the Constitution."
|
|
Note to the Left
Hand:
Here's What the Right Is Doing
©2004 Khrysso Heart LeFey
Jesus of Nazareth admonished that it was dangerous
to put new wine in old wineskins. The Left today doesn't understand that a
contemporary application of this admonition is to the Left's tendency to
evaluate the Right's machinations according to the Left's worldview, and
not according to the Right's. This tendency is why struggles such as
abortion and same-sex marriage are stalemated.
The very fact that the abortion struggle is named differently by its
opposing sides highlights this inability to get on the same page: The
Right insists that the issue is "life," and the Left insists that the
issue is choice."
Having been rabidly right-wing once upon a time and now being rabidly
left-wing, I don't call anti-abortionists "Pro-Life," because to do so
suggests that I am not therefore pro-life. What they are, to my mind, is
anti-choice; I am defining them based on the criterion that matters to me,
not letting them name the terms of the debate. As long as the issue is
Life, there's no struggle: I am for all conceived beings being allowed a
crack at infancy, adolescence, adulthood, and maturity, just as I am
against capital punishment, war, and killing for tennis shoes. I know that
what I am for doesn't always happen, but I support it nonetheless, and I
think that a woman's right to choose is more important than than my right
to intervene in her life when I am not willing to be part of the solution.
The issues are different for me than for a lot of activists because I,
being on the Left hand, know what the Right hand is doing. But most
Leftists don't, and they will continue to spin their wheels as long as
they don't. (This advice, by the way, also applies to the Right, but I'm
not concerned with them, because they are not, by and large, concerned
with win-win solutions.)
Having said that, I now turn your attention to the issue of same-sex
marriage, or, as it is often incorrectly called, "gay marriage."
The reason for my saying that "gay marriage" is a wrong-headed phrase is
that not all same-sex pairings are homosexual, just as not all
opposite-sex pairings are heterosexual. Consider the marriages of
convenience between gay men and Lesbians: these are opposite-sex
marriages, but they are gay marriages, because both partners are gay.
Likewise, not all men who pair-bond are exclusively gay; in some cases
they are both bisexual. If you want to say that I'm splitting hairs here,
talk to a bisexual-rights activist: they will tell you that there is a
difference between gay and bi.
Even if you're not convinced, please bear with me nonetheless.
What Leftists don't
get about the Right, at least about the Religious Right, is that the issue
of same-sex marriage is not about civil rights but about God's commands.
There are, in fact (and I know this to be true because I was one of them
when I was a fundamentalist), deeply right-wing people who would gladly
afford same-sex couples civil rights if they thought that God would allow
it. But they believe that God has forbidden it, and all other things being
equal, they would rather please God than same-sex-oriented American
citizens.
The pivotal issue here is one that non-religious people cannot grasp but
must if they are to understand the deeper nature of political struggle:
the element of sacrament.
Leaving aside impressions formed in childhood catechism lessons, a
sacrament is, broadly, a physical symbol of a spiritual reality. Baptism
isn't a sacrament because it's baptism, but because entry into water
symbolizes entry into the body of God; communion isn't a sacrament just
because Jesus said to do it, but because it symbolizes God's willingness
to enter into humanity and become a part of it, thus making humanity a
part of one another. Sacraments ritually acknowledge people's beliefs
about higher reality.
It is the sacramental nature of marriage that makes it an absolute
sticking point for religious conservatives. It is important, for them,
that the partners be of opposite sexes because the New Testament says that
God is a groom and the Church is a bride. If a bride and a groom are not
participating in a marriage, then the symbolism is corrupted, and it makes
an abhorrent symbolic statement about God: that God is more interested in
uniting with himself (and the masculine pronoun is important here; I don't
believe God, if there is a God, is male) than with humanity, or that
humanity can find redemption in uniting with itself apart from God.
At its heart, the "gay marriage" debate is about the statement that it
makes about God. To fundamentalists, this is not a negotiable item:
marriage is not allowed to be redefined to adapt to the times. God, they
say, does not adapt to the times because God is perfect for all time. So
it is up to humanity to adjust.
To "fight the Right," Leftists must understand absolutism. No argument
can be based on anything else and be persuasive, because they do not share
your premises. The argument must be made on grounds that persuasively
challenge absolutism (not bloody likely) or allow for concessions on other
terms.
This is why the option of "civil unions" has a snowball's chance in Hell
with the Religious Right and "gay marriage does not. "Civil union is, to
the Religious Right's mind, not in such direct opposition to God's
ordained sacrament: it is rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's and unto
God what is God's; they can live with that more easily than they can live
with disobeying God's commandments. They may not like it, but they are
more likely to tolerate it.
That is not to say that homosexuality is not, to their mind, in opposition
to God's ordained sacraments, which is why it's important to say "same-sex
marriage" instead of "gay marriage." The homosexuality issue is, for now,
a lost cause, irreconcilable with fundamentalist thinking. But those
Christian fundamentalists who are willing to let the Heathen go to Hell in
our handbaskets will be more likely to grant us a pass on civil union than
they ever will on marriage. Our being demanding will not gain us any
ground at all on this count. Please believe me on this, otherwise you'll
remain locked in a simple power struggle.
Yes, I agree that "marriage" means a lot of things that I want included
among my civil rights as a man-loving man, things that "civil union" does
not mean. But the savvy Leftist will understand that there is a
fundamental-- as in Fundamentalist -- difference between the two that
makes the latter grudgingly acceptable and the former not at all, ever,
under any circumstances.
You cannot use Leftist theory to evaluate Rightist practice and expect to
get usable results. Get this, or you'll be Left Behind as well as just
Left.
Also Sprach Khrysso.*
*Thus spake Khrysso, with apologies to Nietzche.
|
Printed with permission from Tikkun
Democrats
Needed & Need a Religious/Spiritual Left
November 3, 2004
By Rabbi Michael Lerner
For years the Democrats have been telling themselves "it's the economy,
stupid." Yet consistently for dozens of years
millions of middle income Americans have voted against their economic
interests to support Republicans who have tapped a deeper set of needs.
Tens of millions of Americans feel betrayed by a society that seems to place
materialism and selfishness above moral values. They know that "looking out
for number one" has become the common sense of our society, but they want a
life that is about something more-a framework
of meaning and purpose to their lives that would transcend the grasping and
narcissism that surrounds them. Sure, they will admit that they have
material needs, and that they worry about adequate health care, stability in
employment, and enough money to give their kids a college
education. But even more deeply they want
their lives to have meaning -- and they respond to candidates who seem to
care about values and some sense of transcendent purpose.
Many of these voters have found a "politics of meaning" in the political
Right. In the Right wing churches and synagogues these voters are presented
with a coherent worldview that speaks to their
"meaning needs." Most of these churches and synagogues demonstrate a high
level of caring for their members, even if the flip side is a willingness to
demean those on the outside. Yet what members experience directly is a
level of mutual caring that they rarely find in the rest of the society.
And a sense of community that is offered them nowhere else, a community that
has as its central theme that life has value because it is connected to some
higher meaning than one's
success in the marketplace.
It's easy to see how this hunger gets manipulated in ways that liberals find
offensive and contradictory. The frantic attempts to preserve family by
denying gays the right to get married, the talk about being conservatives
while meanwhile supporting Bush policies that accelerate the destruction of
the environment and do nothing to encourage respect for God's creation or an
ethos of awe and wonder to replace the ethos of turning nature into a
commodity, the intense focus on preserving the powerless fetus and a culture
of life without a concomitant commitment to medical research (stem cell
research/HIV-AIDS), gun control and healthcare reform., the claim to care
about others and then deny them a living wage and an ecologically
sustainable environment -- all this is
rightly perceived by liberals as a level of inconsistency that makes them
dismiss as hypocrites the voters who have been moving to the Right.
Yet liberals, trapped in a long-standing disdain for religion and tone-deaf
to the spiritual needs that underlie the move to the Right, have been unable
to engage these voters in a serious dialogue. Rightly angry at the way that
some religious communities have been mired in authoR.rianism, racism,
sexism and homophobia, the liberal world has developed such a knee-jerk
hostility to religion that it has both marginalized those many people on the
Left who actually do have spiritual yearnings and simultaneously refused to
acknowledge that many who move to the Right have legitimate complaints about
the ethos of selfishness in American life.
Imagine if John Kerry had been able to counter George Bush by insisting that
a serious religious person would never turn his back on the suffering of the
poor, that the bible's injunction to love one's
neighbor required us to provide health care for all, and that the New
Testament's command to "turn the other cheek" should give us a
predisposition against responding to violence with violence.
Imagine a Democratic Party that could talk about the strength that comes
from love and generosity and applied that to foreign policy and homeland
security.
Imagine a Democratic Party that could talk of a New Bottom Line, so that
American institutions get judged efficient, rational and productive not only
to the extent that they maximize money and power, but also to the extent
that they maximize people's capacities to be loving and caring, ethically
and ecologically sensitive, and capable of responding to the universe with
awe and wonder.
Imagine a Democratic Party that could call for schools to teach gratitude,
generosity, caring for others, and celebration of the wonders that daily
surround us! Such a Democratic Party, continuing
to embrace its agenda for economic fairness and multicultural inclusiveness,
would have won in 2004 and can win in the future.
(Please don't tell me that this is happening outside the Democratic Party in
the Greens or in other leftie groups--because except for a few tiny
exceptions it is not! I remember how hard I tried to get Ralph Nader to
think and talk in these terms in 2000, and how little response I got
substantively from the Green Party when I suggested reformulating their
excessively politically correct policy orientation in ways that would
speak to this spiritual consciousness. The
hostility of the Left to spirituality is so deep, in fact, that when they
hear us in Tikkun talking this way they often can't even hear what we are
saying -- so they systematically mis-hear it and say that we are calling for
the Left to take up the politics of the Right, which is exactly the opposite
of our point -- speaking to spiritual needs actually leads to a more radical
critique of the dynamics of corporate capitalism and corporate
globalization, not to a mimicking of right-wing policies).
If the Democrats were to foster a religions/spiritual Left, they would no
longer pick candidates who support preemptive wars or who appease corporate
power. They would reject the cynical realism that led them to pretend to be
born-again militarists, a deception that fooled no one and only revealed
their contempt for the intelligence of most Americans. Instead of assuming
that most Americans are either stupid or reactionary, a religious Left would
understand that many Americans
who are on the Right actually share the same
concern for a world based on love and generosity that underlies Left politics, even though lefties
often hide their value attachments.
Yet to move in this direction, many Democrats would have to give up their
attachment to a core belief: that those who voted for Bush are fundamentally
stupid or evil. Its time they got over that elitist self-righteousness and
developed strategies that could affirm their common humanity with those who
voted for the Right. Teaching themselves to
see the good in the rest of the American public would be a critical first
step in liberals and progressives learning how to teach the rest of American
society how to see that same goodness in the rest of the people on this
planet. It is this spiritual lesson-that our
own well-being depends on the well-being of everyone else on the planet and
on the well-being of the earth-a lesson rooted deeply in the spiritual
wisdom of virtually every religion on the planet, that could be the center
of a revived Democratic Party.
Yet to take that seriously, the Democrats are going to have to get over the
false and demeaning perception that the Americans who voted for Bush could
never be moved to care about the well being of anyone but themselves. That
transformation in the Democrats would make them into
serious contenders.
The last time Democrats had real social power was when they linked their
legislative agenda with a spiritual politics articulated by Martin Luther
King. We cannot wait for the reappearance of that kind
of charismatic leader to begin the process of rebuilding a
spiritual/religious Left.
Respectfully sent to you by Rabbi Michael Lerner.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is national co-chair (with Cornel West and Susannah
Heschel) of The Tikkun Community, an interfaith organization that seeks to
build on the political vision articulated above and more fully explained in
our Core Vision which you can read at www.Tikkun.org; editor of TIKKUN, a bimonthly Jewish Critique of
Politics, Culture and Society, author of Spirit Matters: Global Healing and
the Wisdom of the Soul, and rabbi of Beyt Tikkun synagogue in San Francisco.
www.tikkun.org RabbiLerner@tikkun.org
To understand it more fully, we urge
you to read and then create a study group with friends on the book The
Politics of Meaning or the book Spirit Matters: Global Healing and
the Wisdom of the Soul.
************ We are up against a very difficult period ahead. There will be
struggles to end the war in Iraq and to protect us from what is likely to be
very scary moves to limit civil liberties, decrease social supports for the
poor and the powerless, increase militarization and even new wars. If we
face all this with the kind of liberal and progressive movements that we've
been relying on the past, we are likely to continue to be very ineffective.
That's why taking the Tikkun ideas and building a new kind of social change
movement is such a pressing priority. We are not asking people to become religious
or spiritual if you are not; we are asking for a new sensitivity to this
arena, and new ways of talking to people and new ways of framing progressive
ideas, and a new sensitivity to awe and wonder to replace a narrow
utilitarian way of approaching other human beings and nature (an
idea already accepted in many ecologically sensitive circles).
In peace, Rabbi Michael Lerner Tikkun Magazine
email: rabbilerner@tikkun.org
phone: 510-644-1200 web: http://www.tikkun.org
|
This is Your Story -- The Progressive Story of America. Pass It On.
by Bill Moyers
Text of speech to
the Take Back America conference
sponsored by the Campaign for America's Future
June 4, 2003,
Washington, DC
In one way or another, this is the oldest story in America: the struggle
to determine whether "we, the people" is a spiritual idea embedded in a
political reality -- one nation, indivisible -- or merely a charade
masquerading as piety and manipulated by the powerful and privileged to
sustain their own way of life at the expense of others.
Let me make it clear that I don't harbor any idealized notion of
politics and democracy; I worked for Lyndon Johnson, remember? Nor do I
romanticize "the people." You should read my mail -- or listen to the
vitriol virtually spat at my answering machine. I understand what the
politician meant who said of the Texas House of Representatives, "If you
think these guys are bad, you should see their constituents."
But there is nothing idealized or romantic about the difference between
a society whose arrangements roughly serve all its citizens and one whose
institutions have been converted into a stupendous fraud. That difference
can be the difference between democracy and oligarchy.
Look at our history. All of us know that the American Revolution
ushered in what one historian called "The Age of Democratic Revolutions."
For the Great Seal of the United States the new Congress went all the way
back to the Roman poet Virgil: Novus Ordo Seclorum" -- "a new age now
begins." Page Smith reminds us that "their ambition was not merely to free
themselves from dependence and subordination to the Crown but to inspire
people everywhere to create agencies of government and forms of common
social life that would offer greater dignity and hope to the exploited and
suppressed" -- to those, in other words, who had been the losers. Not
surprisingly, the winners often resisted. In the early years of
constitution-making in the states and emerging nation, aristocrats wanted
a government of propertied "gentlemen" to keep the scales tilted in their
favor. Battling on the other side were moderates and even those radicals
harboring the extraordinary idea of letting all white males have the vote.
Luckily, the weapons were words and ideas, not bullets. Through compromise
and conciliation the draftsmen achieved a Constitution of checks and
balances that is now the oldest in the world, even as the revolution of
democracy that inspired it remains a tempestuous adolescent whose destiny
is still up for grabs. For all the rhetoric about "life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness," it took a civil war to free the slaves and another
hundred years to invest their freedom with meaning. Women only gained the
right to vote in my mother's time. New ages don't arrive overnight, or
without "blood, sweat, and tears."
You know this. You are the heirs of one of the country's great
traditions -- the progressive movement that started late in the l9th
century and remade the American experience piece by piece until it peaked
in the last third of the 20th century. I call it the progressive movement
for lack of a more precise term. Its aim was to keep blood pumping through
the veins of democracy when others were ready to call in the mortician.
Progressives exalted and extended the original American revolution. They
spelled out new terms of partnership between the people and their rulers.
And they kindled a flame that lit some of the most prosperous decades in
modern history, not only here but in aspiring democracies everywhere,
especially those of western Europe.
Step back with me to the curtain-raiser, the founding convention of the
People's Party -- better known as the Populists -- in 1892. The members
were mainly cotton and wheat farmers from the recently reconstructed South
and the newly settled Great Plains, and they had come on hard, hard times,
driven to the wall by falling prices for their crops on one hand and
racking interest rates, freight charges and supply costs on the other.
This in the midst of a booming and growing industrial America. They were
angry, and their platform -- issued deliberately on the 4th of July --
pulled no punches. "We meet," it said, "in the midst of a nation brought
to the verge of moral, political and material ruin....Corruption dominates
the ballot box, the [state] legislatures and the Congress and touches even
the bench.....The newspapers are largely subsidized or muzzled, public
opinion silenced....The fruits of the toil of millions are boldly stolen
to build up colossal fortunes for a few."
Furious words from rural men and women who were traditionally
conservative and whose memories of taming the frontier were fresh and
personal. But in their fury they invoked an American tradition as powerful
as frontier individualism -- the war on inequality and especially on the
role that government played in promoting and preserving inequality by
favoring the rich. The Founding Fathers turned their backs on the idea of
property qualifications for holding office under the Constitution because
they wanted no part of a 'veneration for wealth" in the document. Thomas
Jefferson, while claiming no interest in politics, built up a Republican
Party -- no relation to the present one -- to take the government back
from the speculators and "stock-jobbers," as he called them, who were in
the saddle in 1800. Andrew Jackson slew the monster Second Bank of the
United States, the 600-pound gorilla of the credit system in the 1830s, in
the name of the people versus the aristocrats who sat on the bank's
governing board.
All these leaders were on record in favor of small government -- but
their opposition wasn't simply to government as such. It was to
government's power to confer privilege on insiders; on the rich who were
democracy's equivalent of the royal favorites of monarchist days. (It's
what the FCC does today.) The Populists knew it was the government that
granted millions of acres of public land to the railroad builders. It was
the government that gave the manufacturers of farm machinery a monopoly of
the domestic market by a protective tariff that was no longer necessary to
shelter "infant industries." It was the government that contracted the
national currency and sparked a deflationary cycle that crushed debtors
and fattened the wallets of creditors. And those who made the great
fortunes used them to buy the legislative and judicial favors that kept
them on top. So the Populists recognized one great principle: the job of
preserving equality of opportunity and democracy demanded the end of any
unholy alliance between government and wealth. It was, to quote that
platform again, "from the same womb of governmental injustice" that tramps
and millionaires were bred.
But how? How was the democratic revolution to be revived? The promise
of the Declaration reclaimed? How were Americans to restore government to
its job of promoting the general welfare? And here, the Populists made a
breakthrough to another principle. In a modern, large-scale, industrial
and nationalized economy it wasn't enough simply to curb the government's
outreach. That would simply leave power in the hands of the great
corporations whose existence was inseparable from growth and progress. The
answer was to turn government into an active player in the economy at the
very least enforcing fair play, and when necessary being the friend, the
helper and the agent of the people at large in the contest against
entrenched power. So the Populist platform called for government loans to
farmers about to lose their mortgaged homesteads -- for government
granaries to grade and store their crops fairly -- for governmental
inflation of the currency, which was a classical plea of debtors -- and
for some decidedly non-classical actions like government ownership of the
railroad, telephone and telegraph systems and a graduated -- i.e.,
progressive tax on incomes and a flat ban on subsidies to "any private
corporation." And to make sure the government stayed on the side of the
people, the 'Pops' called for the initiative and referendum and the direct
election of Senators.
Predictably, the Populists were denounced, feared and mocked as
fanatical hayseeds ignorantly playing with socialist fire. They got
twenty-two electoral votes for their candidate in '92, plus some
Congressional seats and state houses, but it was downhill from there for
many reasons. America wasn't -- and probably still isn't -- ready for a
new major party. The People's Party was a spent rocket by 1904. But if
political organizations perish, their key ideas don't -- keep that in
mind, because it give prospective to your cause today. Much of the
Populist agenda would become law within a few years of the party's
extinction. And that was because it was generally shared by a rising
generation of young Republicans and Democrats who, justly or not, were
seen as less outrageously outdated than the embattled farmers. These were
the progressives, your intellectual forebears and mine.
One of my heroes in all of this is William Allen White, a Kansas
country editor -- a Republican -- who was one of them. He described his
fellow progressives this way:
"What the people felt about the vast injustice that had come with the
settlement of a continent, we, their servants -- teachers, city
councilors, legislators, governors, publishers, editors, writers,
representatives in Congress and Senators -- all made a part of our creed.
Some way, into the hearts of the dominant middle class of this country,
had come a sense that their civilization needed recasting, that their
government had fallen into the hands of self-seekers, that a new
relationship should be established between the haves and the have-nots."
They were a diverse lot, held together by a common admiration of
progress -- hence the name -- and a shared dismay at the paradox of
poverty stubbornly persisting in the midst of progress like an unwanted
guest at a wedding. Of course they welcomed, just as we do, the new
marvels in the gift-bag of technology -- the telephones, the autos, the
electrically-powered urban transport and lighting systems, the indoor
heating and plumbing, the processed foods and home appliances and
machine-made clothing that reduced the sweat and drudgery of home-making
and were affordable to an ever-swelling number of people. But they saw the
underside, too -- the slums lurking in the shadows of the glittering
cities, the exploited and unprotected workers whose low-paid labor filled
the horn of plenty for others, the misery of those whom age, sickness,
accident or hard times condemned to servitude and poverty with no hope of
comfort or security.
This is what's hard to believe -- hardly a century had passed since
1776 before the still-young revolution was being strangled in the hard
grip of a merciless ruling class. The large corporations that were called
into being by modern industrialism after 1865 -- the end of the Civil War
-- had combined into trusts capable of making minions of both politics and
government. What Henry George called "an immense wedge" was being forced
through American society by "the maldistribution of wealth, status, and
opportunity."
We should pause here to consider that this is Karl Rove's cherished
period of American history; it was, as I read him, the seminal influence
on the man who is said to be George W.'s brain. From his own public
comments and my reading of the record, it is apparent that Karl Rove has
modeled the Bush presidency on that of William McKinley, who was in the
White House from 1897 to 1901, and modeled himself on Mark Hanna, the man
who virtually manufactured McKinley. Hanna had one consummate passion --
to serve corporate and imperial power. It was said that he believed
"without compunction, that the state of Ohio existed for property. It had
no other function...Great wealth was to be gained through monopoly,
through using the State for private ends; it was axiomatic therefore that
businessmen should run the government and run it for personal profit."
Mark Hanna -- Karl Rove's hero -- made William McKinley governor of
Ohio by shaking down the corporate interests of the day. Fortunately,
McKinley had the invaluable gift of emitting sonorous platitudes as though
they were recently discovered truth. Behind his benign gaze the wily
intrigues of Mark Hanna saw to it that first Ohio and then Washington were
"ruled by business...by bankers, railroads and public utility
corporations." Any who opposed the oligarchy were smeared as disturbers of
the peace, socialists, anarchists, "or worse." Back then they didn't
bother with hollow euphemisms like "compassionate conservatism" to
disguise the raw reactionary politics that produced government "of, by,
and for" the ruling corporate class. They just saw the loot and went for
it.
The historian Clinton Rossiter describes this as the period of "the
great train robbery of American intellectual history." Conservatives -- or
better, pro-corporate apologists -- hijacked the vocabulary of
Jeffersonian liberalism and turned words like "progress", "opportunity",
and "individualism" into tools for making the plunder of America sound
like divine right. Charles Darwin's theory of evolution was hijacked, too,
so that conservative politicians, judges, and publicists promoted, as if
it were, the natural order of things, the notion that progress resulted
from the elimination of the weak and the "survival of the fittest."
This "degenerate and unlovely age," as one historian calls it, exists
in the mind of Karl Rove -- the reputed brain of George W. Bush -- as the
seminal age of inspiration for the politics and governance of America
today.
No wonder that what troubled our progressive forebears was not only the
miasma of poverty in their nostrils, but the sour stink of a political
system for sale. The United States Senate was a "millionaire's club."
Money given to the political machines that controlled nominations could
buy controlling influence in city halls, state houses and even courtrooms.
Reforms and improvements ran into the immovable resistance of the almighty
dollar. What, progressives wondered, would this do to the principles of
popular government? Because all of them, whatever party they subscribed
to, were inspired by the gospel of democracy. Inevitably, this swept them
into the currents of politics, whether as active officeholders or
persistent advocates.
Here's a small, but representative sampling of their ranks. Jane Addams
forsook the comforts of a middle-class college graduate's life to live in
Hull House in the midst of a disease-ridden and crowded Chicago immigrant
neighborhood, determined to make it an educational and social center that
would bring pride, health and beauty into the lives of her poor neighbors.
She was inspired by "an almost passionate devotion to the ideals of
democracy," to combating the prevailing notion "that the well being of a
privileged few might justly be built upon the ignorance and sacrifice of
the many." Community and fellowship were the lessons she drew from her
teachers, Jesus and Abraham Lincoln. But people simply helping one another
couldn't move mountains of disadvantage. She came to see that "private
beneficence" wasn't enough. But to bring justice to the poor would take
more than soup kitchens and fundraising prayer meetings. "Social
arrangements," she wrote, "can be transformed through man's conscious and
deliberate effort." Take note -- not individual regeneration or the magic
of the market, but conscious, cooperative effort.
Meet a couple of muckraking journalists. Jacob Riis lugged his heavy
camera up and down the staircases of New York's disease-ridden, firetrap
tenements to photograph the unspeakable crowding, the inadequate toilets,
the starved and hollow-eyed children and the filth on the walls so thick
that his crude flash equipment sometimes set it afire. Bound between hard
covers, with Riis's commentary, they showed comfortable New Yorkers "How
the Other Half Lives." They were powerful ammunition for reformers who
eventually brought an end to tenement housing by state legislation. And
Lincoln Steffens, college and graduate-school educated, left his books to
learn life from the bottom up as a police-beat reporter on New York's
streets. Then, as a magazine writer, he exposed the links between city
bosses and businessmen that made it possible for builders and factory
owners to ignore safety codes and get away with it. But the villain was
neither the boodler nor the businessman. It was the indifference of a
public that "deplore[d] our politics and laud[ed] our business; that
transformed law, medicine, literature and religion into simply business.
Steffens was out to slay the dragon of exalting "the commercial spirit"
over the goals of patriotism and national prosperity. "I am not a
scientist," he said. "I am a journalist. I did not gather the facts and
arrange them patiently for permanent preservation and laboratory
analysis....My purpose was. ...to see if the shameful facts, spread out in
all their shame, would not burn through our civic shamelessness and set
fire to American pride."
If corrupt politics bred diseases that could be fatal to democracy,
then good politics was the antidote. That was the discovery of Ray
Stannard Baker, another journalistic progressive who started out with a
detest for election-time catchwords and slogans. But he came to see that
"Politics could not be abolished or even adjourned...it was in its essence
the method by which communities worked out their common problems. It was
one of the principle arts of living peacefully in a crowded world," he
said [Compare that to Grover Norquist's latest declaration of war on the
body politic. "We are trying to change the tones in the state capitals --
and turn them toward bitter nastiness and partisanship." He went on to say
that bi-partisanship is another name for date rape."]
There are more, too many more to call to the witness stand here, but I
want you to hear some of the things they had to say. There were educators
like the economist John R. Commons or the sociologist Edward A. Ross who
believed that the function of "social science" wasn't simply to dissect
society for non-judgmental analysis and academic promotion, but to help in
finding solutions to social problems. It was Ross who pointed out that
morality in a modern world had a social dimension. In "Sin and Society,"
written in 1907, he told readers that the sins "blackening the face of our
time" were of a new variety, and not yet recognized as such. "The man who
picks pockets with a railway rebate, murders with an adulterant instead of
a bludgeon, burglarizes with a 'rake-off' instead of a jimmy, cheats with
a company instead of a deck of cards, or scuttles his town instead of his
ship, does not feel on his brow the brand of a malefactor." In other words
upstanding individuals could plot corporate crimes and sleep the sleep of
the just without the sting of social stigma or the pangs of conscience.
Like Kenneth Lay, they could even be invited into the White House to write
their own regulations.
And here are just two final bits of testimony from actual politicians
-- first, Brand Whitlock, Mayor of Toledo. He is one of my heroes because
he first learned his politics as a beat reporter in Chicago, confirming my
own experience that there's nothing better than journalism to turn life
into a continuing course in adult education. One of his lessons was that
"the alliance between the lobbyists and the lawyers of the great
corporation interests on the one hand, and the managers of both the great
political parties on the other, was a fact, the worst feature of which was
that no one seemed to care."
And then there is Tom Johnson, the progressive mayor of Cleveland in
the early nineteen hundreds -- a businessman converted to social activism.
His major battles were to impose regulation, or even municipal takeover,
on the private companies that were meant to provide affordable public
transportation and utilities but in fact crushed competitors, overcharged
customers, secured franchises and licenses for a song, and paid virtually
nothing in taxes -- all through their pocketbook control of lawmakers and
judges. Johnson's argument for public ownership was simple: "If you don't
own them, they will own you. It's why advocates of Clean Elections today
argue that if anybody's going to buy Congress, it should be the people."
When advised that businessmen got their way in Washington because they had
lobbies and consumers had none, Tom Johnson responded: "If Congress were
true to the principles of democracy it would be the people's lobby." What
a radical contrast to the House of Representatives today!
Our political, moral, and intellectual forbearance occupy a long and
honorable roster. They include wonderful characters like Dr. Alice
Hamilton, a pioneer in industrially-caused diseases, who spent long years
clambering up and down ladders in factories and mineshafts -- in long
skirts! -- tracking down the unsafe toxic substances that sickened the
workers whom she would track right into their sickbeds to get leads and
tip-offs on where to hunt. Or Harvey Wiley, the chemist from Indiana who,
from a bureaucrat's desk in the Department of Agriculture, relentlessly
warred on foods laden with risky preservatives and adulterants with the
help of his "poison squad" of young assistants who volunteered as guinea
pigs. Or lawyers like the brilliant Harvard graduate Louis Brandeis, who
took on corporate attorneys defending child labor or long and harsh
conditions for female workers. Brandeis argued that the state had a duty
to protect the health of working women and children.
To be sure, these progressives weren't all saints. Their glory years
coincided with the heyday of lynching and segregation, of empire and the
Big Stick and the bold theft of the Panama Canal, of immigration
restriction and ethnic stereotypes. Some were themselves businessmen only
hoping to control an unruly marketplace by regulation. But by and large
they were conservative reformers. They aimed to preserve the existing
balance between wealth and commonwealth. Their common enemy was unchecked
privilege, their common hope was a better democracy, and their common
weapon was informed public opinion.
In a few short years the progressive spirit made possible the election
not only of reform mayors and governors but of national figures like
Senator George Norris of Nebraska, Senator Robert M. LaFollette of
Wisconsin, and even that hard-to-classify political genius, Theodore
Roosevelt. All three of them Republicans. Here is the simplest
laundry-list of what was accomplished at state and Federal levels:
Publicly regulated or owned transportation, sanitation and utilities
systems. The partial restoration of competition in the marketplace through
improved antitrust laws. Increased fairness in taxation. Expansion of the
public education and juvenile justice systems. Safer workplaces and
guarantees of compensation to workers injured on the job. Oversight of the
purity of water, medicines and foods. Conservation of the national
wilderness heR.ge against overdevelopment, and honest bidding on any
public mining, lumbering and ranching. We take these for granted today --
or we did until recently. All were provided not by the automatic workings
of free enterprise but by implementing the idea in the Declaration of
Independence that the people had a right to governments that best promoted
their "safety and happiness."
The mighty progressive wave peaked in 1912. But the ideas leashed by it
forged the politics of the 20th century. Like his cousin Theodore,
Franklin Roosevelt argued that the real enemy of enlightened capitalism
was "the malefactors of great wealth" -- the "economic royalists" -- from
whom capitalism would have to be saved by reform and regulation.
Progressive government became an embedded tradition of Democrats -- the
heart of FDR's New Deal and Harry Truman's Fair Deal, and honored even by
Dwight D. Eisenhower, who didn't want to tear down the house progressive
ideas had built -- only to put it under different managers. The
progressive impulse had its final fling in the landslide of 1969 when LBJ,
who was a son of the West Texas hill country, where the Populist rebellion
had been nurtured in the 1890s, won the public endorsement for what he
meant to be the capstone in the arch of the New Deal.
I had a modest role in that era. I shared in its exhilaration and its
failures. We went too far too fast, overreached at home and in Vietnam,
failed to examine some assumptions, and misjudged the rising discontents
and fierce backlash engendered by war, race, civil disturbance, violence
and crime. Democrats grew so proprietary in this town that a fat,
complacent political establishment couldn't recognize its own intellectual
bankruptcy or the beltway that was growing around it and beginning to
separate it from the rest of the country. The failure of democratic
politicians and public thinkers to respond to popular discontents -- to
the daily lives of workers, consumers, parents, and ordinary taxpayers --
allowed a resurgent conservatism to convert public concern and hostility
into a crusade to resurrect social Darwinism as a moral philosophy,
multinational corporations as a governing class, and the theology of
markets as a transcendental belief system.
As a citizen I don't like the consequences of this crusade, but you
have to respect the conservatives for their successful strategy in gaining
control of the national agenda. Their stated and open aim is to change how
America is governed -- to strip from government all its functions except
those that reward their rich and privileged benefactors. They are quite
candid about it, even acknowledging their mean spirit in accomplishing it.
Their leading strategist in Washington -- the same Grover Norquist -- has
| |