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It's Up To Us
By Joel Staloch
The "think tank" is a great idea - a group of concerned folks from a broad spectrum of the community minded.
I strongly support creating action from conviction - and everyone has their expertise and/or comfort level to do so. The important thing is to act - but equally important, is to listen to other views while keeping our eye on the long term goals. The R's have spent over 3 decades organizing, dominating legislation and more importantly, wresting the real issues away from public discussion. We are not wrong on the issues. We just have not kept pace on organizing, working together...so we now tend to be on the defensive. It's also time to take back the message.
We all basically believe in the core values of the Democratic Party, yet have not done so well in espousing those views in the ever shrinking media. Books like George Lakoff's "Don't Think of an Elephant" or Thomas Frank's "What the Matter with Kansas" or others such as "God's Politics" by Jim Wallis and many others, help us frame the message to where we do not argue on the R's terms. It is good to understand how the R's have been working on gaining control of the political arena ever since the Goldwater defeat culminated by the Reagan victory which supported the "Contract with (on!) America” leading to the so-called compassionate conservatism in George W Bush.
We have a long way to go. We are not wrong on the issues nor do we have to tilt toward any point on the political spectrum. It will take years to rebuild our core and years to rethink and effectively frame our message - as opposed to only reacting to theirs. But, it is up to us. Waiting for a political messiah will only put us further behind. Blaming the R's or the media (local or national) does little to advance our message. However, holding those groups accountable is of great importance.
In Thurston County, in 2005 alone, there are nearly 70 non-partisan positions on the ballot in November. Just as the R's did many years ago, we have to find good progressive thinking folks to run for every conceivable office (councils, commissions, school boards, etc, etc). Whether one uses an obscure office as an experience builder for future political races or just maintaining solid democratic involvement (and balanced integrity) in the system, we have to show up.
As I often say, it's time to stop preaching to the choir and mingle with the congregation. We can find linkage, commonality with nearly every one of our neighbors (near or far). We may not agree on every issue, but with an effective voice and organized effort, we can rebuild what has made this country and our communities great. It is up to us!
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Return to Foundational Values
Following is part of a response to a German
cousin who viewed the result of our recent national election with disbelief.
His parents and grandparents are survivors of Nazi imperialism.
I fear that the election of Mr. Bush may lead to the ultimate end of
a democratic republic in the United States and the establishment of a
theocratic empire bent on national and world domination. For some time
I have been alarmed by the striking similarities between recent events
in the U.S. and the events in Germany 70 years ago. We seem incapable
of learning from history. After 9-11 we had the opportunity for a moment
of greatness that could have led to reconciliation in the world. Unfortunately,
our government did not "seize the moment for greatness". We
must face the fact that every world empire that has sought economic,
political, religious, and preemptive military domination has fallen under
its own weight. I fear that we are heading in the same direction.
Our current government has the following policies of imperialism:
- An immoral and illegal preemptive war of aggression
- The murder of untold numbers of noncombatant women, children, and
men in Iraq
- A border policy causing the death of thousands of peaceful migrants
in the Arizona desert
- The denial of marriage rights and legal protection for nontraditional
committed couples
- The denial of women’s rights to make decisions and be responsible
for their own bodies
- The health and education policies that further marginalize minorities
and the poor
- The education of children for literal responses on tests rather
than critical thinking
- The discrimination against anyone who does not think and act exactly
like the dominators
The thing that hurts me the most, as a passionate believer in Jesus
of Nazareth and the values he taught, is to watch our government proclaim
imperialistic policies in the name of Christianity. These policies are
not based on the values of Jesus or the "American dream". Instead
they are based on the fundamentalist policies of an antichrist political
cult that is opposed to what Jesus taught and practiced. We seem to have
abandoned the foundational religious values of all the world’s
great religions, and the constitutional values upon which our nation
was built.
Our task now is to look to the future and to educate the undereducated
and uninformed people in our country who are willing to be controlled
by dominating fundamentalists who only speak for their own special interest.
We can also pray that our nation will return to its foundational values
and principles. In the meantime, we can only say "God forgive America" in
the hope that one day we will be able, once again, to say with conviction "God
bless America" because our country believes and practices the spiritual
and national values of "liberty and justice for all".
Bill W. Hillman, Ph.D.
November 18, 2004
Professor Emeritus, University of Arizona
Elder, Presbyterian Church (USA)
Suggested reading: Gary Hart, The Fourth Power:
An Essay on the Power of America’s Principles, Oxford University
Press, 2004.
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