It
is the end of another year, and quite a year it was. On
a personal note, reflecting on life this holiday season,
I am thankful for my wife Sarah, my family and good friends,
and for my son Micah, who is about to turn a year old and
is starting to run around the house. Yet, at the same time,
I’m reminded of those we’ve lost, the empty seats at the
table—my older son Ezra and his grandfather Al. We lost
them physically, just months apart from each other, but
they are still with us in a very real way. So this time
of year, this time of reflection, can bring joy, sorrow
and pain all in one big dosage.
These days, I feel acutely aware of the tremendous suffering
people are experiencing in this country today. And I’m
astounded by the callousness and indifference of politicians
who have the power to change things, yet pretend everything
is just fine, that it is business as usual. Those of you
who follow my writings know that I’m always trying to make
sense of the political world. I follow trends in society,
interpret my findings and attempt to give solutions. But
now I’m just stumped. Stumped, because the problem seems
so simple and straightforward, yet the prescription remains
elusive. And while optimism usually tempers my stinging
critique of the world’s injustice, I don’t know how optimistic
I can be, or should be, about the future of this country.
The problem is that the United States is falling apart.
It has become a Third World country. Record numbers of
people are unemployed. About 44
million are in poverty in America—14.3 percent of the
population—and one
in three working families is near poverty. Food stamp
usage dependency has increased to 42.2
million this Thanksgiving, up 15 million from the start
of the recession in December 2007. Millions have lost their
homes, with 2.8
million foreclosures in 2009 alone, and an estimated
7.4 million between 2010 and 2012. Those who have lots
never had so much of it, and those who have little never
had it so bad. Most of all, there is no sense that things
will improve, or that there is the political will to change
it. And while we can talk about recessions and economic
downturns, there is a sense that things are different this
time around, that there will be no recovery in the traditional
sense.
Nothing short of a massive mobilization of government will
bring jobs to the millions of unemployed and underemployed,
at wages that will enable them to support themselves and
their families. After all, capitalism is being propped
up now, and it cannot and will not supply the jobs. The
fortunes of Wall Street and corporate America are not tied
to Main Street, except to the extent that their prosperity
seems to depend on everyone else’s misery.
And yet, where is the will among our so-called public servants?
U.S. democracy has been thoroughly bought out by wealthy
interests, and the federal legislature is broken, that is,
unless you’re getting what you paid for. The Republicans
are 100 percent owned by corporations, an unsavory amalgam
of wingnuts, the greedy, segregationists, and Christian
nationalists. Along with fear of their own shadow, Democrats’
allegiances to moneyed interests often prevent them from
doing the right thing, and compel them to water down the
good into the mediocre.
In the White House today sits perhaps one of the most brilliant
individuals to ever grace the office, if only he appreciated
his power. His accomplishments already are greater than
many of his predecessors. But then again, the wave of populism
that swept him in power came with it great expectations,
however unrealistic. This president has failed to harness
that populist energy to its full potential. He keeps his
progressive base at arm’s length. He is non-confrontational,
caves in too early on, capitulates, and doesn’t put up a
fight. There’s not enough passion there, and too many status-quo,
banker types at the table. And he prefers incrementalism
when the times demand the bold change the people said they
wanted.
Martin Luther King, a great leader often invoked by the president,
dismissed those who urged him to not take direct action,
and who counseled him against moving too fast: “The nations
of Asia and Africa are moving with jetlike speed toward
gaining political independence, but we still creep at horse
and buggy pace toward gaining a cup of coffee at a lunch
counter,” King said in Letter from Birmingham Jail.
Today, other nations, developing and advanced alike, are
investing heavily in new technologies, high-speed rail and
green energy. The U.S. wastes its money on wars it cannot
afford, more army than the rest of the planet combined,
and tax cuts for the wealthy it really, really cannot afford.
This, as most of its people suffer and its infrastructure
crumbles into dust.
But at least, as a friend jokingly reminded me recently,
“we have guns and extra value meals and thousands of channels.”
It is unrealistic to assume that one person, even the most
powerful leader in the world, can solve the nation’s problems
in two years. Years of bad policy from Bush and neoliberal
Dems brought us to where we are today. What concerns me
is the lack of a sense of urgency from this White House—
that is, unless the administration is setting a trap for
their adversaries, engaged in some multi-layered chess game
that goes above my head and beyond my pay scale.
Called the negotiator-in-chief, the mediator-in-chief, even
the half-stepper-in-chief, he apparently would compromise
with people who would have his head, and they’ve told him
as much. President Obama’s quixotic search for bipartisanship
paid off for him at a rather steep price: a tax cut bill
that represents the worst of politics and policy, a GOP
utopia. How unconscionable to give millionaires and billionaires
a holiday present when a multitude cannot afford to put
food on the table! Americans need help now, yesterday even,
and they have little time to wait and see how this apparent
Clinton 2.0 triangulation strategy works out for the 2012
presidential campaign.
Looking ahead to 2011, the Democratic base needs to help
President Obama out. They need to “make him” do certain
things. They need to provide the cover that F.D.R.’s base
provided him 70 years ago to enact the New Deal. Most of
all, this administration needs a narrative, a communications
strategy with clearly defined enemies. It has to be about
the Wall Street vs. Main Street, corporate excess vs. the
franks and beans of everyday hardworking people. “I ask
you to judge me by the enemies I have made,” Roosevelt proclaimed.
He said this of capitalistic greed and excess:
“Primarily this is because rulers of the exchange of mankind's
goods have failed through their own stubbornness and their
own incompetence, have admitted their failure, and have
abdicated. Practices of the unscrupulous money changers
stand indicted in the court of public opinion, rejected
by the hearts and minds of men. True they have tried, but
their efforts have been cast in the pattern of an outworn
tradition. Faced by failure of credit they have proposed
only the lending of more money. Stripped of the lure of
profit by which to induce our people to follow their false
leadership, they have resorted to exhortations, pleading
tearfully for restored confidence....The money changers
have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization.
We may now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The
measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we
apply social values more noble than mere monetary profit.”
Now that’s what I’m talking about! But more importantly,
this is not about President Obama, whose fate will be sealed
in the ballot box, depending on how much or little his team
will deliver. This is about a sustainable progressive movement
that speaks to bread and butter issues, and will carry on
regardless of who is president. 2011 must be about institution
building—not an infrastructure for a presidential campaign,
but a game plan for how we want this country to be, irrespective
of party affiliation.
“A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded
men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment
plan,” King said. Let’s not die, let’s harden our minds,
make it right, and get it done.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to The Huffington Post, theGrio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily
Kos,
and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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