Click
here to
read any of the commentaries in this series.
Dear
Supporters,
I
have been waiting for some analyst, blogger, or columnist,
etc. to draw the parallels between the millions of people
demonstrating throughout the Middle East and the hundreds
of thousands of people, demonstrating in the State House
and streets of Madison, Wisconsin. However, I have neither
seen nor heard such analysis.
To
me the parallels are obvious. While the focus of the Middle
Eastern demonstrations has been the removal of dictators,
the underlying theme resonating through the demonstrations
has been the desire for the development of an economy that
focuses on the needs of all. They understand that a political
democracy without economic rights for its citizens is a
tyranny of the rich.
In
Madison, while the focus is on protecting collective bargaining
and the existence of public employee unions, the underlying
theme drawing the demonstrators together is the need to
protect the miniscule economic rights gained through over
a hundred years of worker struggles as represented by collective
bargaining and at least a modicum of laws protecting the
rights of workers to organize.
Success
in Cairo has created the opportunity to build not only the
framework of a political democracy but also an economic
democracy. Such a democracy would not only give citizens
the right to vote but also guarantee equity in the resources
of the country, state, and municipal jurisdiction and the
protection of the workers’ right. Such worker rights would
focus on both a voice in their working conditions and a
process to determine both an equitable salary as well as
a fair share of the profits of the business. Workers without
such rights are wage slaves.
What
gains in economic rights will result from beating back the
attack in Madison? Unfortunately, the answer is not much.
That is, while it is important to protect the little that
workers have, in the absence of any constitutionally based
framework of economic rights in this country, any gain of
economic rights by citizens is in constant danger of being
wiped out by future political expediency. What took over
a half century for public employees to gain in Wisconsin
is in danger of being wiped out in the first three months
of a new state administration.
I
remember reading an interview in Time magazine in 1957 where
the new leader of Egypt, Colonel Gamal Abdul Nassar was
asked why the army did not use its power since overthrowing
the King to institute political democracy. His response
was that political democracy was a farce in a country where
the vast majority of the people were under the control of
the landowners.
After
ten years and eleven months as a Boston City Councilor,
my analysis is that political democracy in this country
without guaranteed economic rights for its citizens makes
our democracy a cruel hoax perpetrated to keep our citizens
in a state of psychological turmoil and powerlessness.
The
world is watching as the rich of this country use the resources
of this country to plunder the resources of those sectors
of the world and population of this country that can not
protect themselves from the international oligarchy centered
in this country and England.
A
quick glance at the federal budget will reveal the mockery
of democracy exhibited by our law makers when the budget
includes approximately 60-70 billion for education while
allocating over 700 billion for defense, without including
the costs of the war and the Homeland Security Department.
Who is that money defending? Obviously, the purpose of this
investment is to defend the rights of the rich of this country
to pillage and plunder the world including this country.
At
70, however, I have learned that to moan and complain about
a problem without develop a plan to change the situation,
at most, brings an upset stomach. So our question is how
to build a foundation of economic rights in this country
that can end the economic oppression of the people of this
country by the present oligarchic political democracy.
In
my next articles, I will explore:
1) The roots of the problem;
2) The attempt in Boston over the last fifty years to
lay a foundation for economic rights.
3) A potential action agenda for Boston that could become
a template for the struggle for economic rights in this
country.
A
Luta Continua—The Struggle Continues!
Click
here to
read any of the commentaries in this series.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board Member Chuck Turner - Served as Boston
City Council member for ten years and eleven months. Was
a member and founder of the Fund the Dream campaign. Was
the Chair of the Council’s Human Rights Committee, and Vice
Chair of the Hunger and Homelessness Committee. Click
here to contact Mr. Turner.
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