There
is no question that the devastation caused by the earthquake,
tsunami and nuclear accidents in Japan, already estimated
at $180
billion, will get worse before it gets better. With
thousands dead and thousands displaced, the damage is staggering
and heartbreaking.
Japan
will require a massive reconstruction, including a dramatic
reconstruction effort to rebuild the nation with the world’s
third largest economy. They will need the help of the world,
and the U.S. is certain to provide leadership in the effort,
as it should.
I’m betting on Japan to win this, with their ganbatte
spirit, highly educated workforce, long-term strategy and
dedication to technological advancement. As a student of
the country who once lived in the country and worked in
corporate Japan, I have a particular viewpoint on the subject.
Japan has one thing in its favor - it is not the U.S. When
it is time for America to require its own reconstruction
- that time being yesterday - I seriously question whether
it would even happen. To elaborate, there are two things
working against America. First, the U.S. political system
is a shambles, operating under a system of legalized bribery
called campaign finance. Under this system, the top
400 earners make more money than the bottom 150 million.
Public policy revolves around these 400, who are getting
exactly what they want, which is the almost the entire pie.
All of the money in the system has their name on it, and
even
that isn’t enough for them.
Second, the nation’s minority party - the unruly, untutored
mob working at the behest of the 400 - has convinced enough
of us, for now, that they actually are in the majority.
Characterized by an unsavory combination of ignorance, callousness
and raw greed, members of this party control one chamber
of Congress, and a number of state legislatures and governorships
around the country. And their goal, it seems, is to fall
all over themselves, in an effort to prove that one of them
is more bigoted and batshit insane than the other.
If reconstruction ever comes to America, these are the people
who will stop it dead in its tracks: the plutocrats, the
oligarchs, the kleptocrats and their enablers. The battle
taking place across the land, the reinvigoration of the
American labor movement as the next civil rights movement,
is a test to see whether they can be stopped.
America has had experience with reconstruction efforts, and
it is a checkered past. America’s first Reconstruction
was a time of promise and unfulfilled dreams, of universal
public education and the Freedmen’s Bureau, of 40 acres
and a mule rescinded, and of federal troops leaving freed
slaves to the whims of the Klan and the Crow - Jim Crow,
that is. A quite different group of radical Republicans
had the opportunity to see how far America would go to live
up to its promise.
The second Reconstruction was the New Deal, an effort to
save the public from predatory capitalism, if not to save
predatory capitalism from itself. It was also the era of
a regulatory regime that kept greed in check, and believed
that workers should provide exist in a balance of power
with government and corporations. Much of the New Deal
legacy of relief, recovery and reform that has not already
been eliminated is under siege.
When the U.S. did reconstruction in other countries after
the Second World War, with the Marshall Plan for Europe
and Japan, it worked. Rep. Keith Ellison’s idea of a New
Global Marshall Plan to invest 1-2 percent of America’s Gross Domestic Product in aid to poor countries
sounds like a fantastic idea. The senseless and parasitic
war profiteering taking place in Iraq and Afghanistan is
another story altogether.
But can you imagine what would happen if and when reconstruction
comes to America? Conservative lawmakers, wallowing in
their own backwardness and incalcitrance, would condemn
the very idea as a socialist plot, wasteful spending and
an infringement on states’ rights. Just as the dyed-in-the-wool
racist fights against universal health care because black
people could also benefit from it, the hard right would
resist foreign assistance and investment in infrastructure
like it was a stimulus check signed by President Obama himself.
America does need to get its act together soon, but we are
our own worst enemy. The land of the free finds itself
in a struggle to determine whether it will continue to stand
in its own way, in the way of progress, economic justice
and fairness. What happens next is a matter of speculation
and finger- crossing. But in the meantime, it’s time to
help Japan.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Harvard College and
the University of Pennsylvania Law School. and
a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, 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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