For
most of us, we left 2011with mixed emotions. And
while our individual situations and progress vary, it is
important that we look at the bigger picture as the struggle
over who government serves and how the social needs of a
nation get met. It is painfully clear that most elected
officials are either incapable or incompetent of having
both the vision and a strategy for addressing the big economic,
social and political problems that face the country.
With a 9% approval rating,
Congress has been in crisis management mode. Government
operations were threatened to shut down three times and
the Congress barely avoided a default on the national debt.
Both the House and the Senate have passed the lowest numbers
of bills in over a decade. Congress had not dealt with a
substantive jobs bill and instead has passed hundreds of
meaningless resolutions like upholding “In God We Trust”
as the national motto or designating “Drive Safer Sunday.”
Meanwhile, working families struggle to put food on the
table, keep a roof over our heads, put gas in our tanks
if we’re lucky enough have a car and put some clothes on
our backs.
The masses have been
at the mercy of these greedy, inept and insensitive people,
watching their opulent, decadent lifestyles as the government
and courts do their bidding. The slow burn of the 99% into
an Occupy boil has been a refreshing splash across the face
of a beaten down country. An empowered and energized class
is tired of the carrying the economic burden of this country
while the 1% continued to make unprecedented profits. The
Occupy momentum must be maintained and folded into multiple
strategic battlegrounds.
The GOP steam-rolled
its anti-worker strategy in state legislatures across the
country; they held the majority in most of those states.
They left a whole lot of damage in their wake.
In
Missouri, we have
our hands full. We are organizing an offensive to the Republic
roll-backs during the last legislative session. Anything
that supported working families was attacked.
The focus is on collecting
signatures for two critical ballot initiatives. One initiative
would raise the minimum wage again, a successful effort
waged over a decade ago. The second would set the cap on
the interest rates for payday loans. Currently, the law
allows these blood-sucking predators to charge up to 1900
% (APR). The rate would be brought down from the average
interest rate of 400% to 36% - and that’s still legal robbery.
The new year brings
with it renewed hope and enthusiasm. We can’t stop with
the small victories such as forcing Bank of America and
Verizon to retract additional fees for service. Those were
significant but we gotta’ go after the issues that affect
our quality of life - jobs, education and health care.
This is the year for
the masses of people to look at alternative sources of energy,
alternative economic solutions and new social relationships
that make for a peaceful and sustainable world.
This is the year for
challenging hypocrisy and injustices on all levels
and for demanding fairness and accountability on all
levels. Anything that affects the majority’s standard
of living or their constitutional and human rights must
be stopped.
It’s time to occupy!
Not just occupy parks and the streets but occupy the legislative
rotundas, school buildings, union halls, airwaves, social
media, voting booths and any other space that needs working
class leadership. As Bob Marley sang, those “who feels it
knows it” so it will be up those of us under the boot of
corporate greed, to get ourselves out from under it.
Let’s kick mediocrity
to the curb and start charting the kind of government that
serves the needs of the majority, not the greedy few. It’s
a new year but it could also be a new day. Let’s get organized!
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Jamala Rogers, is the leader
of the Organization
for Black Struggle in St.
Louis and the Black
Radical Congress National Organizer. Additionally, she
is an Alston-Bannerman Fellow. She is the
author of The Best of the Way I See It –
A Chronicle of Struggle. Click
here to contact Ms. Rogers.
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