2 Comments

  1. eli_beckerman

    … there is a justifiable moral and spiritual outrage pervading this nation and this commonwealth. Yet the progressive majorities are silenced by standard-bearing Democrats who can do nothing more than mock and dismiss this outrage. No alternative is presented. The mainstream media blocks the gate of political discourse. Arbitrary “Free Speech Zones” are created by whoever controls the airways. Media consolidation, corporate conglomeration, and a direct line to politicians through campaign contributions and lobbyists mean that corporations have their ears AND control the “public” conversation. Phone calls to legislators are pushed by well-established NGOs and lobbying groups, all friendly to the corporate duopoly. The institutions to challenge the status quo do not exist. Individual activists labor over endeavors to do it — to build new institutions or to wing it without the capacity to organize strategically.

    The Right is organizing the legitimately outraged populace — the same people who made phone calls to their Congresspeople demanding they scrap the bank bailouts, the same people who can see plainly that government is a corrupt mess of self-interested politicians. The Left is stuck in a defeatist splintered victimhood, always reacting 3 or 4 steps behind those setting the agenda. The Greens seek to turn this stale ideological spectrum on its head, respecting people of all stripes yet advancing a clearheaded, rational, values-based agenda. But their brand of ecological politics hit a brick wall of power politics and they turned tail and ran from it because it was an uncomfortable blow. Scattered and licking their wounds, they’re starting to talk about regrouping, about how to size up that wall, to find its weak spots, and get to work getting to the other side of it. It won’t be easy but it’s possible. There’s a time for mourning but we can’t take the time for that now. There’s a whole lot of organizing to do and the windows of opportunity — political, economic, and ecological — are fast closing on us.

  2. michael horan

    Paul, I can’t help but agree with aspects of your critique. Elections can be dispiriting affairs. I can’t tell you how often I feel an anger and deep dismay at my fellow citizens that mirrors your own. But it passes pretty quickly, because I find that in my case, it doesn’t accurately reflect the reality of the situation.

    It pays to remember that a good number of those who voted for Brown or stayed home DID in fact vote for Ted Kennedy for years, and voted for Obama. I don’t think they’re enemies at all, nor do I believe that most are out for “blood, oil, and more money.” Most are just trying to get by, and they aren’t voting for warmongering and global injustice–they’re voting for whoever seems like they’ll leave them the most money need they need to get through the next few months. Or weeks. I sure as hell can’t blame them. and most aren’t heartfelt believers in one candidate or another–they just have a general sense they’re being reamed, which they usually are, and so every 2/4 years they go the polls and register their contempt … for whoever they elected the previous cycle. I don’t hold their desires to protect their families and increase their savings (or, more likely, decrease their debts) against them at all.

    I WOULD agree that they do, often enough, vote against their best interests.

    This, I doO think you hit the nail on the head when you talk about ignorance and apathy–but again, even though I sometimes feel it, it’s hard to rage against them to any great extent. As Eli suggests in his response, the Spectacle is everywhere, and people WILL fall for bread and circuses every time. I know I often did. I still do.

    We have to stop blaming rival politicians, other voters, and “society.” It’s OUR failure. If people aren’t attending to our message, it’s because we haven’t figured out how to be more entertaining than the mass media is. If they don’t respond to our candidates, it’s because we aren’t running candidates with the savvy to know how to appeal to what truly moves them (a classic long-term problem for the left, which assumes that because we’re “right,” people’s nobler inclinations will lead them to elect our candidates. No way).

    WE have to deliver more carrot than stick, and we have to breed a tastier carrot than anyone else. Lay some sugar on ’em.  

Leave a Reply