As someone who has several nephews and a niece under the age of 11, I have seen the struggle of parents to teach their children one of the most basic human lessons - sharing. Most children don't gravitate toward sharing straightaway, but eventually the lesson sinks in even if it is only for an hour or two. But why do we even bother to teach our children to share in modern day America? Isn't sharing the exact opposite of what we preach to other adults and for that matter, other nations?
"Greed is good" is a popular quote from the 1987 movie Wall Street, but instead of just a quote it has become a mantra for the powerful and wealthy. It has led us to believe that the accumulation of wealth is the most important thing in our lives and that we shouldn't share that wealth with anyone including our fellow Americans. Talk of government programs, social services, assistance for the poor is scoffed at as un-American, socialist, big government spending nonsense. In fact, those programs are downright evil. Thus we have entered the age of Corporatism and Privatization.
But was America always this way? Was America always a "lookout for number one" kind of society? The answer is no and you need only go back to the first half of the twentieth century for examples when people and government acted for the common good. Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal was an effort to bring relief to a country in the ravages of the Great Depression. Numerous government programs were created to bring relief to the poor as well as regulate the machinations of capitalism. FDR also asked Americans to sacrifice for the nation's war effort in World War II and Americans responded in kind.
The thought of such sweeping reform and sacrifice for the common good in today's America sounds ridiculous. Even universal health care is branded as "socialized medicine" with the insinuation that socialism is evil. Yet American society is approaching a tipping point in which the gap between the wealthy and the poor is increasingly vast and may become irreversible. Our society could be permanently fractured if this discrepancy in income levels is allowed to continue unabated. Unfortunately, creating this gap has been the strategy of Republicans since the rise of Ronald Reagan in 1980 and is in full bloom today under the watch of President Bush. And because of the brainwashing that the current generation of Americans has gone through believing that government is bad and socialism is evil, even a Democratic hopeful like Barack Obama may not be able to change how we think as a nation.
The question is will we realize in time that in order to be a great country, we must first be a great society? And in order to be a great society, we will at times have to do things for the common good. That brings us back to the lesson of sharing that we were all taught at one point in our lives. Is it possible for adults to re-learn that lesson or will the errors of free market capitalism and privatization continue to reign? Maybe we should let children show us the way.
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Bizarro World Politics - 2/10/08
In today's America, I'm often struck by the nature of political events and decisions as being the exact opposite of what one would think as the right thing to do. In this way, America has become a Bizarro World of itself and its purported ideals. On paper, our nation supports concepts like freedom, democracy and human rights. In practice, those concepts are merely slogans used to achieve ends that have nothing to do with freedom, democracy or human rights.
Since we now live in our own Bizarro World, I'm starting a new installment of posts in which I highlight stories and events that are truly the opposite of American ideals. In our first installment, I have three selections.
From Think Progress, former US Attorney General John Ashcroft made a speech yesterday in which he declared that President Bush has respected civil liberties in a time of war more than any other president. TP further notes that this declaration comes directly after this story in which President Bush allowed the Civil Liberties Oversight Board to go vacant. Perhaps Mr. Ashcroft was thinking of these paradoxical court decisions in which detainees at Guantanomo were deemed to have no rights, yet corporations are now afforded human rights.
Remember SCHIP and President Bush's veto of its expansion? As if that decision wasn't bizarre enough, now we have House Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-MO) bragging about it as an "accomplishment" of Congressional conservatives in 2007. Once again, Think Progress has the details.
And finally, Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone Magazine tells us about the Chicken Doves of the Democratic Party and their true focus. Guess what? It's not ending the war in Iraq as we all hoped it would be. On that topic, they're full of excuses as to why a majority party in both Houses of Congress can't get anything done. This is a truly infuriating read.
Since we now live in our own Bizarro World, I'm starting a new installment of posts in which I highlight stories and events that are truly the opposite of American ideals. In our first installment, I have three selections.
From Think Progress, former US Attorney General John Ashcroft made a speech yesterday in which he declared that President Bush has respected civil liberties in a time of war more than any other president. TP further notes that this declaration comes directly after this story in which President Bush allowed the Civil Liberties Oversight Board to go vacant. Perhaps Mr. Ashcroft was thinking of these paradoxical court decisions in which detainees at Guantanomo were deemed to have no rights, yet corporations are now afforded human rights.
Remember SCHIP and President Bush's veto of its expansion? As if that decision wasn't bizarre enough, now we have House Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-MO) bragging about it as an "accomplishment" of Congressional conservatives in 2007. Once again, Think Progress has the details.
And finally, Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone Magazine tells us about the Chicken Doves of the Democratic Party and their true focus. Guess what? It's not ending the war in Iraq as we all hoped it would be. On that topic, they're full of excuses as to why a majority party in both Houses of Congress can't get anything done. This is a truly infuriating read.
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