Categories
Politics

Democracy: What Makes it succeed or fail

In a number of columns over the past two years, I have ended with a statement worrying that our democracy might be failing.

            Like many Americans, I have seen such things as our current political polarization, monopolistic capitalism, racism and even our lack of energy (personal and environmentally clean) as threats to democracy. And they are.

            Recently I have been reading a path-breaking book by historian Yuval Noah Harari entitled Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (Harper, 2015), acquired at our local bookstore, Bolin Books.   Harari’s history of our species emphasizes the importance of what we believe the creation of what he calls “our imagined order.”

            The way Harari sees it, homo sapiens (that would be us) was able to overcome the other human species (Neanderthal and a few others) over a 220,000 year period of what historians like to call prehistory. Sapiens were able to do this because their larger brain gave them the ability to think in new abstract ways.  

Other humans and higher animals could use their language to say “careful, a lion.”

            Only homo sapiens, says Harari, could say and believe that “the lion is the guardian spirit of our tribe.”  Believing in what Harari calls “fictions” or abstractions like this allowed homo sapiens to form larger groups who shared belief in an idea that went beyond an awareness of things in their local band or physical environment.

            It is this “cognitive revolution” that allows us to create and believe in abstract ideas like religious belief systems and the many “isms” that are a feature of our modern history–nationalism, socialism, capitalism, liberalism, conservatism, absolutism.  You get the idea.

            Democracy, of course, is one of those “isms.” It is a belief system.  There is nothing in our biological or genetic makeup that causes us to see voting or elections as necessary to our survival as a species. Our DNA doesn’t care, Harari tells us, whether we are ruled by an absolute monarch, a fascist dictator, or a duly elected president.

            The only reason we have democratic governments is because over a period of time, a few million people came to believe that a democratic republic was the best way, to quote the preamble to the U.S. Constitution, “to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.”

            All of these aspirations are intangible, part of Harari’s “imagined order.” They are not the real, dangerous lions that our ancestors had to avoid.  These are ideas, honored by millions over recent centuries, but ideas that must be made tangible by the actions of people.

            If we no longer believe in democracy, we will no long take the actions necessary to ensure its survival.  If we make voting more difficult, as Republicans have done in many states by redistricting campaigns and by reducing the number of voting locations in Democratic controlled  cities, we weaken democracy.

            If we vote for candidates who wish to restrict individual rights, divide people into saviors and enemies to be distained or even destroyed, deny people the ability to read certain books, or to see certain physicians, we weaken democracy.

            And worse, if we support and vote for candidates like Donald Trump and his political groupies, who clearly wished to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, place desire for power ahead of democratic norms and rules, we show ourselves and others that we no longer believe in the abstraction of “government for the people, of the people, and by the people.”

Classic western political philosophy, going back to the ancient Greeks, recognizes three kinds of government, rule by one person (monarchy or dictatorship), rule by a small group (oligarchy), or rule by the many (democracy).

            All of these require some level of belief and acceptance by those governed, but the first two require far less because once democracy has been abandoned, people only have to submit in order to survive the person or small group to who now have power.

            You have to really believe in democracy to make it work. Do we?

Categories
Politics

Demography and Democracy: 2023

If you are a political news junkie like me, you have doubtless encountered stories that make much of the fact that U.S. politics will be quite different when white voters become a minority and we become what some call a multicultural democracy.

            The 2020 census reported that the number of self-identified white voters fell from 63.7% in 2010 to 57.3% a decade later.  Soon, pundits tell us, election results may change dramatically as “non-white” voters move into the majority.  

            One of the more interesting book titles in this debate is Steve Phillips, How We Win the Civil War: Securing a Multiracial Democracy and Ending White Supremacy for Good.  American democracy, Phillips points out, was built on inequality and white superiority from the beginning. It has taken over two centuries to finally secure the vote for poor people, women and (more or less) for black Americans.

Our founding fathers, adds DaMareo Cooper, co-executive director of the Center for Popular Democracy, never intended to extend the vote beyond wealthy, landowning white males. (YES magazine, Fall, 2023, p. 50). 

Phillips and Cooper are encouraged by the “browning of America.”  More and more Latino Americans wish to be seen as multi-racial instead of white.  In the 2010 Census 53% of Latinos identified as white; by 2020, only 20% said they were white; most claimed more than one race.

However, this statistical shift in Latino census figures is misleading if we Democrats expect it to result in more Latino votes for Democrats.  Many Hispanic voters are very conservative, opposed to illegal immigration, and supportive of the moral position of the Catholic Church on abortion.  

On the other side of the demographic debate, we find the whole question of white superiority, highlighted by the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally organized by right-wing extremists, the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol by Proud Boys, other right-wing hate-groups and treasonous Confederate flag-bearing Americans. 

Again, American history certainly supports the idea of white supremacy. Author Steve Phillips believes a new age is beginning in American politics.  His argument is contained in the title of his 2016 book: Brown is the New White: How the Demographic Revolution Has Created a New American Majority. Beginning with Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalitionin 1983 and moving steadily upward to the election of Ralph Warnock in Georgia in 2021, Philips echoes the words of Cooper: “We have the votes to win.” (YES magazine, Fall 2023, p. 52)

As much as I support a multi-cultural majoritarian voting bloc in America, I must get off the Phillips-Cooper train of thought at the next station.  These men are, I am saddened and chagrined to say, putting too much emphasis on skin color and not enough on poverty and other economic issues that determine how people vote, regardless of their ethnic background or race.

Democrats cannot be caught up in the demographic illusion that a majority of non-whites (a murky category) will vote against Republicans. Nor should they assume that all white men and women voters are white supremacists and that we need the browns and blacks to save our democratic republic.

What both white and non-white multicultural or multiracial voters will all do is respond to political leaders who will take their economic, social, and cultural needs seriously. They want to know that government leaders care about them.

Trump did not display that caring while president or since, although he talked the talk. President Biden has responded to middle and lower-class voters, whatever their racial or cultural background, who need good, union-protected jobs, protection from corrupt politicians, decent health care (especially for pregnant women), and the hope that might come with a conversion to truth-telling in government and the media.

All these issues are more important than whether American voters are white, brown, black, or some combination of the above.

We all should respect our ancestry, but that is not where we live our lives. We need political leaders who truly care about how we can live more productive and happier lives in healthy communities.

Democrats, of whatever color, do a better job than Republicans, of whatever color, of responding to American needs and desires.

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Politics

Walk and Chew Gum at the same Time?

            When I was a young Democrat in the 1970s, a comment made the rounds that Gerald Ford couldn’t “walk and chew gum at the same time,” a way of saying that he couldn’t concentrate on two things at once. We thought it was an amusing bit of political humor.

            Now that I am older, I see that comment as nasty and unfair, even though I might be saying that in self-defense as my own ability to concentrate weakens with age.

            Nevertheless, it may be time for me and some of my fellow Democrats to look again at a current situation where calling us to do two things at once.

            The public hearings conducted by the House January 6th committee are now underway, and all major networks but Fox are televising them. They paint a grim and shocking picture of a deliberate attempt by an armed right-wing mob to overthrow our government by unconstitutionally nullifying the victory of Joe Biden and stealing the 2020 election for Donald Trump.  

            Republicans call the hearings “a spectacle” to dismiss them. But they are indeed spectacular in how they reveal the carefully planned effort by family, friends, and employees of the Trump administration to keep Trump in the presidency illegally.  

            This would have ended our democratic republic by changing the presidency from an elective office to one that could be seized by anyone powerful enough to do so.  Even Republican leaders like Kevin McCarthy and Mitch McConnell were disturbed by this at first, but they soon were saying the attack on the Capitol and calls to “hang Mike Pence” were not treason but “legitimate political discourse.”

            Democrats—and most Americans—have remained upset by this attempted coup.  Books with scary titles like Democracy in Chains and How Democracies Die and How Democracy Ends (all published in 2018) warned about the dangers posed by Donald Trump’s behavior well before the January 6 insurrection.  This year scholar Barbara F. Walter published How Civil Wars Start looking at the roots of the political violence that still surrounds us.

            My favorite Republican, David Brooks, referred to the Walter book in his June 8 New York Times column. He did so, however, in a piece entitled “The Jan. 6 Committee Has Already Blown It.

            His argument is that if the House Committee’s goals in having the hearings was to influence the mid-term elections this fall by proving that Trump was trying to overthrow the government, they are sadly misguided.

            We don’t need to discuss “the minutiae of who texted what to chief of staff Mark Meadows on Jan. 6.” This will mean nothing to Trump supporters. “This is a movement, not a conspiracy,” Brooks pointed out. We don’t need to harp about a Republican conspiracy, but rather we need to understand the reasons why “the Republican Party, like the Polish Law and Justice Party or the Turkish Justice and Development Party, has become a predatory semi-democratic faction.”

            He added that “we need a committee to look at how conditions in America compare to conditions in countries around the world that have already seen their democracies slide into autocracy and violence.”

            I agree with Brooks that deeper social and political issues underlie the Jan 6 coup attempt, but I disagree with him that what the House Committee’s description of the history of this event is mistaken.  We have to understand as clearly as possible what actually happened before we will can find and address the roots of the problem. That will take time. Brooks thinks the members of this committee “are not gripped by the reality” of the deeper root causes of our political violence and our political instability.

            That is not necessarily true. House Committee members are detailing for Americans the factual causes of the coup attempt. This does not mean that they don’t see the reality of the background issues.   

            “We need a committee that will focus not on the specific actions of this or that individual but on the broad social conditions that threaten to bring American democracy to its knees,” Brooks concluded.

            No, David, we need both.  We need to walk and chew gum at the same time.

Categories
Politics

Culture of Violence Leads to Mass Shootings

            When it comes to gun violence, 2022 is off to a bad start.

A report on National Public Radio on May 15 noted that 2022 has seen 198 mass shootings so far this year. There have been more since then. It took reporters on CNN three minutes to just list all the number and cities where they occurred.  Information for these reports was compiled by an independent data collection organization (gunviolencearchive.org) 

During the weekend of May 14-15, ten people were killed in a racially inspired mass shooting [four or more homicides in the same location] in Buffalo, New York and there was a shooting at a California church that took one life and injured several others. Both were political, motivated by violence aimed at members of another group of people.

Some of my conservative Republican friends are proud of bumper stickers that tell us that “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people.”  Democrats call for gun control while Republicans blame mental illness for the killings. Of course, both contain some truth, but are very limited in their power to explain the increase in mass shootings. 

Yes, we have too many guns in circulation, many in the wrong hands.  But we also live in a period of political, social, and environmental stress.  We are racially and economically polarized in a situation complicated by illnesses, both viral and mental.  We are unhappy and we need to vent our anger at “the other side.”

It is time to face the stubborn facts that show we live in a culture of violence largely created by the far-right wing, supported by Republican Party leaders. 

Fact one: A report from the Anti-Defamation League (NYTimes 5-17-22) counted 450 U.S. murders committed by political extremists between 2012 and 2021. Seventy-five percent of these were committed by white supremacist, anti-government, and other right-wing groups.  Islamic extremists were responsible for about 20% and left-wing extremists for 4%.  

Fact two: Republican legislators and their supporters in the commercial and social media encourage us to believe that violence can solve our problems. Here are some examples:

  • Republican senators like Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley encouraged those who tried to reverse the results of the 2020 election with violence at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.
  • A study by the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights (Dana Milbank, NYTimes 5-16-22) found that more than 1 in 5 Republican state legislators during 2021-2022 legislative sessions had affiliations with far-right Facebook groups; that is 22% of state legislators, only one of whom was a Democrat.
  • ProPublica last fall identified 48 Republican state legislators and local government officials who were members of the Oath Keepers, a militant armed far-right group.
  • An Arizona state senator, Wendy Rogers, received national attention for a speech to a white nationalist conference in February in which she called for violence.

Fact three: Right-wing web sites and Republican leaders contributed to the Buffalo shootings by spreading the racist “replacement theory” suggesting that Democrats were trying to fill America with blacks and immigrants (mostly people of color) to dilute the population of “real Americans’ who are white. When we deny the existence of racism in our society and allow the use of coded slurs such as “Let’s Go Brandon,” we are encouraging violence.

Fact four: For years, Republicans and Fox News have spread conspiracy theories about vaccines, called their opponents pedophiles, and said Democrats were enemies of individual liberty while simultaneously working to limit the freedom of all Americans to vote or to be taught accurate history. Such lies strengthen our culture of violence.

            We live in a fearful world of war, economic uncertainty, and climate crisis. Instead of addressing these problems, many Republicans want to scare people into giving them political power to accompany the economic power they already have. How will they use that power? Think about that!

When trying to end gun violence, it is as important to address racism and our culture of violence as it is to talk about mental illness, drugs, or too many guns—although those issues should be addressed as well. 

Until American voters decide to elect local and national leaders who will address these issues, mass shootings will only increase.

Categories
Politics

Changes in Liberalism

This recent essay by my long time friend, Greg Cusack, also an American historian and former state Representative in Iowa, offers a good historical look at realities that most Americans are no longer aware of—K.W.

In struggling to arise above the inchoate, often content-empty “discussion” that passes today for civil discourse, I have been rethinking the curious reversal, in our history between the positions occupied by today’s “liberals” and “conservatives”. 

Please note: By “conservatives” I am referring to people like the principled men and women with whom I once served, folks who voice thoughtful positions, listen carefully to those with whom they disagree, and welcome meaningful compromise. Clearly these are not the same people as the rabble-babble of the far Right that has captured the Republican Party of today. These latter are more properly understood to be radicals and not “conservatives.”

The origins of modern “liberalism” can reasonably be fixed around the beginning of the 19th century, spurred by both the ongoing path of the industrial revolution and the social and political consequences of, and reactions to, the French Revolution of 1779 and its aftermath.

1. Laissez-faire economics

Whatever your political leanings, it might surprise you to learn that laissez-faire economics – such a prominent feature of Republicanism after Reagan – was originally embraced by liberals of a couple of centuries ago as a means of liberating the economy from the “dead hand” or control of the state and of traditional guilds (a development of the Middle Ages) in order that innovation, invention, and entrepreneurial “risk-taking” could lead the way towards greater prosperity (and, of course, enhanced wealth for the risk-takers!).

In fairness to our ideological ancestors – since I consider myself a liberal/progressive – it must be said that they had no idea of, nor experience with, the kind of industrial/financial capitalism that has come to dominate our world when they advanced their then-modern agenda.

Clearly – at least for those who view the world through lens crafted by fact and data – “hands-off” economics has proven to be a disastrous today because it allows funneling of disproportionate wealth to the already rich while largely ignoring the interests of the increasingly marginalized and the ecological needs of the planet.  The nation desperately needs appropriate governmental regulation of the economy to ensure a just distributional system to all citizens.

2. Universal suffrage

While most assume that this is a logical consequence of living in a democratic republic, its effects are not uniformly positive.

Remember that our own Founders rejected this idea, not only by limiting voting rights to free, white males who owned property but also by allowing them to directly elect only the members of the House of Representatives. (In the original scheme of the Constitution, the members of the federal Senate were to be selected by the several state legislatures and the president by “electors” identified by state legislatures as those men most likely to choose wisely and block the ascension of anyone unworthy for – or dangerous to – the office.)

For the liberals of the early 19th century, however, what they confronted in Europe was a system of franchise that was extremely limited and that, in effect, gave voting control only to landed aristocrats. In fact, the original push to expand the franchise came from the then-excluded rising ranks of the merchant class (a more accurate term than middle class) who insisted on their right to participate. Within a few decades of the 19th century liberals began to insist that all men (women were still excluded) be given the right to participate. 

A similar expansion of the franchise occurred in the United States as gradually all links to property were eliminated and we thought that this expansion would make politics more inclusive, fairer, and wiser.

However, when this expanded franchise was realized it soon became apparent that giving every male the vote was not a guaranteed path to a more liberal republican (as opposed to monarchic) order. As the populations in all countries then was still overwhelmingly rural and peasant/farmer based, liberals discovered to their dismay that this element of the population was more likely to be traditional – and, hence, conservative – than in any sense liberal, let alone radical!

As events of the next 150 years demonstrated, while rural forces could briefly be “radical” in some respects – moving, for instance, to support the overthrow of such despotic regimes as in Tsarist Russia – they always reverted to more traditional positions within a relatively short time. As we now see, this tendency of rural and small town residents appears universal.

Moreover, as repeated studies in the United States over the past 70 years have shown, the average voter even today is abysmally ignorant of all but the most immediate, provocative events. Surveys exploring voter knowledge about, say, the structure of the US government under the Constitution demonstrate the shocking non-knowledge most citizens have, let alone on such questions as how laws are proposed and enacted, the names of their own congressional and state representatives, or in foreign relations. 

The idea that the universal franchise would bring a welcome flood of broadened and informed voters to the table has been shown to be illusory. Conclusion: There should be urgent attention given to how to ensure that the most important public questions can find ways to command public attention and, thus, enhance citizen knowledge. The alternative of limiting the franchise only to those “most informed” is filled with demonstrable pitfalls that should prevent us from “going there” at all!

3. Nationalism

This, too, was once a liberal response to perceived fragmented states in which monarchs ruled over parts of “a people” – as was the case in the numerous German states in the early 19th century or over a mix of different “peoples” such as existed in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

This surge towards nationalism resulted in the unification of both Germany and Italy by the middle of the 19th century, something celebrated at the time as a clear “good.

It also led, however, to a sense of inter-national rivalry and a competition as to which nation-state was, or deserved to be, better or on top. Such national rivalries were a major source of both late 19th century European colonial imperialism and the Great War of 1914-1918. 

Nationalism is a fairly logical development of the tribal instincts deeply woven into human DNA, and while it can serve as a unifying force by creating or reinforcing a sense of commonality among peoples of diverse origins and beliefs, it can also be severely divisive both between and within states when nationalism devolves into a darker form that insists on distinguishing between those who are the “pure” people and those “others” who are not.

4. Self-determination of ethnic peoples

This was one of the rallying points in Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points which he hoped would frame the guidelines that would govern the establishment of a just and lasting peace following the horrors of World War II. [Although the Germans sued for peace on the basis of the terms contained therein the leaders of France and Great Britain instead imposed a harsh settlement upon Germany intended to forever keep Germany in “second place.” And we all know how well that turned out!]

Again, much like universal franchise, the idea of self-determination appears to be an “obvious” good thing. But, as was quickly demonstrated in the Versailles Treaty and has been a glaring reality ever since, just where to draw the geopolitical lines is an impossible headache, especially as during more recent years self-determination has not only been associated with nationalism but also with tribal identities within nations.

At Versailles, for example, among those pleading for recognition as deserving of independent status because of their ethnicity were the Vietnamese (in the person of Ho Chi Minh, no less). But, since Vietnam at the time was one of the colonies of France – one of the major powers that had prevailed in World War I – this request was ignored. And then, as part of the harsh punishment meted out to Germany, some territories were taken from Germany and given to France even though the majority of the occupants were German.

And  there are people within established nations today that could argue from the basis of history and self-determination that they should be allowed to enjoy some degree of relative independence or autonomy from the central government. 

As if this were not difficult enough, waves of immigration in recent years – and the anticipated even greater disruptions that global warming will cause by making large portions of our globe uninhabitable in coming years – have added even greater emotion and a sense of urgency to this matter.

Many historians have portrayed the last several hundred years as a period when unified nation-states came to prevail over smaller political units. More recent events, however, raise questions about how enduring this “triumph” may yet prove to be as centrifugal forces within states seem to be growing in power. Is the future likely to see a renewal of the several German and Italian “little states” that existed prior to the 1860s? Will the United States become disunited in fact as it already seems to be in rhetoric and political preference?

5. Tension between individuals and the community, or self-interest vs. that of the common good

While the Founders of this country certainly recognized the pull of individual freedom, both their intellectual heritage of the Enlightenment of the 18th century and their struggle to achieve independence from Great Britain caused them to emphasize striving to attain and preserve the common good as being of the utmost importance.

As is apparent in several sections of The Federalist Papers, they certainly understood and respected both the rights of individuals and the powerful pull of the pursuit of self-interest. But they tried to harness these inherent impulses to the common good through the structure of government they devised and through their emphasis on the primacy of always teaching citizens how to embody republican civic virtue, that is, the understanding of the necessity of always placing the common good above individual self-interest without which, they warned, our new democratic republic could not long survive.

Despite this, the behavior of many Americans from the very beginning challenged such hopes. Part of this is because the integral logic of capitalism is individual advantage and part is because Americans, feeling themselves liberated from the many class and social structures so dominant in Europe felt newly free to pursue “who they were” (even if they would not likely have used such a term in those days). 

The idea that the “good of the country” could most likely be achieved through the pursuit of individual self-interest came to be widespread, if more in practice than in theory. 

 When the Transcendentalists came long beginning in the 1830s, while they too emphasized the importance of the individual, they nonetheless retained the earlier connection between individuals and the larger common good. While, on the one hand, they carried forward the momentum of the scientific and intellectual revolution of the previous couple of centuries in challenging long-held – but largely unquestioned assumptions (including the role and teachings of the Church) – they also believed that the fruits of individual liberation from dogmatic rigidizes would redound to the benefit of the larger society. Thus, their individualism was tied to the organic whole, in a much healthier way (to my mind at least) than was found in the logic of unrestrained capitalism.

For a brief time during and after the Civil War, the idea of the national interest once again achieved primary importance. However – and it is one of the reasons the Reconstruction effort failed – the lures of profit, economic and physical expansion of the country, and the many opportunities thus available for individuals to make a fortune (even if more in myth than fact) served to make the closing decades of the 19th century one of the most ruthless periods of capitalism in US history so far (as our present years are proof of a resurgence of Gilded Age tycoon dominance).

Then, in reaction to the consequences of this self-serving individualism, there were two periods in the last 130 years when the larger common good once again came – however tenuously – to predominate: the Progressive Era of the early 20th century (extinguished by WWI and its immediate aftermath) and the longer period from the Great Depression through most of the 1960s when the common man and woman – as well as the survival of the United States – came to be the focus of public focus and private concern.

However, by the time Reagan had become president, the pendulum was already swinging back to the idolization of individual primacy as realized through untrammeled capitalism. As is still evident today, the idea of any common good is quickly thought by many (most?) to be a threatening idea of socialist/communist origin.

As a much-needed corrective to this line of belief, I recommend to you Cathonomics: How Catholic Tradition Can Create a More Just Society, by Anthony Annett, which correctly – to me, at least – frames how individuals and our behavior fits within the larger context of all of us – i.e., the common good. This book helps remind us that every act of ours is both political and consequential to the rest of us.

In all of this rationalizing over the role of the individual, liberals have waxed, waned, and wobbled! Just like the larger society.

While 19th century, pre-Civil War liberals did celebrate and defend the rights and roles of individuals, they did so within the context of multiple checks upon excess individualism, such as the many ethical and moral codes constantly reinforced by church and synagogue as well as the controls upon individual economic excesses still extent by states and localities. 

Liberals were among the earliest to join with others in calling for the abolition of slavery and, much later, for women to achieve equal political rights as well as men. Liberals were also prominent in both the Progressive Movement and the New Deal.

However, beginning with the period of the Vietnam War, liberals once again began to get their feet muddied by complicity in supporting the war effort and, more consequential in the long run, for eventually going along with the “new economics” that led, among other things, to the largely unregulated “globalism” that has wrought such devastation upon working-class citizens and so many once-thriving communities, large and small. These same “neo-liberals” enthusiastically embraced the beginning of our forever wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

More recently, many liberals have also – quite mistakenly, in my view – gone “overboard” in their celebration of identity groups that have morphed into identity politics. It is important to recognize that this divisive position is not just the purview of the Right alone! In so doing, they have once again forgotten that individuals apart from the whole are not only isolated but powerless in preventing the collapse of the common good.

Categories
General Politics

Polarization: Here to Stay?

            Two events in American politics in early May, 2022, have clarified what many of us have been lamenting for years. These were the victory of the Trump-endorsed candidate in the Republican primary in Ohio followed by the leak to Politico of Justice Alito’s draft of a likely Supreme Court decision outlawing abortion.

Both events constitute an early stage in a process still incomplete; J.D. Vance hasn’t yet been elected to the Senate, and the Supreme Court will not confirm the draft decision until June. Nevertheless, it should be clear to all of us that the most serious political polarization in America since 1860 is not about to go away—regardless of who we elect to Congress in 2022, or President of the United States in 2024.

It also appears clear to me that there are two possible responses to this situation. Each side can maintain and even exult in the righteousness of its position, claiming that God (or maybe just the power of money) is on its side, and continue the fight to overthrow its “enemies” OR both sides can over time (and it will take some time) make an effort to find what little common ground might remain—and in doing so save our democracy.

The second choice is the best one. However, to move in this direction we must deny the inevitability of polarization and the ultimate victory of one side or the other in this political conflict fed largely by human-centered arrogance and ego.

It certainly will not be easy to make that second choice.  Indeed, it seems contrary to what many of us have been taught was our “original sin,” inherited from Adam, inclining us to do evil; this ideas was amusingly portrayed by Flip Wilson comment in his early 1970s TV show: “The Devil made me do it!”

Yet who among us wants to say that there can never be a middle or common ground? Don’t we all yearn for peace and harmony, even if that means that none of us gets all of what we want?  This requires that we learn how to talk calmly and respectfully with political opponents.

With the help of a life-long friend who served 9 years in the Iowa House of Representatives, I offer the following suggestions on how to talk politics with others calmly while allowing all to “disagree without being disagreeable.”

  • Begin your conversation with something non-controversial, even the weather, and commit to speaking calmly without becoming riled or defensive, neither of which help;
  • Ask questions instead of making pronouncements; when discussing something you both agree is a problem, ask “well, how would you fix it?” and listen to the answer;
  • Then offer your solution to how you might “fix” the problem or address the issue, perhaps in the process even admitting that “your side” might have made some mistakes along the way;
  • When possible, start your discussion with a local or regional issue, because both you and your partner will be more informed about the matter and thus less likely to offer answers taken from your “tribal” group’s playbook;
  • As the conversation proceeds, be careful to seek common agreement on the meaning of terms, and in this way avoid “boilerplate” or “sound bite” answers common among politicians;
  • Maintain your sense of humor throughout; find reasons to laugh as often as possible;
  • Politely walk away if you must, but resist leaving with a middle-finger salute.

Of course, none of these suggestions are worth much unless you and your partner in conversation are open to changing your minds about an issue if confronted with a reasonable argument supported by evidence.

There is much at stake here. The political issues alone go to the core of what we want to be as a country, politically and morally.  Beyond that, we face the earth-shattering challenge of a changing climate that could result in several decades in the loss of billions of human lives, as well as a complete reshaping of all life on our planet.

Can we afford to continue on our current polarized paths?   That may be a question we will only have a decade or so to address.

Categories
Politics

Democrats Can’t Be Sissies

The famous twentieth-century movie star Bette Davis is known for her much-repeated comment that “old age ain’t no place for sissies.”

            We elderly or, as we like to say, people of “advanced middle-age,” certainly have both physical and mental “issues” to contend with that require strength and determination, not qualities found in sissies. 

Our eyes and ears can weaken, causing us to squint more and talk louder on occasion.  We tend to forget things and worry about becoming addled as we age.  

            We sometimes take naps after lunch.

            It takes courage for us to make the best of what we are now without becoming depressed by what we used to be.  And, although not all Democrats are elderly, it requires courage to be a Democrat whatever your age.

All Democrats I know including myself, have friends, associates, or family members, who are Republicans; if possible, we need to smile and ask them to explain what they believe. We both might learn something.

One also has to combine toughness with conviction to be a Democrat today whatever your age. You certainly can’t be a Democrat, out-registered now in Kentucky, and be a sissy! 

And if you were shocked when Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the 2021 Oscar ceremony, you should be dismayed by the Republican-dominated Kentucky General Assembly slapping teachers, poor people, and local public library boards with new restrictive laws. Republicans seem to feel threatened by any ideas or social groups that they fear might threaten their power.

We need to live our values. When we see stupid public comments like the recent one by Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado that LGBTQ people should not be allowed to “come out” until they are age 21, we should post them on large billboards and run TV ads throughout America. Representative Boebert is only 36 years old, and apparently doesn’t have enough life non-heterosexual friends to know or care that such a statement is both hurtful and ignorant.  

Democrats need to point out how democracy can be threatened when one party seeks power at the expense of an unpopular minority. Nazi Germany should have taught us that.

Democrats also should fight back when Republicans label as “incompetent” a President and a Congress that passed a bill last year that has helped our economy grow for fifteen months, have tried hard to reduce COVID deaths, and stood up to a Russian dictator trying to conquer Ukraine without launching another “forever” or nuclear war.

At the same time, we should call out but also avoid engaging in senseless battles with right-wing Republican conspiracy theorists who try to convince us that Trump won the election of 2020, that American scientists are using biolabs in Ukraine to create chemical or biological weapons, and that you should avoid COVID vaccination because it will put a microchip in your brain to control you.

It is no longer good enough to just say “oh, that is so bizarre and crazy.” We must call out craziness!

Democrats need to recognize the current Republican attack on American democracy.  We have only a few months left to convince voters that by restricting voting and refusing to pass laws to help Americans because Democrats proposed them, Republicans are refusing to govern and undermining our political system.  

Let’s not kid ourselves. By refusing to work with Democrats, Republicans at the state and national level led by “leaders” like Mitch McConnell, and Kevin McCarthy, are building a superhighway to an autocracy, one man or one-party rule. 

Perhaps the best thing Democrats can do today is to hold up a giant mirror to extremist Republicans, and do so repeatedly in hopes that Democrats and patriotic Republican work together to address legitimate grievances and solve real problems. This will require a great deal of courage and a clear, determined focus by real legislators who want to solve problems instead of cultivating hatred as a step to power.

We will not like an America in which voting and free expression are increasingly limited. Winston Churchill said that “democracy was the worst system ever devised, except for all the others.”   

Sissies don’t say things like that. Like Churchill, we must stand up to bullies.

Categories
Politics

Signs of Hope in 2022

            Readers of this column over the past several months probably noticed that I try to balance columns that warn of dangers to our country with others that suggest reasons to be hopeful, especially if we can manage to work together at problem-solving.

            I also have several email elves that send me articles to read; a search of my in-box turned up several of these from early January that are hopeful, and I want to share. 

            The January 1, 2022 L.A. Times op-ed by Virginia Hefferman, a Wired magazine columnist was the most optimistic, befitting New Year’s Day.  

            Ms. Hefferman first referred to the “January 6 Was Practice” Atlantic article by Bart Gellman that appeared in December. 

Gellman saw “a clear and present danger that American democracy will not withstand the destructive forces now converging upon it” because we have “only one party left that is willing to lose an election.”

            While admitting that destructive forces such as “danger, death, destruction, and, of course, disease” keep her up at night too, Hefferman also found “true signs of light in the gloom.”

            She noted that unemployment is down and wages are high, the stock market is doing well, and “retail sales rose 8.5% year-over-year between Nov. 1 and Dec. 24, according to Mastercard.”

            Then she added that Trump’s candidates in Republican primary races were not doing so well and even Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin, the GOP winner in Virginia, won by “distancing himself from the Marquis of MAGA.”  Hefferman also saw hope in the fact that nine of the “Big Lie” lawyers were sanctioned by a federal judge in Michigan and over 700 participants and Steve Bannon have been charged with crimes committed on or about January 6, 2021.

            Beyond that, despite the “ain’t it awful” daily news reports about COVID (my words, not hers), we do have a clear decline in deaths due to COVID, we have home-schooled our kids, learned how to quarantine, cared for family and friends, and even voted in very large numbers “in the fairest election in American history.”  And through the “dawns early light,” we can see that “the flag is still there,” as our national anthem proclaims.

            None of these facts erase the considerable suffering of the past two years nor do they deny the real dangers described in the Gellman article.  However, they can help us balance the constant stream of lies and incomplete information in the media and social media reports we encounter daily.

            Another interesting piece was another Atlantic article (1-2-22) in which by Glenn Hubbard, Columbia University Economics professor, promoted his new book The Wall and the Bridge—Fear and Opportunity in Disruption’s Wake.  The title of his article, “Even My Business-School Students Have Doubts About Capitalism,” caught my attention.

            Hardly a “leftist” radical, Professor Hubbard chaired the Council of Economic Advisors early in the George W. Bush administration.  He was surprised to discover that his M.B.A students at Columbia this past fall were “harboring doubts about the free market.”

            These students were shaped, Hubbard noted, by 9/11, the global financial crisis, Great Recession of 2008-2009, and the current debate about “the unevenness of capitalism’s benefits across individuals,” a polite way of describing the great income disparity in “the land of plenty.”

            Hubbard’s student have seen a pandemic create “mass unemployment and a breakdown in global supply chains.”  These disruptions have led to “disaffection, populism, and calls to protect individuals and industries from change.”  Hubbard is glad now that President Bush did not take his advice to protect open markets and instead put a tariff on steel early in his administration.

            Even Adam Smith, father of free enterprise, wrote a book entitled A Theory of Moral Sentiments in which he called for “mutual sympathy—what we would today call empathy.”  Hubbard’s students think that government should do more to help all Americans survive economically by investing in people, “expanding earned income tax credits, providing grants to community colleges and creating reemployment accounts to support reentry into work.” 

He agrees with them and thinks we should “embrace a much bolder agenda that maximizes opportunities for everyone in the economy.”    

            I wonder if he has talked to Joe Manchin about this.

Categories
Politics

So What Should We Do?

This essay, written by my long-time friend Greg Cusack, offers an honest and hopeful look at the (apparently) lost art of problem-solving by talking.

It appears that for many Americans the answer to anything these days is twist and shout! 

As one raised in the spirit of tackling problems, I continue to be saddened by how many among us apparently love to hurl insults, post vicious or demeaning comments, or even suggest that “now” may be the time to consider using violence. 

I am simply very tired of the yammering out there, no matter “where” or from “which side” it is coming from! Solutions to what ails us are available and possible, but we must turn from posting comments and insults to addressing paths to solutions. 

Parents and education

Of course we want parents involved in the education of their children! And, yes, there will be times – like the present – when one or more issues will cause tremendous worry or concern among parents. But let’s stop whining about it and see this for the opportunity that it is! 

At some point – after the initial shouting and finger-pointing are over – school officials should invite parents to share with them both what they do not want taught as well as how they believe sensitive topics should be addressed. 

After all, most of the agitated parents are not racists, they are just people who have been fed a line by the Right designed to gin ‘em up. OK, but let us also admit that a few people out there – hardly unusual in a nation of over 300 million people – have said or taught or used some things that are at best foolish and, at worst, stupid and distorting.

White people today, for instance, are not responsible for the horrors of slavery forced upon Black people for centuries in this country. However, white people should be aware of how the tendrils of past policies still linger and continue to inflict harm upon non-whites: in where people were/are allowed to live, in hiring and promotion opportunities, as well as by the increasingly loud nonsense spouted by white nationalist/supremacists.

Moreover, a form of history has long been taught in this country which downplayed – or even omitted – certain key elements, and most of these have involved the experience of non-white folks, including Blacks, Native, Asian, and Hispanic peoples. We should invite all parents to dialogue about how their stories can be respectfully integrated into the history of all of us. 

History should be taught “warts and all,” and what this means is that our ancestors – just like ourselves – were a mix of folks: a few clearly bad ones, but most people – just like us – doing our best to get by while often being largely unaware of some larger forces or developments affecting others. History needs to stress how people understood what was going on as well as what they believed their options to be. I really do not believe that most of us – liberal, conservative, or whatever – are afraid of the truth, but we all are sensitive to the “spin” that some would put on its presentation. Let us all be willing to see how our own disposition and/or preferences may interfere with our ability to hear and understand the concern of those who disagree with us. 

Actually, that last sentence should apply to every hot topic today, since it seems that a great deal of non-listening is going on. 

The Infrastructure Bills

I think we need to acknowledge a couple of obvious facts before turning to what can be done

The first is that the current iteration of the Republican Party is filled mostly with people who wish to deny President Biden and the Democratic Party of any achievements, no matter how objectively worthy or desirable. 

This is despicable; in my years of public service anyone in either party who had taken such a position with regard to proposals by the governor of Iowa would have been ignored! Yes, we had our partisan differences, but I can recall very few that were not submitted to bi-partisan review, intensive discussion, and sincere efforts and compromise. Simply adopting a negative stance is highly unethical and violates the entire spirit of the Constitution. If a person objects to an idea or proposal, the correct response is to point out the reasons why the proposal is objectionable and then to suggest ways to improve/correct the proposal. (Yes, there are some ideas so objectionable – supporting slavery or the mass exportation of designated groups, for examples – that no reasonable compromises are possible, but the number of such instances are actually few, indeed.) 

So, with regard to either infrastructure bill (those that address both human and physical resources) anyone with objections who was also sincerely interested in being reasonable and thoughtful would respond either by saying, “Proposal ‘x’ should not be part of this bill for the following reasons…..” or “I could support this bill only if element ‘y’ were changed/amended to read….” 

This response is fact-based and gives the supporters of such provisions targets that they need to address. The proponents of such provisions then have the chance to work with the objector(s) in order to find a compromise position acceptable to both. 

This process does take some time, but in my experience it always resulted in eventual legislation that was more broadly acceptable and, therefore, more likely to be successfully implemented. 

In the case of the first infrastructure bill, the one just signed by President Biden, this kind of give- and-take actually took place! 

However, with regard to the measure just passed by the House, no Republican has either voiced support for it nor – for me the more crucial part – has indicated how it could be improved/changed in order to merit their support. Republicans have just, carte blanche, opposed it. 

Why? 

I can understand why some would oppose specific elements in it – there are some that I have some concerns about, too – but simply to oppose the whole thing? Without discussion? Something is grievously wrong here. 

Expanding childcare – First, is there anyone who thinks that this is a bad idea or unneeded? If so, let’s hear your arguments. 

Expanding parental leave – Again, if there is disagreement about whether this is either necessary or desirable, let’s hear them. 

Etc. 

Growing Wealth Inequality

I personally believe that liberals and conservatives alike have dropped the ball on this major issue. It is shameful that so many of us are struggling to maintain the same relative economic and social 

position occupied by our parents while a minority of already wealthy persons continue to be further enriched thanks to current economic and tax policies. 

So, if you disagree with what the Democrats are proposing to begin to rectify this problem – including increasing taxation of the richest among us – what do you propose as an alternative? Doing nothing seems very unwise, and so your preferred alternative is….? 

The truth is that all of us – whatever our economic or political ideology – loses out when proposals are not debated. In my experience, there are few proposals so outrageously bad that they should not be considered. Likewise, there are very few proposals that cannot be improved through discussion and amendment. 

This is what the Congress is supposed to be doing!


Enough with the thoughtless memes intended to rile up your own tribe! We need to come together to grapple with the major issues facing us or else we will go down the tube together

I do not believe that every idea that comes from liberals or progressives to be wise, thoughtful, or needed, nor do I reject every idea that comes from thoughtful conservatives. But, ladies and gentlemen, our current state of affairs is leaving us powerless to do any of those things needed to make our country more prosperous, just, and fair to all.

My point is that in all cases we need to turn to what can we do to solve our problems rather than just simply continuing to be jawing about them! 

Categories
General Politics

Can We Talk? Please?

The late Joan Rivers, actress, and obnoxious comedian, was famous for her line “Can We Talk?” when trying to get someone’s attention.

She would often use this line after she had insulted a persons or group of persons.  It wasn’t pretty.

I have recently become discovered another woman—far different that Joan—who wants us to talk. Her name is Tish Harrison Warren, an Anglican priest and former campus minister at Vanderbilt University and the University of Texas.  She now writes a column for the New York Times.

She opened a recent essay (10-24-21) with these words: “The nation is coming apart. The world is in turmoil. We need to chat about the weather.  I mean this sincerely.”

Warren cited a recent poll that found “that 75% of Biden voters and 78% of Trump voters believed their political opponents ‘have become a clear and present danger to the American way of life.’”

 This finding has less to do with the policies of the political parties but, according to the poll, than to a “mutual loathing based more upon emotion.”  The pollster also says this as a sign of “spiritual and moral sickness.”

Then Warren spends the rest of her column discussing the importance of those “cultural habits that allow us to share in a common humanity.”  She refers to those “quiet, daily practices that rebuild social trust,” simple things such as greeting a neighbor on the street, joking with someone at the grocery or smiling at a baby in a stroller—or even chatting about the weather.

Today, due to cell phones and COVID, we do not have as many opportunities for these “small talk” public interactions that link us as humans and build trust.  However, Warren reminds us, we are much more than the sum of our political emotions and/or hatreds.

            Although people on both sides of our political divide agree that we need some profound political changes and do see dangers in what the other side wants to do, Warren tells us that “we cannot build a culture of peace and justice if we can’t talk with our neighbors.”   So as we slowly leave our COVID cocoons, “one of the first and most important things we need to re-establish is a habit of talking with those around us about nothing that will ever be considered a hot take,” like the weather.

            Two people can leave even a conversation about the weather “and walk away with the feeling that they are each a little less alone.”

            And I know that it is possible to go beyond small talk with those with whom we have political differences; we can be friends, and work together on issues of common interest.  

That has been my experience in recent years working on projects with other members of the Lions Club in Murray, a group which includes many Republicans.  We talk about things more serious than the weather, like collecting used eyeglasses, filling blessing boxes in our community, and offers to help restore Murray’s swimming pool.

            We acknowledge our political differences, but spend most of our time and conversation on ways to help our fellow citizens and promote the common good and general welfare of people in our community.

            Now, before my Republican or Democratic friends write me off as naïve, look a just a few of the other humane things that Red and Blues have done together in Murray/Calloway in recent years.

We have HOPE Calloway supported by Angels Attic and Needline, for those needing help with

food, utilities and housing. We now also have homes and programs for those recovering from addiction.

 Donna Herndon established Calloway United Benevolent Society (CUBS) as a coordinating agency years ago, and now we also have the Calloway County Cooperative, begun during COVID by Mary Scott Buck to support people with life essentials, and Soup for the Soul, led by Debbie Smith.  This list is very incomplete. Unsurprisingly, it is one in which women are prominent.

            I have no idea how these women vote, but they clearly know how to talk to people who may vote differently than they do. 

 And they may even begin conversations by asking about the weather?