In this way, those in the American culture still interested in the ideal –the religionists– were handed over by the cultural left to the con-artists rising on the right, to the Bushite powers with their phony heroism conceiling the very things –greed and power– that Jesus most railed and fought against.
And the failure of the heroic on the left also opened the way for phonies from the right to posture in jump-suits aboard aircraft carriers-- the photo-op enacted to con those Americans hungry for an image to admire. The regime sold them heroism where there was none, where indeed there was only thuggery dressed up in hypocrisy. </strong>
Andrew Bard Schmookler's website www.nonesoblind.org is devoted to understanding the roots of America's present moral crisis and the means by which the urgent challenge of this dangerous moment can be met. Dr. Schmookler is also the author of such books as The Parable of the Tribes: The Problem of Power in Social Evolution (SUNY Press) and Debating the Good Society: A Quest to Bridge America's Moral Divide (M.I.T. Press). He also conducts regular talk-radio conversations in both red and blue states.
Perhaps it would mean being willing to run for office yourself.
Perhaps it would mean working hard to support someone for office who you believe is made of the right stuff.
Why don't people do that....
Well, they don't believe they could win.
They don't believe a worthy candidate could win.
They're afraid that if they put out the effort to support an independent candidate that it would end up supporting their worst nightmare.
All of these considerations are valid. Trying to change things is an uncertain risky business. One person with a gun can stand off a crowd of people because even though the group could take him out, each person realizes that he or she might get hurt.
No incumbent congressperson is willing to defend the Constitution because they fear it will lose them their job and they're not even sure they would succeed. Of course, that's the same dilemma a soldier faces when he or she enters a battle. Apparently moral courage is more rare than physical courage. A lot of people are more afraid of losing face, status or financial security, then they are their lives.
Another problem is... fighting city hall is an uphill battle that you have only a slim chance of winning a lot of ways to get hurt, particularly now. Looking back at the revolutionary war a lot of people did get hurt, including some of those who signed the Declaration of Independence.
Having courage is a lot easier when you have company; not so easy when you believe you are pretty much alone or don't know if anyone will support you.
I guess that brings you back to your original question.
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Mark A. Goldman (81 articles, 2 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 243 comments)
on Thursday, December 20, 2007 at 2:25:56 PM
As for isolation, for the citizenry, fortunately there are places like this that tell us that we are not alone.
But where the courage has been lacking, it seems that the Congress is where the ball got handed off in November of 2006, and then went nowhere. That's where the dearth of heroism has been most blatant.
Does Wellstone go far to explain this dearth?
Wellstone may be dead (and I've heard the rumors), but look at how many other people who have spoken up boldly (and a lot more aggressively against the BUshite evil than Wellstone, who after all died in October of 2002, before the criminality of the regime was nearly so evident), who are still alive: Olbrmann, Feingold, Krugman, Paul Craig Roberts, Glenn Greenwald, Chris Dodd (this week) and many, many others.
This is not like Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Russia in terms of how much courage it would take --or how surely one would be destroyed, or how long one would last-- to stand up to the Bushite regime.
I do not think the level of apparent fear on the part of our so-called leaders is so easily explained.
At the worst, a person in Congress, in standing up to honor his or her oath of office, might be inviting upon themselves the fate of a Max Cleland in the election of 2002. He was "bumped off" politically, but he lived to denounce the Bushites in the campaign of 2004.
I don't know just what Cleland would say about how terrible a fate it is to be defeated by the regime in an election, but my bet is that compared to the kind of danger and terrible fate that led Cleland to leave three of his four limbs in Vietnam, being sent back to private life is not the most frightening fate a human being can confront.
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Andrew Bard Schmookler (314 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 146 comments)
on Thursday, December 20, 2007 at 3:14:39 PM
This article raises a question that I have asked myself over and over--why is it that 40 years ago, so many Americans took to the streets to demonstrate against the Vietnam war while the anti-Iraq war activity is so limited this time?
isit only because there is no draft--the nearly 4000 killed come mostly from the lower income strata of society.Or because we are still far from the 60 000 mark?
I don't think so. Not only we might have lost our pride, our sense of the heroic, as Mr. Andrew Bard Schmookler argues convincingly but wehave lost hope.
After the historical defeat of socialism, under it's two main forms--communism and European social democracy--there is the feeling that ruthless globalized capitalism has the world in its grip, and that there is no other alternative.
And this new form of capitalism seems to bring about a regression of democracy everywhere it has taken over.
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francine (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 370 comments)
on Friday, December 21, 2007 at 7:29:19 AM