Dancing with Dean, Coming Home
to Kucinich
by Stephen Dinan OpEdNews.Com
A pervasive illusion has been dissolved this week, creating an opportunity
for a powerful step forward. It's an illusion that has gone under
the banner of "electability" - rational people assessing which
candidate has the best chance of beating Bush. Underneath the
surface debate, there's another truth, driven more by fear and emotion
than an accurate appraisal of the landscape. People have been afraid
that, in order to defeat a colossal bully, we need an even more macho
fighter in our corner. And thus a lot of very well-meaning people
propelled Dean to the foreground, believing his fire, attitude and
military-like campaign would prove a clear match for the other, much
nastier bully. A natural, very human instinct.
Round 1 is over. The unstoppable, win-win-win bluster of our favored
tough guy detonated back on him. The Iowa voters, in the end,
decided they didn't really fancy it. The tough guy warfare
ended up taking Dean down a notch and made him the laughingstock of talk
radio everywhere with the "Dean Scream." Gephardt
went down with him as Democrats proved again that our status as fighters
is NOT our highest priority or value. Would Dean meet the same fate
when slugging it out with Bush, who does, after all, have a bigger
warchest and the incumbent's advantage? Trading punch for punch with
him may not be the winning strategy since the potential for backfire is
enormous.
As the illusion of "we need the toughest guy to win" dissolves,
many Dean supporters are looking around, wondering if it is time to get
behind someone else. Is the damage already irreparable? I've
watched this development with a mixture of compassion and hope. Compassion
because I know that Dean stands for a lot of positive things and that the
feeding frenzy now descending upon him runs the risk of obscuring the
extraordinary ways that he has already galvanized positive change. But
also hope, because I see a real opportunity for the party as a whole to
take off its blinders and see that a slug-fest with Bush may not be the
best strategy in 2004.
Creating a winning alternative to Bush is about honoring and celebrating
the very virtues that are at the core of the Democrat party and the large
mass of progressives who no longer identify with it. It is a
philosophy of hope and progress. It is a bold, leading forward into
our future. Republicans rule by fear, Democrats lead with hope.
Conservatives cling to the past, progressives lean into the future.
The visionary torch of the future is what we need more than a burly
fighter.
The real problem with the Democrat party, in my opinion, is that it has
begun collapsing rightward and "toughening up" out of the
inferiority complex created from being out of power at the moment. However,
this chisels away at its most enthusiastic and passionate base, the
progressive, activist faction that works for our continued evolution as a
society.
The Democratic party is most authentic when it positions itself as the
party of hope and the future. When it begins to try to imitate the
tough-guy, macho rhetoric of the Republicans, it ends up out of integrity
with its very raison d'etre - to draw our society forward.
I'm thus quite glad that the illusion of needing to meet and match W
on his own turf is starting to dissolve this week and opening the
door to a more sensible strategy that is more likely to win.
The winning strategy, I believe, is to choose a candidate who presents the
strongest contrast to Bush. Not to be simply anti-Bush, as Dean is,
but to stand for an entire platform that is in stark contrast to the
welfare-for-the-rich, military build-up, lies, and unilateral aggression
that we've been seeing for the last four years. The task is to
heighten the difference rather than erase it.
That means using truth more than advertising spin. It means
championing those penalized most by Bush's regime. It means being
willing to cut the Defense budget and strongly commit America to a path
beyond perpetual warfare.
I submit that the candidate who has the MOST viable platform on which to
stand to defeat Bush is Dennis Kucinich. Some reasons, in no
particular order:
1. Dennis is one of the most optimistic people you could meet and he is
focused on inspiring people about what is possible for this country.
He carries a strong visionary torch that leads many to liken him to
Martin Luther King.
2. Dennis is very committed to being a truth-teller. Ethicists rank
him consistently high on integrity. Since one of Bush's Achilles
Heels is the way his administration has systematically lied to the
country, a strong contrast on integrity is key for the winning ticket.
3. Dennis is extraordinarily intelligent, quick, and funny in debates.
He also knows his policies inside and out. He would clearly
outclass Bush in a face-to-face match up.
4. Dennis takes a positive stand for peace, a stark contrast to the
perpetual war we face now. Unlike the other candidates, he has a
plan for getting out of Iraq immediately and moving forward a peace-driven
agenda that revives America's standing in the world.
5. Dennis is deeply, authentically spiritual in a way that reaches across
religious lines and truly honors people as part of the same global family.
6. Dennis is a strong advocate for universal health care and has a plan to
implement it. The vast majority of Americans in recent polls
(ranging from 60 -80%) now back this.
7. Dennis has fought corporate misdeeds in a public way, paid a heavy
price, and then was ultimately redeemed, which makes him a fearless
reformer in that arena.
8. Dennis' Horatio Alger story of starting in abject poverty to run for
the President of the United is the ultimate American dream, a stark
contrast to the aristrocratic privileges of Bush (as well as Kerry and
Dean)
9. Dennis' base of support spans a very wide political spectrum. Large
numbers of Greens are re-registering as Democrats in order to vote for him
and his base is strong with unions and Reagan Democrats, who respect his
integrity, honesty, and blue-collar roots. He now wins with 75% of
the vote in what was a heavily Republican Ohio district.
10. Dennis has a campaign that is running in 50 states with a
reasonably-sized fundraising effort of almost $10M, despite an almost
complete media blackout. His core supporters are passionate and
loyal rather than people trying to merely back "the winner."
11. Dennis has a special appeal to artists of all persuasions: musicians,
writers, graphic designers, speakers, Flash animators, visual artists.
This can become a powerful asset for the Democratic campaign, which
will have to draw heavily on alternative sources of media coverage to
compensate for Bush's deluge of ads from his $200M warchest. Artists
can lend extraordinary power to a campaign and help drive the Internet
marketing as well as events that build a sense of a movement.
12. Dennis is quite a fighter, but in his own, unique, respectful way.
He has a fearlessness about him, a willingness to speak and lead
boldly, to speak the truth that others are afraid to voice. And yet
he manages to do so with real respect for whomever he is challenging.
THAT is the kind of warrior that we need, not one who matches Bush
in muscle but who outperforms him with boldness and fearlessness. That's
a different kind of warrior spirit, that goes beyond having a military
uniform in the closet.
The only real issue with Dennis' campaign at the moment is the pervasive
myth that he is not electable and thus many of his actual, authentic
supporters are working on other campaigns. I believe that this myth
has been subtly encouraged and perpetuated by precisely the same forces
that have the most invested in the status quo. Because if you really
step back and see who has a) the most experience at all levels of
government and b) the most powerfully contrasting platform, character, and
ideology to Bush, it is clearly Dennis. His positions are probably
very close to your own
If you don't believe me, take a five-minute test yourself. Most
forward-looking progressives I know, when they take it, come out the most
aligned with Dennis of any of the candidates. http://www.presidentmatch.com
Instead of saying, "He's not electable," try saying, "Wow,
here's a man I can get passionate about since he is offering policies that
reflect my authentic views!" When you get passionate, that
affects others and ripples outwards. And it's a hell of a lot more
fun to be behind someone who actually inspires you as a human being.
There's a joy and excitement and sense of destiny in it that goes
far beyond being on the team of whomever happens to be winning in the
polls at the moment.
I don't fault anyone for the choices they've made or the candidates
they've backed until now. We can all dance with others. But
when it comes time to choose someone to come home to, someone we really
love and are inspired by, I think we're far better off choosing a man who
can carry the visionary torch of America forward, out of the haze of lies,
war, and greed. There is still plenty of time for the masses to
shift to his campaign. In fact, he and Clinton are at similar places
in the primary race at the same moment. Clinton was out last
"winner" and I believe that Dennis can be our next.
In a democracy, we don't have to have the biggest muscles to win. Truthpower
can win the hearts and minds of the masses far more than bluster and
advertising spin. Backing a man who stands with extraordinary truth
and a passionate belief in our capacity to grow still further as a country
may be the best strategy against Bush after all.
For more information about the Kucinich campaign, see:
http://www.kucinich.us
Stephen Dinan stephen@radicalspirit.org
is the author of Radical Spirit (New World Library, 2002), and
founder of the Radical Spirit Community. Stephen directed and helped
to create the Esalen Institute's Center for Theory & Research, a think
tank for leading scholars, researchers, and teachers to explore human
potential frontiers. Currently, he serves as the marketing manager for an
HR software company called Enwisen , campaigns for Dennis Kucinich and
runs workshops. Stephen is developing several new books, including a
companion volume to Radical Spirit entitled Radical Spirit in
Action, a memoir set in India called In Kali's Garden, a
collection of poetry and a novel. He graduated from Stanford University
with a degree in human biology and holds a master's in East-West
psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies. his
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