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Where Are We Heading -- Bedford Falls or Pottersville?

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It's easy to feel discouraged about the bullying by right-wing Republicans and their patrons over everything from gun control to taxes and social safety nets to trade unions and jobs.

Every year about now I watch "It's a Wonderful Life" again to remind myself what Frank Capra understood about America -- its essential decency and common sense.

In many ways the nation is better than it was in 1946 when the movie first appeared. Women have gained economic power and reproductive rights; we enacted Civil Rights and Voting Rights and, through Medicare and Medicaid, dramatically reduced poverty among the elderly; we began to tackle environmental devastation; we stopped treating gays as criminals and have even started to recognize equal marriage rights. We elected and then re-elected the first black president of the United States. We have enacted the bare beginnings of universal healthcare.

But we are still in danger of the "Pottersville" Capra saw as the consequence of what happens when Americans fail to join together; when they forget the meaning of the public good.

If Lionel Barrymore's "Mr. Potter" were alive today he'd call himself a "job creator" and condemn George Bailey as a socialist. He'd be financing a fleet of lobbyists to get lower taxes on multi-millionaires like himself, overturn environmental laws, trample on workers' rights, and shred social safety nets. He'd fight any form of gun control. He'd want the citizens of Pottersville to be economically insecure -- living paycheck to paycheck and worried about losing their jobs -- so they'd be dependent on his good graces.

The Mr. Potters are still alive and well in America, threatening our democracy with their money and our common morality with their greed.

Call me naive or sentimental but I still believe the George Baileys will continue to win this contest. They know we're all in it together, and that if we succumb to the bullying selfishness of the Potters, we lose America and relinquish the future.

Happy holidays.

 

http://robertreich.org/

Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written (more...)
 
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Naive, yes, sentimental, always by Bayard Waterbury on Sunday, Dec 23, 2012 at 1:32:33 PM
OOPS! by Bayard Waterbury on Sunday, Dec 23, 2012 at 1:33:30 PM
People Who Call Other People Naive by Bob Gormley on Sunday, Dec 23, 2012 at 8:13:55 PM
True........ by Tom James on Sunday, Dec 23, 2012 at 9:22:19 PM