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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
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Reassembling Amercia's Democracy

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On the Fourth of July, we celebrated Jefferson, Franklin, Adams, Madison and all the other great men who created our democracy, right?

Not exactly. The Founders did create the framework for a democratic republic, but they didn't create much democracy. Indeed, in America's first presidential election, only 4 percent of the people were even eligible to vote.

The Founders created the possibility for democracy, but it took the struggle (often bloody and always hard) of ordinary people over the years to create the substance. In some decades, we've made advances; in others, we've fallen back — including in the past three decades, when the power of America's workaday majority has steadily been usurped by corporate elites. So now, We the People must put America back on its historic path toward economic and political democracy.

"Fine," you might say, "but how? I'm just one person. What can I do?"

1) Start by considering what's reasonable for you. Few of us can be full-time activists, and the list of issues and problems is intimidating, long and complex. So just take one bite, choosing an issue that interests you most, then start contributing what you can (time, skills, contacts, money, enthusiasm, etc.) to making progress. No contribution is too small. If you can only devote half a day a week, or an hour a day or even minutes a day — it all adds up. As a young Oregon woman said of her half-day-a-week volunteer door-knocking in a legislative race: "I was only drop in the bucket, but I was one drop. And without all of us, the bucket would not have filled up."

2) Inform yourself. A little effort can quickly connect you to accessible, usable information and insights on any given topic, allowing you to gain a "citizen's level" of expertise so you can talk to others about it. Read progressive periodicals, tune in to progressive broadcasts, get information from public-interest groups, and plug into good websites and blogs.

Don't know how to go online? Nearly all public libraries not only have computers, but also librarians and volunteers who'll assist you in finding the info you want and teach you how to use the machines.

Or find a youngster (maybe your grandchildren or someone at church) who'll help you. Yes, you can do this!

3) Democracy belongs to those who show up. Join with others. Everyone feels better when they're part of a group, a movement, a community (whether real or virtual). In your own town or neighborhood, many others are either already working together or willing to help form a group — seek them out, maybe at bookstores, book clubs, coffee shops, events, churches, blogs, Websites and other meeting places.

4) A community is more than a collection of issues and endless meetings. Combine the serious with the social, and remember the Yugoslavian proverb, "You can fight the gods and still have fun!" So discuss your issues and strategies at potluck suppers (bring the kids, have some music, pour a little wine), throw an annual festival of politics, create weekly sessions of beer-mug democracy at local taverns, set aside one day a week for Big Talk (rather than small talk) at the coffeeshop, etc.

5) Become the media. Create a local newsletter, blog, bulletin board (on the wall or online), Internet radio broadcast, etc. Just as importantly, enlist high-school or community college speech and journalism teachers to help you learn how to do radio and TV interviews and how to get local media to cover your issues. Also, get them to train you and others in pubic speaking, so you can have your own speakers' bureau to address clubs, churches, schools, etc.

6) Hold your own "what to do" sessions in your community. Don't wait for national progressive groups, which haven't figured out a cohesive strategy for focusing on people's anger about the meekness of Washington's Democratic leaders. Instead, have your own discussions about what should be done nationally — if anything — and start zapping those ideas to other communities, heads of national groups, progressive media outlets and so forth. Let the ideas percolate up from a thousand localities!

That's what democracy is. Some assembly required.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
Nice column. Your brand of rabble rousing patriotism is always appreciated. When ever I hear the news talk about how the Dow Joness is doing today, I find myself thinking about a column you wrote years ago in which you said that how the Doug Jones average, ordinary Americans, is going is just as important. --- ---
I would add only one thing to your list: You should not limit yourself to reading progressive periodicals, tuning in to progressive broadcasts, getting information from public-interest groups, and plugging into good websites and blogs. Reading popular information published by the wing nuts of the right helps you understand what you are up against, as does talking with their supporters. I stopped at a couple of pro prop. 8 rallies (CA banning gay marriage.) during the election and asked "why do you care"? While I did not agree with the logic, the answers were more informative than most of what I read.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Mark
Tue Jul 6, 2010 9:32 PM
Our governments will work for us when we stop electing surrogate parents and start electing representatives. Like cars and oil companies, governments are dangerous when out of our control. Democracy is only part spectacle, the rest is our serious responsibility. One vote may be small but it is infinitely larger than none. Ask those who have been denied one.
Comment: #2
Posted by: jwwbrennan
Wed Jul 7, 2010 3:56 AM
Jim does two things that is a disservice to us all in his article:

1) Perpetuates the myth of the "founding fathers" and;

2) Proposes "solutions" that sound more like an outdoor music festival or coffee klatch than any meaningful action;
First I'll address point one:

Most Americans know that the framers met for three months in closed session, but this is generally forgiven on the grounds that the then Congress of the United States had not commissioned them to write a new Constitution, and neither revolutionaries nor counter-revolutionaries can do all their work in the open. What few modern-day Americans realize, however, is that the framers did their best to ensure that we would never know the details of their deliberations. All the participants in the convention were sworn to life-long secrecy, and when the debates were over, those who had taken notes were asked to hand them in to George Washington, whose final task as chairman of the convention was to get rid of the evidence. American's first president, it appears, was also its first shredder.

Fortunately, not all the participants kept their vows of silence or handed in all their notes. But it wasn't until 1840, a half century after the Constitution was put into effect, with the posthumous surfacing of James Madison's extensive notes, that the American people could finally read what had happened in those three crucial months in Philadelphia. What was revealed was neither divine nor diabolical, but simply human, an all-too-human exercise in politics. Merchants, bankers, ship-owners, planters, slave traders and slave owners, land speculators, and lawyers, who made their money working for these groups, voiced their interests and fears in clear, uncluttered language; and, after settling a few, relatively minor disagreements, they drew up plans for a form of government they believe would serve these interests most effectively. But the fifty years of silence had the desired myth-building effect. The human actors were transformed into "Founding Fathers." Their political savvy and common sense were now seen as all-surpassing wisdom, and their concern for their own class of property owners (and, to a lesser, extent, sections of the country and occupational groups) had been elevated to universal altruism (in the liberal version) or self-sacrificing patriotism (in the preferred conservative view).

==============

Now as to point two, Jim's proposed actions which he offers us are really nothing more than chimerical notions that amount to drinking coffee and getting ourselves better informed with some friends tossed in so we are all informed together.

This is more liberal fantasy that sounds appealing in that it might make us feel better at the end of the day but does nothing to change power structures.

As long as women and African-Americans were nice humble and passive what did they get? Nothing. Unless you count subjugation and servitude as something. Would those in power one day have awakened one day in a particularly genial and loving mood having experienced some psycho-spiritual transformation and said, "You are so nice and humble I'm going to allow you to vote, own property and while we're at it let's throw in equal pay?"

Dream on.

It took suffragettes and civil rights activists being insistent, unpleasantly arrogant, unrelenting and a willingness to risk what little they did have to attain the few freedoms that are "allowed" today. This meant laying their bodies on the line.

Those who are destroying our earth and our communities at breakneck speed are as humble and caring as barracudas, with all apologies to the more gentle piscine creatures, and will not easily or at all relinquish their stranglehold on the gasping planet or your neck.

What it will take is nothing short of large scale purposeful sustained direct actions that bring the system to a halt. This means tremendous sacrifice. This means discomfort. In this there is the inevitably of tremendous risk.
We need Latin American-style "socialist" revolution in the streets, complemented by effective traditional political organizing, social-class based.
Comment: #3
Posted by: mcoyote
Wed Jul 7, 2010 6:45 AM
Re: mcoyote
I am sorry that Mcoyote did not use his or her name. He or she is correct and articulate. I do think, however, that Jim's program of social orientation is necessary for the great television-brainwashed mass to prepare them for the brutal struggle that our rulers' destruction of the US economy is making inevitable.
Comment: #4
Posted by: John Wheat Gibson, Sr.
Thu Jul 8, 2010 7:29 AM
Re: mcoyote I have to agree with you abut being activist. A military takeover of the USA could not succeed as evidenced by the Pentagon's incompetency in Iraq, Afghanistan and Vietnam depite overwhelming odds. The reason that American citizens will not protest actively is just why the German people didn't stop the NAZI takeover of that country. It was done with mainlywith propaganda and Hermann Goerring spelled out how easy it is to do. Create imagined fears and appeal to patriotism and the citizens will then go beyond their self interest and serve the interests of those manipulating them even if it puts them in harms way. According to Goerring it works anywhere under any form of government.
Comment: #5
Posted by: kien lusk
Sun Jul 11, 2010 8:47 AM
Hightower tells you to go to Church - just like all corporate owned media in this country is telling you to go to Church. That should tell you something about Hightower. The Christians cut the forests of Europe, steal the Commons, burn heretics & women, start the African slave trade, destroy the native peoples of the Americas. kill the beaver & the bison, cut the Eastern hardwoods, log the northern Midwest pine forests, pollute every river & lake we have, and now pollute the Gulf of Mexico but Hightower wants you to go to church.

Bleep Jim Hightower
Comment: #6
Posted by: peter b
Fri Jul 16, 2010 3:20 PM
Does a weekly editorial cartoons count..."Phillers' @ www.kcactive.com.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Phil Deibler
Sun Jul 18, 2010 5:09 PM
Re: mcoyote For point 1, what are your references relating to these actions? What books, magazines, articles, etc. did you use to substantiate your information? Just curious.
For point 2, you speak of "liberal fantasies." What are these liberal fantasies? Are there many of them? What are they, specifically? Is being informed a liberal fantasy? Or is it better just to be uninformed and mad, such as various hosts we have on TV and radio, and those found at certain rallies across the U.S.? And speaking of being mad and needing a revolt against those who destroy our earth, not to mention lack of teeth in regulations against this kind of destruction, why weren't you advocating this revolution when our previous president introduced oxymoron legislation such as the "Clear Skies Initiative," further pollution through mercury, etc.? Why not protest in Bush's time instead of Obama's? Or is your "revolution" during a Democrat's reign a "conservative fantasy?"
Comment: #8
Posted by: Winslow
Sun Sep 26, 2010 12:59 PM
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