There have been occasions (maybe on my other blog?) where I have presented the idea that Americans- you, me, WE are addicts. We are addicted to oil. We are addicted to stuff and we're addicted to ourselves- we love to think of ourselves as the best in the world. But to move forward, to where we have a future, we all have to admit that our addictions are killing us. We need to change. No need to analyze why we haven't done that in the past, it's just time to make that change. Now. Before climate change wipes us out and we have none of the things we love, let alone the things we addicted to. But if we are to change then I think we need to give Amy Goodman from "Democracy Now!" a good listen. I think she's right. What do you think?
Now the Work of Movements Begins
President Obama is a former community
organizer himself. What happens when the community organizer in chief
becomes the commander in chief? Who does the community organizing then?
Interestingly, he offered a suggestion when speaking at a small New
Jersey campaign event when he was first running for president. Someone
asked him what he would do about the Middle East. He answered with a
story about the legendary 20th-century organizer A. Philip Randolph
meeting with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Randolph described to
FDR the condition of black people in America, the condition of working
people. Reportedly, FDR listened intently, then replied: “I agree with
everything you have said. Now, make me do it.” That was the message
Obama repeated.
There you have it. Make him do it. You’ve got an invitation from the president himself.
For years during the Bush administration,
people felt they were hitting their heads against a brick wall. With the
first election of President Obama, the wall had become a door, but it
was only open a crack. The question was, Would it be kicked open or
slammed shut? That is not up to that one person in the White House, no
matter how powerful. That is the work of movements.
Ben Jealous is a serious organizer with a
long list of accomplishments, and a longer list of things to get done,
as the president and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People. 2013, he notes, is a year of significant
anniversaries, among them the 150th anniversary of President Abraham
Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, the 50th anniversary of the 1963
March on Washington, as well as the 50th anniversaries of the
assassination of Medgar Evers and the Birmingham, Ala., church bombing
that killed four young African-American girls. President Obama’s 2013
Inauguration will occur on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Jealous told me
on election night, as Mitt Romney was about to give his concession
speech, “We have to stay in movement mode."
Young immigrants are doing just that.
Undocumented students, getting arrested in sit-ins in politicians’
offices, are the modern-day civil-rights movement. There are other
vibrant movements as well, like Occupy Wall Street, like the fight for
marriage equality, which won four out of four statewide initiatives on
Election Day. In the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, and despite the
enormous resources expended by the fossil-fuel industry to cloud the
issue, climate change and what to do about it is now a topic that
President Obama hints he will address, saying, in his victory address in
election night, “Democracy in a nation of 300 million can be noisy and
messy and complicated. ... We want our children to live in an America
that isn’t burdened by debt, that isn’t weakened by inequality, that
isn’t threatened by the destructive power of a warming planet.”
It was pressure from grass-roots activists
protesting in front of the White House that pushed Obama to delay a
decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, proposed to run from
Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. More than 1,200 people were arrested at a
series of protests at the White House one year ago. Now a group is
blocking the construction of the southern leg of that pipeline, risking
arrest and even injury, with direct-action blockades in tree-sits and
tripods in Winnsboro, Texas, two hours east of Dallas.
When those who are used to having the
president’s ear whisper their demands to him in the Oval Office, if he
can’t point out the window and say, “If I do as you ask, they will storm
the Bastille,” if there is no one out there, then he is in big trouble.
That’s when he agrees with you. What about when he doesn’t?
The president of the United States is the
most powerful person on Earth. But there is a force more powerful:
People organized around this country, fighting for a more just,
sustainable world. Now the real work begins.
Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
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