A vote for socialism: like Christianity, it's never been tried.Despite the excitement surrounding this year's presidential primaries, American democracy is in big trouble. Sen. John McCain For McCain's grandfather and father, see John S. McCain, Sr. and John S. McCain, Jr., respectively John Sidney McCain III (born August 29, 1936 in Panama Canal Zone) is an American politician, war veteran, and currently the Republican Senior U.S. Senator from Arizona. has served his country bravely and on occasion he shows commendable independence. Sen. Barack Obama provides a welcome voice for national unity after decades of partisan wrangling and government paralysis. But, given the scale of our national problems, personal integrity, bipartisan civility, and inspiring appeals to our better nature will not be enough to break the logjams created by interest groups, identity politics, and widespread denial of responsibility for public life. Both candidates pick away at the Bush administration's blunders, promise to do a better job using the military, avoid serious questions about the goals of foreign policy, tell the poor and workers that they feel their pain, and try to persuade the rich that they will be better off with more competent leadership. There are serious differences about Iraq, the economy and, critically, the Supreme Court, but neither McCain nor Obama seems prepared to challenge chronic inequality at home and a unilateral, unending search for national security abroad. Barack Obama's idealistic appeals for a fresh start may well bring him to the White House, but he will need better ideas and the support of a new, organized reform movement if he is to redeem America's democratic promise. At the very least we need a wider set of political options. Wouldn't we all be better off if this year's candidates had to contend with organized demands for single-payer health care Single-payer health care is an American term describing the payment for doctors, hospitals and other providers for health care from a single fund. The Canadian health care system and Medicare in the U.S. for the elderly are single-payer systems. , federal incorporation and oversight for transnational corporations, reassertion Re`as`ser´tion n. 1. A second or renewed assertion of the same thing. Noun 1. reassertion - renewed affirmation reaffirmation of the public interest at every level of government, and an internationalist in·ter·na·tion·al·ism n. 1. The condition or quality of being international in character, principles, concern, or attitude. 2. A policy or practice of cooperation among nations, especially in politics and economic matters. foreign policy? To open up such possibilities we cannot await a charismatic political redeemer. Instead a considerable number of us will have to renew our sense of political responsibility. "Democratic government requires a democratic people," we once told ourselves; and a democratic people must share responsibility, everyday, for building and protecting a democratic way of life, in the workplace and the neighborhood, at church and school, in unions, professional organizations, and social clubs. Democracy, in short, is a verb as well as a noun. Practice democracy or it dies. So where do we go to practice democracy? Many years ago, looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. an answer to that question by studying American history, I discovered Eugene Victor Debs (1855-1926). Debs ran for president four times on the Socialist ticket, the last time in 1920 when he was a prisoner in Atlanta Federal Penitentiary penitentiary: see prison. , a guest of the government for opposing World War I. The most popular leader in U.S. socialist history, Debs led a fractured party. In 1919 some socialists split off to form the American Communist Party Communist party, in China Communist party, in China, ruling party of the world's most populous nation since 1949 and most important Communist party in the world since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991. , which then split into two Communist parties There are, at present, a number of communist parties active in various countries across the world, and a number who used to be active. The formation of communist parties in various countries was first initiated by the formation of the communist Third International by the Russian , neither of which had any use for the other. Both parties claimed to be revolutionary and both despised Debs and his commitment to democratic politics. Debs was a powerful speaker, but he rejected the role of charismatic leader often associated with popular movements. He would not be a Moses to lead people into the promised land, he once told an adoring crowd, because if he could lead them in, someone else could lead them out again. They would have to find their way through their own efforts, or the freedom they achieved would end up an illusion. Biographer Nick Salvatore found that Debs's democratic vision, formed in his hometown of Terre Haute, Indiana Terre Haute (IPA: [ˌtɛ·ɹə ˈhoʊt]) is a city in Vigo County, Indiana near the state's western border with Illinois. , transcended the violent class conflict forced upon everyone by the greed and lust for power of America's corporate elites and their political lackeys. Through trade unions and machine politics, ordinary people, with minimal help from intellectuals, professionals, and religious leaders, learned to fight back in that elite-initiated class struggle. Some of them, mostly white, even achieved a level of precarious prosperity. Realistic labor leaders and politicians said that was the best they could expect. Debs disagreed and invited working people of every class to fashion a society marked by personal generosity in private life, shared responsibility in the political economy, and genuine solidarity across all those boundaries that divide people and crush their spirit. Building on the memory of abolitionists, populists, and pioneer labor agitators, the Socialist Party Socialist party, in U.S. history, political party formed to promote public control of the means of production and distribution. In 1898 the Social Democratic party was formed by a group led by Eugene V. Debs and Victor Berger. of Debs came as close as we have ever come to providing Americans with a truly democratic political option. That party might have become a Social Democratic Party comparable to the parties that regularly preside over governments in Europe and Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. . But, tragically, American socialists barely survived on the political margins. The leaders who followed Debs, Norman Thomas and Jesuit-educated Michael Harrington
That strategy provided important support for reforms like Medicare and occupational health and safety, but it did not work out. Few Democrats became socialists, while many socialists looked more and more like Democrats. Labor unions, some sympathetic to socialism, were battered by revisions of labor law labor law, legislation dealing with human beings in their capacity as workers or wage earners. The Industrial Revolution, by introducing the machine and factory production, greatly expanded the class of workers dependent on wages as their source of income. , isolated by the identity politics of the cultural Left, and weakened by internal divisions. For a time in the 1960s it appeared Harrington might guide the burgeoning student movement into a revitalized Social Democratic Party, but divisions over the war in Vietnam shattered promising "new politics" initiatives. Martin Luther King's murder ended hopes that democratic renewal would emerge from the civil-rights movement. By the time Bill Clinton and his friends gained control of the Democratic Party in the late 1980s with a new, probusiness agenda, America's remaining socialists found themselves politically homeless. A few sturdy independents like veteran Vermont Sen. Bernard Sanders and the late Sen. Paul Wellstone Paul David Wellstone (July 21, 1944 – October 25, 2002) was an American politician and two-term U.S. Senator from Minnesota. He was a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party and was a professor of political science at Carleton College before being elected to the Senate of Minnesota arose from democratic socialist politics, but after Harrington's death in 1989, socialist ideas all but disappeared. At times it appears that democratic aspirations passed away as well. Who now makes the case, as some of this country's founders did, that without a measure of economic democracy, political democracy will whither whith·er adv. To what place, result, or condition: Whither are we wandering? conj. 1. To which specified place or position: and die? So perhaps the time has come to reconsider the legacy of democratic socialism 'Democratic socialism advocates socialism as a basis for the economy and democracy as a governing principle. This means that the means of production are owned by the entire population and that political power would be in the hands of the people through a democratic state. . At its peak, the socialist movement The Socialist Movement was an independent left-wing grouping in the United Kingdom that grew out the Socialist Conferences. The Socialist Conference was a series of large meetings held in Chesterfield, Sheffield and Manchester in the years after the defeat of Britain’s offered three practical strategies for promoting genuine democracy: nationalization nationalization, acquisition and operation by a country of business enterprises formerly owned and operated by private individuals or corporations. State or local authorities have traditionally taken private property for such public purposes as the construction of of natural resources and public services Public services is a term usually used to mean services provided by government to its citizens, either directly (through the public sector) or by financing private provision of services. ; public guarantees of basic human needs, such as health care, housing, employment, and education; and development of structures of shared economic responsibility that would combine public accountability and worker participation. Socialism of this sort has much in common with Christian teachings that emphasize human dignity Human dignity is an expression that can be used as a moral concept or as a legal term. Sometimes it means no more than that human beings should not be treated as objects. Beyond this, it is meant to convey an idea of absolute and inherent worth that does not need to be acquired and , human rights, and solidarity, and with traditional conservatism and its concern for inherited obligations, institutions, and the common good. That term, the common good, is a mantra mantra (măn`trə, mŭn–), in Hinduism and Buddhism, mystic words used in ritual and meditation. A mantra is believed to be the sound form of reality, having the power to bring into being the reality it represents. of political discourse often abandoned in the give-and-take of framing policy amid democratic politics. But socialists believe there is a public interest, a common good that makes genuine claims on us as individuals and as a people. That means that we should take into consideration the good of the entire community, not just when government makes decisions but when we do. When we pollute pol·lute v. 1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter; contaminate. 2. To make less suitable for an activity, especially by the introduction of unwanted factors. the environment, pay less than a living wage, or wink at violations of the law, we betray the sacred trust of democratic citizenship. When we try to be good citizens at work, whether in board rooms or cotton fields, we practice democracy: the Catholic bishops once called it "justice as participation." Governments--local, state, and federal--are supposed to protect the public interest. In some situations this is best done through public ownership, in others through regulations enforced by public agencies and the courts, in still others by deferring to nongovernmental organizations Transnational organizations of private citizens that maintain a consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. Nongovernmental organizations may be professional associations, foundations, multinational businesses, or simply groups with a common interest in in the private sector. Powerful interests have persuaded us that strong government threatens personal liberty, but the liberty most cherished today is the liberty of corporations pledged by charter and law to pursue their self-interest, not the public interest. In a corporate economy, the people need strong government to protect their rights and interests, and they must organize to make that happen. The only guarantees of freedom amid any bureaucracy, public or private, are engaged, intelligent citizens aware of their civic responsibilities. Ordinary party politics ignores all this while democratic socialism makes such commitments the heart of democratic citizenship. Why has American democratic socialism had such a sad history? There is a library of books on that question. Here are a few answers. First, American abundance. Why endure the pain of socialist restraint when all of us can have what we want if we only work hard and play by the rules? Why go to so many meetings if we can shop at Wal-Mart? American socialism, a visitor once said, "foundered on the shoals of roast beef and apple pie apple pie typical, wholesome American dessert. [Am. Culture: Flexner, 68] See : America ." Second, the peculiar structures of American government require reformers to gain power over executive offices, legislatures, and courts--federal, state, and local. The courts remain a huge obstacle. In the late nineteenth century they ruled that corporations are persons with rights, just like us. From that point on, government regulation and proposals for public ownership encountered powerful opposition. Third, American pluralism. If a reform movement does not have money (and socialists did not), all they have to work with are people, and people often do not trust each other very much. There are racial, gender, religious, ethnic, and regional differences, and for a long time some were excluded: slaves, immigrants, women, people without property. Some were not sure about Catholics, or Jews, or foreigners. Nowadays we think we are beyond such discrimination, but privatization privatization: see nationalization. privatization Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned , resegregation re·seg·re·ga·tion n. Renewal of segregation, as in a school system, after a period of desegregation. , and suspicion of immigrants all speak more of mutual distrust than of democratic confidence. Finally, violent repression. American workers were not very class conscious but capitalists certainly were. They enlisted police, militias, and (in a pinch) the army, and they engaged in persistent, often violent, and ultimately very successful attacks on socialism and socialists. There is substance in all four of these factors, but I want to discuss three other reasons for socialist failure that might point to avenues for democratic renewal. First, American socialism, like American trade American Trade, the trade that the United States has with foreign nations or within itself. The Government actively promotes exports and seeks to prevent foreign countries from maintaining trade barriers that restrict imports. unionism and machine politics, never got beyond the bread-and-butter stage. For good reasons, unions set better wages, hours, and working conditions as their goals, and not for everybody but for their members. Unions, political machines, and ethnic groups understood power: alone you get nothing, organized you might get a shot at security and a share of prosperity. Similarly, a democratic economy, one responsive to popular interests as well as reflective of American ideals, is only possible if people organize. Corporations will always resist independent organization and they will always try to deprive employees of substantive power, in the workplace or the public square. The only way to fight back was to organize. It still is. Asked in a debate if Martin Luther King would be supporting him, Sen. Obama said no, that Dr. King would be out in the streets organizing people to hold the winner's feet to the fire. But organization is not all. Working-class politics won some victories, but it left the undemocratic structure of the economy in place. Lesson one is that if people want to govern themselves, and share responsibility for the common life, they must organize, not just for fair wages or professional self-interest but for a democratic reorganization of the economy. Second, too few socialists listened to Debs when he told them that socialism, like democracy, was a choice. Debs never subscribed to the Marxist belief that socialism was inevitable, built into the process of history. Debs knew better. American workers were realists. They figured out that the socialists would get crushed so they had better cut the best deal they could with the capitalists. After his heroic leadership of the Pullman strike Pullman strike, in U.S. history, an important labor dispute. On May 11, 1894, workers of the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago struck to protest wage cuts and the firing of union representatives. in Chicago in the 1890s, Debs ended up in jail when federal troops were called in to protect the railroads. If plutocracy plu·toc·ra·cy n. pl. plu·toc·ra·cies 1. Government by the wealthy. 2. A wealthy class that controls a government. 3. A government or state in which the wealthy rule. was ever going to be replaced by democracy, Debs concluded, democratic leaders would have to build a multiclass coalition of U.S. citizens prepared to fight for power. For that to happen, leaders would have to trust their people. In short, like a good pastor or grass-roots politician, Debs liked people and trusted them. His invitation to democratic citizenship affirmed human freedom and presented socialism as a project that required creative commitments and responsible choices. The future was open and history was still to be made. And the making required, and still requires, everybody. Third, Debs made democracy into something resembling religion. The Christian Social Christian Social can refer to:
So the problem remains as old as the American experiment. Political democracy and social democracy cannot long survive without a good measure of economic democracy. Capitalist markets have many virtues and socialists too often stifled markets with over-regulation. But, left to themselves, markets inevitably produce inequalities of income, wealth, and power that overwhelm institutions of democratic self-government. In the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , gaps in income and wealth ate back to levels not seen in a hundred years, rural and urban populism populism Political program or movement that champions the common person, usually by favourable contrast with an elite. Populism usually combines elements of the left and right, opposing large business and financial interests but also frequently being hostile to established has disappeared, unions and consumer groups are a shadow of what they once were, and grass-roots community organizations are compelled to accept the best local deal they can. A handful of public-interest and reform organizations do impressive work on the environment, economic justice, and human rights, but powerful factions long ago mastered the art of co-opting or marginalizing the efforts of part-time citizens. To recover the democratic promise will require of us new levels of personal commitment, critical intelligence, and political seriousness. The old Marxist idea that some class or other would do the work of the democratic revolution for the rest of us (abuse) for The Rest Of Us - (From the Macintosh slogan "The computer for the rest of us") 1. Used to describe a spiffy product whose affordability shames other comparable products, or (more often) used sarcastically to describe spiffy but very overpriced products. 2. was always a self-serving lie. The self-evident truth Noun 1. self-evident truth - an assumption that is basic to an argument basic assumption, constatation supposal, supposition, assumption - a hypothesis that is taken for granted; "any society is built upon certain assumptions" is that democracy--liberty and justice for all--requires a democratic people, and that means us. Democracy, like love, may begin as an emotion, but eventually it must become a decision. Now is the time for that democratic decision. Nothing, nothing, matters more for our country. David J. O'Brien is Loyola Professor Emeritus of Roman Catholic Studies at the College of the Holy Cross The College of the Holy Cross is an exclusively undergraduate Roman Catholic liberal arts college located in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. Holy Cross is the oldest Roman Catholic college in New England and one of the oldest in the United States. in Worcester, Massachusetts. |
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