President Obama is Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” – the first Democratic president to receive two consecutive popular-vote majorities since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Yet these are clearly tough times for progressives. Everything progressives have fought for is seemingly on the chopping block nationally, and in many states and cities. Programs are being cut; public assets are being sold off; school teachers are losing their jobs; unions are being attacked; pension and health care benefits are being slashed – even Social Security is being challenged.

Does the successful checkerboard strategy provide a model for future activism?
Progressives, in short, remain on the defensive.
No one would deny that defense is important. But even as every effort must be made to hold the line, how, specifically, might it be possible to regain the political initiative?
History suggests one powerful strategy – one that begins by getting clear about the checkerboard of power, and its possibilities.
Washington may be stalemated. But Washington is not the only space on the political checkerboard. The American system of federalism allows for political initiatives that can take the offense across a range of scales and locations, and politics involves many different squares on the board. Some are currently blocked, but others may be open for doing something interesting. A serious checkerboard strategy may also open the way to national solutions as well.
The steady city-by-city, state-by-state Progressive Era buildup to national women’s suffrage offers one well-known example of a checkerboard offensive. Another involved the state-by-state buildup of work and safety regulations prior to the New Deal. In more recent times, numerous places on the checkerboard have demonstrated how progress on social issues can be made as well, square by square, over time, even in a very conservative era.
Prior to 2004, for instance, no state in the nation allowed same-sex marriage. Today, less than ten years later, same-sex marriage is legal in nine states and the District of Columbia. Moreover, broader public opinion is slowly turning in favor of equal rights for same-sex couples. Step-by-step, further progress is all but certain.
Similarly, fed up with the harsh repercussions of the failed drug war, a majority of Americans now favor legalization or decriminalization of marijuana – and two states on the checkerboard, Colorado and Washington, recently voted in favor of legalization. (Many more already permit the use of medical marijuana).
Along with such highly visible successes on social issues, just below the surface of public awareness numerous important economic and institutional advances have long been developing in cities and states occupying different squares on the board. Although the increasingly hobbled national press rarely covers state and local issues, the advances include little noticed progressive policies in support of cooperatives and worker-owned firms, public- and neighborhood-owned land development, public power and internet delivery, new environmentally sustainable energy strategies and even public enterprise, including publicly-owned health care facilities.
Numerous additional policies operating in various parts of the country also could be turned to progressive advantage and expanded over time – if there were a clear strategic determination to do so (and a lot of hard work). Among others, these include: municipal investing strategies, state venture capital investing, pension and retirement fund investing, move-your-money and bank-transfer efforts, land and mineral revenues for public benefit and municipal methane-capture efforts. On a larger scale, public banking efforts similar to the Bank of North Dakota and progressive health care reforms similar to those recently adopted in Vermont are being pursued in dozens of states.
What is striking about the new range of possibilities is that most also introduce the concept of democratizing wealth ownership into practical and political reality.
There is obviously every reason, first, to learn about what is happening just below the surface of media attention and, second, to build up and steadily expand the number of squares on the checkerboard that are currently open to expansion. The goal should not only be to help people in specific local communities and states, but also to demonstrate possibilities to others working in other squares – and together to slowly surround the hold-back cities and states with what makes sense as they flounder and fail on their regressive path over time.
In certain cities and states a comprehensive strategic option also appears to be opening up – and here the issue is how it might be tested, refined, and then put forth as a serious approach in one or more cities or, ultimately, on a number of squares on the board – especially as economic difficulties and the fiscal crisis intensify.
Traditional progressive strategy for financing public expenditure has always tried to focus taxation at the very top to the extent feasible – both as a matter of equity and of good politics (keeping the middle class out of the line of fire and out of the political embrace of the opposition). There is nothing wrong with this approach except that it is obviously inadequate – as the ongoing right-wing budget program/salary-and-benefit-cutting bonanza so painfully remind.
The strategic way out of the box, logically, is an approach that draws on demonstrably viable checkerboard efforts to rebuild the local economy (and the local tax base) in ways that are effective, stable, redistributive and ongoing – and that also capture greater revenues and profits for public use. Which means a different form of “democratized” development – and a specific plan for how to implement it over time so as to secure funds for vital institutions and infrastructure (such as schools and mass transit), for obligations to past and future retirees, and for programs to conserve resources and protect the environment – all while preserving and expanding services for those who badly need them.
Numerous practical ingredients that can be included in a comprehensive checkerboard strategy include:
• The use of city, school, hospital, university and other purchasing power to help stabilize jobs, anchor wealth, support employee-owned businesses and cooperative ownership, strengthen local small- and medium-sized business and improve the local economy.
• The use of public and quasi-public land trusts (both for housing and also commercial development) to capture development profits for community use, and to prevent gentrification.
• An all-out attack on absurdly wasteful and costly – around $70 billion a year in public subsidies! – giveaways that corporations extract from local governments.
• The use of community benefit strategies – and community organizing, backed also by labor unions – to achieve traditional development but also, where possible, to democratize the local economy, stabilize the tax base and support public services.
• The exploration of further ways for cities to make money by directly managing resources and providing services, thereby offsetting costs and taxpayer burdens. These include taking direct public ownership over utilities (as cities like Jacksonville and Los Angeles already do) to improve services, reduce costs and secure added revenues; and expanding city revenues through city-owned land and other existing strategies that provide non-tax revenue.
Obviously, not all these approaches can be adopted at once. And they may be viable at the outset only on very specific squares on the checkerboard. On the other hand, practical precedents for every element in the mix are now operating in one or more city or state – and the stark reality is that times are getting worse and are likely to continue to get even worse in the coming years.
As problems and pain at the local and state level increase, at some point more squares on the checkerboard are certain to open up. And, as always, it will take some specific person or group of people to grab the reins, set the wheels in motion and flip the switch to light up that square with a new way forward.
Equally important – as the long developing pre-history of women’s fight for the vote, the long developing pre-history of the New Deal, and now the developing state-by-state changes in connection with same sex marriage and marijuana all suggest – the pre-history of potentially much larger national change is all but certain to be developed through such efforts in local and state laboratories at various places on the checkerboard.
And the notion of democratizing ownership in general through such practical efforts – at a time when a mere 400 individuals own more wealth than the bottom 185 million Americans taken together – is likely to be of additional political significance to increasing numbers as social and economic difficulties increase.
For progressives bruised by the battles of recent months and years, a cool look at other opportunities on the checkerboard offers a different way to think about change. Defensive struggles must continue. But forward movement is available on the board, and time and pain are on the side of a serious strategy.
Originally published @ Truthout
Copyright, Truthout.org. Reprinted with permission.
Photo by Steve Snodgrass released under a Creative Commons license.



34 Comments

Rec’d, Gar. Could I add peer-to-peer loans?
It’s so heartening to see that the Zapatistas are out and about now…in non-violent silence since the 21, the first day of their new calendar. What they seem to have accomplished in many municipalities, and all apparently ‘by the people, for the people’ is so heartening, and may be leading us with their light.
Thanks for what you do; I bring your quotes to my diaries sometimes. ;o)
Excellent suggestions. Rec’d
Progressives need to return to the idea that all politics is local. All of those movements and cross-currents are out there, but the progressive political blogosphere’s fixation on Washington and the President leads nowhere but doom and gloom.
“Progressives need to return to the idea that all politics is local.” That was Tip O’Neill, no? Dunno if it were true during his day or not, but I don’t think so much now.
I don’t know what either you or Gar really mean by ‘progressives’, actually; it’s a pretty co-opted term by now. But re: ‘local’: if you don’t see how much state and federal policies effect ‘local politics’, I just don’t understand it, THD, unless you’re again referring to changing a party from within through the lowest entry level electoral politics, or even building third parties that way.
Still and all, that which can be accomplished by abjuring the large Machine is wonderful and will build over time…and is another reason that we need indie media to deprogram the sleeping people who are content to sleep…for now. And of course, those who are willing to be creative risk-takers to build a better future, even while their projects may be somewhat hidden behind the curtain.
A-yep. Instead, they have it backwards: Yeah, let’s put all our energy into running a no-hoper “message” candidate for president!
Look at what’s happened with Occupy: They were considered goners by the Traditional Media, but now through the Occupy Sandy organization have the chance to stop disaster capitalism in its tracks — and raise the consciousness, as well as the spirits, of people in normally very conservative parts of New York and New Jersey. By working locally, by becoming part of their local communities, they are going to be able to take the movement to the next level.
But of course, this is all part of the Gospel According to Saul (Alinsky): Organize locally. Know your neighbors.
I hope it all works out as you envision. Wake me up when you get to the Eleventh Dimension.
One of my sweetest memories of childhood was falling asleep in the back seat of the car as my parents drove home – what a comforting sensation just being able to drift off knowing that when we got there, they would wake me and carry me to my room. I’d love to have that feeling again.
But I’m a grown-up now, and I know that if I want to get there, I’m the one who will need to drive.
Know what I mean?
Sure I know what you mean. However, I fear the over-intellectualization of the struggle ahead.
2013-2014 is a good time to run locally. Whether you win or not, help get the message out. The Green Party, Justice Party, and New Progressive Alliance can help. An example of openings: http://www.thenorthwestern.com/article/20130102/OSH0101/301020371/Spring-elections-largely-uncontested and http://www.newmenu.org/mariaselva
Mr Alperovitz does write in an academic sounding style – but you should google him and his background if you think he’s an academic and nothing more.
He’s got lots of experience with people who did, are are doing, the kinds of things he’s talking about. From the Youngstown Steel worker ownership struggle of the seventies up to the present.
Going to have to disagree with you PW and THD — if indeed American politics are about Local then why bother spending two years plus in time and several billion $$ on sifting and winnowing on/about who and which of the two UniParty USian Partys — D or R — gets to sit in the WH Oval Office?
Here at FDL during 2012 lead-up to November WH election one was putting a flame to a short fuse suggesting not voting for either Obama or Romney. There was very heated reaction to this idea — but if American politics is all about the Local then why the fuss about not voting for ObamaBush or RomneyBush? Or why all the ridicule/mockery directed at 3rd/4th WH candidates?
In Gar Alperovitz’s very well constructed/presented essay up top the first sentence struck me as one way of looking at/framing Barack Obama using the measure of what Time Magazine chose to give Obama.This choice of first sentence by GA seems misplaced and a needless tilt declaration. I do not agree with Time Magazine nor do I agree with the Nobel Prize organization regarding what either of these conventional organizations decided to do in ways of award for/towards Barack Obama.
But if I should just be Local then perhaps it does not matter much what Time or Nobel want to give Barack Obama? Were/Are Time and Nobel being Local? Yes? No? The Local Mayor or County Board Chairman were not in the running for a Time POTY award or a Nobel. But I should be Local while Time and Nobel are being White House? Hmmm…interesting … is this some kind of Know Your Place kind of politics? I am all taken up in what the Mayor is doing or what the County Board or Local Schools Board wants to do/not do or is seeking to give more/less $$ towards? Why should I care about what Barack Obama got from Time or Nobel? Why should I care about whether Barack Obama is a War Monger? Is a War Criminal? ( Afghanistan,Pakistan,Yemen,Congo and Iran are not Local as far as Wisconsin goes then are they? ) Is a Wall Street Fixer? Or that POTUS Obama sabotaged MediCareForAll and seems to be all in for maiming/harming/undermining USian SS/MC/MC? I am sure the Local Ds and Rs like UniParty run USian politics. They are Local. Sad fact this is too.
I disagree with you and THD. Of course seeing/being this is all about politics and political pov’s/opinion’s I can ( and will ) respect you despite holding/having pov(s)in way(s) I may not/would not agree with.
I don’t get this Local framing other than to view it as a method of deflection/misidirection done by R/D/UniParty regime partisans to slow walk or point to where the quicksand pits are regarding national USian politics evolving in acute ways about acute issues. Issues about who is doing war mongering,war crimes and wheelbarrowing billions of $$ to corporatists,militarists and imperialists while aiming to cripple USians SS,MC and Commonwealth. The Local Mayor is not doing this. The Local County Board is not doing this. The Local Schools Board is not doing this. In fact Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker ( R-Austerian- Kochian-Maniac ) is not doing this. POTUS Barack Obama is. ObamaBush is doing Bush/Cheney better than that dubious and dark minded WH duo did or could. Who still wants to suggest this is a matter of/to dispute?
Gar Alperovitz wrote a well crafted and articulated essay up top — I view the first sentence as tilted in a way that puts Obama along/at the side of FDR — going to call False on that suggestion.
My idea of Local Politics would be more about 5-7 million USians showing up at the WH,Pentagon and Langley and doing some genuine Stop Now Politics. That is doing Local Politics too is it not? Get on a bus at your Local and go to WH/Pentagon/Langley Local. Seems Local to me. Or we can consider using the word Locale as well…all the same to me.
Should Barack Obama call down The Death Drones and The Death Dealers on these 5-7 million USians for daring ( actually the exercise of being USian Citizens ) to get Local with this POTUS what is being said and who is saying it? A R POTUS? No…a D POTUS would be doing this — at the WH,the Pentagon and at Langley. Seems Local to me. A Serious Strategy? Serious to who? You? Me? Gar Alperovitz? Nancy Pelosi? Eric Cantor? Chuck Schumer? Barbara Boxer? Joe Biden? Hillary Clinton? Barack Obama? What is Serious?
I think this is serious — with serious doom and gloom implications for USians and humans globally — WH,Pentagon and CIA are on the USian Checkerboard.
I believe Gar means well but this tutorial is still an attempt to put Lipstick on a Pig. Any local progressive attempts at defense or the even rarer offence will be met with scorn or judiciously applied power from our wise Technocrats and their minions.
This small, local and incrementalist approach just further conditions people to accept the fact that we have lost the struggle and our Masters have all the Kings on the checkerboard.
I hope Gar’s message gets through to the members of the establishment left. For example, I’ve been inspired by Bill McKibben’s 350.org and have been working with them locally, but when they call a big action, such as the upcoming February 17-18 rally, it is still focused solely on Washington, D.C. Calling it a ‘national’ rally doesn’t make it so – it is in one city and everyone is supposed to travel 1,000 or 3,000 miles to attend? Why not have rallies everywhere at the same time to show the powers that we are legion and in their backyards?
Likewise, 350 is calling for an international meeting of youth in Istanbul this summer. What’s remarkable about that? Nothing. Another meeting of jet-setting, do-gooding enviros who will fly thousands of miles, spewing tons of carbon pollution in order to combat carbon pollution? What if 350 said, we’re going to have this international meeting, but virtually, because we don’t want to make Earth’s carbon pollution problem any worse? That might get people thinking and talking about the impacts of plane travel and would actually be better for the planet.
In addition, I hope that Gar can point us to some web sites where the local initiatives he talks about are listed. We need to see these concrete examples that can be worked on locally.
Finally, I’d like to see an organized effort to use our existing individual financial resources to create the world we want without waiting for the MOTU to act. Couldn’t we establish a “We The People” cooperative which would work for our interests – in voting rights, in access to solar energy, funding local food projects, etc?
Sorry Gar, your piece is a little drippy with idealism.
All politics is local?
Tell that to the Palestinians.
And playing checkers really doesn’t amount to shit when the other guys are playing monopoly with our money, property, lives and the entire political process.
I apoloize for being all out of hope, what I had left got sucked out in 2008. Now I’m just left with spite and a fixed determination to change the corrupted system from OUTSIDE the system.
It’s good to see someone else breaking through the charade of manufactured consent and civil obedience that is being fed to us by groups like 350.org. While Bill and friends are jetting around the world on tarsands fuel the real battle is being waged in East Texas by real Eco-Warriors.
I saw what I mean happening in the Occupy Movement. The Occupy movement was spreading rapidly to more-and-more local places when the evictions came down. Some high school students in Boaz AL popped up on their main street holding a demonstration and a GA until they were arrested on a parade permit charge (those antiquated segregation-era laws were useful).
Idle No More popped up on a First Nation Reserve and spread to other reserves and then to cities. Each round-dance has its local statement of what is the same issue. Just as each Occupy developed a statement that tied what Wall Street is doing to various local issues. For Occupy Columbia SC, some of those local issues were the construction of a Wal-Mart across from the state capitol, the move to convert the Savannah River bomb plant for nuclear reprocessing, the lax inspection on specific nuclear power plants. Other places were beginning to document how the local PTB related to Wall Street. Documenting the details that show how the tentacles of the Wall Street vampire squid reach into every community on the planet. Building local coalitions around dealing with all of those issues at once locally — and coordinating inter-locally (or intra-globally) to deal with the larger issues of war, economy, and peace that are rooted in the financial domination of the economy, polity, and culture.
The Tar Sands pipeline action has been local–on Pine Ridge and in Texas. It is about the abuse of property rights. And about the environment. And about the corruption of governments. But it is local.
Parties are institutions. Before you can deal with institutions you have to have a broad enough movement to change the social environment in which the institutions operate. And you have to involve more people–locally. Unless you have some power with institutions, they are irrelevant except as examples of what is wrong.
When I use the term progressive, I mean the folks who are the counterpart today to what the progressive movement was a century ago. Its a pretty broad-ranging coalition of reform and revolutionary movements.
x2
McKibben’s meeting would be better held in Houston or Wichita than Istanbul. (Although Riyadh or Jeddah would be good locations).
Tarply on subject fwitw.
McK’s annual budget is $4.5 million and two of his contirbutors are Rock Fam & Rock Bros, Hummm, & oil mbanking.
But but but that might involve work! And meeting people who aren’t in my social or cultural stratum! People with whom I might not agree in every particular!
This.
It sound likes the people on the left needs to do alot of hand washing. Most of them have been groping for leadership in a den of political thives.
It sound like the people on the left needs to do alot of hand washing.Most of them have been groping for leadership in a den of political theives.
BTW, that’s normally called “going outside the system.”
Mahalo, Gar…! My fellow Occupy Hilo compadre has posted an excellent expose on what new insidious f*ckery, ALEC has on tap for ‘We the People’…! And the clock is furiously ticking away…! 8-(
Where the heck do you live? Spread out all over the world. Heck yes, it’s local. Always has been. “Think global. Act local.” is a statement of reality if you’re seeking to change the system. You seem to be expecting institutions to bail us out. You want folks to rise up against Wall Street, you document what Wall Street is doing to their lives. Locally. You want to talk about how K Street has bought Congress and the Presidency and the Supreme Court, you document how their Congressman has sold old their interests. My point during the discussion about the elections was not to get distracted by that expensive corporate-funded sideshow. There was no protest action that would be more than a feel-good activity. It didn’t matter what I did; Obama was going to lose NC and a Tea Party governor was going to be elected. But…by voting, I and a bunch of others voted out a corrupt county commissioner. Will the replacement be corrupt? or corrupted over time? We’ll watch like a hawk. (BTW, the county commission is nominally non-partisan but really is not–and is contested by three or four different local coalitions instead of the parties).
I take that you have 5-7 million folks on your FB friends list that you can ring up at a moment’s notice, that you’ve figured the logistics of getting that many people to Langley, the White House, and the Pentagon without the DHS Fusion center cracking down on them, and have figured out where the food, water, and restrooms are going to come from, and what exactly folks are going to do when they get there. Hint: all of those things can be done, but they involved coordination with local groups. The way you get a million folks to DC is work locally to recruit people to go, charter enough buses to take them there, and have people in DC ready to deal with the practical issues of having that many visitors. That’s what the civil rights movement did. That’s what Million Man March, million moms, and ANSWER all do. That requires doing something local. Local in DC. Local in a lot of other places. And requires a team working on it of 15-20 people in DC to pull the practical things together. You don’t spontaneously hit the streets with 5-7 million people. Even in a revolution.
Forgot to mention. Those old-style large-scale demonstrations in Washington: sprung for the parade permits, lots of bureaucratic hassle and negotiations about where they would be and what they would do.
Gar is really on to something, when he discusses employee ownership.
Employee ownership in America is the one way to empower the masses, and particularly the working class.
It is a vehicle where the owner receives fair value, and employees receive beneficial ownership as the owner is paid.
So the classic conflict with the owner vs. employees is removed and employees receive the ownership merely by working in cooperative efforts to see the transformation of a business from and owner owned to employee owned progress.
In America right now, there are tremendous tax breaks for the business, and now with the new tax rules in effect, an even greater reason for owners to be energized in considering this idea.
Unfortunately, the people that work with the 2 groups of ownership advice providers seem to be wed to a policy of keeping this all from happening. For no good reason other than collective incompetence. But the idea is terrific nevertheless.
Good luck to Gar and his ideas.
Obama self-identifies as a progressive. So does Hillary Clinton. So, progressives seem to be doing fine.
Liberals, on the other hand, have been screwed by Democrats.
Supposedly, O’Neill’s dad gave him that advice. What the elder O’Neill or Tip meant by the statement seems to have been lost in the mists of time.
There is a wiki on the quote, but the source is Chris Matthews, who often pulls things out of nowhere to promote himself.
For just one thing, for a guy who supposedly believed all politics were local, Tip sure got himself to Washington, D.C. as fast as he could, becoming a Congressman at age 24 and remaining there until his retirement.
The only election Tip ever lost was in fact a local election–city council– though he was very young at the time. Wiki says the loss of his only local campaign proved to him that all politics are local, but that makes no sense. I very much doubt he had campaigned for Cambridge city council on national and international issues.
Whatever the quote originally meant to Tip or his Dad, if anything, both of them were of a very different era in politics. For one thing, Tip became Speaker before the exponential growth of lobbyists.
Whether either of the O’Neills would have believed that statement today, none of us will ever know.
Which is infuriating because there’s no justification for it. Obama, the DNC, and the corporate press keeps going out of their way to differentiate between the “Professional Left” and the “Pandering Left”. One blows smoke and mirrors; the other traffics in substance. One is a top-down plutocracy; the other is a bottom-up meritocracy. In other words, progressives are on the defensive because they keep reading and listening to people who claim “Yup, we’re on the defensive” when nothing can be further than the truth. The NDAA is proof of that: the elites are absolutely walking-on-eggshells terrified of progressives. Especially after witnessing how Occupy Sandy delivered results in a much timely manner than bureaucracy-mired non-profits …
Amusing 1st ? THD…
… thank you for a follow up comment … I had responded to PW’s comment which was linked to your earlier comment … so wondered how doing that might shake out.
As it is since this is all just political junkie talk/give and take which is what floats the boats here at FDL I was more interested in and my comment surely is more about what Rs and Ds do to keep Number 3 and Number 4 or even Number 5 political parties outside of American national politics or what R and D partisians more specifically were doing at sites like FDL or take your pick. As it is Obama is now POTUS again until 2016 and what has it been –nearly 8 weeks since being re-elected — and Obama surely seems to set on damaging SS,just gave the Pentagon over $$630 billion ( lots more than that is likely the case ) but wants to CPI SS. Looks like Obama’s murky legal/moral status Drone Death Dealing just killed another so called top Bad Guy in Pakistan — which quite likely Barack Obama has finger prints on having taken place. So — what is it going to take to stop this stuff? I have no doubt you likely can make a long list ThD. Many others then as well.
As for that 5-7 million number? Seems to me that is about what it would/will take to get the attention of the WH,Capitol Hill,Pentagon/CIA and the money people up in New York and/or over in London. Do I have that many FB connections? Hah!! I am not on FB.
But seriously — this is just all conjecture and speculation or wishful thinking or just plain fatigue showing through with the enduring economic/political/legal stallouts now in place here in USA. I do think if and when any big political change or event perhaps takes place it will not be because someone at FDL wrote a comment about politics.
Many comments here at FDL seldom bring on responses as it is — so thank you for taking the time ThD. I am sure we cross paths here at FDL often in comment threads and I know PW is a fixture here at FDL. I don’t think conventional politics and political acts will bring forth the needed solutions for the deep problems now facing USians and the bad mistakes/errors or just plain illegal/immoral acts taking place/being done.
I would guess you use Dem in your FDL avatar because you are not a R? I am not a R or a D. At this point I view R vs. D junk as just that — junk. One day I hope enough USians get to where I am and have been for some time about/regarding the R vs. D junk. Barack Obama Exhibit #1.
A while back in one of my comments I suggested what is likely going to happen here on the Big Island will not be coming out of the TV or computer — sure as hell not on or thru FB. It almost has to come from nowhere and yes everywhere at the same time. Getting 5-7 million USians to show up in WashingtonDC is not going to be about comfort or ease. If this is based on or about conventional politics/assembly it can not/will not happen. Comfort and ease of getting/being somewhere are not what 5-7 million USians may have on/in mind when they show up in WashingtonDC.
Thanks ThD…take care…see you in FDL comments
Historically, change has occurred when pain became too great. This is when things explode. I would say right now is still not the time where the pain is great enough, and people will have to be squeezed more to be motivated to act. In the meantime, the elites keep playing their old game, which they have played over centuries, bribes and force. This where American politics is right now. And the reason you have same sex marriage laws is that it is a 3 ring circus, and while action is happening in one ring, mischief is happening in the other 2. So it is a distraction elites are willing to give to the masses, as Roman did with gladiator fights, the distraction that elites use to bribe everyone in sight and rob the country blind. I guess for them it is a small price to pay to be allowed to do what they really want to do.
Obama is not a “Democratic President”.
He is a (self-described) “moderate Republican” who simply hijacked The Democratic Party (via Media driven hype), and has destroyed it (likely by intent).
But to be accurate, Obama is a reactionary Cheney-Bush style Neocon and Wall-Street bedfellow who — in the face of record levels of Corporate Welfare and the most excessive Militarism in World History — is determined to put “Entitlements” (which are really paid-for earned benefits) on the chopping block — because everyone (?) must bear the load…
Mass Poverty is coming…..
I use the Dem in my handle because I am a small “d” democrat. I see that the people get the government that deserve if they have the ability to make informed decisions. And that billions of dollars are being spent to divide them and manufacture consent for decisions that would not make themselves.
My position is that the possibility that electoral politics would ever work over the short term died for a lot of the public in August 2011. That was the chord that Occupy Wall Street struck and also what terrified the PTB enough to categorize them from the beginning as domestic terrorists and suppress them.
We face bleak times, and Obama being President in only part of it. Look at the Congress. As a group, they are to the right of Obama. Look at the states, gerrymandered for incumbents as a result of the 2010 elections. Will Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania be able to reverse the destruction that has gone on there in the short term? Look at the reach of money downward from DC into state and local government. Art Pope, the executive of Americans for Prosperity, put national money into a county school board election in 2010; he is now the budget director for the Republican governor of North Carolina. Money is working frantically to slam the door at the local, state, and national level on any change to the system. And conservative think tanks like the Goldwater Institute, Club for Growth, and Heritage Foundation are still seeking a permanent Republican (conservative) majority.
Fatigue is not an option if you seriously want your progeny to have a less bad world.