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	<title>Principles &#187; hope</title>
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		<title>Hope in a Time of Cynicism</title>
		<link>http://www.selfdirectedsociety.com/hope-in-a-time-of-cynicism/</link>
		<comments>http://www.selfdirectedsociety.com/hope-in-a-time-of-cynicism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Jan 2010 22:28:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mr. Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Discussion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conservative]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cynicism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hope]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[President Obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[progressive]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.selfdirectedsociety.com/?p=115</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My neighbor&#8217;s car has a bumper sticker that says, &#8220;How&#8217;s that whole hopey-changey thing goin&#8217; for ya?&#8221;   This moronic expression is not only annoying because it reads like it was meant to be a Sarah Palin quote. It is annoying because I would actually like a whole lot more change, please, and I still [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My neighbor&#8217;s car has a bumper sticker that says, &#8220;How&#8217;s that whole hopey-changey thing goin&#8217; for ya?&#8221;   This moronic expression is not only annoying because it reads like it was meant to be a Sarah Palin quote.  It is annoying because I would actually like a whole lot more change, please, and I still hold out some hope that change is possible.  It is annoying because my neighbor, people like my neighbor, and the type of politicians that my neighbor supports, are responsible for the slow pace, and in some cases the complete absence, of change.  It is annoying because my neighbor seems to think that I &#8211; who still have a &#8220;Got Hope?&#8221; sticker on my truck &#8211; might be regretting my earlier support of the principles of change because, in my neighbor&#8217;s view, the changes that were proposed to the health care system looked like the dangerous path to socialism. My neighbor is a fool.</p>
<p>What a shame there are so many millions of people just like my neighbor throughout the country.  I maintain <strong>hope </strong>that rational, well-meaning people can overpower the conservative defeatism that is attempting to drag down our efforts to create positive change and to instead mire us in the conservative muck.</p>
<p>Conservatives are opposed to change.  That is what the word &#8220;conservative&#8221; means: people who espouse this philosophy wish to <strong>conserve </strong>the status quo.  It does NOT have anything to do with fiscal responsibility, as was so aptly evidenced by the egregious economic mismanagement of the Bush administration. The result of Republican economic policies: double-digit unemployment.</p>
<p><span id="more-115"></span>
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<p>So Bush was in the White House for eight years, and the Republicans controlled Congress for four years prior to that.  Twelve years of Republican philosophy had their inevitable consequence: the worst economic disaster our country has suffered since the Great Depression.  The American people got mad enough about the economy that they voted President Obama into the White House.  Now he&#8217;s been in office for all of a year, and people are already angry at him, because he hasn&#8217;t somehow magically fixed twelve years of Republican mismanagement in twelve months of Democratic presidency.  Come on people, we all heard the jokes, but did you REALLY think he was some sort of magical messiah?  He&#8217;s a person like any other, and a person elected to the Presidency is only as strong as his support in Congress.   Commentators like to go on and on about how the Democrats have been unable to pass a health care bill even with a majority in the Senate; but they didn&#8217;t really have a filibuster-proof majority, did they?  They didn&#8217;t even have 60 Senators who campaigned on the Democratic ticket.   Senator Joe Leiberman (Independent) stumped for John McCain&#8217;s Presidential campaign, for crying out loud: he is NOT a Democrat!</p>
<p>Now that Republican Scott Brown has won the Senate race in Massachusetts, the health care bill is unquestionably dead.  The bill may have been bloated, misguided, and loaded with ridiculous provisions, but meaningful health care reform is long overdue in this country, and without any bill we can all look forward to a continuation of the status quo: skyrocketing rates for insurance policies that only the healthy can buy; coverage that is dropped or refused for sick people; and an endlessly growing number of medical bankruptcies.  Thank you, conservative America, for imposing this little corner of Hell on the working people of our country.</p>
<p>Yes, the conservatives love their status quo.  The status quo is, the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer.  The conservative agenda is neo-feudalism, as I discuss at some length<a title="Principles for a Self-Directed Society" href="http://www.basementiapublications.com/bookstore.php?read=summary&amp;id=1"> in the book</a>.  Woe to anyone who attempts to interfere with the conservative march towards a feudalist oligarchy!  The media will gleefully allow conservative pundits to talk for as long as they like about how the opponents of neo-feudalism are themselves somehow opposed to freedom or something. Their argument doesn&#8217;t make any sense, but it doesn&#8217;t HAVE to make sense, it just has to appeal to the gut reactions of their xenophobic base demographic.</p>
<p>But there are progressives out there: real progressives.  I&#8217;m not talking about self-serving Senators doing back-room deals with big corporations; they will say in public whatever they have to say to get more campaign contributions, but they are hardly progressive.  I&#8217;m talking about the ordinary citizens of this country, everyday people, me, you, our spouses and friends.  With poorly paying jobs in a bad economy, we are too busy trying to make ends meet to clog up the streets with anti-&#8221;TeaParty&#8221; demonstrations, but we know that we are in the <strong>majority </strong>because we elected President Obama, and we elected him because <strong>we believe in change</strong>.  It is difficult, when presented with the endless, insufferable cynicism of the other side, it is difficult to maintain hope; but that is precisely what we must do.  Keeping our hope alive is the only way forward.</p>
<p>In <a title="Principles for a Self-Directed Society" href="http://www.basementiapublications.com/bookstore.php?read=summary&amp;id=1">the book</a> I have an entire chapter titled &#8220;Consciously Creating Positive Social Change.&#8221;  The main thrust of the chapter&#8217;s thesis is that everyday people can change the system, against the system&#8217;s will, by building consensus until it achieves critical mass.  The election of President Obama was not the attainment of that critical mass: it was just the beginning, and it was a call to arms for the opponents of change, the opponents of peace, the opponents of freedom and equality.  They have gone on the offensive and frankly they have done a better job with their PR for the past year.  </p>
<p>They can&#8217;t be allowed to shout us down forever.  We have to get out there and be heard.  We have to let the world know that America is not just a country of the haters, by the haters, for the haters.  We have to let the world know that we believe in change, that we will fight for change, and that we&#8217;re not going to give up just because somebody with a hacked copy of Photoshop pasted a Hitler moustache on the face of the President of the United States.  We have to let the world know that we believe in reform, and that we are going to stand up for freedom and equality, in the face of conservative opposition, for as long as we have to, because it is the right thing to do.</p>
<p>We have to let the world know that we still have hope.</p>
<p>I do.</p>
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