This is a year filled with as much possibility as peril for our nation.
However, what needs to be remembered is that the presidential election in November will not change anything by itself.
We had a chance recently to talk to author and democracy activist Frances Moore Lappé, who is busy these days spreading the word that, as she puts it, "hope is a verb."
That means that if you want to renew civic and democratic values, rein in corporate excess and governmental abuse and create a world that's peaceful, healthy and humane, get ready to do some work.
"I call myself a 'possiblist,'" she said. "It's not possible to know what's possible to achieve, and when you know that, you're free."
Lappé, who ran the Center for Living Democracy and the American News Service out of Brattleboro in the mid-1990s, has a new book out called "Getting A Grip: Clarity, Creativity & Courage in a World Gone Mad." In it, she outlines an alternative way of approaching this turbulent time.
One problem, she says, is that in the United States, "democracy boils down to just two things -- elected government and a market economy ... there isn't much for us to do except show up at the polls and shop."
Lappé calls this "thin democracy," and it assumes that people are selfish, materialistic and incapable of coming together for the common good. With more public trust put in markets rather than government, the markets call the tune and do what markets do best -- concentrate wealth and power into the hands of the few.
Carried to its logical extreme, Lappé believes that thin democracy's ultimate result is a "spiral of powerlessness," where people become fearful, depressed and violent and the world hurtles toward economic and ecological collapse.
Real democracy, or "living democracy" as Lappé likes to call it, is the antidote. That means asking ourselves a simple question -- how do we tap into the goodness that is in our nature, the urge to connect, cooperate and work with others in common purpose.
Lappé envisions a "spiral of empowerment," where democracy becomes an evolving, values-driven culture created by the people. Once political decision making is freed from the influence of wealth, and more people have a greater say in their governance, they will feel connected and hopeful instead of feeling powerless and fearful.
Lappé believes Vermont is better positioned than most places to practice true democracy, namely because democracy is so engrained in our daily lives here.
"In a hyper 'me first' culture that emphasizes the private sphere, democracy can't survive," Lappé said. "Vermont teaches us the value of what a culture of democracy can accomplish. Vermont still values the public sphere and those values are transmitted in so many different ways, from town meetings to community suppers to farmers markets and CSAs."
That's due to a simple principle that is often forgotten. Government is not "them." It is us.
Lappé said if every person realizes that they have a voice and something to contribute, and every person is given an opportunity to connect their passions with the world's needs in ways that really add up, we can reclaim our sanity as well as our planet and build a better world.
The cynic may say this is unrealistic, pie-in-the-sky thinking. But Lappé and her daughter, Anna, are working to make this happen. They lead the Small Planet Institute, a collaborative network for research and education to bring democracy to life. And Lappé's book is filled with examples of how people power created change.
Democratic social movements worldwide have drawn inspiration from Frances Moore Lappé's work. It's hard to imagine any one person who has done more to reshape the debate about environmental and food policy than the woman who wrote "Diet for a Small Planet," the 1971 bestseller that shifted the debate about famine and related crises.
Just as Lappé suggested nearly four decades ago that fundamental issues of inequality and inhumanity were more responsible for famine than overpopulation, bad weather or technological inadequacy, she is saying to today that our shortage of democracy is more due to inequality, inhumanity and the many deep-seated fears that keep us from recognizing our individual and collective power.
"You have to go for what you believe and let the chips fall where they may," she said. "I never would have thought that out of George Bush we'd get Barack Obama."
Copyright © 2008 MediaNews Group
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22 Comments so far
Show AllI W A R R I O R ___ & ___ S T A R _ O F _ T H E _ S E A
Thank you, 'de nada' ( it was no_THING )
Elsewhere today in two more recent although similar threads, I see this new EPIC battle advancing between the usual battle "_ L I N E S _".
Whereas Sally Kohn says that perhaps the internet isn't enough up for the challenge, as "Real _ Change _ Happens _ Off-Line" -- while I reply that it CAN occur 〓〓〓 IN-BETWEEN the LINES 〓〓〓, too too.
I also mention the benefits of the "pursuit" of the non-physical battle lines, in my posting on The Good News in Iraq (Don't Count on It)
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
Ditto! Eloquence is as eloquence does. Veracity, you are TRULY inspiring! Don't ever give up and stop sowing your sparkling seeds here in this forum, or anywhere and everywhere you roam. Love and blessings to you! Your service is invaluable-------truly!
veracity, your posts are so amazing they leave me with no other response. :) They're so lyrical and transcending.
☆_STAR_★ ◎F THE ♪♫_SEA_♪♫
I'm learning to let go of the oars, and
__ to "not push the river
__ as it flows by itself"
The "current" that we up against is our reluctance to adapt our thoughts and emotions to be consistent with our non-physicality, as the flow of source energy to fulfill every dream is
_ U N C O N D I T I O N A L __ LOVE
Yes we crawl or squirm _ h o w e v e r_ to energetic exuberant joy in the NOW, that precious only moment we have ( betwixt apparent timeless eternity ) -- to dream BIG, to sow our attentive seeds of future's unprecedented POSSIBILITY.
Yes the sparkling stream of consciousness, that enlivens and floats all in the cosmic dance of IS'ness -- in the absolute ( really quintessential ) purity of truth, love, and harmony of ALL that IS.
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
veracity----I'm with you, kid. Still, it can seem overwhelming at times to remain steadfast and faithful to the vision you so eloquently articulate. Talk about swimming against the current. But then.... perhaps I miss the point. The real message is to crawl up on the bank, re-charge and radiate energetic bliss. Envision the sparkling stream, pure, unsullied and moving in absolute harmony with ALL THAT IS. Blessings!
directdemo: I agree. Imagine if progressives united and formulated plans for local elections, acted on them and won political office? With popular support, this can be achieved. Strong local community involvement listening to their constituents, but more important than listening, enacting laws or programs for the overall benefit of the community. Presently, there is very little representative government in the United States. Our politicians are unaccountable to us, and like crooked lawyers or doctors, protect one another when a scandal occurs. Democracy works when enough citizens participate. When only 50% of people vote in presidential elections and much less of a percentage vote in other elections, it paves the way for dictatorial rule. The US is presently in this stage. Ignorance is not bliss. It is costly in the long run.
iwarrior: Good post.You said it well! There are more of us and when the people wake up...
Come on you people living in Vermont, get it together and Secede. I don't think you'll freeze to death with your wood supply or starve with the deer and maple syrup. You could really set a great example for social democracy.
Dear Future Archaeologist (who finds this note buried under the remains of our former industrialized city),
We're sorry. We fucked up. Industrialization was so much fun, at least in the short run. We fast laned, fast fooded, bargain shopped, and fastly got deluded. Sorry we left the place worse off then we found it, we just didn't have time to remedy the polluted. We got scared and built ICBM's. Watch where you step, it's still radioactive for the next 400 millennium.
Yours truly,
The Brainwashed Generation
PS. Please print and redistribute at your local decimation.
__ 3. __ As SIOUXROSE mentioned her idea that certain people pull the disasters upon their lives
__ 4. __ And as I responded to her idea that people create their lives
The gig is up, and I mean that in the sense that now we can understand that we've been unknowingly co-opted into formulating and aiding the creation of
___ W H A T __ W E __ D O N ' T __ W A N T __
So with that knowledge of having been PERSONALLY responsible for thinking too many negative and insidiously pro-neoCON thoughts, for so long …
___ T H A T __ W E __ N O W __ S I M P L Y __
___ W H A T __ W E __ D O ______ W A N T __
… and by making those thoughts OUR primary focused intention, and attention,
ALONG with the elevated emotion of desperately desiring our own prosperity, health, well being, peaceful existence, vibrant joyful celebration of our beneficial differences, etc …
___ W E __ W I L L __ C R E A T E __
___ T H A T __ D E S I R E A B L E __ F U T U R E __
.
__ W E ___ N E E D ___ T O ___ C H O S E ___
___ T H E ___ B E S T ___ P O S I B L E ____
____________ D _ R _ E _ A _ M ______________
.
____ F O R ___ O U R ___ F U T U R E _____
.
____ F O R ___ O U R ___ C H I L D R E N _____
.
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
〓 〓 〓 P E O P L E __ C R E A T I N G __ C H A N G E 〓 〓 〓
Here's some more details to develop into the bigger picture, that has now crystallized out and together for me:
__ 1. __ I now see how the problem is also the solution
__ 2. __ ¿ How does the neoCON "reality" get created ?
〓 〓 〓 P E O P L E __ C R E A T I N G __ C H A N G E 〓 〓 〓
I absolutely _ L O V E _ this idea.
We are already being massively manipulated to place our ( oh so precious ) thoughts at the beck_C O N_ing call of the neoCONs and Zionists.
The Jacka$$ stream media is certainly culpable to sticking the bamboo of ponerology under our fingernails, to shape and create exactly that world that matters most to the hideously wicked greediest manipulators of all time.
Every time that we read of their twisted point of view as "our shared reality", we ourselves push the bamboo deeper and into more painful recesses. We do it to ourselves without knowing the simple rules of the game, as we continually offer more thoughts in alignment with their "master plan" -- and literally to master us is their plan.
What we nominally are ignorant of, is the creative power to speak a future reality, and believe it to be so true, that we can "taste it" upon our tongues. This is exactly the recipe to allow that reality to draw source energy, and become manifest.
We are all being "danced" to the beatings of neoCON propaganda, to consider only their ideal of the future, AS IF it has already occurred, which is sizeably truth, since Nixon & Reagan launched this ship of fools -- US.
The concept of people's voices carrying weight and actually mattering in the scheme of things is becoming less and less believable huh?
Yes we'd best fight for this democracy, slowly being shifted away from us... if we would keep it. The Vermont model need not be repeated in a place like NYC, only the model of local people getting used to their deciding things, needs be repeated. NYC dwellers will need their own model.
I suggest thinking of Vermont as a small neighborhood and replicating their community access to government on a local neighborhood scale. Then it would fit.
The concept of real democracy... is getting thin ...huh?
Good for Vermont...when people see it work somewhere they adapt the ideas to wherever they are.
We should try real democracy again... you never know... it just might work.
Would be new though. Almost risky sounding these days...the people? Of, For and By... oh not By? Surely not that!
The people?
Us?
You never know... it just could work.
And who says we have to include NYC anyway...lol
AHHHH, the Vermont myth is alive and well. In many parts of Vermont the health care is sub-standard. The lack of dental care has become a crisis. The legal system in Vermont is well known for its cronyism and lack of justice. Vermont is where the tourism industry is subsidized while the homeless shelters are turning people away.
The economy is falling apart. The population is dropping because workers cannot get a living wage. The song should be "Moonlighting in Vermont".
Testimony during the recent Congressional Hearings on heating oil prices said that people will freeze to death During the upcoming winter.
BUT, the mountains are pretty.
"Strong as it looks at the outset, State agency perpetually disappoints every one. Puny as are its first stages, private efforts daily achieve results that astound the world." ~ Herbert Spencer
We do need to get louder and more active, me included. Maybe I'm naive, but I don't think we should have to do that, but in this reality, it's the only thing we can do. The ideal candidates have the game rigged against them. We should be able to trust that our government has the best interests of the people in mind. They are there to serve us, not themselves. We should be able to sit back and live our lives free of worrying about what capers our President and his cronies will pull on us. Damn, a lot of people don't have the time to worry about such things. They're too busy holding down dual jobs to get to a rally or are too mentally and physically exhausted to watch the news or read something.
However, we gotta do what we gotta do. The only time things get doen around here is when the elites are afraid of the peons playing catch with their heads. WE outnumber THEM...
directdemo June 28th, 2008 4:04 pm
I believe it is the only way for liberal politics. I think you are on the right track.
The problem with local elections is an important one to consider: the most likely places to win have entrenched DEMOCRAT incumbents, which is true regardless of which elections we are talking about - it is harder for us to run against them. We do need sacrificial candidates run against Repubs but we are less likely to make real gains there. Our strategy has to be to dismantle the Democratic party first. I have run for a local election (city council) and I can tell you it is really hard to raise any money if you are not a corporately sponsored candidate. The eventual winner is a good guy, but he is still corporately controlled!
I think the Progressive Party of Vermont needs to be nationalized.
Vermont? Isn't that a little white state with no industrial base and no big cities? It's a long way from Yankee farmers and yuppies to power politics between seventeen different block-voting ethnicities in New York!
For one thing, most people in the Bronx don't own a cow.
Maybe I'm just too thick to understand "thick democracy," but I can't see how you can fit the "Vermont model" onto the rest of the world without most of it getting lost in translation.
Right, and it's actually easier on your time and wallet.
The trick is to collectively learn how to simply ignore the macro systems without getting into trouble. This is increasingly easy lately, as these systems are breaking down and failing of their own accord. Can they now be tooled to serve us?
The fear is over, so get away from your computer screen once in awhile and meet your neighbors!
I've recently come to the conclusion that a local strategy is best for progressive politics. It's much easier to win city council/school board/mayoral elections than even state and especially federal level elections. It is as she said 'possible'. Her ideas are not new though. Thick democracy (here called real or living democracy) is a concept directly (though I hope not plagiarized) from John Rawls. For theoretical discussions on how a local strategy might work, one should see the works of Rousseau, Murray Bookchin, Mike Albert, Hannah Arendt and many, many others.
I've heard a lot of people talk about greater democracy, I'm glad that I'm not alone in trying to do something about it.
Vermont, and other parts of New England, has been moving in this direction for many years. The massive consumption of time on national politics has become a collective mental disease, and it was only a matter of time before this realization took root and blossomed into a more local paradigm.
Truly an invigorating and inspirational editorial. Amen to Frances Moore Lappes work over the decades and the fine citizens of Vermont who are leading the way for the rest of America. I like the term, "possibilist." We should all include it in our vocabulary and act on it.
Three cheers for Vermont(ers)!