Restoring Hope: Viewing the World From the Ground-Up
After engaging in many conversations about the plight of this country and the world over the weekend, I felt a little worn down. All of the issues that surround the Presidential election combined with sifting through all the misinformation can be exhausting and dejecting at times. I woke up early Saturday morning to attend a mandatory class on working the polls as I will be doing on November 4th and was pleased to find the class packed with people of all ages anxious to spend their time helping others vote on Election Day. Viewing the election through your television screen for the past two years can wear you down and seeing active members of your own community eager to participate in the process is a good feeling. Coming out of that class I felt partially recharged and so today, I decided to ride that wave of optimism and go down to the Board of Elections to vote early.
I arrived a little before two o’ clock and took my place at the end of a long line that stretched out onto the sidewalk. People were handing out fliers with the hope of swaying any last minute voters who had yet to make up their mind. I saw literature for voting yes on Issue 8, No on Issue 5, for Todd Portune, against Issue 6, and so on. Many of the people gathered outside had brought their younger children so their kids could be introduced to the voting process. There was a family in front of me where the mother was explaining to her young son why it was important to vote and why there were so many people in line. People of all colors and creeds were in generally good spirits as they exchanged smiles and engaged in small talk as the line snaked up the stairs and into the main section of the BOE. Election officials were on-hand directing the voters to empty voting booths and explaining the layout of the ballot.
As I shuffled through the line, I was reminded of a quote that I once heard from folk musician and activist Utah Phillips during a 2004 interview. In that interview Phillips said:
If I look at it [the world] from the top down, I get seriously depressed. The world’s going to hell in a wheelbarrow. But if I walk out the door, turn all that off, and go with the people, whatever town I’m in, who are doing the real work down at the street level, like I said, there’s too many good people doing too many good things for me to let myself be pessimistic about that. I’m hopeful, can’t live without hope. Can you?
As I was standing there today watching an elderly couple struggling to climb the stairs to get into the BOE, as I watched that little boy ask his mom questions about voting, as I watched a blind woman receive her ballot, I felt hope. I felt the hope of an active citizenry cut through all the sound bytes and negative ads and permeate through the racism and hatred of this campaign. I, like Utah Phillips, was forced to view things from the ground up and it gave me hope in what a unified people and in what an active citizenry can do. This hope and faith in people is important in times like these when we live in a world that bombards us with media sound bytes, sensational news stories, and views from the top; it is enough to make anyone pessimistic about the direction that we are headed. It is during those times, when the negativity is driving us to the point of insanity, that it is so important to take a step back and view the world from the bottom up. There are people who are doing very good work to move this society forward in the face of all that is stacked against us. That is what gives me hope and it is this faith in people that we all must depend on. We all have our vision of how we would like to make our community, our country, the world a better place, but these visions all must stem from the fundamental faith in people to unite, take action, and implement the changes necessary to move us forward.
Mark Johnson is filmmaker who just finished a documentary entitled “Playing for Change: Peace Through Music”. It is a film that took Johnson ten years to make, but his belief that “No matter who we are, no matter where we come from, we are all united through music” carried the project forward. Johnson was on the Bill Moyers Journal this past week discussing the film and why he chose to take on this project. Johnson said it quickly became evident that those involved with the film were representing the eyes of the children on the planet. He went on:
Because the truth is, they need us to inspire each other and to create a better world. I mean, there’s so many problems now with the economy and with war and a lot of depression. But at the end of the day, there’s also so much hope because I can assure you, all over the world, people are beautiful and they want to unite together.
Johnson traveled all over the world recording street musicians, viewing the world from the ground up, and uniting the world through music. He traveled to some of the most troubled regions of the planet and when Bill Moyers asked him what took him to those places of the world, Johnson responded:
Well, I think that in order to really unite people, you know, we have to show that in our darkest situations and in the places with the most struggles in the world, that we can find a way of uplifting each other out of it. I remember hearing somebody that said, you know, “The last person who knew why we were fighting died a long time ago.”
We all know the world is changing. And we get to decide if it’s changing for the better or if it’s changing for the worse.
Hope during dark times is not idealistic, it is necessary. Faith in a united people is the foundation for moving us forward and bettering our lives. As the election draws closer, as more bombs are dropped overseas, and as the economy continues to slide, let’s take a moment for a deep breath and look at the world from the ground up.
Below is a clip from the documentary referenced above with a brief introduction by Bill Moyers. The song is “Stand by Me”, the musicians are from all across the world, and hopefully it will do a little bit to restore your faith in a unified people.

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19 Comments so far
Show Allskidog
Nice article.I had the pleasure to see the inspiring segment on MARK JOHNSON on MOYER'S JOURNAL.The 'STAND BY ME',preformed by the many talents from around the WORLD,certainly brought atear to the eye and a spark to the SOUL.Having traveled to some 35 countries over the years and meeting sooo many wonderful and inspiring folks,musicians,etc..THANX,MARK J.
perhaps if the REGRESSIVE RIGHT traveled more...tthey wouldn't be so..REGRESSIVE.
Sarah Palin shows the same intellectual curiosity as DUMBYA.They both didn't TRAVEL,before their coming on to the national stage.
Faith is a killer. The minute I hear the word faith these days I know it is someone very willing to kill other human beings and make excuses for THEIR actions. It is also someone who can rationalize the irrational & ignore reality completely.
Faith in other people is the opposite of 'faith' in an implacable being issuing commands for the destruction of 'evil'.
When the documentary 'Uncounted' was shown in my home city, it drew a packed house of people eager to come together -- except for a handful of people who could only tell the rest of us that we were delusional idiots & that they alone held the true progressive, uhm, faith; that they alone were in tune with 'reality'.
It is not faith, but those who use it that kill. Besides you have taken the action of faith and isolated it for your fears to one area of reality. This is emotional and intellectual genocide.
snydly
rec: "Blessed Unrest" by Paul Hawken.---(not religious...)
Thank you so much...despite it all, I continue to have hope and I was affirmed in that hope through your contribution. Blessings.
My whole life, I have felt that I would live to see something great --just a feeling I've had for as far back as I can remember. The question has remained however; would I live to see something great and terrible, destructive, violent and earth-shattering or would I live to see something great and marvelous, a self realization of our true potential as humans or at least the beginning of that. I am wondering if perhaps I may live to see them both.
There are many resaons to be discouraged, outraged and deeply saddened and we cannot forget those reasons. But it it nice to take a step back every once in a while and remember how many good people there are in the world.
Perhaps many people do not know where to direct their energy or if they even have the energy to make a change. We can start here, with the good that many people possess but don't know how to employ. We can show them how.
I am hopeful every time I visit this site and see people engaging in real conversation about what matters most. So thanks to all of you.
We cannot let the horrors in this world allow us to drop our hands. We have to stay focused on the hope. I'm glad CD offered this article. As simple as it's message is, I needed it.
Excellent. Most people are good across the world. In America, the good will of the people seems to not have that direction of greatness you speak of. We must and will learn how to cultivate and apply this. This will be one of the greatest moments in human life on earth.
"HOPE has two children. The first is ANGER at the way things are. The second is COURAGE to DO SOMETHING about it."-St. Augustine
As the sun rose over Israel Palestine this morning, a wooden boat carrying 27 united pro-Human Rights activists arrived in Gaza despite an Israeli blockade of the territory - the second such voyage in three months.
The ship, named Dignity, sailed from Cyprus overnight and despite initial Israeli warnings that it would not be allowed to dock, Nobel Peace Prize Laurette Mairead Corrigan Maguire, journalists, politicians and regular people who are all fed up with the silence and injustice of the West did something to disturb the status quo and challenge the empire with NONVIOLENT People Power.
As the vessel arrived in stormy weather, organiser Huwaida Arraf said: "Once again we've been able to defy an unjust and illegal policy while the rest of the world is too intimidated to do anything. Our small boat is a huge cry to the international community to follow in our footsteps and open a lifeline to the people of Gaza."
Israel withdrew; "disengaged" its illegal settlers from Gaza in 2005 and resettled them in the West Bank, but never gave up control of Gaza's coast, airspace and borders.
The first FREE GAZA voyage in August, was the first voyage of any international ship to Gaza in over forty years.
It proved what is possible when a few, committed citizens DO SOMETHING.
This second voyage sets a precedent that the Siege of Gaza can be overcome through non-violent resistance and direct action.
The Free Gaza Movement has a simple message for the rest of the world: What are you waiting for?
Do Something!
To find out more about Free Gaza please visit http://www.FreeGaza.org
"Soon after I had published the pamphlet "Common Sense" [on Feb. 14, 1776] in America, I saw the exceeding probability that a revolution in the system of government would be followed by a revolution in the system of religion... The world is my country, all mankind are my brethren, and to do good is my religion."-Tom Paine
Eileen Fleming, Citizen Journalist, Author,
Producer "30 Minutes With Vanunu" and
"13 Minutes with Vanunu" FREELY STREAMING
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
Reading this article and a comment made by "Nebraska Nathan" on another topic about paying more attention to local elections over national elections, I wonder if the author paid attention to the fact that ground up means building the base from the local elections, taking it to the states, and then hitting it all nationally?
Terrance Mitchell
Redfield, South Dakota
"Peace" - NOTHING has made me sadder than people saying they are for "peace" yet voting for candidates & parties that are for the exact opposite! I want each voter to feel terrible about their wasted vote, that they are accomplices to murder in the first degree when they vote for pro-war candidates & parties.
Matt Gonzalez, "What Do They Have To Do To Lose Your Vote?"
http://www.counterpunch.com/gonzalez10292008.html
"Modern industrial civilization has developed within a system of convenient myths. The driving force has been individual material gain, which is accepted as legitimate, even praiseworthy, on grounds that private vices yield public benefits in the classic formulation. It has long been understood very well that a society based on this principal will destroy itself in time. It can only persist with whatever suffering and injustice it entails as long as it is possible to pretend that the destructive forces that humans create are limited, that the world is an infinite resource and that the world is an infinite garbage can. At this stage in history one of two things is possible. Either the general population will take control of its own destiny and will concern itself with community interests guided by values of solidarity, sympathy and concern for others or alternatively there will be no destiny for anyone to control. As long as some specialized class is in a position of authority, it is going to set policy for the special interests that it serves. But the conditions of survival let alone justice require rational social planning in the interests of the community as a whole and by now that means the global community. The question is whether privileged elites should dominate mass communication and should use this power as they tell us they must, namely to impose necessary illusions to manipulate and deceive the "stupid majority" and remove them from the public arena. The question in brief is whether democracy and freedom are values to be preserved or threats to be avoided. In this possibly terminal phase of human existence democracy and freedom are more than values to be treasured, they may well be essential to survival."
--Noam Chomsky
from Manufacturing Consent
and yet he is a study in contradiction... as in "vote for Obama".
Yes the ultimate in an inability to keep ones morals straight. Something very hard to do in the high pressure cooker chamber of social misleadership that we live in.
But Chomsky is old and he has done much considering. The younger generations will be the ones to take the next step toward a fair and sane human existence from the point he could no longer go forward.
Excellent!
"I’m hopeful, can’t live without hope. Can you?"
I am hopeful... but it's not Obama's bastardized self-serving version of "hope".
Over the weeks, I have seen evidence of many excluded, marginalized and disenfranchised individuals who have been learning to exercise their right to speak out against a massive charade, and offer their own personal insights as to why the system that produces that LIE, should not be validated and enabled. They have sharpened their rhetoric, built community and focused their resolve.
I have hope that their messages will be refined and communicated on a level in the future, that will effectively reach enough millions of Americans to make a change in the way we select representation... and who those politicians serve.
These Americans are people who know deeply that the system in which they participate, is "royally" screwing them... depriving them of real voice and forcing them to serve masters who have only bottom line on their agenda. They are all deluged with a single message from "The Party". VOTE! Did you ever wonder why and look beyond the surface?
Be deluded if you wish, Chris. However, know that there is an enormous price tag on that refusal to look at reality with some objectivity. Voting, in the form in which it exists today, is a big part of the problem.
Amazing how many people are "deluded" -- Bill Moyers has to be added to the list.
And of course the "deluded" have never ever ever "wonder[ed] why and look[ed] beyond the surface".
A little self-criticism might be in order for those who believe that they & they alone are apostles of truth & light. A bit of perspective, a bit of trust in other people.
I was happy to read this article, it is an excellent truth. My response to Moondoggy from the article "Like it or not change is coming" posted yesterday here at CD where he/she tells me to "have a little faith" goes hand in hand with this article. Please read it as follows.
"Well I certainly appreciate your opinion, and your inability to see what I see. It is no easy task to weed out love from hate in our day and age, because we are enmeshed in a misleading environment.
Peace yes of course. I can't imagine that any of us are really whining, though despair is flowing and perhaps comes off as whining.
One either has faith or not. There is no little or none or lots etc. I have absolute faith in our power to enact good as long as we stay out of this sidetracking and sickening divisive and violent pattern that is always erupting around us.
I will support your choice be it the winner, even if it is not mine, do you get that?
Choose supporting what we have collectively because cursing it brings a curse down on us all.
This means I will support Obama, or McCain, or Nader. By engaging in directing them. Who else can say this? Who else can see this? This is faith."
"This means I will support Obama, or McCain, or Nader. By engaging in directing them. Who else can say this? Who else can see this? This is faith."
Not sure about Mccain but I think Obama or Nader might pay better attention to the public. If Mccain were the Mccain of 2000, I might have had hope in him listening to us.
Terrance Mitchell
Redfield, South Dakota