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Current Crises Should Unite Us
As members of the Vermont Workers Center have worked to dig ourselves and our neighbors out of the thick, toxic mud left by tropical storm Irene’s flooding, we have been inspired by the solidarity, caring and resolve of our fellow Vermonters. But -- inspiring as this show of community solidarity is -- it is clear to us that it is going to take much more than a neighbor’s helping hand to rebuild from this crisis.
(Vermont Workers' Center)
We recognize a familiar pattern. Those communities most affected by this latest crisis are those already suffering most from the ongoing economic crisis: people with disabilities, people who are homeless, people living in mobile home parks, people with no or low incomes. Irene both exposed and deepened the economic and human rights crisis that people in our communities already face every day -- a crisis of injustice.
Six years ago, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, federal and state politicians not only failed to respond to the needs of people in New Orleans but capitalized on that crisis by imposing a radical new agenda of privatization of government responsibilities. In Vermont, the public services that many rely on have been systematically cut back year after year, along with the jobs of the Vermonters who provided those services.
These cutbacks were justified by the need to "balance the budget," but really what our revenue and spending decisions represent is a decision not to adequately tax those who can most afford to pay, at the expense of the rest of us. Flooding aside, we have been drowning in the politics of greed.
To truly rebuild, we must address both the immediate crisis and the long-term crisis. We must not allow this "natural" disaster to be followed by a man-made disaster of inadequate and harmful reactions from state and federal governments.
The force of Irene -- like the unusual flooding in late-spring -- was likely a result of another man-made crisis, that of global climate change. Our efforts to rebuild must include organizing to change our energy policy and stand up against corporations that profit from destroying our natural environment and our communities.
We believe Vermont can lead the way to a new society of solidarity that puts people first, in times of disaster and beyond. In early 2011, the Vermont Workers Center launched the Put People First campaign, an umbrella for grass-roots organizing efforts including the People’s Budget Campaign and our incredibly successful Healthcare Is a Human Right Campaign, which, through grassroots organizing, changed what is politically possible and began the process of enacting the country’s first universal healthcare system.
With the historic passage of our universal healthcare law this year, Vermont has demonstrated its recognition of our government’s obligation to ensure people’s human right to live in dignity by protecting their health. Now we must hold our government accountable to respect, protect and fulfill all of our human rights, to enable us all to build dignified lives in the wake of Irene’s flooding.
Vermonters understand that solidarity means more than lending a hand. It means recognizing our common humanity, our interdependence and our stake in each other’s welfare. It means remembering that we govern ourselves in order to serve the needs of our communities and that our government is obligated to satisfy the human rights that follow from our needs.
Solidarity also means recognizing that many current crises have common roots. It means carrying the relationships that we build in these difficult weeks into a long-term struggle against policies that cause further hardship. It means working together to demand government that puts people first.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllThere seems to be plenty of evidence in Congress that cutting spending is more important than taking care of each other.
Little chance of uniting the United States. As things get worse, the tribes will deal with their panic and incomprehension by scapegoating each other.
We can't "demand" a government that puts people first. To whom would we address this "demand" even if the impossible uniting should miraculously occur?
Conservatives are already in "Yay for death!" lynch mob mode. Liberals like Michael Moore are saying that, if something isn't done about "jobs" soon, anger bubbling beneath the surface will break loose. Rather than uniting the people into "working together," all this is more likely to turn everyone against everyone else.
"That, of course, is only one of the unfortunate consequences of the fact that mankind, being for the most part incapable of politics, accepts vituperation as an easy and congenial substitute." -- George Bernard Shaw in the notes to "The Devil's Disciple."
Nice.
Well stated and very apt GBS quote. Didn't he also say something to the effect that wars, at least, are good for those selling arms.
The nation is being destroyed by a warped mindset that's a convolution of Ayn Rand philosophy and a belief in the vengeful god's wrath.
While I agree we are likely headed to some form of tribal warfare as things stand, Peg notes an alternative that is not something only fools might consider. That seems to be the knee jerk reaction to many on this site.
Are you all looking forward to bodies in the street and dead kids? Might you be a bit like Bush and Cheney being such tough guys - never served but ask so many others to pull the trigger and glorify the carnage.
So Peg has an option here, and though this may seem far-fetched outside of Vermont, it is likely how it would play out up here. many, many of us are already coming together.