I have a warm feeling about Cory Booker. Not a hero worship;
a quiet admiration. The kind I have for people who keep getting up when knocked
down, keep swimming upstream, keep on keeping on. Loved his ability to go into
Newark, New Jersey, which until he took it on as mayor I thought of as just another of America’s many “loser” cities. Took it on with his bright eyes and his optimism
and made it a better place.
Booker is in the news this morning for his clash with
Republican leader John Cornyn after observing, quite rightly, that there are things in this
country which are “savagely wrong.” It’s bringing him to tears, this normalizing
of injustice. “If this country hasn’t broken your heart,” Booker says, “then
you don’t love her enough.”
Cory Booker is speaking for millions of us. The country’s
broke and we’re looking for a fix.
For some the question is too big to handle. They cite
Voltaire. Go tend your garden. Leave the fools to fix themselves. For others,
the problem is cultural. I’m reading a marvelous history of the United States
by Kurt Andersen on “how America went haywire (the subtitle)” called Fantasyland. Andersen traces the history of America’s
willing surrender to the many worlds of make-believe.
The problem, as I
see it, is two-pronged. It's about economic and social injustice. We are a country with
an ever-widening chasm between rich and poor. We are also a country which won’t face up
to its history of racism and genocide. The people to address this injustice
adequately have to at least include our democratically elected political
leaders. I’m trying to figure out how to find better ones.
There’s another book also speaking to that task, a book
by George Lakey on “how the Scandinavians got it right” (subtitle) entitled Viking
Economics. So the “socialist” solution is presenting itself on two fronts: there's the appeal of Bernie Sanders (and the
nagging question of whether we might have been spared this Trump nightmare if Bernie had
won the democratic nomination instead of Hillary) and there's the fact that by all international measures, the
Norwegians, Swedes, Danes, Finns and Icelanders are doing things better. Less
crime. Better educational results. Better health care. Better representation by
women. Better equity.
Not perfect. Just better.
It would be naïve to assume that socialism is going to solve
all our problems. But at the moment, until someone can show me the squirrel is
not up there, I’m going to bark up that tree.
A good friend came by for coffee the other day and told me
she had decided to join the Democratic Socialists, the DSA. She has a close association
with Sweden, so that probably explains why socialism is not a dirty word in her
estimation. Somebody had asked me once if I had any German heroes and Willi
Brandt came immediately to mind. Again, I’m not into hero worship, but there’s another guy,
like Cory Booker, who lived his life like the Energizer Bunny. Left Germany
under Hitler, went to Norway and fought against his native country until the
nightmare was over, then came home and eventually became its socialist
chancellor. With the courage to fall to his knees in Poland to apologize for
the Holocaust.
My hesitation about leaving the Democrats and joining the
Democratic Socialists is the obvious one – could there possibly be a worse time
to split the Democrats now just before the mid-term elections when there is hope
of taking back the House?
Fortunately, it’s not an either/or proposition. The DSA are not a political party, but an interest group. One can view
the Democratic Party as Matt
Grossman does when he addressed that question in a New York Times
article last month. Grossman points out that America’s two parties are already coalitions of interest groups, and policy gets established in the primary process when those individual
subgroups struggle for dominance. The Tea Party moved the Republicans to the
right, remember, and the Republicans still won. Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition loomed large in the 1984
Democratic primaries, but ultimately Mondale got the nomination, anyway. And at
least those left of Mondale had a platform from which to voice their views.
New York’s mayor Dinkins was a socialist.
Oakland’s mayor Ron Dellums was a socialist. Ben Jealous, a Bernie supporter,
has won the democratic nomination for governor in Maryland.
Whether the DSA will split off from the Democrats at some point in the future depends on two things. Their own numbers, and the response of mainstream Democrats. It’s
possible the mainstream Democrats will take on the proposals for greater equity
and justice the DSA are making and make them their own.
For now, the task at hand is to convince Americans that
socialism is not a dirty word.
It’s an educational task. Got questions you are too
embarrassed to ask? Check this out.
Two things need fixing – the gap between the rich and the
poor, and the ongoing racial discord, as evidenced by the need for such
movements as Black Lives Matter.
The word “intersectionality” is a new buzzword these days as people try to solve
these two problems. Not one first, the other later. Both at once.
Greater economic equity. Greater social justice.
Sounds like just another political slogan.
Maybe. But we can’t sit still and expect change to happen by
itself.
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