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Four
years ago at the counter-inaugural event on the steps of the state Capitol
in Austin, TX, I administered a Citizen’s Oath of Office to a crowd that was
eager to fight the incoming Bush administration’s reactionary agenda:
“I do
solemnly pledge that I will faithfully execute the office of citizen of the
United States, and that I will, to the best of my ability, resist corporate
control of the world, resist militarism, resist the roll-back of civil
rights, and resist illegitimate authority in all its forms.”
Predictably, the Bush gang has spent four years doing its best to strengthen
the corporate elite’s grip on the country, jack up military spending and use
that military to deepen U.S. control in key regions of the world, and
undermine fundamental political freedoms. We couldn’t have predicted that
the events of 9/11 would raise the stakes so dramatically, but the oath was
on target about the basic nature of the threats.
But looking back I realize the oath failed to capture the heart of citizens’
obligations -- it talked only about resisting reactionary forces and didn’t
speak to the democratic force we have to create. It made the mistake of
talking about politics only as the rejection of injustice, not the process
of creating justice and the means of achieving justice over the long term.
So, this time around, I want to update the oath:
“I do
solemnly pledge that I will faithfully execute the office of citizen of the
United States, and that I will, to the best of my ability, help create a
truly democratic world by (1) going beyond mainstream corporate news media
to seek out information about important political, economic, and social
issues; (2) engaging fellow citizens, including those who disagree with me,
in serious discussion and debate about those issues; (3) committing as much
time, energy, and money as possible to help build grassroots political
organizations that can pressure politicians to put the interests of people
over profit and power; and (4) connecting these efforts to global political
and social movements fighting the U.S. empire abroad, where it does the most
intense damage. And I will continue to resist corporate control of the
world, resist militarism, resist the roll-back of civil rights, and resist
illegitimate authority in all its forms.”
I know that’s a mouthful for an oath, but I think it better captures the
scope of the challenges we face.
The next four years will be difficult. The Bush administration seems
determined to sink the country ever deeper into the debacle in Iraq,
justifying the attempted conquest as part of its phony “war on terrorism”
whose real aim is to increase U.S. domination, not protect people. (See
http://dahrjamailiraq.com/ and
www.unitedforpeace.org/) And because of the skill of the Bush PR
machine, a significant portion of the U.S. public will support the war.
Meanwhile at home, Bush is pressing to
undermine the Social Security system by fudging fiscal projections and
distorting data to scare people into believing that one of the most
effective and efficient U.S. government programs has to be privatized.
And, once again, the Bush PR machine
can be expected
to convince a lot of Americans that they should trade solidarity and
collective security for the possibility of some personal financial gain.
On these, and many other issues, we have to resist the policies pursued by a
rightwing-dominated Republican Party that holds power. But we also have to
look beyond the immediate policy battles and work to rebuild politics from
the ground up. The election is over; there’s no reason to pretend the
Democratic Party is a vehicle for progressive change. The work is in our
communities, and it is the work of a lifetime. This is the struggle that we
owe it to ourselves to engage in.
And, more importantly, this is the work that we -- living in the most
affluent society in history -- owe the world.
Robert Jensen,
a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member
of the Third Coast
Activist Resource Center, is the author of
Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity
and
Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream.
Links to his articles are at
www.nowarcollective.com/ and he can be reached at
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
Other Recent Articles
by Robert Jensen
*
Election Day Fears
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* US
Supports Anti-Democratic Forces in Venezuela Recall
* Kerry's
Hypocrisy on the Vietnam War
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“Fahrenheit 9/11” is a Stupid White Movie
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It’s Not Just the Emperor Who is Naked, but the Whole Empire
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Hunger
Strike Remembers the Victims of World Bank Policies
* Condi
Rice Wouldn't Admit Mistakes
* Former
President Bush Involved with Donation
to Group with
Terrorist Connections
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Bush's Nuclear
Hypocrisy
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Observe Right to Unionize by Making it Reality
*
New Purported Bush Tape Raises Fear of New Attacks
*
General Boykin’s Fundamentalist View of the Other
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Just the (Documented) Facts, Ma'am
*
Through the Eyes of Foreigners: US Political Crisis
*
“No War” A Full-Throated Cry
*
Media Criticism of Iraq Coverage Reveals Problems with Journalists'
Conception of News
*
Embedded Reporters Viewpoint Misses Main Point Of War
*
Fighting Alienation in the USA
*
Where's The Pretext? Lack of WMD Kills Case for War
*
For Self-Determination in Iraq, The U.S. Must Leave
*
The Images They Choose, and Choose to Ignore
*
Embedded Media Give Up Independence
*
On NPR, Please Follow the Script
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