<
FREE hit counter and Internet traffic statistics from freestats.com
(DV) Jensen: The 2006 Elections and the Coming Train Wreck


HOME 

SEARCH 

NEWS SERVICE 

LETTERS 

ABOUT DV CONTACT SUBMISSIONS

 

The 2006 Elections and the Coming Train Wreck:
Does it Matter if We Slow Down the Train? 

by Robert Jensen
www.dissidentvoice.org
November 10, 2006

Send this page to a friend! (click here)

 

As I stood in line for coffee on the morning after election night, a Democratic Party supporter ahead of me in line said, “Thank God this country is finally switching trains.”

If only that were true.

On Election Day 2006, the U.S. public didn’t switch trains but simply ratified a different group of conductors.

It’s the same old train, on the same tracks, heading in the same direction.

This isn’t an argument that there are never any meaningful differences between politicians; sometimes it does matter who is giving the orders on the train. But on this day after the morning-after, it’s crucial for those with a critical perspective to highlight that this train -- contemporary U.S. society -- is barreling forward toward disaster, no matter who’s punching tickets.

Here’s the unavoidable reality: Our train is on an unsustainable course in cultural, political, economic, and ecological terms. In a predatory corporate capitalist economy in an imperial state -- a system that values the concentration of wealth and power, and devalues people -- certain things are inevitable:

* Our deepest values concerning justice and solidarity will be undermined by the anti-human values of capitalism and empire.

* Truly democratic politics, in which ordinary people have a meaningful role, will be subverted the concentration of wealth.

* An increasingly fragile economy mired in self-indulgent deficit and debt, with an artificially inflated currency, will start to collapse when our military and political power are unable to keep the rest of the world in line.

* The ability of a finite planet to sustain life as we know it will diminish dramatically in a system based on fantasies of unlimited growth marked by the glorification of domination.

The train moves forward, as the vast majority of Democrats and virtually all Republicans avoid these realities. Where can such a train take us? Pick your metaphor.

* It could be that the train tracks end at a cliff, or

* it might be that the train is heading for a brick wall, or

* perhaps the train will derail along the way, or

* maybe the tracks will simply end abruptly and the train will run into the ground.

If we don’t take radical action relatively soon, every ending we can imagine is likely to be brutal and violent, deadly not only for most of the world’s population but also for the non-human world. This isn’t irrational apocalypticism but a rational approach to the evidence in front of us. No one can predict how this will play out, but it will most certainly play out ugly unless we change the trajectory.

Many who would agree in some fashion with such an assessment will say, “Yes, but at least electing Democrats might slow down the train.” With a reactionary right-wing Republican Party in total control, the train is hurtling forward at 100 miles per hour, according to this position, but with Democrats in charge the train might slow down to 90 miles per hour.

Theoretically they could, though I hear little coming from Democratic Party leaders that suggests they will pursue policies that will significantly turn from an unsustainable capitalism or a profoundly immoral empire. Instead, they talk of different strategies and tactics for managing those systems.

But, for the sake of argument, let’s assume that Democratic Party rule could slow down the train and buy us more time. If nothing is done to change the direction of the train, the end remains the same. So, the important question is, what can we do with that time -- not off in an abstract future, but now?

The small amount of time we might gain will be meaningful only if we confront the harsh reality that the systems that shape our world -- capitalism and empire, rooted in white supremacy and patriarchy -- are fundamentally bankrupt and indefensible, yet deeply rooted in our culture.

When I make this point, I’m often told by liberals and progressives that I’m not being realistic, that ordinary people won’t listen to such analysis. That’s not my experience. When I have tried to articulate this worldview in plain language in recent political talks, I have found that a growing number of people not only will listen but are hungry for such honesty.

Of course not everyone agrees -- not anywhere near the number needed for a mass movement right now, and certainly not a majority -- but one wouldn’t expect that in this affluent society in which many people are still insulated from the consequences of these systems. But more and more people, from many sectors of society, are facing these realities, and we are searching for a community in which to confront this together.

Our political work should focus on connecting with people on common ground, and then working to shape a radically new vision of justice and sustainability. The time for that is now; the direction and speed of the train dictate that we not put it off any longer. It’s time to dig in for what one writer has dubbed “the long emergency.”

I think that in the two years to come before the presidential election, pressing this kind of analysis is the crucial political work for those committed to left/feminist/antiracist values and progressive politics. Rather than fussing about how to persuade Nancy Pelosi and Howard Dean of the need for radical action, let’s take that message to ordinary people, who are more likely to listen.

This isn’t about who can be most radical for the sake of being radical -- it’s about whether we can be realistic. Such an approach cannot promise political transformation in the short-term, but I believe it is the only hope for our future.

Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center. He is the author of The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both from City Lights Books). He can be reached at: rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.

Other Recent Articles by Robert Jensen  

* The Consequences of the Death of Empathy
* Propriety and Paranoia in the Empire
* The Other 9/11 Tragedy: The Road Not Taken
* Iranian President’s Attack on Academics Should Sound Familiar in the US
* Getting Cognitive: The Limits of George Lakoff’s Politics
* Florida’s Fear of History: New Law Undermines Critical Thinking
* Attacking Iran: Bad Policy is a Bipartisan Affair
* The Four Fundamentalisms and the Threat to Sustainable Democracy
* Why Leftists Mistrust Liberals
* “Crash” and the Self-Indulgence of White America with Robert Wosnitzer
* Why I am a Christian (sort of)
* The Failure of Our First Amendment Success: Dealing with the Death of Discourse
* "Dangerous" Academics: Right-wing Distortions about Leftist Professors
* MLK Day: Dreams and Nightmares
* Intelligent-Design Debate Reveals Limits of Religion and Science
* The 1st Amendment's Assembly and Petition Clauses -- Eviscerated by Big Money?
* Give Thanks No More: It’s Time for a National Day of Atonement
* Abe Osheroff: On the Joys and Risks of Living Authentically in the Empire
* The Challenge of a Broken World
* TV Images Don't Bring Change
* From Hiroshima to Iraq and Back with Sharon Weiner
* Demonizing News Media is Attempt to Divert Attention from Policy Failures
* Iraq’s Non-Election
* A New “Citizens Oath of Office” for Inauguration 2005
* Election Day Fears
* Large Dams in India -- Temples or Burial Grounds?
* US Supports Anti-Democratic Forces in Venezuela Recall
* Kerry's Hypocrisy on the Vietnam War 
* “Fahrenheit 9/11” is a Stupid White Movie
* It’s Not Just the Emperor Who is Naked, but the Whole Empire
* 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
* Bush's Nuclear Hypocrisy
*
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
*
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

HOME