Breaking the
trance
by Granny Haddock
This is a speech given by
92-year-old Doris "Granny D" Haddock, who walked across the
U.S. in 1999-2000 for campaign finance reform. She made this
speech to Citizens for Participation in Political Action in
Boston, on Sept. 27, 2002.
I want to begin by congratulating
you for all the work you do. I know it is often frustrating
work. You are blessed to be able to see ahead to a world of
cooperation and peace -- a world of justice and sustainable
economies and meaningful democracies. You wonder why others
cannot or will not see these things or reach out for them,
and why they in fact oppose the obvious good -- why they
take the part of the oppressor, the blindered war
horse.
I would like us to take a few
moments to consider why this work is so hard, and what we
might do to move toward our common dreams more rapidly and
with greater joy.
Some of you may be old enough to
remember the Reagan Administration. Mr.Reagan and those
around him believed in a very new kind of American hero.
This new hero was a business hero -- not the fellow who
built up a family furniture store on Main Street and
supported the Little League and the Scouts; this new hero
was not the woman who worked late hours to create a
successful travel agency, nor was this new business hero
anything like any of the hard-working Americans who built-up
our middle class, advanced our standard of living and gave
us the resources and leisure for the proper civic life of a
democracy, with its leagues and Rotaries and Lions and Elks
and VFWs and party conventions and all that
glory.
No, the Reagan business hero was the
corporate takeover artist.
Any regulations that might get in
the way of these ruthless new capitalists were removed --
removed so that reptiles of uncommon greed and brutality
might rule the earth, which they now nearly do.
What soon happened was that ALL
corporations of medium size or larger had to look over their
shoulders. How did a corporation protect itself in this
environment from a hostile takeover? It had to close down
any factories that were not earning obscene profits. Never
mind that a factory had served a town well for a century, or
that it provided a healthy and regular profit for its
stockholders. If it seemed to be underperfoming by the new
hypergreed standards, or if it could be closed in favor of
opening a foreign plant that provided a slightly higher rate
of return, then, in this new atmosphere, the company was
derelict in its duty to its stockholders if it did not
ruthlessly act.
Perfectly good and profitable
factories were closed. Benefits to employees everywhere were
attacked, and staffs were downsized, outsourced,
computerized, downsized again, outsourced again to temp
agencies that paid no health care or retirement, and on and
on until America became a very different place. The gap
between rich and poor is now wider than at any time in our
history.
It is still a wealthy nation for
many people, but poverty is on the rise, and those with jobs
find themselves so overworked trying to make ends meet that
there is little time for family or for the joy of living.
Indeed, there is very little joy left in American life.
Workers are not loyal to their companies, because companies
treat them like expendable slaves, with no dignity or
assurance that hard work will result in advancement or
security.
We are living in the harsh world
invented by a handful of corporate raiders whose values were
completely foreign to the fairness and moderation that had
so long served as the proper foundation of American success
and the American dream of plenty for all. They were not a
new kind of person, for there have always been among us a
few reptilian hearts of uncommon greed. What was new was the
political permission they received for their rape and
rampage, which continues.
And so a new world devolved as if
from a virus. The new business hero, a Horatio Alger on
crack, did very well. The new model CEO derived from that
moment -- the ruthless mercenary who would come in to
reorganize a company and render it takeover-proof by
rendering it inhumane. This executive was worth millions per
year, we were told. In this way, a Darwinian system of
corporate survival assured that the most carnivorous, rather
than the most responsible, would rise to lead our most
powerful commercial organizations. And if you need an
explanation for Fox News or Enron, this is the history you
need to remember.
These superwealthy predators now,
through their political patronage, control both political
parties. They control Congress and the White House. They
control elements within your state house. They are not
particularly smart people, as their current agent in the
White House clearly demonstrates.
Here is how the takeover of
corporations became the corporate takeover of American
democracy: To get along and move up in one of these right
wing business organizations, you have to be like the boss.
The people working under you will then want to be like you
to get along themselves. In Fox News, even reporters in
local regions are told how to slant each story hard to the
right. There is no pretense of journalism within the
organization. And many people stuck in those jobs, who got
into journalism with the idea of doing legitimate
journalism, are sick to their stomachs every working
day.
In this way, the right-wing leanings
of a few people have distorted entire industries, including
television news. Political leaders are quickly infected in
this trickle down reptilism -- trickling down from the
people who write the checks for political campaigns and who
control political news.
And the reptilism trickles down
further, to the weaker minds listening to talk radio or
silly enough to spend too much time watching cable
television news -- people who buy the lies, who are simply
suckered into forking over their own political best
interests to the con artists who attempt to pick their
pockets at the same moment they are pointing out others who,
they say, are the real trouble makers. About 25 percent of
our people are susceptible to this kind of con, and they
then give us problems by standing against any reasonable
reforms. They have been spiritually twisted by the cheap
poison of a hundred Rush Limbaughs into the angry,
unthinking agents of the superrich.
On my long walk across America, a
man driving a garbage truck told me that the biggest problem
facing America today was the inheritance tax. I didn't have
to ask him if he had a radio in his truck.
I remind you of all this because it
is important to know that the reason our reforms are
difficult is not because Americans are split into two camps,
conservative and liberal. It is not like that at all. There
are lots of conservatives and liberals in America, but we
are not the two sides of the divide. True conservatives in
our country don't have many political leaders to look to
with respect. Among the last was Barry Goldwater. He
believed that the government had no business in our
bedrooms. He believed that a woman and her doctor didn't
need the government's help in deciding her important issues.
He would have laughed and then, I think, become very, very
angry at Ashcroft's attacks on the Bill of Rights and his
citizen-against-citizen snitching system. Goldwater believed
that the only issue of importance regarding gays in the
military was whether or not they could shoot
straight.
What we are seeing now from the far
right is not conservatism at all. It is fascism: the
imposition of a national and worldwide police state to
enforce a narrow world view that enriches and empowers the
few at the expense of the many, and that gives no respect or
honor to other cultures, ways of living, or opinions. To
call that conservatism is a crime against the memory of
America's great and true conservatives, who might think that
government ought to be less involved in life than we old
liberals would concur with, but who nevertheless stood for
the core American values that today's right-wing leaders
undermine at every opportunity.
We Americans are not split into
liberals and conservatives. In fact, if you are running for
office from the center, or from left of center, just do a
better job of demonstrating how far right-wing your opponent
is, and you will win more and more votes. You will win them
from the vast number of people, most especially urban women
and professional men, who identify themselves as Republicans
for old time's sake, but who are very uncomfortable when
forced to look squarely at the far right positions of many
candidates running under the flag of the Grand Old Party.
Given moderate alternatives, they will vote for them. That
was exactly the truth that Clinton understood and exploited
so brilliantly. He understood that Republicans are
conservatives but the Republican Party is not. If you want
to reflect upon how well he exploited this insight, remember
that Hillary was a Republican when he met her.
If we Americans are split into two
meaningful camps, it is not conservative versus liberal. The
two camps are these: the politically awake and the
hypnotized -- hypnotized by television and other mass media,
whose overpaid Svengalis dangle the swinging medallions of
packaged candidates and oft-told lies. It is all done to
politically prolong the open season on us -- open season
indeed, as the billionaire takeover artists bag their catch
for the day. And in their bags are our freedoms, our
leisure, our health care futures, our old age security, our
family time, our village life, our family-owned businesses
on Main Street, the middle class itself, and our position of
honor and peaceful leadership in the world.
Once we understand what we are up
against, and where the meaningful dividing lines truly run,
our lives as reformers can be easier because we shall know
how to proceed.
How to break the hypnosis is then
the question. It is easy.
Pull any contractor out of his white
pickup truck, turn down the talk radio blaring from it, and
ask him, "Government good, or government bad?"
His glazed eyes will widen.
"Government bad!" he will say.
Ok, good. You found one to play
with.
Now, ask him what the town might do
to make it safer for kids to get to and from school, and
around town when they're not in school, without getting
killed by traffic or getting in trouble. He will have a
million ideas. Good ideas. He has no clue that he is being
government -- if government is what happens when we get
together to solve our common problems and to make life
better for our communities.
You have broken his
trance.
When a proposition is on the ballot,
people talk about the mechanics of the idea, and the
hypnosis is largely circumvented. You see quite progressive
ballot propositions passing in otherwise quite unprogressive
states. Why? Because people are problem-solvers at heart,
and they enjoy it. They want to participate and be helpful
and accepted as valuable players. It takes a lot of hypnosis
to overcome that instinct, and a lot of hypnosis is what we
have had. But we can get around it.
Government agencies, of course, have
been the communitarian's worst enemies.Anything that smacks
of bureaucratic rudeness or pushiness or counterproductive
stubbornness does nothing but damage the idea that
government is us -- we the people acting together to solve
our problems as fellow citizens. That brand of government
really needs to be stamped out whenever it shows its
pinched, gray face. That is what can be done and must be
done to prepare the ground for what must come next, which is
a new engagement of citizens with the issues of interest to
them in their communities. We should begin in our high
schools. During the years from 13 to 19, lifelong civic
values are formed.
We should start with our younger
people. As community leaders, we should work with the
popular history and civics teachers in our high schools to
bring the issues of the day and the issues of the town into
the classroom -- not to propagandize but to openly invite
students to learn, research, and offer advice to the
community on a wide range of issues. This is where the
hypnosis falls apart. This is where democracy finds its feet
again.
This summer I asked America's
independent community radio stations to get involved with
those same teachers in our high schools, to make students
into community reporters and commentators. I reminded these
indy news stations that they have the technology and the
dramatic missions young people crave. I said young people
will never become robots if they are enlisted in the cause
of truth at an early age.
What we do in schools, we must also
do in colleges and then in the general community. But if we
only have the means to focus on the high schools, that is
enough. These young people will be voting in only a few
years. If we support their increased civic engagement as
they move through college and into the community, we will
have raised an army of citizens immunized against corporate
hypnosis. Our victories for needed reforms will come
naturally. With an engaged and informed citizenry, who knows
what good we might do, and what great civilization we might
yet again move toward?
True conservatives and liberals
unite! Bring your issues and your opinions to our young
people, and create a new expectation that they will get
involved, get informed, and form a view of themselves as
problem-solving citizens of a democracy. Our differences
from the left or right are nothing compared to the
differences between the politically awake and the hypnotized
drones of the new colonialism that now stalks and shreds our
civilization.
I urge you to think young, to link
with moderates on the other side of the fence, and to
approach the schools and teachers who can help you connect
your young, rising citizens to the issues that will shape
their lives.
If you believe that human beings, in
addition to all their other instincts, want to help create
and live in a happy, creative and cooperative world, then
you must believe that people are to be trusted in their
politics so long as they are encouraged to study everyone's
experience and study the competing points of view -- and so
long as they are raised with enough love and security to be
capable of empathy. We need not force a liberal agenda on
our society, any more than we need force our political
opinions on our children. We can enjoy life instead of
banging our heads against the old walls. If we encourage an
awake thoughtfulness, democracy and justice will have all
the victories our hearts can handle.
To read more of Doris Haddock's
writings, visit GrannyD.com.
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