
               What could start a popular resurgence in this country against the  abuses of concentrated, avaricious corporatism? Imagine the arrogance of  passing on to already cheated working people and the jobless enormous  corporate losses? This is achieved through government bailouts and tax  escapes.
 History teaches us that the spark usually is smaller than expected  and of a nature that is wholly unpredictable or even unimaginable. But  if the dry tinder is all around, as many deprivations and polls reveal,  the spark, no matter how small, can turn into a raging inferno.
 The Boston Tea Party lit up the American Revolution. Storming the  hated Bastille (prison) by impoverished Parisians launched the French  Revolution. More recently, in December 1997, an Israeli military vehicle  rammed a civilian van in the West Bank killing seven occupants and  igniting the first Intifada.
 
 Last December, a young fruit vendor, abused by thieving police in a  small Tunisian town, immolated himself in the local square. Seen by  millions on Facebook, this self-sacrifice launched the Tunisian and  Egyptian overthrow of their long-time dictators. Later, in Syria, after  police arrested 13 youngsters in a southern border town for  anti-government graffiti the place erupted in riots and rallies that are  spreading to other cities.
 A few weeks ago, many progressives and quite a few pundits believed  that the recurrent, ever larger February-March rallies in Madison,  Wisconsin by workers, students and others against the Governors’ and the  Legislature’s attack on public employee unions and social services,  following earlier blatant corporate welfare enactments, would be the  long-awaited spark.
 The Madison eruption spread briefly to Ohio and Indiana where  Republican officials were moving in the same direction, punishing  workers and families while leaving the corporate and wealthy to count  their mounting privileges. There, the crowds were neither as large nor  as frequent. In all these states, the Republicans got most of what they  wanted, albeit with a possible, future political price to be paid. The  rallies have subsided, not even culminating—as some organizers hoped—in a  gigantic march on Washington, D.C.
 Granted, rallying a long repressed people into losing their fear and  demanding, as in Cairo’s huge Tahrir Square “out with the dictator”, is a  simple, anthromorphic goal. In our country, the rallies are hardly as  clearcut, though use of the citizen right of recall for Republican  legislators, and later Governor Walker himself, may produce an  interesting accountability election. But sparks are difficult to  sustain.
 In authoritarian regimes, there are few options for dissent or airing  one’s grievances. So when the spark does occur, the climate is fertile  for an explosion of outrages.
 In the United States, there are largely myths such as “anyone can  sue,” or “anyone can run,” or “anyone can directly tell off the  President or the Mayor,” or “anyone can blow the whistle.” These combine  with a few celebrated successes by rebels or an ordinary David taking  on a Goliath for a win here and there, from a corporate-government  ruling class that bends a little so that it doesn’t break.
 Meanwhile, the inequality, gouging, political exclusions and overall  gaps between the top one percent and the rest tighten the grip of the  oligarchy and its draining, violent militarized empire.
 Loss of control over almost everything that matters, including their  children to daily direct corporate marketing of junk food and violent  programming, is rampant. Over seventy percent of those polled told  Business Week that they believed corporations had “too much control over  their lives”—and that was in 2000 before conditions and controls—viz,  the Wall Street collapse, severe recession and taxpayer  bailouts—worsened.
 The American people don’t see much they can do to counter the  pressures of greed and power that tracks them daily from debt to debt,  from lower standards of living to outright penury, from denial of  critical healthcare to the iron collar of the cruel credit score, from  inscrutable, computerized bills to fine-print contracts trapping their  sense of unfairness into waves of frustrations, from being put on hold  by the companies until they’re told no, no, no or penalty, penalty,  penalty!
 How do we break the cycle of despair, exclusion, powerlessness, and  endless betrayal by those given the authority to bring down the  exploiters and oppressors to lawful accountability?
 The Empire rips up the Constitution and takes the reserve army of the  young unemployed to kill and die in aggressive wars of the White  House’s choice, with Congress watching from the sidelines; its only role  to funnel trillions of tax dollars into the insatiable war machine’s  unauditable budgets. President Eisenhower wanted us to control the  “military-industrial complex”. Instead it grew much more out of control.  Eisenhower’s grave warning as expressed in his farewell address in 1961  was prescient.
 The spark can come from a recurrent sequence of abuses that strike a  special chord of deeply felt injustice. Or it could be a unique episode  or bullying that tolls the feeling “enough already” throughout the land.  Such sparks cannot be manufactured; the power to arouse and break  people’s routines is spontaneous.
 When that moment comes, millions of Americans whose self-respect and  keen sense of wrong will remind them precisely why our Constitution  begins with “We the People” and not “We the Corporations”. They will  realize the necessity for a Jeffersonian revolution.
                                                                Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author. His most recent book - and first novel - is, Only The Super-Rich Can Save Us. His most recent work of non-fiction is The Seventeen Traditions.
    
 
No comments:
Post a Comment