alexandraerin (
alexandraerin) wrote2009-09-14 11:32 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Written on the road: matters of definition.
Whenever liberal judges or politicians bring up the state of justice overseas in discussing the laws here, a certain segment of the far right tends to go into a tizzy.
"New World Order!" they say.
"One World Government!" they say.
Pish, I say.
We're just taking stock of the world and our place in it. If we happen to notice that we're engaging in a practice that only countries Bush 43 identified as members of an "Axis of Evil", we wonder about the company we're keeping, you know?
We're not interested in giving up our sovereignty. We're interested in using it... using it to better ourselves as a nation, to form a "more perfect Union"... more perfect today than it was yesterday, we hope, and possibly even better still tomorrow.
And at its heart, that's what this health care debate is about: how we define ourselves as a people, how we define ourselves as a nation.
Is it enough to be a free people and a powerful nation? Does it not matter what we do with our power and freedom?
Is it enough that America is great?
My thought is that greatness is okay, so far as it goes, but it's better to be great and good than the alternative.
Those who are against reform say that there's an effort underway to change America, to redefine what America is and take it away from our roots and traditional values.
Folks, that's going to happen anyway. It's happening anyway.
A shining beacon on the hill? Not when we lag behind every other developed nation in how we treat our citizens.
A Christian nation? Not with how we do unto the least of us... and I don't know exactly who shall know us by our works, but probably not anyone we'd want to be seen with.
The land of opportunity? Face it, we've had a mixed record on that one. Unavoidable, really... if success doesn't bring rewards then "opportunity" is worthless, but if the rewards are meaningful then the rich hold advantages over the poor that carry across generations, resulting in unequal opportunities.
But even if we've never been perfect in an area, we can still do better or worse and right now we're doing much worse than we should be. The rising cost of health care shackles people to jobs by making a lot of traditional opportunities... entrepreneurship and education, for instance... too risky for the rewards.
The land of the free and the home of the brave? It's hard to be brave when you have to choose between food, rent, and medicine. It's impossible to be free when your choice is death from untreated but preventable conditions or a lifetime of onerous debt.
America is redefining itself by degrees. Like a satellite in a decaying orbit, the great and soaring dream of the world's first Democratic Republic will come crashing down if we're too afraid to make some necessary course corrections. We will become a third world country with scattered pockets here and there of breathtaking privilege. Within one hundred years, we may not be one nation indivisible, but two nations divided: a permanent underclass of workers who find that both the simple necessities of life and the opportunities for advancement are rigidly controlled and rationed in order to keep them in bondage, and an upper class that pats itself on the back and congratulates itself on having "made it" while exhorting the teeming masses to pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
(Hopefully somebody among the underclass will be educated enough to appreciate the irony when the ruling class identify themselves as John Galt and claim the millions whose labor supports them are parasites and looters.)
And you know what? Eventually I think the underclass will pull themselves up... and it will be ugly. When our descendants some centuries hence read about "The American Revolution", they won't be reading about George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. They will be reading about something that would make the Bolsheviks blush and Robespierre go "Oh, my."
Because that's what it would take to upend a social order that entrenched in a nation so large, so great, and so powerful.
And with that, the redefining of America will be complete.
Call this speculation. Call this hyperbole. Call it a bit of fiction dreamed up by a purveyor of the same.
But don't be afraid to look at the path we're on and see where it's leading... not where you want it to lead, not where you think it should lead, but where it actually is leading: the gap between the rich and poor... the increasing barriers to opportunity... the almost pathological gutting and cutting of any tool we give ourselves to use our collective might and wealth and freedom to help our fellow citizens.
Making access to our leading edge health care system a public concern, a national concern isn't so much about "redefining America" as it is about examining our existing definitions and seeing how we measure up.
I think we can do better. I write this without irony: we can put a man on the moon. We can split the atom. We wrapped a continent in bands of iron and a world in bands of information.
Anybody who says we can't provide health care is underestimating us. Anybody who says we shouldn't... well, with as much respect as I can muster, I disagree with their definition of America.
"New World Order!" they say.
"One World Government!" they say.
Pish, I say.
We're just taking stock of the world and our place in it. If we happen to notice that we're engaging in a practice that only countries Bush 43 identified as members of an "Axis of Evil", we wonder about the company we're keeping, you know?
We're not interested in giving up our sovereignty. We're interested in using it... using it to better ourselves as a nation, to form a "more perfect Union"... more perfect today than it was yesterday, we hope, and possibly even better still tomorrow.
And at its heart, that's what this health care debate is about: how we define ourselves as a people, how we define ourselves as a nation.
Is it enough to be a free people and a powerful nation? Does it not matter what we do with our power and freedom?
Is it enough that America is great?
My thought is that greatness is okay, so far as it goes, but it's better to be great and good than the alternative.
Those who are against reform say that there's an effort underway to change America, to redefine what America is and take it away from our roots and traditional values.
Folks, that's going to happen anyway. It's happening anyway.
A shining beacon on the hill? Not when we lag behind every other developed nation in how we treat our citizens.
A Christian nation? Not with how we do unto the least of us... and I don't know exactly who shall know us by our works, but probably not anyone we'd want to be seen with.
The land of opportunity? Face it, we've had a mixed record on that one. Unavoidable, really... if success doesn't bring rewards then "opportunity" is worthless, but if the rewards are meaningful then the rich hold advantages over the poor that carry across generations, resulting in unequal opportunities.
But even if we've never been perfect in an area, we can still do better or worse and right now we're doing much worse than we should be. The rising cost of health care shackles people to jobs by making a lot of traditional opportunities... entrepreneurship and education, for instance... too risky for the rewards.
The land of the free and the home of the brave? It's hard to be brave when you have to choose between food, rent, and medicine. It's impossible to be free when your choice is death from untreated but preventable conditions or a lifetime of onerous debt.
America is redefining itself by degrees. Like a satellite in a decaying orbit, the great and soaring dream of the world's first Democratic Republic will come crashing down if we're too afraid to make some necessary course corrections. We will become a third world country with scattered pockets here and there of breathtaking privilege. Within one hundred years, we may not be one nation indivisible, but two nations divided: a permanent underclass of workers who find that both the simple necessities of life and the opportunities for advancement are rigidly controlled and rationed in order to keep them in bondage, and an upper class that pats itself on the back and congratulates itself on having "made it" while exhorting the teeming masses to pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
(Hopefully somebody among the underclass will be educated enough to appreciate the irony when the ruling class identify themselves as John Galt and claim the millions whose labor supports them are parasites and looters.)
And you know what? Eventually I think the underclass will pull themselves up... and it will be ugly. When our descendants some centuries hence read about "The American Revolution", they won't be reading about George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. They will be reading about something that would make the Bolsheviks blush and Robespierre go "Oh, my."
Because that's what it would take to upend a social order that entrenched in a nation so large, so great, and so powerful.
And with that, the redefining of America will be complete.
Call this speculation. Call this hyperbole. Call it a bit of fiction dreamed up by a purveyor of the same.
But don't be afraid to look at the path we're on and see where it's leading... not where you want it to lead, not where you think it should lead, but where it actually is leading: the gap between the rich and poor... the increasing barriers to opportunity... the almost pathological gutting and cutting of any tool we give ourselves to use our collective might and wealth and freedom to help our fellow citizens.
Making access to our leading edge health care system a public concern, a national concern isn't so much about "redefining America" as it is about examining our existing definitions and seeing how we measure up.
I think we can do better. I write this without irony: we can put a man on the moon. We can split the atom. We wrapped a continent in bands of iron and a world in bands of information.
Anybody who says we can't provide health care is underestimating us. Anybody who says we shouldn't... well, with as much respect as I can muster, I disagree with their definition of America.
That or...
That or, you know: boot, face, forever, stuff like that.
Re: That or...
Re: That or...
(no subject)
Re: That or...
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I do not agree with the general notion of government health care in any form, but I do applaud President Obama for bringing forth the debate, come hell or high water. I think if you look at what the people are crying out for in this health care debate and ignore the media and the politicians (on both sides) a large part of the population is against the government health care idea. They are not sheep following the talking heads, but informed, concerned citizens that are wary of where the officials who supposedly serve them, the people are taking this country.
I put forth that the political elite is ignoring the rest of the country and doing what they want to or need to in order to stay in power. Republican, Democrat, doesn't matter anymore, so long as you are in office, you are royalty and everyone else is a serf.
I think the revolution you speak of is brewing, and it is not left vs right, it is as you say, the "have-nots" vs the "haves."
"Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely." I recall seeing that in one of my history texts in elementary school and finding it to be profound. I'm a month away from 33 now, and it still strikes me when I think of it. Republicans used to be advocates of smaller government and less regulation. Before that it was the JFK Democrats. Now both parties are pro big government, pro regulation, pro bail-out. They're doing all they can to make we the people more beholding to them.
Forgive my rambling. My point is that, regardless of your ideological point of view, be wary of anything that consolidates more direct control over areas of our lives within the federal government. First they went after our financial institutions, then our largest manufacturing sector, and now our health care industry. Those three together are well over half of our total economy. Think about that.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
a republic...
no subject
I call ir prescience and premonition from over this side of the pond…