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America's First
Decade into the New Millennium
By Ben Tanosborn
ccun.org, January 4, 2010
As we bring curtains down to the initial 1
percent of the new millennium, while taking a summary look to see what
we’re leaving behind, one feels compelled to give these past ten years a
name; one other than 00’s or similar non-descriptive monikers that fail to
depict what the period was about. To some of us, this decade has
been, at least in these United States, a decade of realization, a decade
of recognition. Not realization for all Americans, or even the
majority of them, but for enough of the emerging, civically active
citizenry that could possibly effect major change in the near future;
change not just for the betterment of this nation, but for the rest of the
planet as well. During this decade of chaos and turbulence, from
the tail end of the Clinton years to the start of Obama’s hopeful-changes,
we have experienced wars of choice, genocide and an American government,
first of Republicans and later of Democrats, obsessed with propping-up a
collapsing predatory capitalist system, it, and its collection of
fawningly nincompoops at the Fed, helped create. Most of these dire
calamities were the result of decisions from a sordid White House run
during eight years by the younger Bush, a true criminal fool, placed at
the helm of the nation thanks to a corporate elite aided by the blinded
support of a dedicated, but misguided, religious flock. A flock that
saw ultra-right conservatism as both its political benefactor and a
powerful ally, instead of what it really was: a vote-parasite serving a
master that was neither Christian nor divine… and even more ironic, not
even fiscally conservative! After a devastating eight years of
shameless lies, economic thievery, and international political amorality
that shook the world, the United States has been given, if temporarily, a
reprieve to get back on course and make necessary amends. Whether
such a proper course is taken by Obama remains to be seen; for, to date,
most indications show no significant changes in policies or direction from
those of his predecessors other than a strong rhetoric and occasional
bursts of hot air. Be that as it may, there are realizations that
many concerned Americans have come to recognize during this past decade.
For starters, there has been a substantial increase in appreciation
that we, the good old USA, may not quite be the country we’ve always
claimed to be – one with a divine grant of exceptionalism and a manifest
destiny – in either perception or reality. That we are not at the
front of the pack internationally when it comes to caring for the
well-being of our own people, showing apprehension that we are indeed
lagging behind most first-world nations in education, health care and open
opportunity for an improved, rewarding life; and that instead of catching
up to those nations, we measure to be growing further and further apart
from them. One could very well call it, the American dream in
reverse! That in the past, the United States has dealt with issues
of global significance, such as nuclear disarmament and global warming, in
a unilateral, self-serving way… such awareness finally taking root in an
ever-increasing portion of the US population, and not just restricted to
peaceniks and tree-huggers. That there is a greater cognizance of
our treatment of Palestine, or the US military presence in the Middle East
and Afghanistan – and the wars waged to establish that presence so as “to
insure that American interests are protected.” Our comprehension is now
starting to discover that such protection might be for the interests of
“others”… and not the interests of the vast majority of citizens of the
United States – interests which are represented by powerful, unbreakable
lobbies that place the desires of the State of Israel and Corporate
America as supreme, and makes a mockery of our claim to having a
government “of the people, by the people and for the people.” That
Americans are coming into consciousness in how they were politically
swindled by Ronald Reagan, the two Bushes and Bill Clinton when told that
America’s economic future resided in the blind acceptance of globalization
– without looking at short and midterm implications to the social and
economic makeup of the nation, the destruction of the industrial base –
and its in-place infrastructure – without a substitute base to take over
or even a well thought-out plan to get there, one minimizing social
upheaval and pain. Finally, many Americans are
starting to grasp what laissez-faire predatory capitalism can do to
democracy and social justice in both economic and human terms. In
the past Americans have been poised (some might say poisoned) to treat
other political systems, capitalistic and non-capitalistic alike, as
inferior, unworthy of a second look – misusing the quote by Winston
Churchill that “Democracy is the worst form of government except all those
other forms that have been tried from time to time.” As if our
Republic could be perceived to be representative of true democracy!
Perhaps recognition of our corrupt, predatory capitalist system is best
exemplified by United Steelworkers (USW) current efforts in exploring a
better economic model than that provided by the US, as they tap into the
five-decade experience of cooperative-capitalism of Spain’s Mondragón (a
worker cooperative federation) that really expresses humanity at work with
one person, one vote; and where CEOs usually are paid 3 to 5 times the
wages of its lowliest worker, not hundreds or thousands of times, as it is
the case in the United States. This first decade of the millennium
has been one of true realization, appreciation, apprehension, awareness,
cognizance, comprehension, consciousness, grasp, perception, recognition
and understanding that we are people just like any others on this earth;
that we are neither unique nor more deserving of special grace than any
others sharing this planet with us. More and more Americans are
starting to think that way, to have common goals with their brethren
elsewhere. Unfortunately, Americans continue to be captive of a
system ruled by corporate elite that enslaves and brainwashes them via a
seemingly democratic two-party system that in essence is but one party.
As the decade comes to a close, we find ourselves well into our third
year of an economic depression that too many economists, money-changers
and politicians took incredibly long to recognize and accept under its
diminutive name: recession. Now, Americans are being given a false
sense of economic stability with government intent in preserving this
capitalist system where over 90 percent of the population is capital-less,
pumping the perpetual credit well, refusing to acknowledge the well is
dry, totally spent. Perhaps the decade that follows will extend
realizations of this past decade to most Americans, and a new freedom
movement with a popular base replaces the grotesque, undemocratic system
that now rules our fate.
Ben Tanosborn
tanosborn@yahoo.com
www.tanosborn.com
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