The clearest example of the irrelevance of the Democratic Party is found in its apparent inability to address the real concerns of the least among us. Even if you don't take it that far, and only focus upon the most surface level intentions of the party one is still left wondering what the point of the party is. In a recent speech by radical journalist and activist Chris Hedges he referred to the Democratic Party under Obama this way:
Obama has done nothing to alter the rape of America by corporations. He’s done nothing to alter the permanent war economy, 1 trillion dollars in defense-related spending, expansion of the imperial war in Afghanistan, 700 civilians dead in Pakistan from drone attacks since Obama took office. He hasn’t restored habeas corpus, revoked Bush's secrecy laws, ended extraordinary rendition or the torture of detainees in our offshore penal colonies nor, most egregiously perhaps, the looting of the US treasury by speculative interests on Wall Street.
All of the issues listed in that quote are precisely those which we, those who swallowed our pride and voted for a Democrat once again, thought were unflinchingly going to be reversed under Obama. What seems obvious now is that he must have had a swift, closed door meeting where he was told exactly what he was going to have to do in order to save the country from absolute economic mayhem. Either that, or he is a wolf in sheep's clothing. No matter which is true, he and his cognitively dissonant Administration has rendered the Democratic Party completely impotent to implement the kind of "change" he campaigned upon. And it doesn't appear that Obama, especially in light of the uprisings in Egypt, is at all prepared to challenge the powers that be in the American government. That is, Wall Street, Corporate America, and the investment banks that make it possible for them to loot the American people year after year.
Liberalism, the group of tenets that the Democrats are supposedly bound to, has also undergone a kind of cultural lobotomy, so much so, that the original meaning of the term has gotten completely lost in the new chemical makeup of the collective brain of liberalism today. It's almost as though liberalism has been on an antidepressant drug as of late. Here's a crash course. Liberalism, as a sociocultural and political idealogical theory, was developed during the Age of Enlightenment. It was an ideology bound by the basic belief that the human species would evolve if it was now bound by such things as absolute monarchy, feudalism, the "divine right of kings", heredity status, and so on. This is what we could call "classical liberalism," a concept championed by John Locke. Locke believed in a then revolutionary concept that governments should rule only by the consent of the governed, hence the development of democratic voting and of public comment. This is also the basis for such concepts as the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." By today's American right-of-center Zeitgeist classical liberalism might as well be called "libertarian socialism". In fact, it was liberation philosophy that was used to justify the armed overthrow of tyrannical rule in France and the early United States. Liberalism today does not embody what Locke had in mind when he opined about the natural right of man to pursue happiness. The pursuit of happiness does not naturally flourish, for the many at least, under capitalism. And while capitalism is indeed the economic system developed by early liberals, it can only make people rich if it also makes a substantial portion of the population exceedingly poor. This is where Barack Obama has completely failed in his liberalism, as did Bill Clinton, who in my mind is the worst President in the history of the United States.
Today's liberalism has essentially been co-opted by the libertarian wing of the Republican Party, which has itself been co-opted by the socially conservative wing of the general public, fueled by religious cultural self-importance. The Democratic Party has now been challenged, effectively, by the conservative movement in America, because of its successful co-opting of liberalism. This is why liberalism has become one of the looser terms to use in today's political lexicon. And progressivism is no longer a useful term either, as there is little to no labor movement present in this country, thanks to Presidents Reagan and Clinton.
What needs to happen in America is a profound shift of the current American Zeitgeist, which means in the original German, "the spirit of the times". Thomas Khun identified it as "The general cultural, intellectual, ethical, spiritual, and/or political climate within a nation or even specific groups, along with the general ambiance, morals, sociocultural direction, and mood associated with an era." And we need hope. Not the kind of useless hope garnered from Barack Obama's flowery speeches, but the kind of hope that comes from the citizens of this country, and indeed the world, engaging in physical actions against the morally, ethically, politically, economically, and spiritually bankrupt Democratic and Republican Parties of the United States.
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