It always amazes me when anybody can use a phrase like "the American Dream" with a straight face. But there is no straighter face in North America than Katrina van den Heuvel's, a person who never met a cliche she didn't like:
Can a Movement Save the American Dream?And I'm sure you can see where that is going.Wisconsin provided inspiration for the effort by Van Jones and others to launch the American Dream Movement. Jones, the founder of Green For All, joined MoveOn.org, the Center for Community Change, the Campaign for America’s Future ... to build an initiative....
Just as the Tea Party provided an umbrella for conservative groups with disparate agendas... so the American Dream Movement hopes to provide an umbrella and help mobilize energy for widespread progressive organizing efforts....
America’s democracy has been corrupted by big money and predatory corporate interests that threaten that dream....Our task is to clean up politics and rebuild an economy that works for working people....
Can ... any truly populist movement, build with Barack Obama in the White House? Disappointment in Obama has sparked a familiar debate among activists....
In his Democratic National Convention speech in Chicago in 1996, the Rev. Jesse Jackson summarized the interaction between movements and presidents:
Progress comes through an enlightened president, in coalition with an energized people.... Dr. King supported Kennedy.
In addition to its feckless Obamaite rah-rah conclusion, this piece provides much else to enjoy. It is noteworthy, for example, that both American "liberals" and American "conservatives" postulate a vanished Golden Age, an America that we need to "take back". "America's democracy", fer Chrissake? Just when exactly did that ever exist?
Then of course there's the notion of a mano-a-mano between the teabaggers (in this corner) and the likes of MoveOn.org (in the other).
Nobody, but nobody, surpasses me in contempt for the teabaggers, but I would lay money -- if I had any -- at hundred-to-one odds that the teabaggers would eat the moveonners alive in the first round. For one thing, the teabaggers have taken the wonderfully bracing and quite correct "throw the bums out" stance, whereas MoveOn was founded to rally 'round the Prez back in Blowjob Bill's day, and appear to be running true to form now that there's another neoconservative Democrat in the White House.
As I was reading this silly and vapid piece, a long-overdue penny finally dropped. Kat van den H thinks she's Henry Luce. She thinks she's going to turn the Nation mag into the Time of our day -- a Time with a vaguely bien-pensant liberal flavor.
Got news for ya, Kat: there is already a Time for our times. It's the Drudge Report.
Comments (27)
El sueño de la razón.
Posted by Sandwichman | September 23, 2011 6:45 PM
Posted on September 23, 2011 18:45
"It is noteworthy, for example, that both American "liberals" and American "conservatives" postulate a vanished Golden Age, an America that we need to "take back""
Yes, the vanished golden age of American Progressivism, when folks like Williams Jennings Brian were actually serious candidates for President.
http://projects.vassar.edu/1896/bryan.html
But about that same time the "real America" was showing what is really all about.
http://www.lastoftheindependents.com/wounded.htm
Posted by Drunk Pundit | September 23, 2011 7:16 PM
Posted on September 23, 2011 19:16
As George Carlin used to say, it's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.
Posted by antonello | September 23, 2011 8:00 PM
Posted on September 23, 2011 20:00
This post was rejected a while ago, let's see if it works this time.
"It is noteworthy, for example, that both American "liberals" and American "conservatives" postulate a vanished Golden Age, an America that we need to "take back""
Yes, the vanished golden age of American Progressivism, when folks like Williams Jennings Brian were actually serious candidates for President.
http://projects.vassar.edu/1896/bryan.html
But about that same time the "real America" was showing what is really all about.
http://www.lastoftheindependents.com/wounded.htm
Posted by Drunk Pundit | September 23, 2011 8:18 PM
Posted on September 23, 2011 20:18
Wisconsin
Ding!
provided inspiration for the effort by Van Jones
Ding ding!
and others to launch the American Dream Movement.
Ding ding ding!
Jones, the founder of Green For All, joined MoveOn.org,
Ding ding ding ding!
the Center for Community Change, the Campaign for America’s Future ... to build an initiative....
Ding ding ding ding dingggg! We have a winner!
Y'know, I'll bet I could create a drinking game based on the phrase "American Dream"... and a set of Bullshit Bingo cards based on every name and organization mentioned in that Nation column -- oh, yeah, and the word "initiative".
Got news for ya, Kat: there is already a Time for our times. It's the Drudge Report.
D'oohhhhhhhh. You're fuckin' cold, Smiff.
Posted by Mike Flugennock | September 23, 2011 11:15 PM
Posted on September 23, 2011 23:15
But she should give heart: There's always Life.
Posted by davidly | September 24, 2011 4:03 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 04:03
Must be some visceral drive that impels the likes of vanden Drivel or our special friend Harris-Perry-whatever to trot out such desperate-sounding gruel. Are they fearful that they're losing 'four more years' of encysting within the bureaucracy like their Movement counterparts have so successfully done?
Someone somewhere raised the specter of Bachman/Palin slashfic. Equally appropriate might be Katrina/Melissa slashfic. Both would require a writer/writers with the sensitivities that derive from having all due respect for the great American traditions that inform the spectacle.
Posted by RedPhillip | September 24, 2011 10:25 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 10:25
@Sandwichman: What is this 'Reason' of which you speak?
Posted by RedPhillip | September 24, 2011 10:27 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 10:27
They're looking for Grendel, but they keep stumbling upon Elmer Fudd.
Posted by Jack Crow | September 24, 2011 10:27 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 10:27
Pandar populism
Is for the merit class elements that want to
" roll in it"
As my dogs "roll in it"
It's
to counter their smell to their prey
In this case the prey are students and bohos
That as yet have failed to get comfortable around elite technoliberals
Posted by Op | September 24, 2011 11:48 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 11:48
The American dream is a condescension
Real skill deprived kulack tadpoles caught in mid McJob trot
May want to start a business
Maybe a shop or restaurant
or think about retiring early
to some place warm and breezy
We could get uncle to fund a million bad ideas per year
Yes one million bad ideas
The people have to hatch
Not high tech not even just
Junior high tech
Any idea
Set up categories ...
To participate you simply send in a proposal
It gets pigeon holed in one or other category box
And you await lottery results
that occur every month
Cost to uncle ? Maybe 200 billion per annum
Consider this
Instead of pissing uncle's free money away on schooling grants etc
Let folks start up somethin'
Economics suggests it's no worse then upping transfers
Posted by Op | September 24, 2011 11:58 AM
Posted on September 24, 2011 11:58
The last thing mcshitnik jobsters want is to parade around as mcshitniks
They are wage workers only by necessity
To run a register at sears is not an honorable trade eh?
Not like being say a carpenter or a cow puncher
Want to approach this mcscrambled majority ?
Offer them the fun equivalent of guerrilla war
job site organizing is like paint ball for non nerds
Posted by Op | September 24, 2011 12:04 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 12:04
Rule one
take heavy casualties
Hundreds of thousands fired for organizing
Is a minimum if we want to get a few blazes going here
Have you looked at the numbers?
Pitful
No one gets fired for job site insightments these days
Hey I've had 5 jobs in ten years and I'm old
anyone clever enough to organize can get hooked into a next job
Now is the season
Hop a job at the mall's biggest box and raise Hell
Posted by Op | September 24, 2011 12:11 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 12:11
Owen,
That's not going to be good for your vision of the future, that "taking casualties."
It's going to mean a bunch of pissed and hungry people who are amenable to harsh measures and scapegoating.
Especially if there's no way to actually feed the people you've apparat'd into hunger and homelessness.
Posted by Jack Crow | September 24, 2011 2:45 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 14:45
KVH is also responsible for downgrading Alex Cockburn's biweekly column in favor of inflicting more thoughts from Melissa Harris-Perry (formerly known as Melissa Harris-Lacewell).
Posted by sk | September 24, 2011 5:33 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 17:33
@sk - I did remember the 'Lacewell' long after I'd posted but thought, "What hay?" I blame everything on the brain damage.
Posted by RedPhillip | September 24, 2011 5:39 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 17:39
It's worse than that sk. Alex downgraded to monthly.
Posted by Chomskyzinn | September 24, 2011 6:10 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 18:10
Still, good to hear Alex is chirpy as ever (and capable of provoking those who suffer shortness of breath when "AGW" is mentioned ;)
Posted by sk | September 24, 2011 6:38 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 18:38
Crow
The jobakazi
Are. Picked from
Those class elements without
Dependents and partners
Old and young
You're point is often heard among pie cards
Its bs
It takes a breed
But plenty exist
The unions are alibi ing inaction
Btw have you done job. Orging ?
Posted by op | September 24, 2011 7:28 PM
Posted on September 24, 2011 19:28
Owen,
Any chance you can put that into common idiom? Especially since we probably speak the same dialect of yankee English, and I'd have a clue what you were trying to communicate.
Posted by Jack Crow | September 25, 2011 10:09 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 10:09
What threw you?
Jobokazi
Or pie card
The first oughta be obvious
the second is a nice name for union leadership
there are motions within the broader jobster liberation movement
That face the task ahead without obvious prejudice , illusions or pessimism
The dialogue is marginal to organized labor itself
Though somehow union backing must be arranged
One obstacle beyond the complacency of the local barons
Is the threat of non legal methods to a legit unions finical status
Much is pre emptied by the legal department
More even then by contempt for the will and fortitude of the still unorganized
Posted by Op | September 25, 2011 10:25 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 10:25
In protracted struggles union backing can vanish if a deal for even
A fraction of the loaf can be arranged
with corporate management
The dues hounding implies is no more immoral then it is incomprehensible
To succeed the social activists working to org the unorganized
Need to find avenues of struggle that deal in the unions not deal em out
This requires sequencing
The pie cards won't turn down a dues stream
Okay how do we arrange that for em while retaining the initiative in our own hands
Posted by Op | September 25, 2011 10:29 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 10:29
The evolving strategy seems to require an inside/outside structure
based among individual organizers inside unions and community and job class organizers outside the unions
The best paradigms seems to pre date the wagner act/CIO late 30's
The long pre history of industrial unionization
Posted by Op | September 25, 2011 10:34 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 10:34
Jack Crow sez on 09.24.11 @14:45:
That's not going to be good for your vision of the future, that "taking casualties."
It's going to mean a bunch of pissed and hungry people who are amenable to harsh measures and scapegoating.
Not necessarily. You're not taking into account the fact that these pissed-off hungry people could still be reached by follow-up education and information efforts by labor activists, nor that a large number of said pissed-off hungry people will already have enough sense to not fall for the harshness and scapegoating, and to know who their real enemies are, and basically "know the score".
I think the key here will be that the education/info effort needs to be spearheaded by actual workers themselves -- not a bunch of suit'n'tie mainstream union officials, nor the Democratic Party, nor a bunch of effete white liberal vegan college brats.
Posted by Mike Flugennock | September 25, 2011 11:28 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 11:28
Op sez on 09.25.11 @10:29:
To succeed the social activists working to org the unorganized
Need to find avenues of struggle that deal in the unions not deal em out...
I hate to say this, but I wouldn't trust the established mainstream unions as far as I can throw 'em these days, as they all seem to have been thoroughly defanged and castrated by the Democratic Party. The exceptions that prove the rule -- as far as I could tell -- were the Steelworkers joining the anarchists at the Seattle WTO in '99, and the Longshoremen refusing to load shipments of war materiel and fighting the cops in San Francisco in '03 -- and even then, they were acting independently, not under the direction of their unions' "leadership".
Imho, our best hope -- a long shot, I'll admit -- would be large-scale revival of the IWW. We need another Joe Hill, another Sacco'n'Vanzetti, and another Eugene Debs or two to win this one. The old mainstream AFL-CIA-type geezers are only getting in the way. All they'd do is suck up all the new movements' energy and divert it into propping up the Democratic Party.
Posted by Mike Flugennock | September 25, 2011 11:46 AM
Posted on September 25, 2011 11:46
KvH appears to have learned her craft from the Working Assets copy writing staff.
Posted by gluelicker | September 25, 2011 1:16 PM
Posted on September 25, 2011 13:16
I hear ya mike and crow for that matter
But I'll re iterate some fragment of the unions must be at the table
As they were in the CIO break out
One big union is a confusion of the necessary solidarity of the social union movement for the basic unit of organization
Posted by Op | September 25, 2011 9:29 PM
Posted on September 25, 2011 21:29