I agree with both points made by Sam
Graham-Felsen. While I went away from the
conference feeling energized and able to
conquer
mountains, I must admit that I was and am
perturbed by the lack of not only radicalism
but
any concrete alternatives besides
name-bashing,
religion-mocking and the same old politicking.
And, yes, where was the discussion on Iraqi
withdrawal and against the militarization of
our
youth and society? US interference in
Venezuela
and other global democracies? US support for
dictatorships? Socialist and communitarian
alternatives to fend-for-yourself capitalist
globalization?
The problems of America and mankind are
systemic.
Jettisoning Bush and his gang won't solve our
problems. The Democrats in office are not the
saviors that many at the conference find them
to
be. If they were, why didn't more of them stand
up
to the Patriot Act? Or the Iraq war
resolution?
Sure, some will say they were cowed by fear
and
fed misinformation, but that's no excuse,
especially with experts and information all
readily available at the click of a mouse.
What can we deduce from this? Our government
is
corporate bought and owned. Nothing less than
a
transformative, transcendent movement lasting
beyond election cycles and rising above the
lost
hope of Democrats-as-saviors is necessary and
each
of us is responsible for fulfilling our part
in
it.
The 2008 election won't solve all our problems.
A
concerted radical progressive movement is
required
to salvage American democracy, global
prosperity
and human dignity.
I hate to admit it but the conference, for all
its
good points, seemed like a convention of old
Clinton cronies, including Dee Dee Myers, Paul
Begala, John Podesta, and Bill himself.
Unfortunately, that's how I also view the
Center
for American Progress.
Come on, folks, this was the guy who played a
direct role in maintaining sanctions against
Iraq,
sanctions that hurt the Iraqis--especially
children--more than they ever hurt Hussein. In
1994, he also tacitly allowed the overthrow,
by
the brutal US-supported Haitian military, of
the
popularly elected priest Aristide of Haiti
simply
because he sought to work for all Haitians,
especially the poor who elected him, and have
his
country stand on its own two feet, a threat to
US
hegemony in America's backyard. He deformed
social
programs by "reforming" welfare, putting the
needy
poor out on the streets. (A discussion of the
needs of the poor was also missing at the
conference as was any honest and substantive
discourse on social and economic justice.) He
instituted "don't ask, don't tell" and signed
the
Defense of Marriage Act. His administration
may
have helped draft the Rome Statute laying out
the
details for the vastly important human
rights-defending International Criminal Court,
but
he sat on it thereafter, even if it was near
the
end of his term. And, as a previous post
states,
it's shameful that a woman with connections to
the
Rwandan genocide introduced this mockery of a
President. To my knowledge, Clinton never did
apologize for sitting back with the rest of
the
predominantly white, wealthy world while black
Africans were slaughtered.
Let's not dare call this fraud a progressive
or
even liberal. One health care scheme and child
tax
credit doesn't make someone progressive. And
let's
not be nostalgic for a time when a Democrat
occupied the White House, even if the economy
was
bubbly, even if lots of new jobs were "created"
by
Clinton-Gore, the majority of those touted
jobs
numbers being low-wage anti-union service
retailers like Wal-Mart and McDonald's. That's
job
security!
Individuals like Begala have cheapened the
political discourse by participating in
hackery.
(I personally took intellectual offense to
Begala's evasion of the Marxist blow by Novak.
While the argument for Jesus Begala made is
convincing (and I take no religious side
here),
what's wrong with Marx, a philosopher who's
ideas
are dead-on about the capitalist system that
profits the few at the expense of the many?
This
is hardly compatible with a meaningful
democracy,
if that's what we had, even under a Democratic
chief executive and Congress. Again, here's
another example of self-proclaimed liberals
and
progressives following the terms of debate set
by
the conservatives and corporatists: capitalism
good, despite massive evidence of its
failures,
but socialist possibilities bad. Furthermore,
this
is a delusionary free market dogmatism, a
conversation on which might have been wonderful
at
the conference as we sought out--if we
did--alternatives to the current problems that
ail
humanity.)
Individuals like Clinton, a man morally guilty
of
gross human rights violations and war crimes,
shouldn't be praised as a progressive, let
alone
given a keynote spot at a conference touting
progressivism. Anyone who says Clinton is
progressive is guilty of some semblance of
dogmatism, an apparent characteristic of many
right-wingers of the fundamentalist Christian
persuasion. (I don't profess complete avoidance
of
personal dogmatism, but I try to notice such
personal fundamentalism, guard against it and be
a
critical thinker.)
Where are our principles and values? We don't
need
to be more like them--the conservatives (not
all
conservatives are Republicans, let's remember).
We
just need to be damn proud of our
values--substantive and sustainable peace,
dignity, prosperity, cooperation, justice--and
stop cheering for men and women who have
betrayed
the people of America and the world. We need
to
stop saluting hacks and corporatists in
liberal
and progressive masks.
Graham-Felsen is right: strategy, not
principles,
were in abundance. Strategy, though, hardly
lasts
past the jubilation of an election--and the
tragic
realization that the guy you voted for is
another
corporate stooge. Principles, properly
guarded,
last a lifetime and are the lighthouses and
hearths of our own social transformation and
actualization. At the next conference, we need
less "tailoring the message" and more "stand
up
for what's right and say so, damn it!" This
conference was good, but let's blast a bolt of
energy in to the anti-war, economic and social
justice student movements by holding a great
National Student Conference next year.
Following the 1st Campus Progress National Student Conference and a convention in my home state, I'm just starting to recover. DC is something else. And this Conference is something else. I met so many people who have done and are doing work all across this country that is great. And I met even more with plans in the works to do even better work.
I finally met, in person, friends like Asheesh and Ezra. I made new friends. I missed some people that I would like to have met (with 600 people, it would be near-impossible to catch them all). What can you do?
Still, I'm incredibly impressed by how the whole event came off. If you only watch one video of the conference, make sure you check out the opening panel on the battle of ideas. The panelists did a great job. If you watch another, watch the one on economic policy. I'm looking forward to downloading the videos of the panels I couldn't be at.
At this point, though, now that we've had an opportunity to look back, what would you want done differently? The greatest thing about blogs is that they allow for the dialogue, so, please, jump in and tell the folks at the Center what you would want to see done differently next year.
Talking to others, I can say that one of the frequent complaints was that there wasn't enough...time. The day we had was packed, fun, emotional, and exhausting. But we've got hundreds and thousands of young leaders across this country seeking skills and education to go out and do good work. One day was not enough.
One of my other concerns was that the skill trainings were all related to communications. All four were great and loaded with excellent panelists, but where were the basics of campus organizing, the Student Government Elections 101, or the live version of Nico Pitney's guide to quick, dirty, and great research.
These are some of my thoughts and thoughts I heard from others I met with.
What are yours?
Please remember that Campus Progress' terms of use do not allow promoting or endorsing any particular political party or candidate for office. Posts or comments that do this will be deleted.
Graham-Felsen. While I went away from the
conference feeling energized and able to conquer
mountains, I must admit that I was and am
perturbed by the lack of not only radicalism but
any concrete alternatives besides name-bashing,
religion-mocking and the same old politicking.
And, yes, where was the discussion on Iraqi
withdrawal and against the militarization of our
youth and society? US interference in Venezuela
and other global democracies? US support for
dictatorships? Socialist and communitarian
alternatives to fend-for-yourself capitalist
globalization?
The problems of America and mankind are systemic.
Jettisoning Bush and his gang won't solve our
problems. The Democrats in office are not the
saviors that many at the conference find them to
be. If they were, why didn't more of them stand up
to the Patriot Act? Or the Iraq war resolution?
Sure, some will say they were cowed by fear and
fed misinformation, but that's no excuse,
especially with experts and information all
readily available at the click of a mouse.
What can we deduce from this? Our government is
corporate bought and owned. Nothing less than a
transformative, transcendent movement lasting
beyond election cycles and rising above the lost
hope of Democrats-as-saviors is necessary and each
of us is responsible for fulfilling our part in
it.
The 2008 election won't solve all our problems. A
concerted radical progressive movement is required
to salvage American democracy, global prosperity
and human dignity.
I hate to admit it but the conference, for all its
good points, seemed like a convention of old
Clinton cronies, including Dee Dee Myers, Paul
Begala, John Podesta, and Bill himself.
Unfortunately, that's how I also view the Center
for American Progress.
Come on, folks, this was the guy who played a
direct role in maintaining sanctions against Iraq,
sanctions that hurt the Iraqis--especially
children--more than they ever hurt Hussein. In
1994, he also tacitly allowed the overthrow, by
the brutal US-supported Haitian military, of the
popularly elected priest Aristide of Haiti simply
because he sought to work for all Haitians,
especially the poor who elected him, and have his
country stand on its own two feet, a threat to US
hegemony in America's backyard. He deformed social
programs by "reforming" welfare, putting the needy
poor out on the streets. (A discussion of the
needs of the poor was also missing at the
conference as was any honest and substantive
discourse on social and economic justice.) He
instituted "don't ask, don't tell" and signed the
Defense of Marriage Act. His administration may
have helped draft the Rome Statute laying out the
details for the vastly important human
rights-defending International Criminal Court, but
he sat on it thereafter, even if it was near the
end of his term. And, as a previous post states,
it's shameful that a woman with connections to the
Rwandan genocide introduced this mockery of a
President. To my knowledge, Clinton never did
apologize for sitting back with the rest of the
predominantly white, wealthy world while black
Africans were slaughtered.
Let's not dare call this fraud a progressive or
even liberal. One health care scheme and child tax
credit doesn't make someone progressive. And let's
not be nostalgic for a time when a Democrat
occupied the White House, even if the economy was
bubbly, even if lots of new jobs were "created" by
Clinton-Gore, the majority of those touted jobs
numbers being low-wage anti-union service
retailers like Wal-Mart and McDonald's. That's job
security!
Individuals like Begala have cheapened the
political discourse by participating in
hackery.
(I personally took intellectual offense to
Begala's evasion of the Marxist blow by Novak.
While the argument for Jesus Begala made is
convincing (and I take no religious side here),
what's wrong with Marx, a philosopher who's ideas
are dead-on about the capitalist system that
profits the few at the expense of the many? This
is hardly compatible with a meaningful democracy,
if that's what we had, even under a Democratic
chief executive and Congress. Again, here's
another example of self-proclaimed liberals and
progressives following the terms of debate set by
the conservatives and corporatists: capitalism
good, despite massive evidence of its failures,
but socialist possibilities bad. Furthermore, this
is a delusionary free market dogmatism, a
conversation on which might have been wonderful at
the conference as we sought out--if we
did--alternatives to the current problems that ail
humanity.)
Individuals like Clinton, a man morally guilty of
gross human rights violations and war crimes,
shouldn't be praised as a progressive, let alone
given a keynote spot at a conference touting
progressivism. Anyone who says Clinton is
progressive is guilty of some semblance of
dogmatism, an apparent characteristic of many
right-wingers of the fundamentalist Christian
persuasion. (I don't profess complete avoidance of
personal dogmatism, but I try to notice such
personal fundamentalism, guard against it and be a
critical thinker.)
Where are our principles and values? We don't need
to be more like them--the conservatives (not all
conservatives are Republicans, let's remember). We
just need to be damn proud of our
values--substantive and sustainable peace,
dignity, prosperity, cooperation, justice--and
stop cheering for men and women who have betrayed
the people of America and the world. We need to
stop saluting hacks and corporatists in liberal
and progressive masks.
Graham-Felsen is right: strategy, not principles,
were in abundance. Strategy, though, hardly lasts
past the jubilation of an election--and the tragic
realization that the guy you voted for is another
corporate stooge. Principles, properly guarded,
last a lifetime and are the lighthouses and
hearths of our own social transformation and
actualization. At the next conference, we need
less "tailoring the message" and more "stand up
for what's right and say so, damn it!" This
conference was good, but let's blast a bolt of
energy in to the anti-war, economic and social
justice student movements by holding a great
National Student Conference next year.
--Michael Ziri, Springfield, IL