The elections are over and while many Demo-liberals are
heartened by the results the rest of us should understand that we have a long
way to go.
The DiBlasio victory in New York shows hopeful signs for a
city that has been run for more than twenty years exclusively by Wall Street,
banking and financial interests and their upper income servant class. Of course
that’s true for the nation as a whole, so one victory for a candidate at least
speaking to more humane values is a step in the right – as well as slightly
left – direction. And more important than DiBlasio’s long time Democratic affiliation
was the fact that the Working Peoples Party both endorsed and labored for his
victory.
Alternative parties are not supposed to matter in our
winner-take-all corporate imitation of democracy, but this New York group and
the nationwide Greens and Libertarians are playing a greater role in moving
people to bother at all with election days that usually offer a lesser evil
choice of cancer or polio.
Considering the massive obstacles put in place by the
wealthy national ownership of the political-economic-electoral process, even
small gains can inspire but also offer further experience to activists on how
to present issues and candidates to the public and then organize to get
understandably disgusted voters to the polls.
Some initiatives were even more hopeful than individual
candidates, especially a minimum wage increase in New Jersey and an even bigger
one - $15 an hour – in Washington. What we really need are a $20 an hour minimum
wage, a twenty hour work week to make full employment and family life possible,
a national health care program covering all, public banks, an end to multi
billion dollar military meddling in other nation’s affairs, vastly improved
schools and infrastructure paid for in part by the savings of such a peaceful
policy, a much higher tax rate on the corporate rich, and a full employment
program for americans that ends our destruction of foreign economies in order
to create cheap immigrant labor here that pits natives against immigrants strengthening
the divide and conquer policy that keeps a minority in power and a majority
squabbling over massive losses it carries so that the even more massive profits
are gorged on by an ever richer minority at the top.
It will take more than the electoral process to accomplish
those ends and more, but that process is necessary even in an imitation
democracy like ours. But for a real one it is absolutely essential. This election
saw some victories, some setbacks, and as such was like all others. “They” of
the minority still control the process and while “we” of the majority made some
small gains, for substantial change and not simply more moving around of the
deck chairs on the Titanic, future elections will need to offer far more
opportunities than this one. We need to see to that and we’d better or they
will continue leading us to greater inequality, more wars and ecological
breakdown of the planetary life support system.
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