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Ask
Auntie Pinko
June
6 , 2002
Dear
Auntie Pinko,
As individual voters, the general population can in no
way compete with corporations in their ability to influence
legislation. In your opinion, what tools do we voters have
collectively to effectively reverse this trend of having to
live with the whims of big business?
Sincerely,
Kim
Pismo Beach, CA
Dear Kim,
Five stars to you for asking what may be the most important
question anyone has asked Auntie since I started writing this
column for the nice folks at Democratic Underground. It's
a question bigger than this website, bigger than the current
political climate, bigger even than the American nation. How
can the relatively powerless take on the relatively
powerful, and win?
The Greeks of Athens in the fifth century BCE (Before the
Christian Era) had an inkling of the answer-they realized
that no one person can ever be as powerful as the united
will and action of a multitude of people. Their attempts
to apply this concept, albeit in a painfully limited way,
produced such a radical change in how humans thought about
themselves that twenty-five hundred years later we are still
tinkering with the notion.
But it's a very big subject and the long history and many
related topics go far beyond the very practical spirit of
your question. So let's stick with that. Theoretically, in
America at the dawn of the third millennium CE we have some
form of political self-determination. Yet it always seems
that in our system, money (of which businesses have a great
deal) speaks with the loudest voice. What can we do about
that?
Auntie Pinko suggests that we look for successful models.
There have been times when the American people have been able
to trump big business' dollar signs. At the end of the nineteenth
century and the beginning of the twentieth, no one would have
bet a nickel on the chance that laws enabling workers to form
unions and bargain collectively would ever be passed. In the
middle of the twentieth century, the idea that a "war" hugely
profitable to the military-industrial complex could be ended
because a lot of ordinary people thought it was wrong was
laughed at.
But in both cases, the will of the people triumphed over
the will of the stock market. That's the good news. How
did it happen? Well, that's the bad news. It took two things:
Organization, and time.
Organization isn't easy. It requires people to make sacrifices
of their personal energy, time, and money. Sometimes they
have to put aside some cherished part of their personal agenda
in order to achieve another part that is equally cherished
by their neighbors. It means that instead of going home and
relaxing after a hard day, they have to go home and then work
again, this time on the organizing-meeting, writing, talking,
traveling, whatever organization demands.
And the really discouraging part, for us instant-gratification-conditioned
Americans, is that even with all the effort and all the organizing,
change doesn't happen overnight. It doesn't even happen
in a year, or two years, or ten years. America is a huge country.
Trying to change its course is like trying to steer a vast
river-you have to wade in and get wet, dig and dig and dig
some more, despair when a flood undoes your work but bend
your back to the task of doing it again. And ultimately you
can succeed.
I'm sorry I couldn't come up with an easier answer for you,
Kim, but Auntie Pinko doesn't want to respond to such an important
question with anything less than the most realistic, truthful
assessment my experience can encompass. Thank you for asking!
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