It’s Up to Us

I posted this about a year ago – the night of Obama’s election. A few people have mentioned it to me in the past week, so I thought I’d repost it now.

Though I share in the jubilation at Obama’s election, I find I’m also a bit guarded. Holding back, as if afraid to get “fooled again” by the promise of new leadership.

To be sure, it’s going to feel good and be good for America to have a potential world leader as our president – someone who, instead of bringing himself down to the level of the least common denominator, actually demands that we raise ourselves to his level of discourse and sophistication. Friends are asking me what words like “bipartisanship” mean – a sure sign that they are actually, finally interested in how government functions and what it is Obama might do to change it.

But I’ve also got the nagging sense that too many of us are still hoping and waiting for what Obama’s going to do. As if the president somehow enacts policies or spends money in a way that makes everything better. This is not what a president does. Yes, there are certainly public works programs Obama can promote, to rebuild highways or develop alternative energy technologies while giving jobs to more Americans. These are potentially great top-down stimuli for a failed economy and neglected infrastructure – but they do not rebuild a society ravaged by runaway deregulated capitalism and military misadventure.

That part is up to us. And in this sense, we must take Obama at his word: the moment is now, we are the ones we’ve been waiting for. The election of Obama is itself a cue. It’s a cue that America can elect a smart, capable, and caring person as its leader. That we are capable of transcending the logic of short-term self-interest, fear, and even racism. And if we are capable of doing this, it means we are better than we act most of the time. This moment is the bang of the starter’s pistol – an awakening, an opportunity.

When there’s a big blackout in New York, especially during the summer, some people take it as a “cue” to start looting. It’s not that the blackout itself makes it significantly to break down store fronts; it’s not that the police are so very busy with the blackout. The lights going out is a cue to behave differently – to release the hidden potential for vandalism and long-repressed rage.

Likewise, the election of a black man to the presidency is a cue that something has changed. As my friend, Ari Wallach explained to me on my new radio show last night, it’s a kind of “shock and awe.” There’s a thoughtful, progressive and black president-elect on the cover of the New York Post. The cognitive dissonance this generates is an opportunity to reprogram. It’s what advertisers and social programmers try to do in pretty much every communication they make. It’s as big a disconnect and reconnect as 9-11 was, only constructive instead of destructive. A narrative is broken; another is born.

But this new narrative is not the story of how we are led by some new person. It’s the story of how we lead ourselves. It’s about how we accept the cue to act.

Everyone I know in my own circles is obsessed with creating the next big Internet phenomenon or organization to marshall all this energy and help people do their own bottom-up activities. I’ve been invited to a few dozen meetings already for such projects, and I’m happy to see everyone so enthused. But if everyone wants to do the “meta” job of creating a brand or utility through which activism happens, then there will be no one left to do the actual organizing.

No, the opportunity is not to create the next great website for modeling bottom-up community activity, but to go and actually do the stuff. It is to participate the public school, work towards alternative energy possibilities, design and install bicycle lanes, argue at work for equal pay for women, assist local agriculture projects, develop complementary currencies and non-profit credit unions.

My faith in the change we need will be strengthened by my own and others initiative. Obama can inspire us, and even remove some of the obsolete regulations preventing progressive activities from taking hold. His ability to lead us out of this mire into a brighter future will be limited, however, by our own capacity to engage.

Obama’s going to be busy for while, anyway. Two wars, a dozen failed federal agencies, and a banking industry that needs to be dismantled are going to take up a lot of his time and energy. While he attends to mitigating the damage of past failures, it is we who need to build a new society based on the values we share but have closeted during these decades of institutionalized self interest.

How? Where? Just go out the door and look around. There are opportunities literally everywhere. If we do get fooled again, it will only be because we have fooled ourselves.

Here’s original post and comments.

Posted on 19 December '09 by Douglas, under Uncategorized.

9 Comments to “It’s Up to Us”

#1 Posted by Eddie (19.12.09 at 23:42 )

Virtue is not left to stand alone. He who practices it will have neighbors.
Confucius

#2 Posted by Anthony Landreth (19.12.09 at 23:57 )

Nice post. I don’t think that you can over-emphasize the need for individuals to take their future into their own hands, or over-sell the need to distinguish posturing from action.

#3 Posted by NingúnOtro (20.12.09 at 11:06 )

Still, skin color is only a trivial attribute… and the rest does not show anything different than what might be expected to emerge from either democrat and/or republican filtering mechanisms.

His acts so far have proven he is no different than a propaganda stunt without an own agenda.

Maybe he has one, but then he lacks the power to enforce it.

#4 Posted by mason (20.12.09 at 13:32 )

For some time now i have been thinking about this old post of yours Doug. With today’s careful reading, i have to grant that the crux of your position was the “cue” nestled in some language that suggests change already in progress. But that change was only an electoral shift in a nuanced game. There were some stark regional “revolutions” and some much more obvious demographic shifts. But that was it!

The cognitive dissonance we felt perceiving these small revolutions (from the left or the right) was completely subjective and even more limited to the degree it coincided or shared a set of actionable values with others’.

I agree with everyone here, Confucius mostly, but only because Confucian society or culture is so very as below so above, with the added admonition to do everything, absolutely everything one can…..

If, one argues, the election signified real choice, Obama has misread himself and the support of others by choosing his advisers. Part of this (perhaps) is due to the destructive behaviours of the Clintonites.

As the year comes to a close, my analysis suggests we all have listened to the wrong old men Obama included! And the propaganda men are becoming first among the worse sort that have our ears. Sprinkled throughout this Confucian Ode are some interesting names for these sort.

IX
Duke Mu to his colleagues in the ministry,
avoiding Lèse majesté in the form.
First of the “changed odes,”
in King Li’s time. 877-841 B.C.

Folk worn out, workin’ so late,
Kind rule at centre hauls on a state.
Pitch out the slimers and scare off worse,
Thieves and thugs see a light and curse;
Easy on far men, do with what’s near,
And the king can sit quiet the rest of the year.

2
Folk worn out need support,
Men gather round a kindly court;
Throw out the punks who falsify your news,
scare off the block-heads, thugs, thieves and screws.
Don’t shove it off on the working man,
But keep on doing what you can
for the king’s support.

3
Folk worked out need time for breath,
Kindness in capital
draws on the four coigns withal;
Sweep out the fakes and scare the obsequious
thugs, thieves and screws
and don’t promote the snots to sin on sly.
Respect men who respect the right
and your own honesty may heave into sight.

4
Folk burnt out need a vacation,
Kind court alleviates people’s vexation;
Throw out the flattering fakes,
scare blighters and crushers,
Don’t ruin folk pretending it’s government,
tho’ you’re mere babes in this business
and the job bigger than you can guess.

5
Folk burnt out need a little peace,
Kindness in middle causes no injuries.
Turn out the oily tongues and parasites,
thieves, squeezing governors; don’t upset honest men.
The king wants jewels and females, I therefore lift up these wails.

x
Attributed to the Earl of Fan
in King Li’s time, 877-841 B.C.

The sky’s course runs a-foul and in reverse,
a jaundiced people sink beneath the curse.
Given to untruth plotting never a-right,
You say, and lie, that no sage sees the light.
Against your nearsightedness
I employ this reproving verse.

2
The heavens send down the hard, pull in your smirk
Gainst sky’s square kick, no man has time to shirk.
Words fit to fact
folk will enact;
Calm discourse needeth no force.

3
From a different line of work, my colleagues, I bring you an idea. You smirk.
It’s in the line of duty. Wipe off that smile,
and as our grandfathers used to say:
Ask the fellows who cut the hay.

4
There is no joke in heaven’s severity,
Old men clear ditches and young men step high.
My word ‘s not moss-grown. Your frivolity
is a muck heap’s blaze.
Fagots, not to be saved, blaze higher,
Medicine grass puts out no fire.

5
Dour heaven ‘s not cogged to fit your jactancy,
Good men sit corpse-like still, perversity
is your line. The people groan,
none dares ask why
all ‘s wrack, no charity.

6
Light’s lattice, the sky aloft, tunes man
as flute or pitch pipe can;
easy to lift as half
the jade tally-mace, none tries to enlarge his half to tune.
Prone to untune, be not yourselves the base
of their untunedness.

7
True men a fence, and serried ranks a wall,
Great states a buffer, clans as a flank bulwark.
Straightness in action gives calm. That meditate,
Clan-chiefs shall be as solid thy stronghold,
let it not moulder here till solitude
be not thy worst to fear.

8
Revere the anger of heaven
nor count it vain stage-play;
Revere the motion of heaven, bawl not thy jactancy,
The light of heaven is clear enough to see
the king going out, and at sunrise there’s light
enough to show
the revel’s remnant, idleness’ overflow.

#5 Posted by mason (20.12.09 at 16:04 )

Doug’s repost seems to occasion some activity at the media squat where the commiseration and self condemnation stems from the much less than imperfect results of Copenhagen. Hence my Confucian observation. For, if the heavens have not given us a “square kick” concerning global warming, we can not venture to ascribe reason or language to any of our “misfortunes” that are anything but evasion and lies. The insensitivity of those behind the walls in Copenhagen to the facts or their over sensitivity to the evasions and lies is disgraceful, period.

-mason

#6 Posted by Eddie (22.12.09 at 18:13 )

Re Copenhagen, I find this profoundly disturbing.
“India has confirmed it worked with China and other emerging nations to ensure there were no legally binding targets from the Copenhagen climate talks.”
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/23/2779003.htm

Re the rest:
I went backwards recently and again started thinking that we need to convert the ignorant to a more enlightened lifestyle of using less energy.
Doug’s post reminded me that our global consciousness needs to evolve (or awaken) and our egos and individualities need to take a back seat permanently. We can’t be taught this, we must individually realize it for ourselves. Like birds taking their first flight, we will learn it or die, but either way, the sun will explode in 4.5 billion years. So there is no reason to get too upset about it.

#7 Posted by mika. (15.01.10 at 20:10 )

When the culture is corrupt, and the government is corrupt, then the people are corrupt. All these things flow directly from people’s condition as individuals. To affect change, change the condition of individuals.

I watch the US, as I watch the world, and I see very little worth saving. Even Sodom & Gomorrah had a higher percentage of “righteous” individuals. I hope god is dead. The US would certainly not survive my judgment. But neither would the rest of the world.

#8 Posted by mika. (15.01.10 at 20:16 )

Rise up; this matter is in your hands. We will support you, so take courage and do it. Ezra 10:4

#9 Posted by mason (22.01.10 at 20:50 )

Chazak, chazak, v’nit’chazek!
mika, i am shocked, shocked to hear you take this view! There must be some life yet in those libertarian bones when you will speak of “people’s condition as individuals” in a corrupt culture and under a corrupt government! What about free choice and bootstraps and other Grecian adages? And Ezra too? Shocked!

Fortunately, for you, Douglas , who’s arguably clung to the middle path, that is, without zig zagging (perhaps) as much as you and i, is signing a copy for you and coming over to our side of the street. I just can’t tell who’s in the middle!

Eddie! After the recent Court Decision, your Confucius is best! “Virtue is *not* left to stand alone. He who practices it *will* have neighbors.” Our collective concern here in this thread is how to be virtuous and practice virtue in these very interesting times.

I always think that Douglas must be the most occupied with this concern, only because he has so much more exposure to so many more people than we. All the more reason to do right by Doug. I’m not saying one should fawn over Douglas like mika does, just “give him strength, strength; and we shall be strengthened!”

-mason