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Movements in a new America PDF Print Email
A special issue of InTheFray Magazine.
By Ben Helphand / Chicago
Sunday, October 26, 2003

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The voting booth is often touted as the way that Americans can change their society — the site where democracy plays out in its purest form. But we live in an era where electoral politics has been diluted, its power leeched into the hands of pollsters and lobbyists. So where does this leave democracy? If one vote per citizen is not enough to overcome the influence wielded by corporations and the wealthy elite, then where should we look to find the new face of political engagement?

When our democratic institutions fail us, when citizens lose their ability to speak and be heard, Americans organize. Political and civic associations form a kind of test kitchen for democracy. It is here that we serve up new and classic combinations of citizen participation. The debate within these groups over organizing tactics is not just a matter of touchy-feely outreach and political correctness. It is a struggle over the very nature of democracy.

In this special issue of InTheFray Magazine, we take a look at this process in action. How do today’s social movements organize themselves? In what ways are organizers dealing with the fragmentation of American society — its separation into bickering identity groups, its division into silos of single-issue organizations toiling in isolation? Has this generation of activists come up with innovative ways to bond communities and bridge their divides?

This month, we begin with a series of four articles. In “The new ‘crisis’ of democracy,” we speak with the legendary thinker and activist Noam Chomsky about the recent, encouraging signs of political protest around the world, and the barriers and backlash that continue to stand in the way of real change. In “The end of old-school organizing,” Victor Tan Chen looks at United for a Fair Economy, a Boston-based economic justice group that has staked its success upon reaching out to communities of color, winning over sympathetic wealthy elites, and bringing the white working class back to progressive politics — a tall order for even the most visionary of activists. In “Elisabeth Leonard, Raging Granny,” Henry Belanger profiles a veteran peace and justice activist whose life story shows us how much — and how little — the struggles against oppression have changed over the years. And in “World Trade Barricade,” Dustin Ross and Victor Tan Chen offer us a glimpse of last month’s protests in Cancún, where thousands of farmers and anarchists and environmentalists from around the globe converged to demonstrate against the World Trade Organization and its alleged bias in favor of "free-trade fundamentalism."

In November, we’ll follow up with two more updates to our Special Issue. The stories to come include:

  • A list of the Top 10 social justice organizations in the country — compiled by the editors with the help of activists across the country — and a chance for readers to choose their own favorite activists and groups.

  • Maureen Farrell’s profile of the Catholic Worker, a group that since the days of its legendary co-founder, Dorothy Day, has striven to “obliterate” the distinctions that separate the poor from everyone else.

  • Tamam Mango’s look at Palestinian Media Watch, a media advocacy group that is organizing individuals across geographic lines in a decentralized, democratic fashion.

  • Victor Tan Chen’s analysis of the global justice movement, which shut down Seattle in 1999, helped derail trade talks in Cancún last month, and is mobilizing for another huge protest next month in Miami.

  • An interview with renowned Indian environmentalist Vandana Shiva, author of Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply and founder of Navdanya, a movement for agricultural diversity and farmers' rights.

Ben Helphand
Projects Editor, InTheFray Magazine
Chicago


p.s. You’ll notice a new look and feel to the magazine. Our redesigned site offers a range of new features, including a regularly updated blog (the reincarnation of our old “Pulse” department), the ability to post comments directly after articles, personalized user identities, automated printing and emailing of our online content, and a better-integrated Readers' Forum. We ask for your patience in the coming weeks as we work out the remaining bugs on the new site. Please send any feedback to webmaster-at-inthefray-dot-org.

STORY INDEX

TOPICS > SOCIAL MOVEMENTS >

“The Other Superpower”
By Jonathan Schell. Published in The Nation. March 27, 2003.
URL: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20030414&s=schell

“The Second Superpower”
Explanation of the term “second superpower,” and its recent use by The New York Times. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Superpower

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Shopping our way out of our jobs
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Unfortunately, the US consumers are voting more in the cash register line than in the voting booth.
They are living off the suffering of others who make their goods in far away places. Employees of Wal-Mart reportedly need an average $2000 of government assistance in some form to survive. So a new kind of tariff comes after the fact.
Consumer need to know that cheaper prices are not necessarily cheaper. Reportedly in some foreign countries where US factories have been moved, some workers do make three times more in wages than ever but the cost of living has exploded to ten times more. In the USA, a working poor class has been created and has replaced a large part of the middle class. The USA has suffered the most massive dislocation of jobs in its history.

The USA actually start funding the moving of factories outside the USA in 1956 and never really quit pushing this adgenda. NAFTA and GATT trade agreements just sped up the process and these two agreements now have over a ten year history of failures.
Free Trade is not really trade as historically practiced. Today Free Trade is primarily about moving production, factories and outsouring jobs to the cheapest labor markets of the world. It is an endless cycle down to the bottom Investments rule over labor with workers who are the core of any economy having no voice in the process that is outside of any real democratic process.

See Tapart News and Art that Talks global issues at http://tapsearch.com/tapartnews/ Tapart News is dedicated to human dignity and social justice in the workday. It mixes published commentaries with editorial art by Ray Tapajna. It is based on expert sources including Manuel Castell, Catholic Workers, Rerum Novarum, Chuck Harder, Sir James Goldsmith, Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, Dr Pat Choate and others See also top newspaper story about The American Dream is Burning artwork at http://tapsnewstory.filetap.com Other reference sites includes links at http://pages.zdnet.com/arklineart/tapin http://arklineart.fotopages.com http://www.graphicsforums.com/...sp?id=1250 or search under Tapart News on Google, Yahoo and others for hundreds of more references. Much of the data is unique and comes from real living experiences and private files.
Anonymous | July 4, 2005

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