Opinion: Why we must try
Fixing the current political system will take effort and perseverance this election cycle.
The Capitol Dome in Washington is illuminated (Jan. 8, 2015). Many feel that the current political system is broken, but it is not beyond repair.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo/File
Instead of 鈥淵es we can,鈥 many Democrats have adopted a new slogan this election year: 鈥淲e shouldn鈥檛 even try.鈥
We shouldn鈥檛 try for single-payer system, they say. We鈥檒l be lucky if we prevent Republicans from repealing Obamacare.
We shouldn鈥檛 try for a $15 an hour minimum wage. The best we can do is $12 an hour.
We shouldn鈥檛 try to restore the Glass-Steagall Act that used to separate investment and commercial banking, or bust up the biggest banks. We鈥檒l be lucky to stop Republicans from repealing Dodd-Frank.
We shouldn鈥檛 try for free public higher education. As it is, Republicans are out to cut all federal education spending.
We shouldn鈥檛 try to tax carbon or speculative trades on Wall Street, or raise taxes on the wealthy. We鈥檒l be fortunate to just maintain the taxes already in place.
Most of all, we shouldn鈥檛 even try to get big money out of politics. We鈥檒l be lucky to round up enough wealthy people to back Democratic candidates. 聽
鈥淲e-shouldn鈥檛-even-try鈥 Democrats think it鈥檚 foolish to aim for fundamental change 鈥 pie-in-the-sky, impractical, silly, na茂ve, quixotic. Not in the cards. No way we can.
I understand their defeatism. After eight years of Republican intransigence and six years of congressional gridlock, many Democrats are desperate just to hold on to what we have.
And ever since the Supreme Court鈥檚 鈥Citizens United鈥 decision opened the political floodgates to big corporations, Wall Street, and right-wing billionaires, many Democrats have concluded that bold ideas are unachievable.
In addition, some establishment Democrats 鈥 Washington lobbyists, editorial writers, inside-the-beltway operatives, party leaders, and big contributors 鈥 have grown comfortable with the way things are. They鈥檇 rather not rock the boat they鈥檙e safely in.
I get it, but here鈥檚 the problem. There鈥檚 no way to reform the system without rocking the boat. There鈥檚 no way to get to where America should be without aiming high.
Progressive change has never happened without bold ideas championed by bold idealists.
Some thought it was quixotic to try for civil rights and voting rights. Some viewed it as na茂ve to think we could end the Vietnam War. Some said it was unrealistic to push for the Environmental Protection Act.
But time and again we鈥檝e learned that important public goals can be achieved 鈥 if the public is mobilized behind them. And time and again such mobilization has depended on the energies and enthusiasm of young people combined with the determination and tenacity of the rest.聽
If we don鈥檛 aim high we have no chance of hitting the target, and no hope of mobilizing that enthusiasm and determination.聽
The situation we鈥檙e in now demands such mobilization. Wealth and income are more concentrated at the top than in over a century. And that wealth has translated into political power.
The result is an economy rigged in favor of those at the top 鈥 which further compounds wealth and power at the top, in a vicious cycle that will only get worse unless reversed.
Americans pay more for pharmaceuticals than the citizens of any other advanced nation, for example. We also pay more for Internet service. And far more for health care.
We pay high prices for airline tickets even though fuel costs have tumbled. And high prices for food even though crop prices have declined.
That鈥檚 because giant companies have accumulated vast market power. Yet the nation鈥檚 antitrust laws are barely enforced. 聽
Meanwhile, the biggest Wall Street banks have more of the nation鈥檚 banking assets than they did in 2008, when they were judged too big to fail.
Hedge-fund partners get tax loopholes, oil companies get tax subsidies, and big agriculture gets paid off.
Bankruptcy laws protect the fortunes of billionaires like Donald Trump but not the homes of underwater homeowners or the savings of graduates burdened with student loans.
A low minimum wage enhances the profits of big-box retailers like Walmart, but requires the rest of us provide its employees and their families with food stamps and Medicaid in order to avoid poverty 鈥 an indirect subsidy of Walmart.聽
Trade treaties protect the assets and intellectual property of big corporations but not the jobs and wages of ordinary workers.
At the same time, countervailing power is disappearing. Labor union membership has plummeted from a third of all private-sector workers in the 1950s to fewer than 7 percent today. Small banks have been absorbed into global financial behemoths. Small retailers don鈥檛 stand a chance against Walmart and Amazon.
And the pay of top corporate executives continues to skyrocket, even as most peoples鈥 real wages drop and their job security vanishes.
This system is not sustainable.
We must get big money out of our democracy, end crony capitalism, and make our economy and democracy work for the many, not just the few.
But change on this scale requires political mobilization.
It won鈥檛 be easy. It has never been easy. As before, it will require the energies and commitments of large numbers of Americans.
Which is why you shouldn鈥檛 listen to the 鈥渨e-must-not-try鈥 brigade. They鈥檝e lost faith in the rest of us.
We must try. 聽We have no choice.
This article first appeared at .