Politics
and the Golden Rule
By
Robert C. Koehler
March 10,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- “What I’m not trying to do is just pass
legislation. I’m trying to change the face of
American politics.”
Pull these
words out of the context of “the news” and let them
pulse like the heartbeat of the future.
The words
are those of Bernie Sanders, of course — engaged
last week in a
confrontational interview with Chris Matthews.
Free college tuition? Matthews loosed his skepticism
on the presidential candidate, who pushed back:
“You and I
look at the world differently. You look at it inside
the Beltway. I’m not an inside the Beltway person.”
“But the
people that vote on taxes are inside the Beltway,”
Matthews retorted.
“Those
people are going to vote the right way when millions
of people demand that they vote the right way on
this issue. I have no doubt that as president of the
Untied Stated I can rally young people and their
parents on this issue. . . . As president of the
United States, I would have the bully pulpit. What
I’m not trying to do is just pass legislation. I’m
trying to change the face of American politics.”
I listen in
disbelief and feel hope percolate as poll results
come in. This week Sanders triumphed in my wounded
home state of Michigan, confounding the media and
political status quo yet again. Is this really a
revolution emerging from a presidential race?
That’s not
supposed to happen. And I find myself skeptically
embracing the possibility, spurred by the near total
cynicism and intentional cluelessness of the
mainstream media. For the past half century, the
American media, in collaboration with the
military-industrial corporatocracy — the Beltway —
has delivered up issueless presidential campaigns to
the American public. Business as usual, in all its
manifestations, is not to be disrupted. Until now.
Something
uncontrolled is happening in American politics.
Trump supporters raise their hands in pledges of
brand allegiance and the ghost of fascism smirks.
America’s racists, so marginalized all these years,
converge at the edges of his campaign, knowing that
his “disavowal” of the Klan is a wink-wink,
nudge-nudge sort of thing. He’s their man. Allegedly
respectable Republicans convulse.
Among the
Dems, Sanders is bringing democracy to the
disaffected, calling not for slivers of social
fairness but a full-blown re-emergence of the New
Deal, in defiance of the Democrats’ post-Reagan
allegiance to compromised ideals. He’s standing up
for the sovereignty not of Beltway politics but of
working-class America — the people! —
reopening the door of participatory politics and
declaring that the American government should not be
for sale.
I’m so
close to believing in the revolution — in this
reclamation of the United States of America.
At a
recent debate, a woman in the audience asked
Sanders: “Do you think God is relevant?”
He answered
yes, to serious applause, explaining: “What we are
talking about is what all religions hold dear, and
that is to do unto others as you would like them to
do unto you. . . . I believe morally and ethically
we do not have a right to turn our backs on children
in Flint, Mich., who are being poisoned or veterans
who are sleeping out on the street. . . . I want you
to worry about my grandchildren and I promise you I
will worry about your family. We are in this
together.”
And the
Golden Rule enters the presidential race and I
stand in awe of the potency of this ethical
imperative. It’s the opposite of the spectator
idiocy of “my guy is better than your guy,” the
state to which the media has reduced American
democracy.
If the
Golden Rule is not simply a personal but a
political principle, we cannot wage war. And
knowing this, I can’t think about social fairness
without feeling a shattering sense of despair . . .
“The United
States
launched a series of airstrikes on an al-Shabab
training camp in Somalia on Saturday, killing more
than 150 militants and averting what a Pentagon
official described as an ‘imminent threat’ posed by
the group to both U.S. and African Union troops
stationed in the war-torn country.”
As
Glenn Greenwald put it, reflecting on this
latest impersonal news about dead bad guys: “We need
U.S. troops in Africa to launch drone strikes at
groups that are trying to attack U.S. troops in
Africa. It’s the ultimate self-perpetuating circle
of imperialism: We need to deploy troops to other
countries in order to attack those who are trying to
kill U.S. troops who are deployed there.”
And here’s
the beginning of an
open letter written by four former U.S. Air
Force drone operators, which they sent last November
to President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Ashton
Carter and CIA Chief John Brennan: “We are former
Air Force service members. We joined the Air Force
to protect American lives and to protect our
Constitution. We came to the realization that the
innocent civilians we were killing only fueled the
feelings of hatred that ignited terrorism and groups
like ISIS, while also serving as a fundamental
recruitment tool similar to Guantanamo Bay. This
administration and its predecessors have built a
drone program that is one of the most devastating
driving forces for terrorism and destabilization
around the world.
“When the
guilt of our roles in facilitating this systematic
loss of innocent life became too much, all of us
succumbed to PTSD. . . .”
Changing
the face of American politics is a profound,
unfathomably difficult undertaking, but it’s nothing
at all if it doesn’t begin with the Golden Rule. And
this rule cannot be selectively applied.
Robert Koehler is
an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and
nationally syndicated writer. His book,
Courage Grows Strong at the Wound
(Xenos Press), is still
available. Contact him at
koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at
commonwonders.com.
© 2016
Common Wonders |