Notes On The Next American Revolution
The Article: What Then Must We Do? Straight Talk About The Next American Revolution in The National Memo.
The Text: Chapter One: How to Detect a System Problem Without Really Trying
People toss around the phrase Itās the system pretty loosely in everyday language. Usually they mean that things are sort of set up, by either design or accident, to run the way they runāand that the game is pretty well rigged so that those at the top (and their organizations) control the action. You canāt really buck the system: Too much power, too much red tape, too much bureaucracyātheyāll wear you down.
And so on.
Thatās not a bad way to start thinking about the big system that defines the overarching contours of our national lifeānamely, the large corporate-dominated economic system and the heavily constrained political system that set the terms of reference for almost everything else.
I want to push a bit deeper, however. Hereās the essential point: A system problemāas opposed to your usual garden-variety political problemāis one that isnāt going to go away through politics as usual. It will require somehow changing the way things are rigged deeper down in the machinery of institutions, corporations, bureaucracy, and all the other elements of the system that produce the outcomes we experience.
A system problem is difficult. It runs deep.
Everyone knows we have problems in the United States: unemployment, poverty, environmental decay, global warmingāto say nothing of whole cities like Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, and many others that have essentially been thrown away. If you are black or brown, your prospects are far worse. And wars keep happening, with little positive outcome and lots of dead American kids (to say nothing of dead Iraqis, Afghanis, and others). Civil liberties decay, day by day, year by year.
So much is obvious. Moreover, this wealthiest of all wealthy nations has been steadily falling behind many other nations of the world. Consider just a few wake-up-call facts from a long and dreary list: The United States now ranks lowest or close to lowest among advanced āaffluentā nations in connection with inequality (21st out of 21), poverty (21st out of 21), life expectancy (21st out of 21), infant mortality (21st out of 21), mental health (18th out of 20), obesity (18th out of 18), public spending on social programs as a percentage of GDP (19th out of 21), maternity leave (21st out of 21), paid annual leave (20th out of 20), the āmaterial well-being of childrenā (19th out of 21), and overall environmental performance (21st out of 21).
Add in low scores for student performance in math (17th out of 21), one of the highest school dropout rates (14th out of 16), the second-highest per capita carbon dioxide emissions (2nd out of 21), and the third-highest ecological footprint (3rd out of 20).
Also for the record: We have the worst score on the UNās gender inequality index (21st out of 21), one of the highest rates of failing to ratify international agreements, the highest military spending as a portion of GDP (1st out of 21), and among the lowest spending on international development and humanitarian assistance as a percentage of GDP.
Such facts are pretty hefty elbow nudges in the direction Iād like you to think about, but they arenāt (yet) much more than that. Everyone knows that if you donāt like the way things are turning out, the thing to do is to āget involvedāāelect a congressman, or senator, or president. Weāve all been told (and maybe even told others!) that things arenāt going to change unless we all roll up our sleeves and get into the game.
I donāt have any problem whatsoever with that kind of adviceānor, as I mentioned in the introduction, with advice suggesting that we need to build a political movement. The problem is not with what is being said, but with what is not being said.
What is usually being said is this (in only slightly oversimplified language): We know that the economic system is dominated by large and powerful corporate institutionsāand we know that the political system is dominated by money and lobbying, and also, in practice, by large corporate institutions.
The fundamental judgment, however, is that it is possible (without altering āthe aboveā) to organize enough political power so that āthe aboveā can be made responsive to the concerns of the vast majority of people in these United States.
Usually the way politics does this trick, it is hoped, is that enough power can be put together to tax āthe aboveā and then spend for good things like schools, roads, bridges, and maybe even health care. Also, politics, it is hoped, can put together enough power to regulate āthe aboveā to achieve health, a clean environment, safety, and other outcomes of importance to the people.
Now, itās surely possible that this can be done sometimes. Moreover, almost certainly something like this (give or take some difficult questions we will shortly come to) has worked (sort of) in the past.