The
Granny D. Speech
Doris
"Granny D" Haddock
Speaking in Hood River, Oregon
Published by CommonDreams.org
Thank you.
Well, you've heard that wonderful Margaret Mead quote about
how you
should never doubt that a small group of dedicated people
can change
the world, and that, indeed, it's the only thing that ever
has. Well,
I think it's time we stopped repeating that quotation and
came to
some agreement about what we happy few might do over the next
five
years or so. That is the purpose of my remarks today.
You know, there are two kinds of politics in the world: the
politics
of love and the politics of fear. Love is about cooperation,
sharing
and inclusion. It is about the elevation of each individual
to a life
neither suppressed nor exploited, but instead nourished to
rise to
its full potential--a life for its own sake and so that we
may all
benefit by the gift of that life. Fear and the politics of
fear is
about narrow ideologies that separate us, militarize us, imprison
us,
exploit us, control us, overcharge us, demean us, bury us
alive in
debt and anxiety and then bury us dead in cancers and wars.
The
politics of love and the politics of fear are now pitted against
each
other in a naked struggle that will define not only the 21st
Century
but centuries to come. We are the Sons and Daughters of Liberty
in
that struggle, indeed we are. Let us not shirk from the mission
that
fate has bestowed upon us, for it has done so as a blessing.
This struggle is real. A very close friend of mine, a college
student, spent this summer in Guatemala to help small communities
prosper in ways that support their local environments. Those
villagers and their environments are under siege by international
big
business, using a captured U.S. Government to push through
damaging
treaties such as the proposed Central America Free Trade Agreement
and the hemisphere-wide Free Trade Area of the Americas. The
villagers of Guatemala want global FAIR trade, but the corporations
and their captive governments want FREE trade. If fair trade
wins, a
global middle class will rise, as farmers and craftsmen are
paid
fairly for their work, and as they gain a voice in their governance
and their environments are protected for their future generations.
If
free trade wins, it is colonial exploitation, torture and
murder
written in blood across another century.
Or do you wonder if it is really an honest difference of opinion
as
to which policies are best for the people? On July 24, three
armed
gunmen broke into the home where my young friend was staying
in
Guatemala, dragging her and another young woman to the ground,
covering their heads with blankets. These young women began
to count
their lives in seconds. For three-quarters of an hour, the
gunmen
went through the biodiversity files in the home. Big business
interests in Guatemala, in league with elements of the military,
are
trying to push-through the passage of free trade agreements
and to do
it they must suppress all dissent. Their partner and blood
brother is
the U.S. Government. Not the U.S. Government that we see,
but the
U.S. Government that much of the rest of the world sees: a
world of
C.I.A. treachery, the training of death squad leaders in our
own Army
facilities within the U.S., and a big business-friendly White
House
that winks and nods as great injustices continue.
The two women survived, but tens of thousands have not, because
they
are in the way of big business. It is not an honest difference
of
opinion; it is a global struggle of people versus a global
crime
syndicate that counts taken-over governments and multinational
corporations among its members.
There is a term now in common use in Latin America that is
confusing
to us Americans. It is called neoliberalism and it is a very
dirty
word indeed among the brave pro-democracy and fair trade groups
throughout the Americas. "Neoliberal" sounds like
the happy return of
the Kennedys, but it is not. Nor is it about some resurgence
of the
liberal values of the Square Deal or the New Deal or the War
on
Poverty or any of those great moments when we called upon
our best
instincts to cooperatively address our largest needs as a
free and
self-governing people. The liberation that we meant then when
we used
the word "liberal" was the liberation from poverty,
despair and
ignorance, the liberation of the mind through public education,
the
liberation of the citizen through universal voting, equal
rights and
equal opportunity, and the freedom to prosper from the fruits
of our
labors. But that is not the liberal that is meant by neoliberal.
It
means newly free to rampage. It means free of government constraint.
It means free trade over fair trade.
"Neoliberalism" refers to the liberation of a giant
beast that we,
the ordinary people of America -- the farmers, the townsmen
and
townswomen, the trade unionists -- tied down to the earth
early in
the 20th Century and it is that beast that has now gotten
himself
loose again to do great damage to us all. The deadly meanderings
of
this beast are most apparent in the most labor-intensive regions
of
the world, but the beast is here, too, and he has brought
misery and
suffering into your life and mine, stealing our water, blowing
up our
mountains, fouling our air and seas, and stealing our lives
and our
future at every turn. Neoliberalism is the colonialism department
of
neoconservatism.
How did we handle this evil giant before? The Teddy Roosevelt
Progressives, and the William Jennings Bryan Populists before
him,
were part of a successful effort to tie down the giant. After
the
Civil War, at the high point of the Industrial Age--the age
of
railroads, oil and steel--great corporations and trusts were
created
that towered high over the human-scaled businesses of America's
Main
Streets and cast dark shadows over human liberty and happiness.
These
monstrosities treated humans as slaves. They robbed the public
wealth
and were properly called the robber barons of that Gilded
Age. These
giants freely stalked, destroying the economics of family
farms and
family businesses, corrupting our governments with great bribes
and
corrupt deals, and polluting our food, our land, water and
air. They
tore our families apart and dragged us into the hardest of
hard
times, as they have been liberated to do once more.
I am not talking about all corporations or all big business.
Corporations of reasonable size are but groups of people.
Beyond some
point, however, the humanity falls away from an organization
and all
that is left is the will to power and profit. They care not
that our
seas and atmosphere are rapidly changing in ways that may
lead to
disaster and famine of unimaginable scale. They care not because
they
are not human and they have moved beyond human values. They
do not
need the fresh air or the water or the mountains of the birds.
They
are a kind of virus or a cancer, all prettied up with a nice
logo and
television commercials to tell us the most outrageous lies,
one after
the other. For in reality, they crush us under their boots
and they
pay off our political leaders with campaign contributions
and other
bribes. They trample on diversity of all kinds, including
human
personality, as fewer and fewer kinds of people can prosper
in the
world they are casting, and more and more of us are marginalized.
The big corporate empires would be powerless if they were
not in
league with crooked politicians. I do not mean that the politicians
necessarily know what they are doing. The corruption is so
immense
that they cannot even see it, even when it pays their spouse
and
finances their reelection. These, the happily blind, populate
Capitol
Hill and our state capitols like vermin who have been for
generations
in deep caves where they gradually lose their vision and there
other
senses, too.
Well, two and a quarter centuries was a good run for this
democracy,
but a rebirth is long overdue, and it is indeed necessary
if we are
to save our freedoms and our human values here and abroad,
and if we
are to protect the beauty and sustaining graces of nature,
including
the positive sides of human nature.
What that Republican Teddy Roosevelt understood at the beginning
of
the 20th Century was that, if the rights and fortunes of the
human
scale are to be protected, if the rights and fortunes of average
Americans, small businesses, family farms and Main Street
are to be
protected from the ravages of overscaled business giants,
then
government must grow in size and power to protect us all.
The big
business wing of the Republican Party, under Taft, defeated
the
family business wing of the Republican and their leader, Teddy
Roosevelt. It would take another Roosevelt of another party
to turn
the Square Deal into the New Deal, under which government
greatly
expanded to protect the people.
That has not been altogether a happy strategy, as large government
has its own costs to us and its own abuses. The Libertarians
are our
new and brave allies in the defending of the Bill of Rights
from
Bush's anti-American attacks through his henchmen Ashcroft
and Ridge.
But our friends the Libertarians would have us do away with
most all
of our government. Anyone who has paid too many taxes or dealt
with
too many rude and overly powerful bureaucrats understands
the
Libertarian's feelings, but I ask at least the intellectually
honest
Libertarians -- and there are many of them -- to wisely see
that
government, which is indeed a system of restraint -- must
be matched
in strength and scale to the corporate monstrosities that
now have
the ability and the willingness to destroy us -- to blow up
the
entire Appalachian Range for the profits of coal, for example,
as is
now happening -- or to steal for profit the water supply of
whole
regions, or to enslave whole regions at low wages rather than
allow
fair trade. Or to move every one of our good jobs overseas.
These
inhuman and inhumane organizations are stealing our lives
and all
nature around us.
Only government is large enough and powerful enough to reign-in
the
corporations whose cold heartedness trades lives for profits
all over
the world. Republican Teddy Roosevelt began the buildup of
big
government solely to protect us from overlarge corporations
so that
they might not overwhelm us human beings. In doing so, he
created a
split in the Republican Party, and big business interests
won.
Perhaps the rational solution is to scale them both back --
corporations and government -- and let individual enterprise
and
individual freedom, and its many middle class treasures and
blessings, blossom in the old battlefield. But there is no
leadership
for that, and governments are being stripped of all regulatory
powers
by the false religion of a new deity, the unfettered, liberated
market. So, no longer protected by governments, we must fight
the
battle that is before us: human beings versus monstrous corporations
and their body snatched government puppets. It is a battle
of human
scale versus monstrous scale, love versus fear.
What is happening now, of course, is that the neo's in the
Bush
Administration -- you can call them neoliberals or neoconservatives,
though they are neo nothing except perhaps neocolonial and
neolithic
-- What's happening now is that the neo's in this Administration
are
starving government very much on purpose, and they tell us
as much in
their writing.
Huge military commitments, huge tax cuts to the wealthiest
individuals and corporations, and huge budget deficits leave
no money
for the old New Deal programs like Social Security or newer
programs
such as Medicare. No money for schools, hospitals, police,
fire,
veterans -- no money for anything but the front lines of a
corporatized military and a militarized corporatocracy. A
starved
government -- once our government -- has no ability to restrain
the
liberated giant or to investigate his abuses or prosecute
his crimes.
And so, two years after Enron, but one person is behind bars.
It is
not for lack of villains, and, as all California cries, it
is not for
lack of victims.
All right. When did this monster get untied? He did so in
the era of
corporate raiding, permitted and smiled upon by the Reagan
Administration. Reagan admired those cowboy businessmen of
the 1980s
-- the corporate raiders who engineered hostile corporate
takeovers.
But those takeovers, allowed by hamstrung regulators, caused
all
large and mid-sized American corporations to go on a rampage
of
streamlining, outsourcing, wage-cutting, plant closings and
job
exporting. They did so to make themselves takeover-proof.
It was no
longer respectable to make a respectable profit and to serve
your
community with good jobs and fairly priced goods and services.
The
new mentality of profit maximization and unlimited mergers
and no
government control, was the untying of the monster and it
was no
accident. The ropes were further loosened in the greedy and
morally
corrupt Clinton and Bush administrations, until we find ourselves
now
with a government of, by and for the corporations. The new
model CEO
was the ruthless cost cutter and dealmaker. CEO salaries went
unbelievably high, where they have stayed. For every hundred
dollars
that the average American worker makes, these top CEOs make
fifty-thousand
dollars. It is a moral outrage in the land of so many
homeless and struggling and worried people. But the giant
does not
care if we struggle or worry. The giant does not care that
every
homeless person we walk by is a humiliation to us, too, as
members of
a community no longer able to take care of our own. It is
a
humiliation designed to impress upon us that we are not in
charge.
That we must do as we are told if we do not want a similar
fate. It
is concentration camp logic.
A century ago, the ordinary people of America joined together
to tie
down the giant. The antitrust laws and environmental laws
and the
rights of workers to organize and collectively bargain for
wages and
benefits all joined to nurture the restoration of a great
middle
class -- always the bedrock of democracy. The robber barons,
the
great giants, remained tied down, no longer free, liberated,
to do as
they pleased in crushing us with their great wealth and political
power. And so it was for a time.
And now, loosed again, these giants have taken over our television
networks and most of our newspapers, turning them against
our
interests and against the truth itself. These giants send
our young
people off to fight their commercial wars -- great profitable
ventures.
How free are we now, friends? Check you bills and your bank
account.
How much time and leisure do you have to enjoy your life and
friends?
How is your place in your community as a free and equal citizen?
Or
are we drones that go to work, go to bed to rest for more
work, go to
the stores to spend all that we earn and more, and watch television
to receive our instructions what to buy the next day, if we
have jobs
at all? Is that freedom by some other name? It is not freedom
by any
name and it is nothing to push on the rest of the world in
the name
of freedom.
These corporations steal our time with their computerized
telephone
switchboards and their long waiting lines and few employees.
They
steal our jobs and our benefits and our pensions. They use
fear at
every turn to sell us a little protection, and a little more.
And
they steal our senators and congressmen just when they might
have
earned their keep protecting our democracy.
What shall we do, my fellows, about these corporate giants
stalking
our earth freely? How shall we get our children home from
their wars
and ourselves free from their captivities?
We the people, acting together in the new ways made possible
by
electronic communication, must become the large counterbalance
to
these powers -- the counterbalance that our government no
longer
provides. By communicating and acting in concert, we can reward
the
good companies and thereby keep our money clear of the worst.
We can
make our demand for fair trade products and provide the shift
in
market share that will change the practices of those businesses
that
now exploit our brothers and sisters here and around the world.
We
can agree together which television news channel is the least
objectionable, and agree to watch only that -- for our watching
and
buying habits are votes for the kind of world we will live
in. By
nudging market share, our small group of dedicated people
can
influence great changes. We have the tools now to do this
now. It
will not be an easy task, but we have no real alternative
if we are
to save the world, and that is what we must decide to do.
Tell your favorite coffee house that, as of Earth Day, 2004,
you will
only buy fair trade coffee. Let us give a "fair warning
for fair
trade" in this and other areas of products and services.
Let us
develop the best information about who is doing what, and
let us use
our new tools of electronic democracy to come to consensus
regarding
which companies deserve our support -- a reverse boycott on
a global
scale. I will try to put information on my website about who
is
helping in this new effort, and I will put some little cards
there
you can print to give a fair warning for fair trade to your
favorite
shops and other companies. And let us use each subsequent
Earth Day
to push for more improvement on every front, giving our fair
warnings
to move progress along. Let Americans and other people of
the earth
join us or not. But let them decide and know for themselves
which
side they are on.
Yes, let's continue our efforts to reform our government,
most
especially with campaign finance reform. But, with revolutionary
new
tools, we are capable of redefining democracy at a critical
moment.
Let us not be shy about it for time is short. We stand for
love and
fairness in the world. That is not gentle work, nor is it
painless or
bloodless, as so many people around the world know.
This is, after all, our world and our lives. Do you remember
those
few weeks after the 9/11 attacks when we, as an automatic
antidote to
the inhumanity of those attacks, sought to reassert our humanity
again in a million little ways? For that moment we came out
of the
hypnosis we have come to live under and we saw the Eden of
human love and cooperation. We must not fall back under that hypnosis
again, as
it is a waste of our lives. The forces of life and death are
in
struggle, for those are the other names for love and fear.
Let us
choose life and love, and happily use our selves up in loving
service
to one another.
Thank you. |