Thursday, November 6, 2008

Hope and Change

One of my coworkers made a comment yesterday that stuck with me. It actually brought something up that became so pervasive in (nearly) eight years’ time that it rarely occurred to me; something that changed so thoroughly since 2001 that it’s transparent anymore (or at least was transparent until Tuesday). What he said was this: “Yes, there are a lot of conservative Americans. Possibly a majority. But the bigger factor was fear. People have been afraid of the government, and they had an opportunity reverse that,” and though it’s a simple point, it is very true. As a society, we shifted from apathy—especially our generation (X or Y, depending)—directly into fear. At first, we feared the terrorists. The Bush administration used that fear to great effect, manipulating it to consolidate power and justify imperialism. They’ve used fear virtually every day for the past 2700 or so days (since September 12, 2001), to “protect” our freedoms by systematically taking them away. Fear has been used to distract the people in this country from the macabre realities of the administration’s aims and actions.

For example, a point of pride in the history of the United States—that this is the land of opportunity, anyone can come here to make a better life—has been perverted by fear mongering against the defenseless target of immigrants. “Illegal” and “Immigrant” are now synonymous, and the people who have come here with hopes and dreams and ambitions, people who with their work not only improve themselves but improve the United States through their contributions, are attacked in words and in actions. Yes, we have to acknowledge that illegal immigration exists and is a problem, but we need not fear it. We have been browbeaten to fear everything that is not “American,” and to fear is to loathe. Furthermore, “American” has been defined as conservative jingoism and evangelical capitalism—make no mistake, not evangelical democracy.

Perhaps I’m being mawkish, but the beauty I see in the election of Barack Obama is that he did not run on a platform of anger or resentment, or revolution. He ran on two words—“Hope” and “Change.” People voted, in record numbers, for hope and change. The overwhelming, transparent fear that gripped Americans was broken by such simple, peaceful concepts. It seems precious and even trite, almost a fairy tale ending.

Will Barack Obama catalyze change in the way the American majority has demanded it? In one way, he already has. Something huge and completely unprecedented happened on Tuesday; someone of color, of the minority, was elected by the majority. This has not happened anywhere else in the modern western world, and is a testament that the United States is as dynamic as it can be static, as progressive as it can be conservative, as compassionate as it is individualistic. The real fairy tale is if he continues, and if unity prevails as a result. He has the potential to be the impetus; it is the people who will become the change. God willing, to borrow from Obama’s campaign, yes we can.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

it is a breath of fresh air to finally have some hope, to have a president that seems to genuinely want to help the country by doing what the country wants. the world is weary enough without having a fear monger like Bush beating the alleged "War on Terrorism" into our heads for the past 7 years..

i really hope obama can bring around some of the change he talks about. it is unrealistic (and downright naive) to think he can do it all, but some change is better than no change at this point.

oh and what do you think of his appointment of Emmanuel as Chief of Staff.. that guy is a bad ass! i'm really stoked about that.

Anonymous said...

I know that it seems that everything is going to be fine now that we have taken over Washington. I just urge everyone to not forget the 8 years that it took to get here, its common for us to look around now and try to bring some sort of unity within the country. I urge you however to think about that, think of all the things that the GOP did to us and I hope that president Obama doesnt try to unify us by excusing the Bush administration of all they did wrong. I was jailed for speaking my mind peacefuly twice during the past 8 years and so where thousands if not millions of people like me and those were the people that voted for a change those were the people that took Colorado, North Carolina and Wyoming for the Democrats, it wasnt the same old party line democrats that won this election. We cant get complacent now, we need change and it has to start happening on January 20th and we need to make these people pay, we need to remove our troops from the middle east and put them in Crawford to fight the real evil doers. We need to take these party line Republicans on a tour of all the countries that they support so they can see how people really live there Ukraine, Israel etc. Obama is good even i cant deny that its historic, its powerful but this cant be the end it has to be just the beggining.

daylabor said...

Chris, I honestly think he picked Emanuel so that he'd have him under his thumb as chief of staff, as opposed to having him running amok as Speaker of the House.