Given my upbringing, it’s no surprise I developed progressive views relatively late. But having
lived through the past decade, I’m amazed that more people haven’t turned
leftward. In fact, I’ve been hard
pressed to find a place where my neighbors share my ideas.
For the last few years I’ve lived in a
mountain resort community where I teach at the local college. When I first arrived in Treetop (not its real
name), it seemed like just the nice, free-thinking sort of place I’d been searching
for. I hoped to find friends who thought
and felt as I do. I thought it might be
the where I’d realize a long-nurtured ambition to start a free alternative school. I yearned to breathe free in the clean alpine
air.
Treetop does have a reputation for having a
free-spirited, youthful, alt vibe. What
I discovered underneath, however, was a pretty typical small town, right down
to the weekly Rotary, Kiwanis, and Lions Club breakfast meetings. The conversation at the wine and cheese
parties differs little from what you’d hear in the suburbs. Town ordinances ensure that one downtown
building looks much like all the others.
I shared my misgivings with an acquaintance,
telling her I wished Treetop was more socially progressive. She was taken aback. “But Treetop is very progressive,”
she protested. “We have snowboarders,
artists, and yoga studios. I listen to NPR and read The Huffington
Post every morning!”
I didn’t bother to argue. While Treetop isn’t exactly the kind of place
Sinclair Lewis would have satirized, neither is it a refuge for aspiring
bohemians or dissidents. My exchange
with the neighbor underlines an important fact of American political life. Progressivism is a fringe movement, probably
more so than at any other time in our history.
Oh, we have a loose cultural tolerance we call liberalism. But being a
liberal is largely a matter of style over substance, just another meaningless fashion
statement. I blame this on the legacy of
the 1960s. More precisely, I blame it on
people taking away the wrong lessons from that era. The individualistic, do-your-own-thing,
let-it-all-hang-out countercultural ethos seeped into the mainstream without transforming
the soul of “square” society. This is
why you have kids today with long hair, tattoos, and body piercings who vote
Republican and unabashedly seek business careers.
The biggest
roadblock to reviving progressivism is our essential, small “c,”
conservatism. We don’t like change. We stubbornly believe individual initiative
and hard work conquer all. Despite mounting evidence
to the contrary, we think the system is basically fair and should stay the way
it is. Most importantly, we don’t want
to lose whatever social and economic privileges we’ve managed to hold on to. In
short, our national narrative and decades of propaganda have convinced us
progressivism just isn’t a good idea.
It helps explain why the Occupy movement has failed to
take off. It hasn’t been police
repression or official harassment. It's been public skepticism and
apathy.
So, what’s
the solution? In my humble opinion:
What we need
is a compelling counter-narrative. We
need to take back the symbolism and heroes of our past. We need to remind ourselves of the taken for
granted gains made by our forebears. We
must let go of our preconceived notions.
This is easier said than done, but I believe it has to happen. It may be a bridge too far to win over older
generations whose members feel they have too much to lose. Perhaps we can count on the open mindedness
of youth to rebuild the movement.
To build a
future movement, we have to look to the past.
We must revisit the experience of the 1960s New Left, the political
movement that faded into historical oblivion even as the decade’s music and
fashion became cultural icons. Our goal
should be nothing short of a revival of the New Left. This next
New Left must not simply engage in activism.
It must win the cultural war against reaction and corporate
hegemony. It will have to rely on moral
suasion to remake our basic cultural values.
This last
charge – to fundamentally remake our collective beliefs – is the most critical
and the most difficult. I’ll mull the
possibilities in a future post.
© 2012 The
Unassuming Scholar
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