Americans Should Embrace Their Radical History
http://www.alternet.org/americans-should-embrace-their-radical-history
In his 1939 book It Is Later Than You Think: The Need for a Militant Democracy progressive writer Max Lerner proffered: The basic story in the American past, the only story ultimately worth the telling, is the story of the struggle between the creative and the frustrating elements in the American democratic adventure.
With those words in mind, I move that: Americans Should Embrace their Radical History. And to second the resolution, I call upon a voice from 1930, one of Americas finest voices, the voice of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a man destined to become the greatest president of the twentieth century.
Looking back on 10 years of conservative-Republican presidential administration and what they had wrought an intensifying economic crisis and spreading human misery that would come to be known as the Great Depression FDR, who was then the Governor of New York State, said: There is no question in my mind that it is time for the country to become fairly radical for a generation.
And do we not see what Roosevelt saw then?
We have experienced three decades of conservative ascendance and power. Three decades, in which well-funded conservative movements, and ambitious and determined political and economic elites, secured power and subordinated the public good to corporate priorities, enriched the rich at the expense of working people, hollowed out the nations economy and public infrastructure, and harnessed religion and patriotism to the pursuit of power and wealth. In short, we have endured thirty years of right-wing political reaction and class war from above intended to undo or undermine the progressive advances of the 1930s and 1960s.