In sum, over the last year we've seen the dissolution of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps and the evolution of right-wing formations such as the tea party and "patriot" movements. Likewise, we also see state governments pandering to said constituencies, thus promoting legislation such as HB 1070 in Arizona which by and large uses visual and cultural distinction to interrogate one's nationality.
Needless to say, there is also a strong push back in communities nation-wide as far as organizing and directly confronting xenophobia and crude nationalist sentiment. Especially so with mobilization nation-wide that echoed the rumblings of the 2006 Strikes and Boycotts.
As always, it is a visual binary metaphor that reflects the present state of the movement.
Top-down as opposed to bottom-up, local, as opposed to national, students, as opposed to workers, compromise packages, as opposed to just legislation. The question we must ask is what will work best.
The backlash in late 2006 in wake of the movement demonstrated that we are still at a crossroads.
Is it worthwhile to posit electoral politics into the mix considering that mass raids and continued repression ensued even after electoral victories by the Democrats in 2006 and 2008? To what extent is it viable to favor legislation as opposed to local organizing?
When all is said and done, it's a question of what comes first. Sadly, we see the enforcement component trumping the humanitarian component (which also has economics firmly enmeshed within).
The struggle continues.
1 comment:
Netroots Person Intro
Hi Oscar!
This is just to introduce myself, and my cause!
Presenting INTERNET VOTING ADVOCATE
William J. Kelleher, Ph.D.
Like the horseless carriage 100 years ago, Internet voting is coming to the USA. Now is the time to plan on how to turn that technology to our Progressive advantage.
Internet voting is a New Opportunity for the folks at home, and our soldiers and citizens abroad, to finally obtain real electoral power.
Don’t be fooled by the Great Security Scare that currently dominates much of Progressive thinking. The security technology refined by superrich banks and other corporations can be transferred to online voting systems. Ironically, we can use their technology to neutralize the power of Big Money in US elections. Let Citizens United be the rule, with Internet voting that will not affect voters!
For more info, read my article on Op Ed News,
“Internet Voting and the US Social Forum,” at http://tinyurl.com/IntVUSSF
Watch the interview of me on Blip TV, at http://blip.tv/file/3750735
Also, read the Young Republican interview of me, for an excellent short introduction as to how Internet voting would work in practice, at
http://jumpinginpools.blogspot.com/2010/04/interview-with-dr-william-kelleher.html
(It’s only a five minute read. The first question is, “How would Internet voting have changed the 2008 election?”)
For a longer radio interview by Jim Fetzer, go to
http://radiofetzer.blogspot.com/ and scroll down to February 10, 2010
History is with us. This is a fight Progressives can win!
William J. Kelleher, Ph.D.
Political Scientist, author, speaker, CEO for
The Internet Voting Research and Education Fund
A CA Nonprofit Foundation
Email: InternetVoting@gmail.com
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