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Op-Ed
Articles
Liberalism
Means Try, Try Again;
The Day Is Short and the Work Is Urgent, So Let´s Get on about
the Nation´s Problems
November
1, 1988
Los
Angeles Times
Since George
Bush has based his entire campaign on a fierce attack on liberalism,
one of us liberals needs to set the record straight.
Despite all
the nasty and misleading rhetoric, the liberal view of government
is surprisingly modest. Liberals believe that, in addition to providing
for our national defense, the federal government has an appropriate
role in crafting effective solutions to our nation's domestic problems.
Most Americans agree.
This approach
is fundamentally different from Reaganism, which holds that protecting
our national security is virtually the only legitimate function
of the federal government. Under Reaganism, the government has no
business interfering in social inequities or abuses. Reaganism argues
that the free market will eventually right all wrongs. No problem
is so big that it cannot be ignored.
Reaganism adores
moral exhortations -- its main weapon in the war against drugs is
its "just say no" campaign -- and loathes addressing the
social, economic and cultural roots of problems.
But not everyone
listens, and some problems are a bit more complicated than lack
of self-discipline. That's one reason we need a strong and active
government -- to develop sensible responses to health, education
and economic problems.
Government is
also needed to enact regulations that smooth the rough edges off
capitalism. The private sector is one of our nation's greatest strengths,
but the free market isn't a perfect mechanism. It doesn't respond
well to environmental concerns, abuses from a concentration of power
or frauds foisted on consumers. These are significant cracks in
our system that pose serious dangers to millions of Americans.
On this point
Reaganism adopts a Darwinian view. For instance, the logic for dismantling
consumer agencies is that they are unnecessary, since defective
products will lead to injury or death, which then bring lawsuits
and economic consequences, which then force the productsoff the
market. This is silly and reckless. A better, more civilized system
is to enact regulations that provide basic protections and prevent
injuries where possible.
Reaganism is
static. It takes things as they are and seeks no change. Its measure
of success is materialism, nothing more.
Liberalism is
dynamic. It searches for a better society and is dedicated to improving
the lives of all Americans, not just those with power and wealth.
Our standard isn't how much money a few acquire, but how much opportunity
is open to all Americans.
Last year Alex
Kotlowitz of the Wall Street Journal wrote a harrowing article about
Chicago's Henry Horner housing project. He described a neighborhood
ruled by gangs and filled with poverty, fear and drugs. Only the
most violent survive, and even they for not very long. It's a neighborhood
out of control and without hope.
Reaganism has
no energy or ideas for America's Henry Horner projects. There is
no compassion, no understanding. Reaganism ignores the unpleasantness
of urban poverty; it looks past it to an idealized America that
is happy and tidy.
Liberals understand
that the projects are not only a human tragedy but also a lost resource
for our nation. Ignoring this waste is wrong. It is also dangerous.
These projects are breeding grounds for drugs and crime, teenage
pregnancies and abortions. Singing "Don't Worry, Be Happy"
and urging kids to "just say no" won't work here -- the
solution is government leadership and involvement. We must hire
more police to take back control of our streets and issue tough
mandatory prison sentences to the worst criminals. And if housing
projects and other existing programs are failing, we need to eliminate
them, redouble our efforts and create innovative alternatives. But
we must try, and try again.
As new problems
emerge -- the devastating costs of long-term health care for older
Americans, the AIDS epidemic, the scandal of 37 million Americans
without health insurance, or global warming and ozone depletion
-- liberals are best able to devise coordinated and thoughtful governmental
responses.
The Reagan-Bush
record on all these issues is appalling. It took more than six years
just to convince President Reagan to say "AIDS" in public.
And the Administration has never missed an opportunity to oppose
additional pollution-control measures. Reaganism wants to hide from
these problems. Liberals want to lead on these issues, knowing that
private initiative -- no matter how well intentioned -- can never
provide an adequate answer to such problems.
Because we care
about social needs, liberals are criticized as "big spenders."
The fact is that many spending programs can pay dividends for years
to come. Investments in preventive programs, like sex education
and prenatal care, actually save taxpayers' money and improve the
lives of millions of Americans.
Just as important,
it is not the liberals who are responsible for the Reagan budget
deficits. The disastrous combination of huge tax cuts for the wealthy
and wasteful increases in defense spending -- what Bush once called
"voodoo economics" -- has more than doubled our national
debt and leaves it to our children and grandchildren to pay our
bills.
The only way
to put our financial house in order is to evaluate coldly every
program, both defense and non-defense, and decide if we are getting
our money's worth. And we simply need more revenue to pay our bills;
our challenge is crafting prudent tax increases that don't adversely
affect our economy.
We liberals
are also often accused of being concerned exclusively about people
at the bottom of our society -- the homeless, the unemployed, the
minorities and the poor. But we are also concerned about the vast
middle class whose affluence is often more apparent than real. Many
families can barely hold on to a middle-class life style with two
incomes. Even the comfortable upper middle class is finding it impossible
to finance college educations for its children.
We must never
take for granted -- or be willing to sacrifice for short-term political
gain -- our freedoms of speech, press and religion. Patriotism is
measured not by how often we say the Pledge of Allegiance but by
how strongly we fight to protect and preserve our constitutional
rights, even for the most unpopular among us. Our freedoms are our
greatest strength -- that which sets us apart from every other nation.
America remains
the greatest nation on Earth. Yet we should take notice that we
are the only industrialized society without a nationalized health-insurance
program. More than a dozen nations boast of better schools and higher
achievement for their students. A score of nations can point to
infant-mortality rates well below ours. And we sadly have one of
the worst rates for children living in poverty.
Those who care
about our nation's future will face these truths. Lying to the voters
now may win elections, but only at an unacceptable price to our
children.
Liberals reject
this. Our energetic, restless, problem-solving philosophy may best
be summed up in the time-honored dictum: "The day is short,
the work is urgent. It is not your duty to complete the work, but
neither are you free to desist from it."
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