David A. Love's Blog

David A. Love

David A. Love
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Birthday
June 18
Bio
David A. Love is the Executive Editor of BlackCommentator.com, where his Color of Law column appears weekly. He is a contributor to the Huffington Post, the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, theGrio, News One, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He also completed the Joint Programme in International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford.

SEPTEMBER 25, 2009 4:29PM

America Needs A True Revolution Of Values

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MLK 

As you probably heard, the Values Voters Summit was recently held in Washington, DC. What exactly is a values voter, and who exactly decides on the definition of a values voter?

In the Orwellian world of conservative-Republican-Christian-fringe doublespeak, the goal is to confuse, obfuscate, distort and deceive. Concepts are intentionally misnamed to suggest a completely opposite meaning. So, universal health care is characterized as “fascism”. Disdain for women’s reproductive rights is called “pro-life”. Denial of rights to same-sex couples becomes “the protection of marriage”. And rejection of evolution and the teaching of creationism in public schools fall under “religious liberty”. Given these twisted definitions of reality coming from the Far Right, it stands to reason that I am skeptical of their definition of values - presumably “family” values - or values voters for that matter.

The list of confirmed and invited guest speakers at the summit reads like a who’s who of the usual tea partying suspects: opportunistic, empty-suit G.O.P. politicians, and washed-up and recycled “rising stars” holding their finger to the wind; secessionist sympathizers and bellicose, blowhard news entertainers; immigrant haters and Obama haters; homophobic ex-beauty pageant contestants and the Bible-thumping, self-righteous moralizers and demonizers, and the like.

And who made Carrie Prejean and Mike Huckabee the experts on values? What can Sen. Jim DeMint, Bill O’Reilly or Rep. Michele Bachmann teach me on the subject of values, or anything of any importance for that matter? I’m not sure. I shall search elsewhere for my values, thank you very much.

One person I will consult is Martin Luther King. The angry mobs of his day labeled him a communist. He talked about the need for a revolution of values. Specifically, he said:

 …we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a “thing-oriented” society to a “person-oriented” society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.

In today’s post-bubble reality called the Great Recession, Dr. King’s words resonate more than ever. As a rabbi reminded me recently in her Rosh Hashanah sermon, these days we have been forced to live with less, to make our lives fuller with less. For many Americans, it was a summer of stay-at-home vacations. People now have to dig deep within, to give more of themselves to their communities and the institutions that matter to them.

Yet during the times of plenty, although many more people were happy, empty values were allowed to thrive. Before the recession hit, Gordon Gekko and his philosophy of “greed is good” were provided a safe haven. The people who could steal the most were hailed as heroes - the best and the brightest, standard-bearers of the American Dream, the people we wanted to become. And surely, someone out there believed that they needed a fifth mansion, yacht or car to make them even happier than their first four.

Yet, in those times of empty economic calories, of massive profits extracted through paper shuffling and smoke and mirrors, there were multitudes who did not share in the wealth. These silent suffering people had been rendered invisible. The prevailing values had dictated that the wealthy few should take all of the economic spoils. The poor are as they always have been - poor and becoming even poorer. And the middle class is, at best, like the proverbial hamster on the treadmill, spinning wheels yet gaining no ground. In a worst case scenario, the people in the middle are joining the ranks of the poor, and there is no middle left.

In a society that values property rights over people, families are thrown into the streets for the sake of predatory corporate profit. Everyday people must choose between paying for food, rent and health care. The sick are allowed to die because they could not afford to get sick in the first place. Young people are saddled with obscene levels of college debt, yet cannot find jobs to pay off their mortgage-sized tuition loans.

Then there’s the environment. After thousands of years of respecting the land and acting in concert with it, something has gone awry. A few weeks ago I was invited to attend the International Energy Conference at the United Nations. There was a lot of good values talk there - about green jobs, the need for sustainable sources of energy, and empowering poor communities and developing nations through renewable energy technologies. The production-consumption model of economic growth has run its course. Taking, making and wasting for the needs of 1 billion people - at the expense of the remaining 5 billion - has damaged the Earth’s ecosystems, depleted its natural resources, and fueled political instability around the globe. “Oh, mercy mercy me. Oh, things ain’t what they used to be” as Marvin Gaye used to sing. “Oil wasted on the oceans and upon our seas. Fish full of mercury.”

I can guarantee that the participants in the Values Voters Summit did not hold these family values in high regard--of social, economic or environmental justice -- even though they claim to be religious and know God personally.

Apparently, there are many types of values out there, or at least they are packaged and promoted as such. To be sure, no one should claim a monopoly on them. But in the end, we must decide which values are meaningful to us, and which values should guide our government and our society. We can find values anywhere, including a down-and-dirty, anti-Obama tea party, or at the white-collar, business suit version that just took place in Washington. That does not mean we want to claim them as our own.

(From BlackCommentator.com.) 

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Thanks for this. I find it so exclusionary and disheartening that a certain group of people can call themselves "Values Voters", as if they own the term, and those who don't agree with their views are somehow "Anti-Values Voters".

And you're right - they are masters of doublespeak.
Great blog and wonderful thoughts. Dr. King's quotes have certainly come to pass and, with all due respect to the late leader, you didn't have to be a prophet to see that coming. I well remember realizing decades ago that capitalism is a ravenous cancer without checks and balances. Lack of a strong ethical base channeled into regulation to keep economic entities below a certain scale, capitalism will eat itself and everything in its path. We're seeing that come to pass now, not just on a national scale, but global as well.

And I wasn't alone in those realizations, encountering others who saw the same. The paradox is that because of our perspectives, we were/are so marginalized by that very self-perpetuating system that our influence is negligible.

I do take exception to your statement that "after thousands of years of respecting the land and acting in concert with it, something has gone awry." Our attitude toward nature has always been one of subjugation and exploitation, it's just that now, due to scales of population and technological capacity, those attitudes are no longer feasible and their self-destructive core is laid bare.

The paradigm shift required to make it past these challenges are nearly the most monumental in the history of our species. It will take Herculean effort to make the changes and survive.

Rated.
We never recovered from the "me" decade of the 80's, epitomized by Michael Douglas in the movie "Wall Street" (Greed is Good!)
Good post, David. When the "values" of one group impinge upon and cause harm to another group it is time to call them out. You have done that very well here.

I have no doubt that the Values Voters actually believe what they say and actually live by those beliefs. That is what makes it essential that we call them out. What is particularly depressing is that the press and news media do not call them out.

monte
I watched several videos of the value summit and quite frankly, I think they are all hypocrites to the nth degree. O'Reilly received a courage in journalism award and locked out the press at the last second like the coward that he is. (bizarre)
Prejean was the most likable out of the group that I heard, but she was touting herself as being extremely tolerant. Just how in the world does that work? Great work as usual. David and congrates on the HuffPo gig!
I don't believe the "values voter" leaders could actually believe that what they spew is actually good for the country. I often wonder whether they have all just found a mode of behavior that they think will cement their own (and their families') prominence at the expense of most of the nation, and so they climb aboard regardless of the outlandish rhetoric, no matter how often they contradict themselves, no matter how unchristian their chatter. I think they know exactly what they're doing.

"If this is what I must do to stay wealthy, I'll do it! Someone must rise to the top!" It's survival of the fittest, frankly, operating as if they are fighting for the survival of their genes, quite the opposite of the acceptance and compassion I hear so much about when people speak of a Christian life.

I'm with you, David. I have some pretty strong values, and mine appear to be much more in line with Christianity than what these people espouse.

I was posting yesterday on a blog in which someone said atheists could only be interested in their own well-being, and that altruism is virtually impossible if the threat of God's retribution isn't a motivator. I don't need deities to force me to treat others well, and conversely, Christians don't necessarily follow the tenets of their faith as they seek personal advancement. It's a hiding place for some of the greediest and most immoral people on this planet. These values voters know that most people don't actually read the Bible or understand its purpose.
Rated post mon!
I echo Kevin Lee's voice but the revolution idea against a military with all the technology I know exist, is a dream that would quickly turn to nightmare! I love Orwell lets keep him out of this... I'm much too Secular, existentially speaking to buy this values shyte... We all know the enemy is Capitalism, always has been, maybe Moore's movie opens some eyes...
First we need the faith of a mustard seed.

But MLK is like tonic for the soul.
This is like a white paper on our times. You do have a way of getting to the essence of things. There's a positively Orwellian vocabulary of the right that somehow becomes widely accepted, so that all of us adopt terms like pro-life or values voter, as if accuracy didn't matter. Perhaps the media has to use the terms the groups themselves use or set themselves up as some kind of naming authority, but the rest of us don't have to. We should avoid adopting the right's own terminology. I consider those folks fear-based, not values-based.
Can't wait for Michael Moore's film next week, which is already out in NY and LA.

Patrick, I'm a big fan of Orwell, too. He's like a prophet to me. I think he had a way of warning us about the corruption of power that few others could articulate.