"What Divides Us"
Late last year an armed man put his children on a school
bus, then walked into a schoolhouse in another part of town,
took young girls hostage, and proceeded to shoot and kill
them. The world watched in the days that followed as those
"odd Amish" invited the killer's wife to their daughters'
funerals, and even more odd, how they attended the killer's
funeral -- to support his widow.
There was no tit-for-tat -- no cries for vengeance. Odd
indeed. Yet the world marveled.
Several years ago, an Irish man lost his son due to IRA
violence. He sought out the IRA leaders, but not to get his
shot at them. He had a simple message: "It stops with my
son. I don't want your children to be next."
Again, the world marveled.
We have . . .
* Too much tit-for-tat in our politics.
* Too much revenge motivation.
* Too much political tribalism, which leads people to think
if our guys do it, it's ok, maybe even great; but if their
guys do it, it's stupid, illegal, or evil.
Political tribalism is a poor substitute for listening, for
gathering facts, and dare I say it, for thinking.
Frankly, our political tribalism is killing us. The
politicians play lip-service to fixing it, but mostly, they
play "Hardball." And the pundits tell us, who's up and who's
down, as if they were sportscasters.
Well, actually, they are sportscasters. It's like a
half-time show! "Senator Blowhard really struck the right
note and his poll numbers are surging. I don't know how
Governor Handy can recover in the second half."
Our future shouldn't come down to a game. WE ARE ALL
AMERICANS AND THERE ARE MORE THINGS THAT UNITE US THAN
DIVIDE US.
Yet these "games" operate on a principle of divide and
conquer. Politicians, along with their handlers and
spokesmen, play on a "fear of the Other." They suggest that
their followers choose tribal loyalty instead of independent
thought; otherwise the bad guys might win. And this argument
works!
But there is a better way, and if we adopted it, the world
would marvel.
This is something of an "open letter" to an organization
called "OMB Watch." It's also a declaration, to our
supporters present and future, of the kind of organizations
both DownsizeDC.org, Inc and the Downsize DC Foundation want
to be.
Last week, in a fact sheet distributed to their members,
http://www.ombwatch.org/npa/GR_Analysis.pdf OMB Watch
decided to attack Downsize DC.
* They told who knows how many people that we were dishonest
-- that we intended to deceive. They never substantiated the
charge.
* They quoted me out of context. Yet they managed to concede
the thesis of the very Downsize DC action alert they quoted
later in their piece.
* They accused me of being a partisan conservative. Clearly,
they don't know me -- or Downsize DC! As I explained in
December, we are not conservatives, nor libertarians,
liberals, or anything else. More on that in a moment.
* And though it's been said, all publicity is good
publicity, and you shouldn't care what people say about you
as long as they spell your name right, they didn't even
manage to do that. They incorrectly attributed my editorial
to the organization that reprinted it.
But we're not going to respond in kind. At some point,
someone has to say no to the tit-for-tat. Someone has to
relinquish vengeful responses. And that is my purpose today.
I don't want to sound sanctimonious. In fact, I have a
confession to make. When I read OMB Watch's fact sheet on
what was "really" in the grassroots lobbying bill (according
to them), I was fuming. My first thought was to respond with
a raw passion that would qualify as anger. The facts were
all on my side. I intended to set the record straight --
maybe even get even.
That would've been wrong.
I had barely started to do the wrong thing when I was
reminded both by a dear Christian friend and next by my
non-Christian partner here at Downsize DC, Perry Willis, of
what I profess to believe. Jesus promoted a "turn the other
cheek" ethic that few have figured out how to live by --
particularly those who claim to be his followers. But the
few who have managed to live by it, well, they've
accomplished a great deal.
It seems strange, even to me, that the meek can inherit the
Earth. But a Russian novelist and Christian anarchist by the
name of Leo Tolstoy believed it. He inspired a non-Christian
named Mahatma Gandhi to stand up to the largest empire in
the world and try a risky strategy of non-violent resistance
and even civil disobedience when necessary, knowing
full-well that such activity could cost him tremendously,
even up to his very life.
Gandhi inspired men like Lech Walesa, leader of Poland's
Solidarity Union during their days behind the Iron Curtain,
as well as Martin Luther King, Jr. when his people were
second class citizens right here in our own country. Gandhi
also inspired a man named Nelson Mandela, who emerged from a
prison cell with a smile and a handshake. Mandela became the
leader of his country and led it to reconciliation rather
than vengance and unending conflict.
None of these men were perfect. But each tried to live by
this difficult ideal of meekness. And in each instance, the
world marveled.
No one plays politics like that. It couldn't work, right?
Nearly a year ago, Perry Willis and I were doing something
we frequently do; talking about Downsize DC's identity and
strategy. We discussed the pitfalls of most political
communications -- the direct mail letters that demonize,
prey on fears, and promise protection from the "bad guys"
(at least until the next letter arrives with a new problem).
We talked about how we could advance a policy of
communication that, as Downsize DC grew into a national
player, would change the tone of debate in this country.
I won't go into the entire conversation, but to give you a
flavor of it, we decided to tend in the direction of
"meekness" and that for Downsize DC that would include
principles like these . . .
* Steer clear of partisan tribalism, ideological labels, and
cults of personality. If we began hearing from Downsizer-Dispatch
subscribers who said they could sense that we had a favorite
in the political games, then we were becoming part of the
problem, and would need to adjust our behavior.
* Along the same lines, we had a duty to speak truth and
speak it plainly, but we must avoid personalizing it --
particularly in the form of an attack: Avoid labels and
reduce adjectives. Every time we mention a politician by
name in one of our Dispatches, trust me, we've had a
conversation about it. We don't do so lightly.
* Avoid the logical error of "special pleading." This is a
variation on the Golden Rule: the standards we apply to
others should apply to us as well. I can't begin to tell you
how many rhetorical arguments or campaigns we've considered
using (that you've never seen) just because they came up
short on this particular test.
* And if someone catches us in an error -- and it has
happened several times -- don't be stubborn. Admit it. Fix
it. Often, it's appropriate to announce your error and what
you did to correct it. I know some incredible people, but I
know too few who are truly open to correction. Their minds
are made up and they refuse to be confused by the facts. We
strive desperately to be "teachable."
Wouldn't the national debate be "marvelous," possibly even
productive, if these were the universally accepted ground
rules?
Call me an "idealist" but I actually believe these could
become the accepted ground rules. When Martin Luther King,
Jr. marched, he was routinely subjected to a particularly
egregious insult -- a word that starts with the letter "N."
But only 50 years later a well-known television star has
probably ruined his career because he used that same word.
Bad behavior should be sanctioned, though not by government.
I'm with Voltaire: "I do not agree with what you have to
say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."
The solution to every problem that faces us isn't a new law.
The comedian I've just referred to isn't going to jail, but
perhaps he wished his problems could be solved that simply.
We need to reach the point where blind tribal loyalty to a
partisan team, combined with the tactics of either fear or
division, is considered inappropriate in polite company . .
. And not because people are afraid to speak, but because
they want to be good.
Which brings me back to OMB Watch.
As we've also reported here in a December edition of the
Downsizer-Dispatch, I signed a factual letter to Joan
Claybrook of Public Citizen. Claybrook had told her
supporters that her group was helping Nancy Pelosi write the
new grassroots lobbying restrictions. The letter I signed
violated none of the principles cited above.
In her response Ms. Claybrook chiefly noted that the
majority of the other co-signers of that letter were
conservatives, and there was an implication which Public
Citizen made clearer in a post on their blog, that this was
sour grapes by Republicans who didn't want to lose their (DeLay-Abramoff)
"astro-turf" groups (as opposed to the real grassroots
groups the legislation would really harm).
Her response was pure partisan tribalism. According to
Public Citizen, our criticisms were supported by too many
conservatives, so they didn't need to be taken seriously,
even though the criticisms we were making were perfectly in
line with what most people would consider liberal values.
OMB Watch seems to have taken a page from this same book and
assumed that DownsizeDC.org is a conservative group that can
be dismissed not because of what we say, but because of the
supposed label OMB Watch has mistakenly affixed to us.
We are not conservatives. I could list scores of examples to
prove it, but I'll pick my most recent favorite and simply
say that in the second-half of last year we were valued
participants in a coalition of liberal/progressive groups
fighting warrantless wiretapping by a Republican President's
administration. There was exactly one conservative in the
coalition. There was one self-identified libertarian. And
there was Downsize DC. Everyone else, more than 20 groups
and additional individuals on top of that, starting with the
coalition leaders from the ACLU, was a liberal.
Again, we just don't care about that partisan stuff. We
think it's poisoning the governing process of this country.
On the other hand, it seems OMB Watch has forgotten their
Voltaire. Voltaire was right, and these barriers to entry in
our national debate are wrong, even if they are applied to
groups that we at Downsize DC disagree with strenuously.
THIS BILL IS BAD FOR ALL START-UP AND UP-START GRASSROOTS
GROUPS LOOKING TO PARTICIPATE IN THE DEMOCRATIC PROCESS. A
well-spring of under-funded, gritty-grassroots, progressive
political activism is, in large part, responsible for the
Democrats recent Congressional victory. Ironically, now a
group of liberals will strangle this kind of grassroots
activity.
Do Public Citizen and OMB Watch even understand that this is
what they're doing? I think not. So my fondest hope would be
that they would come to understand that their legislation is
not only anti-conservative, it is anti-liberal and
anti-every-label-under-the-sun.
Yet we don't think Public Citizen and OMB Watch mean to
cause harm. We merely think that they ARE causing harm, and
we would like to coax them back to the bright side of the
force. We want to do this with love and respect and
friendship, the same as we feel for all the liberal and
conservative organizations with which we work.
Here are the non-partisan facts: These regulations will cost
DownsizeDC.org significant money, when compared to our
annual budget. They may cause progressive groups (and groups
all across the spectrum), to quit before they start because
they don't want to risk fines of up to $200,000 per
violation, or jail time (yes, you could go to jail for a
First Amendment activity here in America!). When these
budding grassroots groups see that they will need the
proverbial "lawyers, guns, and money" to do business, all
too many of them will quit before they even start.
The cynical part of me says this will make the incumbents
quite happy.
Yet I firmly believe OMB Watch is sincere in their
intentions. They believe their tactics, including this
recent fact sheet, are advancing an important goal. And this
important goal is to limit corruption and give us better
government.
And I still firmly disagree that this policy is even
remotely beneficial.
* In my opinion, it was the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act
that led bad actors to seek new, darker, more hidden places
to put their money.
* I think this new set of regulations also fails a
Constitutional test.
* On top of that, it seems illogical to me to burden
citizens, who can't be corrupted in the legal and political
sense because they have no public office to sell and no
taxpayer financed favors to dispense, while politicians who
apparently are so morally feeble they can't handle the
temptations these groups offer, get away regulation-free.
Fortunately, we have a chance to strip the grassroots
lobbying provisions from the Senate version of the bill even
as you read this. So please send a message now.
http://action.downsizedc.org/wyc.php?cid=61
So to OMB Watch I want to say, simply, that you were wrong
about us. I sincerely hope that at some point you'll take
the time to get to know us and that when you do, you'll
understand that you've mischaracterized us.
And to DC Downsizers I say, let's set an example of not only
what to change about our governing, but how to behave as we
do it. We will educate and speak the truth to power. We will
be aggressive and overwhelm the Upsizers. But we will try to
do it with grace and kindness. It won't always be easy, but
we'll do our best.
And just maybe, the world will marvel.
Jim Babka
President
Downsize DC Foundation
& DownsizeDC.org, Inc.
Downsize DC,
http://www.downsizedc.org/mission.shtml - Read The Bill
Act,
http://www.downsizedc.org/rtba_legislation.shtml. Many
other quick and simple ways to email your voice on
Constitutional rights and organizing for activism -
https://secure.downsizedc.org/rtba/coalition/.
SAVE AMERICA!
STOP SPENDING AND START SAVING! - CUT THE GDP - MONEY IS THE
ONLY THING THE US GOVERNMENT UNDERSTANDS - WHEN THEY START
RETURNING THE CONSTITUTION - WE CAN START SPENDING AGAIN.
Dei Jurum Conventus
Ed Ward, MD;
http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/arc_ward.htm
Independent writer/Media Liaison for The Price of Liberty;
http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/