Friday, October 07, 2011

About the Occupation (of Wall Street)

The protests on and near Wall Street continue and are starting to get regular coverage. I work a few blocks away and so have witnessed them in their element at Liberty Square Park as well as marching and speaking outside my building near City Hall.

My initial thoughts about the protests were that they were kind of silly. They seemed to lack a purpose and goal. Why protest Wall Street? Even at its most successful, would a protest convince Wall Street to be less profit-driven? If you want to affect Wall Street, you need to change laws.

But I am starting to feel differently. While I still think it is more than a little nebulous, I think it might serve a really good purpose. This could finally be the response to the Tea Party - which is itself nebulous and a little silly. I think we need a strong and vocal liberal wing of the party that can actually push our moderate leaders to move away from center-right policies and embrace at the very least center-left.

I had been thinking that there would eventually be a left-wing movement again (I think I first heard Peggy Noonan raise the possibility). But my prediction, which I hadn't voiced yet, was that it would come after the 2012 elections. I figured we would probably get a Republican president, almost definitely get a Republican senate, and might keep a Republican House. If that happened, the Republicans would definitely overreach and try to ax popular government programs. And this would prompt the liberal awakening. Independents would also revolt because they would finally realize that smaller government means less services and cuts to programs they actually like.

If all of this can start before the 2012 elections and avoid a Republican government, that would be great. So I really do hope this movement, which had humble beginnings, can create a space where liberal / progressive values are once again championed - and loudly. And remember, we don't have to agree with everything in the movement, but we do need it to be counterbalance to the crazies on the right that are at the moment driving policy.

Goodbye to a Friend

A few weeks ago I went to a celebration of the life of a friend. I went to graduate school with her and she died recently from an aggressive form of cancer. There are a lot of reasons why this has affected me, but I want to focus on one part in particular for this blog.

My friend was a government superstar. We had both received Master's Degrees from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. It is one of the best schools in the country for public administration, and at one of the best schools, she has been one of the most successful. Her obituary in the Washington Post talks briefly about her work on human rights at the State Department. And at the celebration of her life, her coworkers talked about all of her amazing accomplishments. (She seemingly had my dream job - though for me it is just a dream and not something I actually work towards nor am even near qualified for. For her it was a dream job and she lived it and was amazing at it.)

What I take away from this is that while she died young and leaves behind a loving husband and young daughter, she can take solace in the life she lived and what she accomplished; she has done so much for human rights around the world.

At Maxwell, we were taught the Athenian Oath, which ends as follows:
We will transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.
This means, at its most simple, to make sure that when we leave, that we have improved the world around us. My friend did this. And she did so much so soon, that even at the young age of 34 she can say she delivered the city much, much greater.

You might guess that there is political commentary coming. And you are right. I want to be able to say the same thing when I leave. And that is what I don't understand about conservatism. At it's base, it is about smaller government - less taxes and less services. Most often this means less services for those in need. And whether intentional or not, it often means under-producing other beneficial public goods like education and infrastructure.

The point is that I just can't imagine being satisfied with a life that is spent not improving the world, not trying to make things better, and not trying to help people. Without that, what is your legacy? We are only here for a brief time, and so we should be making sure we are improving the world while we are here. And that is why I am a Democrat.

I can only hope to come close to the example my friend left for us.