There is so much at stake this weekend and, surely, this will go into
next week with Passover looming at the end as, perhaps, a real deadline.
Be prepared, my friends: We will see the worst of our politics in the
next few days but what is at stake is far more important even who gets
elected president, something so many put so much energy into just a year
and some months ago. It is even more important than health care
itself, as vital as that issue remains, more than sixty years after it
was identified as a national exigency.
In the meantime, the
mantra against taxes and government itself has settled over the country
even while everyone---including the greedy proponents of the end
government movement---enjoys the benefits of the more progressive
thoughts and achievements of our forebears: particularly those named
Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
Since then we have
been told that all that matters is that there be "no new taxes," which
is nothing more than another way of saying "I got mine. You go take
care of yourself."
This is now people operated before it was
understood that government was necessary; that there was a value to
coming together, pooling one's resources. It is how our roads were
built, we defend ourselves, we explore new horizons and, of course, how
we educate our children.
Some horrible person was elected
president and told everyone that
government is not the
solution to our problem; it is the problem
which
translates to "you are on your own. Best of luck."
And the
stupid, poorly educated sheep we are bought it. We complained about
how long it took us to renew our car registration given all those long
lines, how badly our roads had fallen into disrepair, how incapable our
government was in responding to natural disasters, or protecting us from
terrorists who flew airplanes into our buildings and why every other
country seems more prepared to meet the future than we are.
And
we wondered how that happened.
We have made a mess of things
since then and have put this country on a clear path as a society in
decline. Until recently, every president since the "government is the
problem" speech has bought into it, including the one nominated by the
Democratic Party, who told
us the
answer had to be found in voluntary associations:
The
era of big government is over, but we can't go back to a time when our
citizens were just left to fend for themselves.
We will meet them
by going forward as one America, by working together in our
communities, our schools, our churches and synagogues, our workplaces
across the entire spectrum of our civic life
nothing
more than a restatement of the first President Bush's
"thousand points of light" :
we're a nation of
community; of thousands and tens of thousands of ethnic, religious,
social, business, labor union, neighborhood, regional and other
organizations, all of them varied, voluntary and unique.
This is
America: the Knights of Columbus, the Grange, Hadassah, the Disabled
American Veterans, the Order of Ahepa, the Business and Professional
Women of America, the union hall, the Bible study group, LULAC, "Holy
Name" -- a brilliant diversity spread like stars, like a thousand points
of light in a broad and peaceful sky
The truth is
that all those associations are great, and they represent many
communities, but the one that looks out for all of our people,
regardless of religion, race or any other irrelevant thing, that
educates our children, that protects us from harm, that build and
maintains the roads, takes away the garbage, explores what science and
medicine offers, and does the many things that we cannot do ourselves or
even as voluntary groupings, is government. If it has to be on television to be true,
here's a little West Wing for you to explain the point further.
The damage done to
our country during this period of greed and selfishness is almost
incalculable. We will not make it back to the country we were before
Vietnam divided us into irreconcilable camps for a long time, but as
President Kennedy told us in only a slightly different context, "let us
begin."
We need a government which will step up to this long
neglected challenge: to make sure that nobody suffers needlessly
because they cannot afford the medical care that would otherwise be
available but is not because of a lack of financial resource. As
President Kennedy said while medicare was pending,
it's
not that much to ask of our government.
As so often it does,
the
inaugural address of the president whose words meant something even
to this eight year old boy when they were said on a snowy day in
January and remain resonant in the mind of almost everyone who has heard
them, either then or since, contain the antidote to the mean spirited,
selfish attempt to destroy government and its role in our scoiety.
Every
day of these endless debates about this bill, whether "deem and pass"
or "the reconciliation process" is a good idea, whether we could have
done better, whether perfect should be the enemy of the good, whether
Speaker Pelosi can pull it out, whether the President should go abroad
during this time, whether the Senate can do anything at all, these words
from that most famous speech, are the ones that resonate every single
day:
If a free society cannot help the many who are
poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.
Amen.