I am, I suppose, in irrepressible optimist. Not from experience, heaven knows, but simply
by temperament. At any rate, I discern a
few signs that the progressive side of the American seesaw may be starting to weigh
in just a bit. Here in North Carolina,
the sheer horrendousness of the actions of Governor Pat McCrory and his legion
of orcs in the State Legislature has provoked a growing response from the
previously complacent left [if I may use that term, here in the New South,
comparatively.] A series of "Moral
Monday" demonstrations have been held in Raleigh at the State Capital, and
although I have not taken part [I hate joining public demonstrations], I give
money repeatedly. I figure someone has
to provide funds, and that is something I can do. Elsewhere, court cases are being filed to
reverse the assaults on voting rights and on reproductive rights, and already
one or two federal judges have imposed stays on particularly hideous state
laws. Since the Supreme Court, in
striking down the most important article of the Voting Rights Act, left in
place a secondary route by which the Justice Department may challenge the most
egregious limitations of the right to vote, Attorney General Holder has started
efforts to invoke what remains of the Act.
Eventually, I would imagine, one or another of these cases will make its
way back before the High Court, which will have to commit even more naked
assaults on reason and justice if it is to block the efforts of the Obama
Justice Department.
These are slender pickings indeed, but they are enough to
give this congenital optimist reason to hope.
4 comments:
Prof, this is just out of curiosity so don't feel like you have to answer: why do you hate participating in demonstrations? Is it just personal taste, or do you think there's also something wrong with them?
No, no, no. They are essential, important, effective! I just find being in a crowd with people I do not know very hard to take. I think if I went to a demonstration with a few friends, I would enjoy it. But there are many jobs that need to be done for social change, and raising money [or giving it, now that I have it to give] is one of them -- not the most important, just one of them.
I think at this point the term "just department" under Obama, is even more Orwellian than it was under Bush.
*justice
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