By Rosemary Candelario
07/05/05
When I checked my email on Friday, July 1, there were over 50 messages in my inbox about Sandra Day O’Connor’s surprise resignation from the Supreme Court.
“O’Connor Resigns – Women’s Lives Are at Stake!”
Urgent Alert! Action Needed Now!”
“Abortion Rights Emergency!”
“The Battle for the Supreme Court Has Begun”
“Protect Our Rights!”
Reading them, I found myself moving from irritated to fuming. It’s not that I disagree with the basic premise. There is no question that we are at a very dire moment. Whoever fills the vacancy left by O’Connor’s retirement will have an influence on the Supreme Court for decades to come. Looking at Bush’s nominees to the lower courts, we can tell the type of jurist he will likely nominate for the Supreme Court. And the prospects are not good. The consequences will be far-reaching, and will have a direct impact on people’s daily lives.
As Adam Cohen wrote in New York Times in October, 2004:”Abortion might be a crime in most states. Gay people could be thrown in prison for having sex in their homes. States might be free to become mini-theocracies, endorsing Christianity and using tax money to help spread the gospel. The Constitution might no longer protect inmates from being brutalized by prison guards. Family and medical leave and environmental protections could disappear.”
So why am I fuming when I should be joining the fight? Because the Left is gearing up to fight the same battle they’ve fought, and lost, since Bush stole the election in 2000. From the Florida recount debate, to the launch of the Iraq War, to the 2004 election, to the filibuster battle, the Left has used the same losing strategy over and over again. In essence, the strategy is to get lots and lots of people – including those who have never participated before – to support the Democrats, and to hope/beg/lobby that they will “do the right thing”, which usually involves maintaining a system that was long-ago broken. The solution to the vote fraud in Florida? Get more people to vote. How to stop the war from starting? Call your Senator! Want to get rid of Bush? Hold your nose and vote for Kerry! Desperate to prevent Bush’s outrageous judicial nominees from getting confirmed? Celebrate as a victory a “compromise” that ensures the filibuster won’t be used.
Even progressives have embraced this strategy, citing of the importance of “speaking truth to power.”
Well, the truth is that power doesn’t give a shit. Power is only interested in staying in power. As Frederick Douglass said, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” So far, no one is demanding anything. Nothing of substance, anyway. Nothing that will really rock the foundations and change the dangerous course that Bush, et al, are leading us on to fascism and theocracy.
So I’m fuming because all this desperate activity – the emails, the national conference calls, the emergency meetings – strike me as nothing but “sound and fury, signifying nothing.” Nothing, because the result will be the same as with the other major battles against the Bush juggernaut: Lots of time and energy and money will be expended, and Bush will still get his way.
Some said of the 2004 election that the bright side was that unprecedented numbers of people, many active for the first time, were mobilized to work to elect Kerry. The thought is that these folks will now be involved in new battles. But is it a good thing for people to organize to go down a dead end? Isn’t that actually disorganizing?
Many people comfort themselves with the thought that “the pendulum will swing back.” But the fact is, there is no pendulum. The laws of physics do not dictate that the world will swing back and forth between the radical left and the radical right, eventually settling in the moderate center. When the times have “swung” one way or the other, it is because the people made the world change. Civil rights, women’s rights, gay rights, all were achieved with decades of hard work and personal sacrifice. Many people went to jail to make change. Some people died. In every case, it was only when the demands of the people became so great that those in power had no choice but to pass legislation or issue court decisions that echoed the will of the people.