Posted by David Roberts at 12:19 PM on 19 May 2006
It's not strictly environmental, but I thought readers would be interested to see this preview of Barack Obama's new book, The Audacity of Hope (available Oct. 2006). This should give you an idea of the theme:
No, what's troubling is the gap between the magnitude of
our challenges and the smallness of our politics -- the ease with
which we are distracted by the petty and trivial, our chronic
avoidance of tough decisions, our seeming inability to build a
working consensus to tackle any big problem.
...
Of course, there is another story to be told by the millions of
Americans who are going about their business every day. They are
on the job or looking for work, raising families, helping their kids
with their homework, and struggling with high gas bills, insufficient
health insurance, and a pension that some bankruptcy court
somewhere has rendered unenforceable. They are alternately
hopeful and frightened about the future. Their lives are full of
contradictions and ambiguities. And because politics seems to
speak so little to what they are going through -- because they
understand that politics today is a business and not a mission, and
that power consistently trumps principle, and what passes for
debate is little more than spectacle -- they turn inward, away from
the noise and rage and endless chatter. They may still vote, out of
habit, anger, or some atavistic sense of civic obligation. But they
don't have much confidence that government can do them a lot
of good. They hope, at best, that it does them no harm.
A government that truly represents these Americans -- that
truly serves these Americans -- will require a different kind of politics
than what we have now. That politics will need to reflect our
lives as they are actually lived. It won't be prepackaged, ready to
pull off the shelf. It will have to be constructed from the best of
our traditions and will have to account for the darker aspects of
our past. We will need to understand just how we got to this
place, this land of warring factions and tribal hatreds. And we'll
need to remind ourselves, despite all our differences, just how
much we share: common hopes, common dreams, a bond that
will not break.
Whether idealism like this appeals to me varies from day to day. I hope he's right. I hope another kind of politics is possible. Much depends on it.
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