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Dispatches From the Changing American Dream: Expanding the National Conversation

Posted: 08/09/11 07:14 PM ET

The theme of this year's National Association of Black Journalists Convention (which I spoke at last week) was "The Power of Now: Claiming Your Destiny" -- a theme that was embraced by both the event's speakers and the attendees. Even so, the mood at the gathering was somber.

This is hardly surprising: unlike much of the mainstream media, many of those in attendance have devoted themselves to chronicling the ongoing devastation that the financial crisis continues to wreak across the country. This was a group in touch with the worst aspects of our troubled economy.

Though the national unemployment rate is 9.1 percent, among African Americans it's over 16 percent. For African-American teens the number is a staggering 41 percent. And while median household wealth for whites declined 16 percent from 2005 to 2009, for African Americans it dropped by 53 percent.

But what I sensed at the convention wasn't anger (though that would certainly be justified), but a pervasive feeling that things would not be getting better any time soon. There was still a lot of support for President Obama in the room, but not a lot of faith that, for the foreseeable future, Washington is going to be capable of doing anything meaningful to make life better for the majority of Americans.

Of course, this lack of faith is not confined to black journalists. The gulf between the real concerns of the public and the circus that's been going on in Washington has seldom been so great. In a new USA Today/Gallup poll, only 24 percent of Americans said that most members of Congress should be re-elected; and only 47 percent believe Obama deserves another term.

In the meantime, the deficit-focused debate in Washington has been likened by James Fallows to one "about the moon program in which no one had heard of gravity."

Our economy has slowed down to 1.3 percent growth (far below the sustained 2.5 percent level we need to even have a chance at lowering the unemployment rate), nine states are about to cut unemployment benefits, and, of course, our debt rating has just been downgraded.

So it's no wonder people have lost faith that our broken political system will produce solutions to improve their lives. And as we approach the 2012 election (after, of course, several more manufactured crises about the deficit), the debate is likely to get even further removed from the reality of what's going on in the country. Washington has tuned out the country, and the sentiment is being reciprocated.

The question becomes: what now?

Well, one place to start is with ourselves. Our politicians have chosen to narrow their imaginations, but they can't narrow ours. Even if we can't control how Washington responds to our problems, we still have control over how we respond to them.

The Black Journalists Convention theme is instructive -- it isn't about waiting for our destiny to be given to us, it's about claiming it. And claiming it now.

A couple of weeks ago I was at a dinner in Washington, right as the debt-ceiling debate was reaching its crescendo (or, more accurately, its nadir). The guests included a wide range of Washington insiders, and as the dinner was coming to an end, there had been little in our discussion to be hopeful about.

Glancing across the table at Tim Shriver, head of the Special Olympics, I suggested that before we all trudged out into the night, Tim might be able to offer something to lift our spirits. To do so, Shriver turned to his work with the Special Olympics -- and people's ability to overcome massive challenges.

"I think," he said, "that a lot of political leaders have succumbed to the idea that we're no longer a country of ideals, but a country of interests; that we're not a country of sacrifice, but a country of selfish people. I don't think they are trying to reach out to the people to say, 'you've got a role to play, and we need your help.' In the Special Olympics movement, I ask big things of people every single day. And in asking big things of others, I think we unlock a side of the human experience that is the seat of excitement and enthusiasm... indeed, of the human spirit."

To respond to this need to tap into the human spirit, HuffPost will be launching a new series highlighting outside-the-Beltway leadership of the sort Shriver exemplifies, and which has been in such short supply in recent times in Washington.

Dubbed "The Inspirationals," the series will spotlight -- on video and in written Q&As -- effective, creative and credible leaders across the country who have shown an ability to inspire and bring people together to accomplish things that better their lives and the lives of others. Fittingly, our inaugural Inspirational is Tim Shriver himself, interviewed by Howard Fineman.

In addition, we are expanding our Greatest Person of the Day feature. For the past 10 months, we have been profiling people all across America who are making a difference. They may not be able to fix the political system, but they can have a positive impact on their communities in ways large and small. And they are doing so in imaginative, ingenious, and very American ways.

Starting next month, our Greatest Persons will be culled from local heroes found and profiled by Patch's 856 hyperlocal editors -- allowing us to find and feature even more under-the-radar "Greatest Persons." Of course, you can still nominate the people in your community who have stepped up, refused to give in, and decided to make their small corner of the country a little bit better by emailing greatestperson@huffingtonpost.com.

Lastly, as part of HuffPost's efforts to expand the national conversation beyond the cramped, unimaginative, and unproductive one happening in Washington, we are launching "Dispatches from the Changing American Dream," a project in collaboration with Patch devoted to chronicling both the negative effects of the financial crisis and the creative and innovative ways people all across the country are responding to it. Again, Patch's 856 editors will help give our coverage a hyper-local perspective.

So in addition to stories about college graduates moving back in with their parents because they can't find a job, and stories about foreclosures and our crumbling infrastructure, we will focus on efforts to revitalize -- and even re-imagine -- our communities.

One such effort is being sponsored by the Museum of Modern Art. The 14-month program is called "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream," and is an effort to rethink America's suburbs in the wake of the foreclosure crisis -- and spur dialogue and debate around the subject. The project is "premised on reframing the current crisis as an opportunity," writes curator Barry Bergdoll, "an approach that is in keeping with the fundamental American ethos where challenging circumstances engender innovation and out-of-the-box thinking."

Innovation and out-of-the-box thinking are exactly what we need right now. Among the many tragedies unfolding across the country because of the tectonic shifts going on in our economy is the horrible waste of human resources. We don't just have a surplus of under-utilized workers, we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent.

So as Washington disconnects, the rest of us need -- more than ever -- to connect. In times of crisis and disruptive change, empathy is the most valuable quality we can nurture if we're going to reclaim our destinies -- and our nation's.

 
 
 

Follow Arianna Huffington on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ariannahuff

 
 
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CB5
We do not want to repeat 2010 in 2014! VOTE:)
01:58 PM on 08/31/2011
I just found this. What great news. Thank you, Ms. HuffPost for your creative and Positive thinking about our country. I will follow and fan YOU.
10:47 PM on 08/14/2011
Great
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Hendricks
see wikipedia
07:38 PM on 08/14/2011
Things will get better the day the media reports on economic solutions that are outside the government stale mate.

Stop trying to work through the congress or government , that's not helping either. The government is at a stalemate and its foolish to take a wish list to them. It won't happen. People need help now.
Political bickering doesn't buy groceries.

You and I, and other leaders need to come up with innovative solutions, and the media needs to go beyond doom and gloom and report on solutions that work.

National Hiring Day would do all that, helps all, costs nothing, etc. Why not do what just might really work? http://wp.­me/p5S9X-n­v OR try something else. But do something that's not the same as what's failed before.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MPatrick Dahlke
environmental essayist
06:15 PM on 08/14/2011
Dear Arianna

It is absolutely amazing to me that after you took the time to write a very positive and insightful piece about the notion that perhaps WE AS AMERICANS can affect a positive change FOR OURSELVES, the vast majority of the responses to your suggestion have been written by people who seem to be aflicted with "Poor Me Syndrome".

"Nothing good can possibly happen because of this. Everything that is bad will remain bad because of that"

With this type of an attitude, it is virtually no wonder that our American leaders are as dysfunctional as those that elect them. As a leader myself, I choose within the constraints of my own frustrations and anger over the fact that so much needs to be done in our America to do whatever I possibly can to make something happen and do so positively.

My choice seems to be working just fine.

Do I dare smile?
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CapitalismIsCancer
Celebrating the End of Conservatism
06:00 PM on 08/14/2011
If we're going to fight this fascist onslaught, we're going to need money, weapons and leadership.

The time for talk is over.
05:26 PM on 08/14/2011
It is time for Americans to become Americans again. We want cheap goods, we want it all and we want it cheap. That is why we see jobs going abroad: It's to make those cheap goods we all want. We see super WalMarts and the like springing up every where and the local merchants go broke. We want so much for so little, we don't care if it costs dozens or hundreds of jobs in the local communities as long as we can buy cheap Chinese and third world made products by people that don't get enough wages to survive. If we want that cheap stuff, this is what we get. If you want a vibrant economy and thriving middle class then you better start buying ONLY goods made in the US by US citizens.
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laymancanuck
IGNORANCE has used up its quota of TOLERANCE
04:50 PM on 08/14/2011
The America Dream is dead for half the citizens. Society should evolve from senseless consumption to compassion. Success should be defined not how much you have but by how you can help others. It's better to give then receive.Receivers would rather be the givers. It's all about helping not hoarding.
02:54 PM on 08/14/2011
And finally:

o trust that Obama isn't going to betray gays, minorities, and immigrants, but appreciate that it's political suicide for him to make those issues the focus of government right now. he can't give you Sotomayor and Kagen if he can't earn electoral votes in Ohio, Florida, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado, and New Mexico.

o consider that Obama identifies with Lincoln above all, that he is the Red State - Blue State speech above all, and that he might actually be right that the #1 priority in government is figuring out how to overcome divisive politics to do big things. Blue and red, we are in a fox hole, and the US is going to decay and there will be widespread suffering and social unrest unlike anything we have seen since the Civil War if we cannot come together.
02:54 PM on 08/14/2011
Liberals, consider this sober thoughts from the progressive middle:

o yes, taxes are high when you add federal + social security + medicare + state. Half my check. And turbotax makes it clear that I'm missing out on breaks that homeowners, parents, and small businesses get. And when I finish, turbotax shows me a graph that shows that I'm paying more % than just about everyone else at my income level. So I'm for reform.

o yes we have to cut spending. identify priorities, like universal health care, and figure out how to finance it so that it doesn't bankrupt the country.

o yes we have to cut spending. every good idea doesn't have to get funds from taxpayers or words of support from politicians. figure out how to advance your agenda without involving government and politics. the internet has enabled you to go directly to the people to communicate, to raise money, to organize, to spend the money you're raised, and to promote your results. seize the day. don't sit around waiting for your turn at the pork table.
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Robert SF
02:52 PM on 08/14/2011
We need to be honest. The only way a society can maintain a middle class is if the economic system is structured in such a way that its fruits are distributed more evenly. Of course there will always be the wealthy, but there's a world of difference between the wealthiest 10% getting 35% of the pie and getting 90% of the pie. And the reason the wealthiest 10% get 90% of the pie is that they are in charge of the rules, and they've written the rules to make it so.

The only way for that to change, is for the wealthy to rewrite the rules. But is it even reasonable to expect the wealthy to do that, thus cutting their share of the pie? They're not saints, you know. And I know there are wealthy people of good intentions, but it always comes down to that deal-breaker: for the middle class to get more, they have to give some up. Sigh, if only there were a way of doing the first and not the second, but there isn't.

That's why all this talk about volunteering and unlocking the human spirit is beside the point. The rules won't change until the wealthy are forced by circumstances to change them.
02:01 PM on 08/14/2011
Maybe need to start questioning why this government has not had an approved budget for over 2 years. How can the lead and be fiscally responsible with no budget? That is what makes the debt ceiling raise wit budget cuts only approved to cover the increase a farce
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SoylentGreenIsPeople
You know how to use Google too !
01:57 PM on 08/14/2011
Why should the white working class go Democratic? The party abandoned them for free trade and cultural issues long ago when the "new left" took over the party. The Republicans may be more enthusiastic about screwing them economically. However, the way they see it is that the Democrats want to take their (hardly plentiful) money and give it to the poor, while the Republicans want to take their money and give it to the rich. Either way, they end up supporting (in their mind) less deserving people. They've been tilting Republican in the last few elections for the same reason most African-Americans vote Democratic: They are pretty sure that a sizable part of the opposing party hates them. The Democratic party will probably get creamed again and again until they return to a being a party based on the bread and butter concerns of the working class.
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Robert SF
02:27 PM on 08/14/2011
Precisely! I've been saying that for a while too. The political left abandoned the working man (and woman, and of all colors) when it embraced feminism, civil rights, environmentalism, animal rights, gay rights, starving children in Africa, and a million other narrow, single-issue causes, leaving little energy left to fight for the working class.
03:54 PM on 08/14/2011
And the dentists. When they embraced the dentists, I was like, are you kidding me? I didn't sign up for a dentite agenda. The dentite agenda is dangerous. They have their own schools, their own publications, their own conferences. What is it that they are conspiring to do at these events? Who knows. You have to be a member of their society to find out.
01:10 PM on 08/14/2011
Expanding the national conversation takes the participation of the mainstream media!
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MDEvans
Conversation Peace: Boycott Shell, Halt Oil War.
06:27 PM on 08/14/2011
...or at least circumventing the effect (effectiveness) of the EMBEDDED MEDIA. We can look, without incorporating so much of the violence and destruction, to both the Egypt Model and the communication of the UK Rioters. Right now the organizing principles (as mantra'd by the EMBEDDED MEDIA) of the US Collective is The Pursuit Of Paranoiac and Fabricated Threats...with Liberty And Justice For All...long forgotten. If enough courageous people can stand strong in the face of the Embedded Media and consistently carry on a narrative espousing the original principles of The Pursuit Of Happiness...and Liberty and Justice for All...("give me your huddled masses...")...and link/associate these actions with the exemplars to be publicized....THEN A MARVEOULOUS SHIFT IN THE ORGANIZING PRINCIPLES AND ENSUING ACTIONS OF THE NATION AND THE INDIVIDUALS MAKING UP THE NATION CAN TAKE PLACE.

(peace, love, joy)
01:04 PM on 08/14/2011
End H-1b work visas, end free trade, end NAFTA, and make E-verify mandatory with fines and jail for EMPLOYERS of illegals.

You're welcome! I just gave you a plan to create millions of good paying jobs in America. In fact, this is the only plan that will work.
12:42 PM on 08/14/2011
EXCELLENT IDEA!!! You are right on target here especially with the notion that American know-how that once was the world's ideal, can be that ideal once again. I believe that Americans can dig deep and produce wonders; we have seen the generosity of spirit over and over. Americans have fantastic ideas and if we can row in a common-good direction, I do feel that we can collectively rise above the economic ashes our clueless politicians have handed us. We need to start at the grass roots level for innovation that can lead to at least one new job with more to come. Lets see how we can turn vacant malls into instructive classrooms with volunteers as mentor-teachers; organize kids to cleanup parks and create safe playgrounds and use technology to teach as well as communicate. We need to help the next generations along as much as possible, not write them off as a "lost generation".
01:25 PM on 08/14/2011
If you don't end free trade you will never create net new jobs.
03:08 PM on 08/14/2011
Agree with your statement at a national level. This is about impact at the local level - a small bakery, a custom shoe shop, a solar design and implementation business, a farm co-op that supplies local restaurants, for example. Small businesses, start-ups, one new job at a time. The impact would be small at first, but if a lot of communities could do at least something, it would help over time. To do nothing is to assure that nothing will happen.
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Robert SF
02:35 PM on 08/14/2011
Innovation is just a silly buzzword. If this were the 90s, we'd be saying "think outside the box." I challenge anyone to imagine an innovation -- not create it, just imagine it! -- and then explain how it would lift our economy.

The truth is that our economy, while not soaring, is not evenly bad. The wealthy have it really good. Corporate profits have broken records set in the 1920s, and executive compensation rose 23% just last year. Can you even imagine getting a 23% pay raise?

Our problem isn't that we're not cleaning parks and volunteering. The problem is that too much of our national wealth is being funnelled to the top. That's all that needs to change.
03:25 PM on 08/14/2011
Challenge accepted! And yes, concentrated wealth is a huge problem and needs to be fixed via re-distribution. But that will take both years and enormous changes to our current federal government to reach that goal.

I live in a small picture-postcard town in New England. Several "larger" businesses here have gone belly-up in the past few years and the buildings they occupied are up for lease. There have been about 6 brand new much smaller businesses here that have taken hold and are enjoying success. My idea is to convert the bigger buildings into smaller "shops" that offer something unique and have a better chance to succeed in this economy. Folks that have ideas would need to "audition" to compete for the space with the best ideas winning. They would get to rent free until they turned a profit and then pay based on a percentage of profit. Cheaper for them to get into business and focus on their product or service vs. worrying about paying the rent. This may not be truly innovative but the idea is to have small teams of people with skills to: invest, advise, and run a business. As stakeholder teams, we all win or we all fail. With success comes growth and with growth comes an improved economy, first locally. It is really easy to criticize; much more difficult to come up with a plan of action and then work to make it happen.
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weathergirl
loved politics as a little girl!
05:39 PM on 08/14/2011
Amen! Already a fan but had to mark as favorite once again! I would love a 23 percent pay raise...heck, I would like back the 15 percent pay cut that I have been living with for the last three years!