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George Lakoff

George Lakoff

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Obama Returns to His Moral Vision: Democrats Read Carefully!

Posted: 04/17/11 10:45 PM ET

Last week, on April 13, 2011, President Obama gave all Democrats and all progressives a remarkable gift. Most of them barely noticed. They looked at the president's speech as if it were only about budgetary details. But the speech went well beyond the budget. It went to the heart of progressive thought and the nature of American democracy, and it gave all progressives a model of how to think and talk about every issue.

It was a landmark speech. It should be watched and read carefully and repeatedly by every progressive who cares about our country -- whether Democratic office-holder, staffer, writer, or campaign worker -- and every progressive blogger, activist and concerned citizen. The speech is a work of art.

The policy topic happened to be the budget, but he called it "The Country We Believe In" for a reason. The real topic was how the progressive moral system defines the democratic ideals America was founded on, and how those ideals apply to specific issues. Obama's moral vision, which he applied to the budget, is more general: it applies to every issue. And it can be applied everywhere by everyone who shares that moral vision of American democracy.

Discussion in the media has centered on economics -- on the president's budget policy compared with the Republican budget put forth by Paul Ryan. But, as Robert Reich immediately pointed out, "Ten or twelve-year budgets are baloney. It's hard enough to forecast budgets a year or two into the future." The real economic issues are economic recovery and the distribution of wealth. As I have observed, the Republican focus on the deficit is really a strategy for weakening government and turning the country conservative in every respect. The real issue is existential: what is America at heart and what is America to be.

In 2008, candidate Obama laid out these moral principles as well as anyone ever has, and roused the nation in support. As president, as he focused on pragmatics and policy, he let moral leadership lapse, leaving the field of morality to radical conservatives, who exploited their opposite moral views effectively enough to take over the House and many state offices. For example, they effectively attacked the president's health care plan on two ideas taken from the right-wing version of morality: freedom ("government takeover") and life ("death panels"). The attacks were successful even though Americans preferred the president's health care policies (no preconditions, universal affordable coverage). The lesson: morality at the general level beats out policy at the particular level. The reason: voters identify themselves as moral beings not policy wonks.

All politics is moral. Political leaders put forth proposals on the assumption that their proposals are the right things to do, not the wrong things to do. But progressives and radical conservatives have very different ideas of right and wrong.

With his April 13, 2011 speech, the president is back with the basic, straightforward idea of right and wrong that he correctly attributes to the founding of the country -- as UCLA historian Lynn Hunt has observed in her important book Inventing Human Rights.

The basic idea is this: Democracy is based on empathy, that is, on citizens caring about each other and acting on that care, taking responsibility not just for themselves but for their families, communities, and their nation. The role of government is to carry out this principle in two ways: protection and empowerment.

Obama quotes Lincoln: "to do together what we cannot do as well for ourselves." That is what he calls patriotism. He spotlights "the American belief... that each one of us deserves some basic measure of security... that no matter how responsibly we live our lives, hard time or bad luck, crippling illness or a layoff, may strike any one of us." He cites the religious version of this moral vision: "There but for the grace of God go I." The greatness of America comes from carrying out such moral commitments as Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid.

Analogous moral arguments can, and should, be given constantly for all progressive policies at all levels of government on all issues: the environment, education, health, family planning, organizing rights, voting rights, immigration, and so on. It is only by repetition of the across-the-board moral principles that the voting public gets to hear how all these idea fit together as realizations of the same basic democratic principles.

Systems Thinking

President Obama, in the same speech, laid the groundwork for another crucial national discussion: systems thinking, which has shown up in public discourse mainly in the form of "systemic risk" of the sort that led to the global economic meltdown. The president brought up systems thinking implicitly, at the center of his budget proposal. He observed repeatedly that budget deficits and "spending" do not occur in isolation. The choice of what to cut and what to keep is a matter of factors external to the budget per se.

Long-term prosperity, economic recovery, and job creation, he argued, depend up maintaining "investments" -- investments in infrastructure (roads, bridges, long-distance rail), education, scientific research, renewable energy, and so on. The maintenance of American values, he argued, is outside of the budget in itself, but is at the heart of the argument about what to cut. The fact is that the rich have gotten rich because of the government -- direct corporate subsidies, access to publicly-owned resources, access to government research, favorable trade agreements, roads and other means of transportation, education that provides educated workers, tax loopholes, and innumerable government resources taken advantage of by the rich, but paid for by all of us. What is called a "tax break" for the rich is actually a redistribution of wealth from the poor and middle class whose incomes have gone down to those who have considerably more money than they need, money they have made because of tax investments by the rest of America.

The president provided a beautiful example of systems thinking. Under the Republican budget plan, the president would get a $200,000 a year tax break, which would be paid for by cutting programs for seniors, with the result that 33 seniors would be paying $6,000 more a year for health care to pay for his tax break. To see this, you have to look outside of the federal budget to the economic system at large, in which you can see what budget cuts will be balanced by increased in costs to others. A cut here in the budget is balanced by an increase outside the federal budget for real human beings.

What is a "system?"

Systems have the following properties:

  • Homeostasis: Stable systems are self-correcting or are correctable; they have indicators that have to stay within a certain range for the system to be stable. In an economy, there are indicators like unemployment, GDP, and so on. In global ecology, the temperature of the earth is a major indicator.
  • Feedback: Feedback can be controllable or uncontrollable. In our economy, the Federal Reserve uses indicators as feedback in an attempt to control certain aspects of the economy, using interest rates and the money supply. In the global environment, the global icecaps are an uncontrollable feedback mechanism. They reflect sunlight and heat, which has a cooling effect. As the earth gets warmer, they melt and get smaller, which lowers their ability to reflect and to cool, which makes the earth get warmer, which melts them more, which heats the earth more, and on and on.
  • Non-local and network effects: Global warming in the Pacific increases ocean evaporation. Winds blow the additional water vapor toward the northeast, pushing cold arctic air down over the East coast of the US, and the excess water vapor falls as a huge snowstorm. Warming in the Pacific can produce huge snowstorms on the East Coast of the US via such non-local effects.
  • Nonlinear effects: A small cause can produce a large effect. A few percentage points lowered in the tax rates of the wealthiest percent or two of Americans can produce a trillion dollars of debt over the whole country over a decade.


When a system has causal effects, as in the above cases, we speak of "systemic causation." "Systemic risks" are the risks created when there is systemic causation. Systemic causation contrasts with direct causation, as when, say, someone lifts something, or throws something, or shoots someone.

Linguists have discovered that every language studied has direct causation in its grammar, but no language has systemic causation in its grammar. Systemic causation is a harder concept and has to be learned either through socialization or education.

Progressives tend to think more readily in terms of systems than conservatives. We see this in the answers to a question like, "What causes crime?" Progressives tend to give answers like economic hardship, or lack of education, or crime-ridden neighborhoods. Conservatives tend more to give an answer like "bad people -- lock 'em up, punish 'em." This is a consequence of a lifetime of thinking in terms of social connection (for progressives) and individual responsibility (for conservatives). Thus conservatives did not see the president's plan, which relied on systemic causation, as a plan at all for directly addressing the deficit.

Differences in systemic thinking between progressives and conservatives can be seen in issues like global warming and financial reform. Conservatives have not recognized human causes of global warming, partly because they are systemic, not direct. When a huge snowstorm occurred in Washington DC recently, many conservatives saw it as disproving the existence of global warming -- "How could warming cause snow?" Similarly, conservatives, thinking in terms of individual responsibility and direct causation, blamed homeowners for foreclosures on their homes, while progressives looked to systemic explanations, seeking reform in the financial system.

A Golden Opportunity

It is rare that a presidential speech provides such opportunities for Democrats, whether in office or not. The president has made overt the moral system that lies behind every progressive position on every issue. He has done it with near perfection. He went on offense, not defense. He didn't use conservative language tied to conservative ideas. He correctly tied his moral vision to the American moral vision and the very idea of American democracy -- and patriotism. He used systems thinking throughout. He tied every part of his budget proposal to the American moral vision. And he showed clearly how the Republican budget rejected those American moral ideals in every case. It was not merely high political art. It is a model to be studied and followed.

There is one big problem with the speech that he apparently felt he could not avoid: He stayed within Republican issue-framing, keeping to the Republican's definition of the issue as the deficit and the budget -- even while the main features of the talk were his moral vision and systems thinking. The media and the politicos have mostly not been able to get beyond issue-thinking, that the speech was about the deficit and the budget, missing the larger themes. And the president, since the speech, hasn't pressed the political public on those major themes. He needs help. He needs progressives to start talking publicly about that moral vision and about the importance of systems in our lives and in our politics.

Finally, Democrats need to understand why expressing their moral views is so vital. The crucial voters in recent elections have been misleadingly called "independents," "moderates," and "the center." In reality, they are what I will call the "duals" -- people who are conservative on some issues and progressive on others, in all kinds of combinations. They have both moral systems in the neural networks of their brains, but applied to different issues. When one moral network is activated, the other is inhibited -- shut down. The more one moral network is active, the stronger it gets and the weaker the other gets. In 2008, the Obama campaign activated and strengthened the network for the progressive moral system -- and won over the duals. In 2010, the Democrats stopped talking morality and kept on talking policy, ceding morality to the conservatives, especially the Tea Party radical conservatives. In doing this, they ceded the election. Policy without an understandable moral basis loses.

Democrats need to both activate their base and activate the progressive moral vision dormant in the duals among the voters. They can only do this with an overt appeal to the progressive moral vision inherent in our democracy. It's time for the Democrats to shout their patriotism out loud.

Details and Vision

Many progressives are skeptical about the president's ability -- or even his desire -- to live up to his moral vision. For example, the Progressive Caucus in the House has produced its own People's Budget, put forth as an alternative to both the president's and the Republicans'. But the People's Budget is an instance of the same moral vision articulated by the president. In short, progressives should look at this speech separating out the necessary budget details from the moral vision they all need to be expressing on every issue.

In addition, all progressives need to start thinking and talking in terms of systems. The nature of systems is central to understanding what is going wrong in ecosystems, financial systems, social systems, educational systems and even in particular systemic enterprises like deep-water drilling, frakking, nuclear energy, food production, and so on.

I would like finally to thank President Obama for bringing these issues to the fore.

 
 
 
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05:02 AM on 06/03/2011
By activating one "side" more or weakening the other; one's opinion may shift. I can agree that through metaphoric structure one may have a worldview that is consistent. However, politics is not about morality or morality without. It is about appealing to all of the needs of human beings from empathy to outright selfishness. Fear is the politics of now for all sides; humor is the only serious thing now as we allow the terms of our politicians dictate policy. Strategies to make a stalemate do not make our country better; they only delay while each party tries to consilidate power. I have faith in our slow-moving system. Can we do it? I agree that one must seize the oportunity to espouse empathy and progressive morality. It's a battle that is moot until systemic changes are made and these games that are played, simply fade away. Or at the very least, the games are realized as a dance around certain truths that cannot be diluted with persuasive narration. Competition is great when you are making something and not taking away. Are we all in this together? No. We are not. Those who are willing to sacrifice to make this country better, will still do it. Those who take advantage of the empathy and sacrifice of others are not scared of hell anymore. So is there a secular moral imperative that can appeal to the selfish more than simply helping themselves or getting re-elected?
06:39 PM on 05/05/2011
A Predsidents' "moral" ground is more important to examine, by far than his very important proposals on issues. Obama did well in outlining his moral basis. Not simply platitudes that any of us could claim as our beliefs but thoughtful statements of what guides him.

Debate on these "broader issues"in a civil, sincere, contrasting discussion is not only what candidates should offer. It is what We The People shouild demand. Not only of the candidates but demand it of ourselves too.
09:53 PM on 04/24/2011
His opponents will get him re-elected. They are the sorriest bunch in my 60-year lifetime.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Attilatheblond
No intimidation zone
09:35 PM on 04/24/2011
He's a good campaigner who counts on the left having a short memory or settling for the lesser of a whole batch of weevils.
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akutan
Black Conservative
07:01 PM on 04/24/2011
I like Obama's math. $250,000 equals millionare. My buddy closed his small business because the tax and health care inplications would have drove him under. But he is blindly loyal, he blamed it on Bush.
09:00 PM on 04/24/2011
With single payer, your buddy could have kept his business open, and would not have had to pay for any healthcare for his employees.
06:55 PM on 04/24/2011
"Morally vision"??? now thats laughable!
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akutan
Black Conservative
06:39 PM on 04/24/2011
Obama is a good rhino
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:34 PM on 04/24/2011
Sorry, what a sucker you are. Obama had the power to end the tax cuts, the DLC and Obama could have passed a better budget bill before the democrats lost the house, Obama could have closed Guantanamo, and stopped rendition to countries that torture, indefinite detention, surveillant state, Geneva convention breaking sensory deprivation torture, the two wars, not starting another war, and you now that he no longer has the power, you fall for his promises that THIS TIME he will do what he promised LAST TIME. Grow up, wake up.

Vote for the Kucinich type progressive Caucus folks for all offices but pres. Stop being charmed by the professionally sold GOP and DLC. Learn what the DLC stand for if you don't know already: they are corporatist.
08:53 PM on 04/24/2011
Thank you! Very well said!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
didereaux
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is my Lord & Saviour!
04:30 PM on 04/24/2011
"With his April 13, 2011 speech, the president is back with the basic, straightforward idea of right and wrong that he correctly attributes to the founding of the country ..."

And those words are just words in a speech. It's the actions of the speaker after the words that are real. Obama has said these things many times in speeches, and in the nearly three years he has had the power to act upon them he has not done so. The facts are that his actions so far cannot be distinguished from the words of most Republicans, for he has backed or backed down on every time the Republicans have wanted something.

No, to give praise, and try and instill false hope at this point in time with regards to our president is nothing more than dangerous (to Democrats and non-Loonies) for if too many are lured in with lies he will continue his defacto Repug regime.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:35 PM on 04/24/2011
FF. you got it. Now that Obama is campaigning, he's for everything we want.....
08:55 PM on 04/24/2011
F&F! I'm amazed at the number of people who still excuse everything he does, and blame it on Rep obstructionism - which surely exists, I admit.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
03:13 PM on 04/24/2011
Ok, so he lied about more than he has in a long time. That is supposed to change our brain dude? What up wid dat ... ???
01:54 PM on 04/24/2011
Blah, blah, blah .... Yes, talking is important; it got Obama elected once.

But here's what Obama did:

1. Shifting private debt to the public sector

2. Watching private sector profits reach un-precedented levels while investment goes abroad, hiring moves abroad, and manufacturing continues to disappear and un-employment continues

3. Raising the defense budget 6% to sand bag "cuts"
4. Allowing the financial industry to 'borrow' from the ‘public sector’ (i.e. me and you) at 1% and buy bonds that pay 3% interest or loan to me and you at 4%, 12%, 18%

5. Giving private sector insurers a windfall: mandated customers, with a taxpayer-paid overhead rate of 20% for ‘mandated customers’ (The American people wanted a government administered plan like Medicare - for everyone. (72% - CBS/New York Times poll June 2009))

6. Expanding the war in Afghanistan.

7. Keeping the six too-big-to-fail banks

8. Supporting ‘Negotiations’ – e.g. McConnell/Obama giving every billionaire $10,000 for every $10 provided to an un- or under-employed person or family (with a 15% tax rate for hedge funds; 25-33% for lower & middle class workers; no taxes and a bailout for GE, taxing unemployment benefits and not addressing an 18% un- and under-employment rate; Boehner 'historic compromise' to extend Bush tax cuts, again)

What we've seen Obama do far outweighs what he says. Lakoff, you seem like a nice guy, but this blathering wont cut it. Out with Obama in 2012.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
didereaux
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is my Lord & Saviour!
04:31 PM on 04/24/2011
F&F'd
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:37 PM on 04/24/2011
Agreed, but for one point: Vote for the Kucinich Progressive Caucus folks for all BUT pres. Let Obama compromise and find center with real citizens reps.
08:57 PM on 04/24/2011
Hmmmm...not sure I understand.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kevinbr38
Forward
12:34 PM on 04/24/2011
Mr. Lankoff has provided us with an extremely well-written article that is deserving of thought and debate. Obama's moral values don't seem to me to be the issue, rather his ability to articulate them to the electorate. He sometimes seems to operate as if he has blinders on. It could also be called having one's nose to the grindstone. I admit to being confused by the labels left-wing and progressive. They seem to be tossed around as if they are mutually exclusive, thereby diluting them both. Mr. Lankoff makes clear to me what a true progressive is...namely one who has his/her eye on the finish line, The Big Picture, progress(ive) indeed like the race horse wearing blinders. So by that definition, President Obama falls clearly in that category. He is nothing if not consistent. There is nothing he said on the campaign trail that is in conflict with how he has been conducting his job, approve of it or not. All opinions are valid. I would quote The Staple Singers, "Let the gentleman do his thang".
11:34 AM on 04/24/2011
Fool me once.......
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TheGreatRenewal
Naming the next paradigm
11:27 AM on 04/24/2011
Bravo George ... Because of your create capacity, patience and clarity to help all of us learn to 'reframe' the conversation I took time to ask myself ... What is this system that we need to come under and support? The answer ... The Great Renewal.

I chose this term because of you, George.

1) I used 'great' because it implies something larger than ourselves that we can all gather around and do our best to actualize.

2) I chose 'Renewal' because we have moved well past the time of sustainability.

3) I chose 'Renewal' because anyone with any cause can place that cause into this concept by developing the 6 components of this 'system': language, behaviors, institutions, organizations, policies and laws.

The progressive sentiment is so clearly expressed as an engraving on the capitol building in Salem, Oregon (which was never known as a progressive State but is now sort of):

'A free State is formed and is maintained by the voluntary union of the whole people joined together under the same body of laws for the common welfare and sharing of benefits justly apportioned.'
11:16 AM on 04/24/2011
I would be much more buoyed by this sudden reappearance of his existential, "big picture" perspectives of America and our national moral imperatives, if they had occurred at some point in time other than the run up to his re-election campaign.
Specious.
02:04 PM on 04/24/2011
My thoughts exactly. And more specifically, his speech occurred shortly before the fundraising trip to California, where Obama no doubt knew he would be criticized for his behavior over the past two years.