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Van Jones

Van Jones

Posted: February 22, 2011 10:19 AM

In the past 24 months, those of us who longed for positive change have gone from hope to heartbreak. But hope is returning to America -- at last -- thanks largely to the courageous stand of the heroes and heroines of Wisconsin.

Reinvigorated by the idealism and fighting spirit on display right now in America's heartland, the movement for "hope and change" has a rare, second chance. It can renew itself and become again a national force with which to be reckoned.

Over the next hours and days, all who love this country need to do everything possible to spread the "spirit of Madison" to all 50 states. This does not mean we need to occupy 50 state capitol buildings; things elsewhere are not yet that dire. But this weekend, the best of America should rally on the steps of every statehouse in the union.

Moveon.org and others have issued just this kind of call to action; everyone should prioritize responding and turning out in large numbers.

On Saturday, the powers-that-be (in both parties) should see a rainbow force coming together: organized workers, business leaders, veterans, students and youth, faith leaders, civil rights fighters, women's rights champions, immigrant rights defenders, LGBTQ stalwarts, environmentalists, academics, artists, celebrities, community activists, elected officials and more -- all standing up for what's right.


Take Movement to a Higher Plane: Defending the American Dream

And we should announce that our renewed movement is more than just a mobilization to back unions or oppose illegitimate power grabs (as important as those agenda items are). Something more vital is at stake: our country needs a national movement to defend the American Dream itself. And the fight in Wisconsin creates the opportunity to build one.

After all, it is the American Dream that the GOP's "slash and burn" agenda is killing off. We need a movement dedicated to renewing the idea that hard work pays in our country; that you can make it if you try; that America remains a land committed to dignity, justice and opportunity for all. Right now, this very idea is on the GOP chopping block. And we must rescue it now -- or risk losing it forever.

America will not make it through this crisis healthy and whole if -- at the first sign of trouble -- we are willing to throw away millions of our everyday heroes. Our teachers, police officers, firefighters, nurses and others make our communities and country strong. Their daily work is essential to the smooth functioning and long-term success of our nation. An attack on them is an attack on the backbone of America.

Nobody objects to politicians cutting budgetary fat. But the GOP program everywhere is so reckless that it would actually cut muscle, bone and marrow, too. This approach is both shortsighted and immoral. We should rise up against it -- in our millions.


GOP Cuts Muscle, Fat and Bone -- Republicans Attack American Way

Both parties should be taking steps to solve the country's problems in a balanced, fair and rational way. If deficits are truly the issue, then raising taxes and cutting spending both should be on the table, as tools. But Wisconsin's governor recently handed out massive corporate tax breaks, reducing the state's revenues. That move greatly added to the problem he now wants to fix by attacking essential services with a meat axe. A slew of GOP governors in places like Ohio are gearing up to take similar approaches.

If a foreign power conspired to inflict this much damage on America's first responders and essential infrastructure, we would see it as an act of war.

And if a foreign dictator unilaterally announced that his nation's workers no longer had a seat at the bargaining table in their own country, the U.S. establishment would rightfully go bananas.

If Republicans would oppose that kind of thuggery abroad, how can they champion it here at home? How can they accept for the American people what they would denounce for the people of any other nation on Earth?

GOP governors in multiple states are advancing schemes to erase the long-standing rights of American employees to choose a union and bargain collectively. We need to call these outrageous plots what they are: un-American and unacceptable. They are not just assaults on workers; they are assaults on the American Way itself.


This Is Our 'Tea Party' Moment -- In a Positive Sense

It is time to draw a line in the sand -- nationally. Someone has to stand up for common sense and fairness. It is time to use all nonviolent means to defend the American people and our American principles from these abuses.

If we take a bold and courageous stand, over time, we can win. Make no mistake about it: this is our "Tea Party" moment -- in a positive sense.

In fact, we can learn many important lessons from the recent achievements of the libertarian, populist right. Don't forget: even after the Republican's epic electoral defeat in 2008, a right-wing uprising was still able to smash public support for "new New Deal" economics. Along the way, it revived the political fortunes of the GOP.

A popular outcry from the left could just as easily shatter the prevailing bipartisan consensus that America is suddenly a poor country that cannot possibly help its people meet our basic needs.


America Is Not a Poor Country -- We Suffer From Poor Leadership

The truth is that we don't live Bangladesh or Malawi. America is not a poor country. The public has just been hypnotized into believing that the richest and most creative nation on Earth has only two choices in this crisis: massive austerity (as championed by the Tea Party/Republicans) or SEMI-massive austerity (as meekly offered by too many DC Democrats). It is ridiculous.

Fortunately, the people in Wisconsin know that. So they are fighting courageously. Their efforts could blossom into a compelling, national force for the good -- offering a powerful alternative to those false choices.

And while our re-born movement needs to be as clear and bold as the Tea Parties, we must base our efforts on a deeper set of American values.

The Tea Party attached itself to only a single American principle. And it identifies itself with only one moment in our distant past: the Boston Tea Party, symbolizing "no taxation without representation."


'American Dream' Movement Rooted in a Deeper Patriotism

That is an important moment and concept. But the notion of "negative liberty" ("don't tread on me!") is only one principle among many that make our country great. Other equally vital American values and ideals (like justice, opportunity, fairness and democracy) have gone largely undefended and unheralded, in this recent crisis. That ends -- now. Our rising movement should stand for the full suite of American values and principles.

And the American ideal most in need of defense is our most essential one: the American Dream.

The steps needed to renew and redeem the American Dream are straightforward and simple:

  • Increase revenue for America's government sensibly by making Wall Street and the super-rich pay their fair share.
  • Reduce spending responsibly by cutting the real fat - like corporate welfare for military contractors, big agriculture and big oil.
  • Simultaneously protect the heart and soul of America - our teachers, nurses and first responders.
  • Guarantee the health, safety and success of our children and communities by leaving the muscle and bone of America's communities intact.
  • Maintain the American Way by treating employees with dignity and respecting their right to a seat at the bargaining table.
  • Rebuild the middle class - and pathways into it - by fighting for a "made in America" innovation and manufacturing agenda, including trade and currency policies that honor American workers and entrepreneurs.
  • Stand for the idea that, in a crisis, Americans turn TO each other - and not ON each other.

A Return to the Moral Center

These are not radical notions. They are the common sense ideas that form the core of who we are as a nation. We can rally Americans, once again, to stand up for these values. We can make America, once again, a land where it is safe for everyday people to dream.

We will prevail because -- in truth -- we are not in a right-wing period of American history, nor are we in a left-wing period. We are simply in a volatile period.

And during times like these, we can take comfort in knowing that a great nation will ultimately pull its answers -- not from its ideological extremes -- but from its deep, moral center.

By standing up for dignity, equal opportunity and fair play, the Wisconsin workers have found their way to America's great moral center. They have shown us all, at last, the way back home. By standing with them, we reclaim what is best in our country.

April 15, 2009, marked the beginning of the national movement to remember the Tea Party and pull America to the ideological right.

Let Saturday, February 26, 2011, mark the beginning of the national movement to renew the American Dream and return us to the moral center -- where everybody counts, and everybody matters.

Join the American Dream Movement on Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Rebuild-The-Dream

 
 
 

Follow Van Jones on Twitter: www.twitter.com/VanJones68

 
 
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:12 PM on 04/09/2011
While I agree it is a time for Americans to turn to one another, buy and sell from one another, trade with one another, and support a critical transition to cleaner technology, end our dependence on foreign oil, upgrade our decrepit and antiquated infrastructure, and vastly improve the quality of education making it available to ever child equally; I cannot agree with unionizing police and fireman, nor do I support teacher's unions. The teacher's unions are a disaster; tenure should be eradicated, and none of this addresses the real problem we have of the politics governing school systems, state and private universities. Overcrowding due to overpopulation is another huge problem in the school systems. Public sector employees should not be unionized nor allowed to collectively bargain...nothing short of a monopoly. Van Jones et al do nothing to expose the corruption of the union bosses, the threats/violence w/ respect to card check issues, and the billions spent using union dues to buy off politicians, in return for powerful favors and voting allocating to unions future contract assurances that cannot and should not be absorbed by American taxpayers. Furthermore, the mere idea that teachers are out of the classroom being paid to do union political work is infuriating to any average worker or parent.
Get real Van Jones and admit & include the horrors and corruption that exist in the unions hierarchy along with ts history of threats and violence in your rhetoric and "opinion journalism" you espouse.
04:03 PM on 03/01/2011
There is so little real information in this "article" that I am having trouble even locating context or his perspective. It's all rhetoric. All of it. None of it is logical argument...

"Guarantee the health, safety and success of our children and communities by leaving the muscle and bone of America's communities intact." Rhetorical nonsense.

"Maintain the American Way by treating employees with dignity and respecting their right to a seat at the bargaining table." Rhetorical nonsense.

"Rebuild the middle class - and pathways into it - by fighting for a "made in America" innovation and manufacturing agenda, including trade and currency policies that honor American workers and entrepreneurs." Again - raving, rhetorical, and meaningless in an argumentative context.

This is what politicians feed you and you take it at face value, most of you. They give whole speeches based on nonsense quotes like these, but because they sound good, or catchy, you gobble them up. Reason is supposed to be backed up by facts, expert testimony, and proper logical structure. Catchy phrases and fiery rhetoric are pretty, and can nicely frame a logical argument, but they're no substitute for one. You would all do well to take a critical thinking class. You would come to understand that a large majority of what they are feeding you is nonsense rhetoric.
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01:06 PM on 03/02/2011
Point taken on the rhetorical nature of the piece. But how should one respond to the way our budgetary crisis is being handled. What does reason say about the way States (or the federal government for that matter) deal with shortfalls? Or do you believe there is a crisis?
01:34 PM on 03/02/2011
I am not a politician, nor an economist, nor an attorney, nor an expert in any field related to what you're asking. So with that in mind, there are two ways I could answer your question. One, I could answer with more rhetorical nonsense - which I admit I have been prone to do in the past - or two, I can say that you take the facts, the real facts and not the ones fed to you by our representatives, and weigh them for yourself. You decide, based on expert testimony from both sides. What you'll likely find, as I have, is that the answer lies somewhere in the middle of both extremes. Is there a crisis? I know there is job loss and difficulty in finding good jobs right now. That's a fact. But whether it's a crisis remains to be seen. Current numbers aren't at their lowest as far as jobs are concerned, but it is definitely a matter for concern.
My response to the budgetary crisis is that the governement will do what the governement will do, with or without our input. As is becoming increasingly apparent. Civilian pressure seems not to matter with most of these guys. What's alarming is the quotes I've read recently of some politicians calling us "sheep" and one (I won't name him here) who said that the majority of Americans are "idiots." Who knows though, he may have a point? Google it, I'm sure it will come up.
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03:19 PM on 04/09/2011
Totally agree. But this is what we've consistently heard from the Van Jones soapbox; the audience he plays to sucks up his fiery rhetoric...which does nothing to enlighten and transform them, and only serves to deepen the divide -- which is antithetical to his "Americans need to come together" proposal.
12:45 AM on 04/10/2011
Yep. Which is why I would stress again the extreme importance of taking a logic or critical thinking class, if for no other reason than to simply recognize the difference between rhetoric and argument. Not to say that no valid points are made in a rhetorical argument, but very little is truly accomplished....unless it's your aim to sway people without any real meat in your proposal. Hope and Change? What does that even mean? Yeah, we all hope for a better America, but what do we change? Does it follow the aristotelean concept of the most good for the most people? And if so, if that can be supported, do the means justify the end? Are the means relative? The end nearly always is.
06:28 PM on 02/28/2011
I agree with Mr. Jones 100%, but I'd like to suggest using a venue other than Facebook. Employers routinely use Facebook to weed out job applicants. As anyone who has taken a pre-employment personality knows, employers don't want to hire people with radical egalitarian notions. Supporting such ideas on Facebook would be a definite black mark against a prospective employee.
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04:29 PM on 02/26/2011
Mr Jones,

In a piece about a debate about teachers' unions you mention teachers 2 or 3 times, and as mere props for your plea for more power and a bigger government. Thank you for the honesty. It has nothing to do with teachers or collective bargaining - it's about your power.

Good luck in your battle. Freedom will defeat government power every time.

http://athirdvoice.wordpress.com
07:14 PM on 02/25/2011
Majority? Of ex-con extortionists and professional beggars? Y'know, 3/5 of a vote is making more sense all the time! Here's an idea, homey... Let blacks pay 100% of benefits to black folks. Then you can drop out at a 50% rate and demand a comfortable living from whatever crappy job you get that you go to whenever you feel like it, kay? White guilt is a myth that is fading away while blacks taking care of their own is more and more unlikely. You look in a black face and see fairness, generosity, understanding, empathy. It's gonna hurt when that face says NO! I long for the day when black people come to their senses. It would be racist to wait for you to evolve, I can only demand you GROW UP! Just holdin' the mirror to nature, cuz. You want to live off the fat of the land, well the fat is people. Life is hard work. Work makes life sweet. You can be rich, and you can fail too. Ain't gonna be no re-shuffling that will let a bum, fool, or criminal live easy! Not in my town!
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03:33 PM on 04/09/2011
Turn off the welfare machine... amazing what people do when handouts disappear. The ludicrous age-old argument violence on the streets will increase if we don't expand welfare... well, bring it on! And, get the non-citizen millions of individuals living on our soil who are stealthly taking billions in welfare, food stamps, free lunch, housing, free medical off our system once and forever. Money for the truly should be reserved for absolute emergencies only; not as a generational lifestyle. These services must be reserved only for American citizens and legal resident aliens. NO one else should be taking a penny from our system. Tired of listening to cheaters laugh at how they live off the welfare system, and make $ under the table, to boot.
05:22 PM on 02/25/2011
Thanks for listing your "radical Notions" and then telling us that "these are not radical notions". A lot of people are stupid enough to believe it just because you say it. The American Dream has nothing to do with union thugs bankrupting states and businesses alike.
03:32 PM on 02/25/2011
The KEY to the American Dream has always included home ownership, a job and prosperity in America. The key to liberty is freedom of speech, to organize and be a voice of reason in a fair and balanced Democracy.

I suggest that EVERY individual who cannot afford to join support for the rallies ‘50-State Mobilization to Save the American Dream’ display a KEY openly in public to support the cause.
The KEY to the American Dream – the KEY to our Democracy and the American way. The KEY to unlock our shackles of a misguided economic system; a sophisticated prison cell - the indentured servant now an indebted wage slave.

The movement to Save the American Dream should be the visual icon of the KEY. Liberty clutching the very KEY to free ourselves from the repressive might of influential economic elite who control America today.
01:44 PM on 02/25/2011
My suggestion is that we establish a living wage + 10% as the Minimum Wage at a 20 hour work week. Tie that to a true Marginal Income Tax calculated at % of Minimum Wage, time in the margin and source of income (making the % curve less steep for 'care providers').
This combination takes the steam out of the larceny of 'inflation.' It also takes away the terrorism of unemployment. This is a congruent implementation of our collective values in human dignity and self reliance we call Democracy and Capitalism.
I suggest this as the core understanding and policy establishing standard for Democratic Capitalism.
04:26 PM on 02/25/2011
The number of degrees one has is no indicator on whether their head is full of bull. I'm laughing. You want to be able to live on 20 hours work a week? Here's my idea. Forced labor in order to compete with countries where they make $3 a day. I know you're thinking, that sounds like slavery. Well, you're not afraid of insulting people, or prison. Prison will be unpaid sun up to sun down manual labor. Any sentence over 10 years gets you life in prison or death if you like. There's no getting out after 10 years. Any prison sentence at all costs you your nuts. You're gonna need your roads paved, crops rotated, your litter picked up and 20 hours a week doesn't go far y'know. Gonna have to give up $100 sneakers, ouch! You'll be very tempted to sell drugs, but now you'll have to think twice. Which is what you should have done before posting this crap... ;)
03:37 PM on 02/26/2011
Yes, thanks for making the point: the alternative to a neo-feudalism is a real democratic capitalism.
01:16 PM on 02/25/2011
I just posted a legitmate question to Mr. Jones concerning FAT CATS but it did not get posted and I don't know why. Do you post only complimentary comments and not questions?
01:10 PM on 02/25/2011
Mr. Jones . . . you are currently a 'visitng fellow' a Princeton University in NJ.....living in one of the wealthiest towns in the country: Princeton. Most of Princeton residents are wealthy and many are graduates of Harvard, Yale and Princeton; they are financial managers, corporate executives and most have family wealth. You "teach" Princeton University students to become "wealthy" in corporate America, and many on Wall Street . . . So how can you be believed when you, like Pres Obama, call the current wealthy people FAT CATS when you are at a University who trains students to become FAT CATS?

You rejected the Tea Party Patriots who arose from the "bottom" and objected to Big Govt takeovers and spending to keep the FAT CATS in business, giving them more billions to stay in business and to keep Goldman Sachs as the TOP FAT CAT. You are really appear to be a TEA PARTY PATRIOT rather than a socialist or communist as some say you are. And, if you are, why are patriotic Americans paying mega bucks to have their students indoctrinated into a system of failure?

So, are you a TEA PARTY PATRIOT which is the way you appear to be to me????
Or, are you the BIG GOVT guy who wants our President to keep feeding the FAT CATS (including the FAT CAT UNIONS)???
01:45 PM on 02/25/2011
"rose from the bottom" with a lot of help from outside "FAT CAT" Money....
photo
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The good of the many outweighs the good of the few
11:53 AM on 02/25/2011
To the people who say they do not understand, HELLO! that is a huge part of the problem here, the majority of the American public is too lazy or too ignorant educate themselves politically,they apparently think that if something is not affecting them directly, they don`t need to know the truth about it. Little do they realize that there is no escape from being affected by all of the negative things that have been going on in this country for the past 30 years...it is here, it is now and it is right up in all of our faces. If we do not stand and for each other as well as ourselves we will suffer greatly at the hands of those hell bent to destroy the rest of us. America will not be fit to live in!
11:09 AM on 02/25/2011
I am re-reading this article. I'm schocked that you would indirectly say that you agree with the, "Tea Party." Seriously? Did you come in the back door and give them props? No more articles for you!
10:57 AM on 02/25/2011
You lost me at, "This Is Our 'Tea Party' Moment." I in no way want to be associated in anything with the name "Tea Party."
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10:54 AM on 02/25/2011
Man, those opening two paragraphs are seriously damning in regards to Obama. Jones is basically saying that Obama's hope and change has failed, and a new movement is needed, to take up the cause that Obama dropped. Truth hurts.
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08:21 AM on 02/25/2011
The 'American Dream' Movement
A somewhat debased metaphor, wouldn’t you say Van? How about a “When The Dreamers Awoke” movement?

“Nobody objects to politicians cutting budgetary fat”.
Just to fat cats, cutting up the country to share between themselves.

“How can they accept for the American people what they would denounce for the people of any other nation on Earth?”
Maybe they got the impression from somewhere, that what was good enough for Arabs was good enough for Americans.

“a deeper set of American values”
Democracy, as a real thing. Reject imitations. You have to be undemocratic, to be agin it.

"no taxation without representation."
No governance, without majority mandate of policies.