Admittedly, our monumentally negative and complex national
situation will not receive some quick magic-bullet solution. And many
will argue that we need multiple strategies and that many of them are
complementary. Yet the fragmentation-critical mass issue must not be
ignored any longer. Especially when we acknowledge the myriad, powerful
forces supporting our ugly, oppressive status quo system and their
demonstrated capability over many decades to beat back serious reform
attempts. Success requires solidarity. If we do not take the
fragmentation problem seriously, untold numbers of micro-reform groups
will remain marginalized. Just what status quo forces want.
Realistically,
reaching consensus will be resisted by many reform-groups that would
not be selected as the priority, solidarity option. One cannot ignore
the considerable egos of activists that have energetically created a
web group, and that have attained supporters – though rarely in
significant numbers. They sincerely believe that their strategy is the
best one and having relatively few supporters does not deter them. Many
are as opposed to alternative reform strategies as those in the status
quo establishment, but not all. Most celebrate their long shot status
with a religious zeal bordering on obsession. We need passion for a
solidarity strategy.
This requires maturity and open-mindedness
from entrepreneurial activists to acknowledge that some other strategy
offers more promise of wide scale success. Joining together in common
cause is necessary to save our nation.
Umbrella Strategy: What
we can strive for is that many reform advocates can support another
strategy that does not contradict or oppose their own one. In seeking a
solidarity strategy, we want the capacity to serve as an umbrella
movement that ultimately can assist others to succeed or at least
fairly compete against each other for public support.
Unlikely
Mass Action: The solidarity strategy should not be dependent on
changing the behavior of enormous numbers of people. Many sincere
groups believe that millions of converts will change more than their
thinking or values – they will change their behavior. They trust that
their information stimulus will produce their desired response. One
group aims at convincing people to have only one child per couple as
the planet-wide solution. Another preaches voting out incumbents.
Another wants supporters for replacing our representative democracy
with direct democracy – despite being antithetical to our
constitutional republic framework. Such micro-movements hope that true
believers will voluntarily choose to behave in the desired fashion. But
how can one person confidently believe that millions of others will
behave likewise? Such groups typically exist for years despite no
objective evidence that their message is causing millions of people to
behave similarly.
Unlikely Lawmaking: Many other groups, such as
those pursuing specific electoral reforms, base success on Congress
eventually passing the desired law. But if we are talking about
profound reforms, passage is unlikely. Powerful moneyed interests spend
whatever is necessary to preserve the status quo through lobbying and
campaign funding. Getting dissidents to send letters to members of
Congress, sign petitions and participate in street protests are tactics
that rarely succeed against the corrupt power of money. Moreover, many
of these groups pursue beneficial but narrow reforms that will not
profoundly change our system. Note that I am not talking about worthy
issue-specific actions that often mobilize large numbers, such as the
recent success to kill the attempt to grant amnesty to illegal
immigrants and as yet unsuccessful attempts to impeach Bush and Cheney,
stop the Iraq war, and stop globalization.
It comes to this: Is
there a solidarity strategy for achieving deep reforms? Yes. Some time
ago I anguished over the decision to dedicate my time, energy and money
to a movement that I had researched and concluded had the capacity to
produce many major reforms. An Article V convention could be the
successful solidarity strategy. The Framers of our Constitution created
this option exactly because they anticipated the loss of public
confidence in the federal government. That day has arrived.
This
strategy is a clear constitutional right. An Article V convention,
moreover, would provide a legal venue for consideration of many
possible amendments. Indeed, when I examined countless reform groups,
the clearer it became that many goals could be instituted through
constitutional amendments – our ultimate lawmaking opportunity.
Why
so many failed attempts to get an Article V convention? Powerful groups
on the political left and right had opposed the convention. They wanted
to retain their ability to greatly influence public policy and feared a
convention that circumvented all three branches of the federal
government. The great hypocrisy was that those professing to honor and
love our Constitution opposed using exactly what our Constitution
offers us.
I first wondered why Congress had not proposed an
amendment to remove the convention option. But then I realized that
Congress has chosen to conceal its opposition to a convention. But two
of our greatest presidents backed it: Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
I linked up with other conventionists and now we have a major web presence for Friends of the Article V Convention at
www.foavc.org.
We are nonpartisan and will not endorse specific amendments. We have
shown the potential for wide scale success by achieving remarkable
rapid growth in membership in just a few months and have begun building
state chapters.
If you are a true dissident looking for major
political-government reforms come with an open mind to our website.
Access a wealth of information and analysis that refute any fears you
may have about a convention (because of propaganda from
anti-conventionists). If you have a reform group or are committed to
one and can envision a constitutional amendment to reach your goal,
consider affiliate membership for your group.
In solidarity
there is strength. Much strength is needed to meet our common reform
goal of restoring American democracy and rebuilding a trustworthy
government.
[Joel S. Hirschhorn is the author of Delusional Democracy and can be reached through www.delusonaldemocracy.com.]