
People’s anger over politics
and more continues to envelope the country, and
the question is: what should we do with it? One
answer comes from U.S. Senator Sam
Brownback, who is running for governor of
Kansas. He’s proposed an “Office of the
Repealer,” a new state office to terminate
stupid, idiotic, and silly laws and
regulations. Why not, right? Well, there’s a
better path for us to take.
I don’t doubt that there are numerous
laws and regulations that need to be repealed.
I often argue with my colleagues and friends
who believe government action must be the
solution to every problem. I fear when any
institution gets too big or too powerful. In
fact, that’s one of the reasons why I do the
work I do: I believe in a strong civic culture,
made up of many groups, organizations, networks
and individuals, all working out what’s best
for society over time.
But I also disdain cheap shots like
“Office of the Repealer,” and especially
now, when so many individuals, families and
communities need support, and when positive,
constructive actions are called for. Going
around Kansas – or any community or state for
that matter – and pretending that an Office
of the Repealer will make a big a difference in
people’s lives is simply folly. And it’s
cynical.
Indeed, the very notion of a repealer
is about what one is “against”; but what I
want to know is what an individual is
“for.” For instance, those who are running
for office:
What are you for when it comes to
acting on the challenges involving vulnerable
children and families?
What are you for when it comes to dealing with
housing foreclosures?
What are you for
in terms of meeting our energy needs – and
the trade-offs that confront us at each turn?
What are you for when it comes to
helping communities get back up on their feet
after losing industry and jobs?
I could
go on. It’s easy to say what we’re against,
what we seek to pull down, what we want to
dismantle. But what we are for – that’s
something different entirely. For starters, it
requires that we see and hear people and
genuinely speak to their concerns and
aspirations. It demands the building of public
will so we can take effective action. It means
that we must allocate scarce resources.
In short, “what we are for”
requires that we put a stake in the ground
about what we believe in, what we will fight
for, what we hope to become. We must make
ourselves and what believe visible. There is
little notion of responsibility – or
accountability – in saying what we are
against. All we must do is find a good target
and fire away.
Yes, saying what we want to repeal may
make good sound bites and make us sound tough.
But what we are for actually builds
communities, and people’s lives, and hope. It
asks us to harness our anger for something
productive. Which one do you want?