Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Beyond hope

I am certainly excited over the passage of the health care reform bill this week. I will feel much better when the reconciliation bill, with the necessary changes, is passed and signed. It's about time that this country started moving down a path towards true civilization.

With that said, there is a lot of uncertainty that prevents me from feeling the kind of elation that I thought I would have felt. My feelings are captured perfectly by these lines from the poem "we are running" by Lucille Clifton:

oh pray that what we want
is worth this running,
pray that what we’re running
toward
is what we want

The reform is imperfect, we all know that. There are at least two general directions I can see this going. The imperfections can be used to foster more discontent among the fear-filled bigots (especially among those who believe that our president is a socialist, marxist, communist Muslim). As much as I would like to ignore these folks, fear is a great motivator for getting people out on election day. And complacency keeps folks home. Juxtapose the two in any given election and you get Scott Brown elected to the Congressional Senate. Every increase in reactionary, right wing ideologues there are in policymaking positions, the greater the chance that this much needed reform is repealed, or worse, crafted to not work.

Or we can insist that the imperfections be monitored closely, rooted out, and fixed. Ask the question "what would make this fail" so that we can identify those "unforeseen" consequences and then proactively address them.

We can be sure that those who oppose this reform for whatever reason are prepared to do whatever it takes to repeal or cripple it. If the last year has shown us anything, it is that we must move beyond hope. We must act. Act to rebut the misinformation and lies. Act to deny going back to system in which people lose their homes or their lives but for lack of health insurance. Act to continually improve this imperfect system we call the USA.

Hope is not enough anymore. We need to seize the sense of possibility that we felt in November 2008, when it was evident that the world really was changing for the better. Now we need to make that change happen. Part of that means moving past the uncertainty, past the grief or anger that the bill wasn't sufficiently comprehensive or efficient for your taste, and past the certainty that your favored solution was the only acceptable solution. If we cannot work together to take what we've been given and change it for the better, then you can be sure that we will lose it.

P.S. Don't forget to fill out your census forms. And then mail them back. And also, tell your neighbors. The due date is March 30.

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