A
decade ago, some barons of the media establishment designated
themselves America’s official arbiters of political truth. One of their
tools is PolitiFact, a project of the
Tampa Bay Times and several
other major newspapers, which issues an award for the year’s most
outrageous falsehood. Last year’s election was infested with so much
disinformation and dishonesty, however, that PolitiFact’s 2016 Lie of
the Year was not a single prevarication, but that cluster bomb of
whoppers collectively branded “Fake News.”
Just
as troubling as fake news is the media’s systematic omission of
grassroots news that people could really use. What’s missing is real
news of the ordinary Americans in practically every zip code who are
finding innovative solutions to big problems that the elites do nothing
about. Here are a few examples:
Inequality.
In 2014, American CEOs earned 350 times more than the average worker,
creating the world’s greatest income gap. Washington’s response to the
grotesque inequity has been to blow political hot air at it and hope it
drifts away. It hasn’t. So, in December, the mayor and city council of
Portland, Oregon, decided to stop talking about the ever-widening gap
and actually try to shrink it. They added a surcharge to the local tax
bill of any corporation that gives its top exec more than 100 times the
median pay of its rank and-file employees, providing a financial
incentive for corporate boards to seek some balance and at least to
consider pay fairness. The main sponsor of the provision called it, “The
closest thing I’d seen to a tax on inequality itself.”
Public
Education. With Betsy DeVos, the right-wing ideologue and billionaire
Amway heiress, now leading an all-out Trumpster charge to destroy
America’s public schools and privatize educational opportunity, what
chance is there for school kids from low- and middle-income families?
Don’t despair, for there is hope in local people’s common sense
commitment to the common good, as presently being demonstrated in San
Antonio, Texas. A few years ago, Mayor Julian Castro launched a
democratic process for ordinary citizens to decide the best way for the
city to invest in its future. After weeks of city-wide conversations,
San Antonians chose a single priority: Invest in our children’s future
by expanding quality, full-day, pre-kindergarten education for more of
the city’s children. This was no small task, for the government of this
extremely rich state is run by boneheaded teaparty Republicans who
constantly shortchange our public-school system and refuse to fund more
than half-day pre-K programs. So where to get the money? The people did
what the antipublic-school halfwits said would never happen – they taxed
themselves, voting for a 1/8th of a cent sales tax hike that put $31
million a year into the successful experiment called Pre-K 4 SA.
Corporate
Power. Trump and his likeminded Congress critters are gearing up to
unleash corporate profiteers from practically all restraints that
protect us ordinary people, our natural resources, and even our core
values from their greed. But they might want to ponder how North Dakota
voters reacted to a similar power play last year. At issue was a
monumental 1932 state law that bans nonfamily corporate farm ownership,
reflecting the people’s desire to maintain family farms, healthy rural
communities and sustainable agriculture practices. Nostalgic hogwash
growled Big Ag lobbyists, who got obsequious legislators and the
corporate-funded governor to overturn the eight-decade-old ban on
industrial ag. In turn, progressive forces led by the North Dakota
Farmers Union plowed the grassroots, recruiting volunteers to put on
last June’s ballot a referendum giving common voters the final say. And
speak they did, loud and clear: 76 percent of North Dakotans rejected
the corporate powers and the politicos who served them, restoring the
outright ban on corporate-controlled farming.
These
“real news” stories show that it is possible to build progressive power
in cities and the states. The Institute for Local Self-Reliance is a
tremendous resource for communities that want to build their economies
in ways that nurture people instead of giant, far-removed corporations.