Barack Obama
took to the stage in Chicago to
bid us farewell. He was following a
tradition begun by George
Washington whom he quoted. Employing
his unique oratorical skill, his message contained both an expected list of
accomplishments, a sober discussion of the “state of our democracy” and a
reaffirmation of his faith in the future.
“Yes we can.” His words, and of course
his style, stood in sharp relief against his successor’s coarse news event the
following day. So much has changed since
the president began his term eight years ago. A just released essay by Pew Research’s President
Michael
Dimok reviews and puts some statistical meat on the bones of what’s
happened. Some of those changes reflect
the advance of technology (for example neither the iPhone or iPad existed when
Obama started campaigning); some are products of a hardening partisan divide.
Obama hasn’t lost his hope,
but is clear headed about where we stand and the challenges that lie
ahead. Some of them come directly from
the ideological shifts that Dimok details, and also from the fact that we have
yet to adjust to the social and economic impact of technology and wide scale
automation. A clear majority, 60%, of Americans
expect that in the years to come robots and computers will be carry out much of
the work now done by humans. Obama underscored
this saying, “…the next wave of economic dislocation won’t come from
overseas. It will come from the relentless pace of automation that makes
many good, middle-class jobs obsolete.” Of
course, this isn’t something happening in the distant future. A recent NY
Times article noted, “A century ago New York Harbor employed 40,000
longshoremen, who unloaded ships with hook and sling and brawn [think On the
Waterfront]. Today, the entire
workforce is just under 3,400 longshoremen, many perched behind the controls of
cranes and straddle carriers.” While
obviously not happening all at once, the current workforce is less than 10% of
what it was, a loss of 36,000 jobs just in one location.
Obama said
this will require “a change in the social compact.” Undoubtedly so, but instead of moving in that
direction many people, encouraged by self-serving – and I believe irresponsible
– politicians, are in denial. Donald
Trump’s promises to bring back manufacturing and touting his pre-inauguration
successes completely bypasses the fact that, even if restored or maintained,
those plants will employ far fewer workers than was once the case. The longshoremen story is not an outlier but
a reflection of what’s happening all over.
Just look at how technology has automated our own lives. The computer on which I am typing and through
which I receive my daily digital “newspapers” is a manifestation of that
reality. Welcome to my paperless life. It’s been over twenty years since I employed
a secretary. I opt for self-check wherever
it’s offered, pump my own gas, use an ATM to withdraw cash and my mobile phone
to make deposits. Like many of you, I
purchase more books and goods on Amazon than from all the retailers in my area
combined. Sure Amazon employs a lot of
people in their fulfillment centers but far fewer than might have been the case
even a decade ago. It’s a trend that will continue. Very soon a drone rather than a UPS driver will
likely deliver to my doorstep.
Perhaps one
of the most far reaching finding of the Pew study reflects on something will
all sense anecdotally but whose impact we may not have given enough
attention: super partisanship. More than ever before people
are lining up on virtually all issues along party lines. That has trend solidified in the Obama years.
This doesn’t negate regional and
economic factors entirely, but what my party says – and that tends to be fairly
monolithic relative to issues – is where I stand. We’ve all noticed that fewer legislators and
executives share a common middle – there few if any liberal Republicans or
conservative Democratic officeholders. This
suggests less, often no, compromise, but doesn’t totally explain why. In former times a Congress member could veer
away from the “party line” on individual issues. She or he had some measure of independence
because voters were diverse and broadly defined enough not to be
threatening. That’s no longer true as
exemplified in the relatively new threat of them “being primaried” back home. Today few dare to waver because their
constituents have become so single minded.
I don’t
think it’s an overstatement to say that we now face a polarization crisis. Effective governance is predicated on the
ability to compromise. Obama’s
presidency has been badly wounded by six years of increasing gridlock. Donald Trump will have Republican majorities
in both houses, but if he loses them or one of them in 2018 he, and most
importantly we, will face the same problem.
Majority rule is clearly one of democracy’s attributes, but so too is
giving force and voice to minorities, political and otherwise. And to different viewpoints. Obama included his concerns about this in
outlining threats to our democracy, something that may be self-evident but, “have never been self-executing”. Here
is some of what he said:
“For too many of us, it’s become safer to retreat into our own
bubbles…surrounded by people who look like us and share the same political
outlook and never challenge our assumptions. The rise of naked
partisanship, increasing economic and regional stratification, the splintering
of our media into a channel for every taste – all this makes this great sorting
seem natural, even inevitable. And increasingly, we become so secure in
our bubbles that we accept only information, whether true or not, that fits our
opinions, instead of basing our opinions on the evidence that’s out there.”
And to my concern he added, “…without
a willingness to admit new information, and concede that your opponent is
making a fair point, and that science and reason matter, we’ll keep talking
past each other, making common ground and compromise impossible.” I’ve written about this before, about our
becoming religious-like political fundamentalists, claimers of the singular and
only truth. If we continue to buy into
this self-focused vanity, you can kiss all progress goodbye. Add to that learning which involves and
depends on a broadening of ideas and an inquisitiveness that super partisanship
seeks to undermine and ultimately crush.
Don’t misunderstand, I am not suggesting that there aren’t some
things about which we can’t or shouldn’t compromise, some values that aren’t
worth fighting and even dying for. The
point is that not everything, in fact a very limited number of things, fall
into that do or die category. Political
scientists and ultimately historians will be dissecting the reasons for this
ultra-polarization. Each of us can make
our own list, but I don’t think we have the luxury of time in addressing the
why. We urgently need to focus on what
we can and must do about it. We won’t be
helped very much by the incoming president who seems more interested in
widening the divide than in, to use Lyndon Johnson’s words, “reasoning together”. Nor can we depend on the current class of
elected officials, particularly legislators, who have succumbed to the kind of ugly
partisanship that has become the problem.
Moving toward the conclusion
Obama gave us some direction. “It falls
to each of us,” he said, “to be those anxious, jealous guardians of our
democracy; to embrace the joyous task we’ve been given to continually try to
improve this great nation of ours. Because for all our outward
differences, we all share the same proud title: Citizen. Ultimately, that’s what our democracy demands.” We know what’s happened here, and only we can
address and fix it. Voting is
important -- no it’s essential – but opening
up a dialogue outside our bubble and listening as much, if not more, than
talking is perhaps the only way forward.
I’ll deeply miss President Barack Obama both for who is and for the huge
step forward that he represented on taking office and beyond. For certain much of his legacy is under
immediate threat, but his words, including those in his farewell address cannot
be erased. They should not be forgotten
and, speaking for myself, they never will.