B 
		
				
			
		byro
Guest
Why is "liberal" a four-letter word in mainstream America?  
I remember, many years ago (1988?), when GHW Bush debated Dukakis and repeatedly taunted him for being a liberal. Bush eventually, cutely, started calling it "the L word" and the crowd ate it up. Dukakis ran from the "accusation" like a bunny in a shooting gallery, thereby affirming Bush's supposition that being a liberal was a bad thing. The same thing happened when Kerry ran for president; he defended his presumed non-liberalness more vigorously than he did his record in Vietnam.
In the political arena as a whole, the word "liberal" has not just been degraded, but transmorgified into an epithet (often preceded by the words "tax and spend"). A few months ago, AOL had a poll, asking, "Is John McCain conservative enough?", but it's unimaginable that they would ever ask, "Is Obama/Clinton liberal enough?" Even now, I read repeatedly that Obama presumably has the most liberal record in the Senate and that "information" is used to dismiss him as being "out of step with America."
Given that a majority of Americans want out of Iraq, believe tax cuts to the wealthiest should be repealed, want Social Security and Medicare to be preserved, favor universal health care and are strongly in favor of initiatives to combat climate change -- all of which are positions held by liberals -- how did liberalism come to be so denigrated? (Especially given that so many "conservatives" in recent years have become rampaging radicals.) Now it's not safe even to use the word "liberal"; Obama calls himself a "progressive" -- presumably out of necessity.
Just once I'd love to hear a liberal in a Presidential debate say something like:
-Liberals opposed slavery and in some cases died protecting runaway slaves.
-Liberals fought for voting rights for women and blacks.
-Liberals decriminalized interracial marriage and repealed Jim Crow.
-If you like/need Social Security and Medicare, you have liberals to thank for having established them in the first place.
-If you enjoy the civil rights afforded you by the Warren Supreme Court you also have liberals to thank.
-FDR was a liberal.
-Eleanor Roosevelt was a liberal.
-Gandhi was a liberal.
-Martin Luther King was a liberal.
-If being a liberal puts me in the same category as these people, then thank you for the supreme compliment.
But no. Whoever gets the Democratic nomination will be "tarred" with the brush of liberalism and will run from the label as though it's synonymous with "pederast." It's yet another example of how brilliantly the right wing of the Republican party (is there any other wing now?) has established and continues to dominate the terms of "debate" over the past few decades.
Is "liberal" a word that can ever be re-claimed for mainstream America? Are Democrats still haunted by McGovern's landslide loss? And given Americans' stands on the issues cited above, can a liberal Democrat (whatever he may call himself) actually get elected President of the United States?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			I remember, many years ago (1988?), when GHW Bush debated Dukakis and repeatedly taunted him for being a liberal. Bush eventually, cutely, started calling it "the L word" and the crowd ate it up. Dukakis ran from the "accusation" like a bunny in a shooting gallery, thereby affirming Bush's supposition that being a liberal was a bad thing. The same thing happened when Kerry ran for president; he defended his presumed non-liberalness more vigorously than he did his record in Vietnam.
In the political arena as a whole, the word "liberal" has not just been degraded, but transmorgified into an epithet (often preceded by the words "tax and spend"). A few months ago, AOL had a poll, asking, "Is John McCain conservative enough?", but it's unimaginable that they would ever ask, "Is Obama/Clinton liberal enough?" Even now, I read repeatedly that Obama presumably has the most liberal record in the Senate and that "information" is used to dismiss him as being "out of step with America."
Given that a majority of Americans want out of Iraq, believe tax cuts to the wealthiest should be repealed, want Social Security and Medicare to be preserved, favor universal health care and are strongly in favor of initiatives to combat climate change -- all of which are positions held by liberals -- how did liberalism come to be so denigrated? (Especially given that so many "conservatives" in recent years have become rampaging radicals.) Now it's not safe even to use the word "liberal"; Obama calls himself a "progressive" -- presumably out of necessity.
Just once I'd love to hear a liberal in a Presidential debate say something like:
-Liberals opposed slavery and in some cases died protecting runaway slaves.
-Liberals fought for voting rights for women and blacks.
-Liberals decriminalized interracial marriage and repealed Jim Crow.
-If you like/need Social Security and Medicare, you have liberals to thank for having established them in the first place.
-If you enjoy the civil rights afforded you by the Warren Supreme Court you also have liberals to thank.
-FDR was a liberal.
-Eleanor Roosevelt was a liberal.
-Gandhi was a liberal.
-Martin Luther King was a liberal.
-If being a liberal puts me in the same category as these people, then thank you for the supreme compliment.
But no. Whoever gets the Democratic nomination will be "tarred" with the brush of liberalism and will run from the label as though it's synonymous with "pederast." It's yet another example of how brilliantly the right wing of the Republican party (is there any other wing now?) has established and continues to dominate the terms of "debate" over the past few decades.
Is "liberal" a word that can ever be re-claimed for mainstream America? Are Democrats still haunted by McGovern's landslide loss? And given Americans' stands on the issues cited above, can a liberal Democrat (whatever he may call himself) actually get elected President of the United States?


						

















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