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Stephen Dinan's Post

Stephen Dinan's Post

Lady Liberty

Stephen Dinan | 09.15.06 | 06:05 PM |
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Recently, I was reading Thom Hartmann’s 2005 article on political branding, which led me to reflect on the psychology of political identity. While his analysis was fascinating, I came to different conclusions about what the left really needs right now. The right wing has succeeded in wrapping itself in the flag of patriotism, creating a political identity of loyal, religious Americans who are strong and self-reliant. The right’s visual logo is the flag itself. Hartmann is quite accurate in portraying the right as having done a more effective job at creating an enduring identity than the left, regardless of what we think of the actual policies.

I see three main options for the left to improve its positive branded identity and thus create a more effective political movement. First, it can rekindle the class struggle against oppression – working and middle classes versus the upper class – that has served as a primary identification for the left in the past. This struggle has noble motives and a long history behind it. Hartmann advocates this route, linking it with the founding impulse of our country. However, I think this strategy has some real limitations, including being built on opposition rather than vision, limitation rather than abundance, and polarization versus our sense of interconnection.

The second option is to try to occupy the same ground as the right, reclaiming the flag, American patriotism, national self-interest, etc. This approach reframes the left’s policies as more effective paths to the same goals as the right professes, such as financial success and security. Recent Democrat candidates have often taken this angle, trying to be more patriotic, fiscally responsible, and tougher on terrorists than their Republican opponents. The challenge with this option is twofold: claiming aspects of identity already monopolized by the right is a long, slow fight, and the actual symbolism may not be as resonant for many left-wingers, many of whom do not feel a teary-eyed devotion to the flag or as strong a sense of American patriotism.

The third route, which I believe is the most evolutionary path for the long term, is to transcend class-based or nationalistic identification and connect the left’s sense of identity to something more universal, heart-centered, and principled. This approach sees left-wing policies as expressions of care not just for a few Americans but for the entire planet. It evokes an image of us carrying the torch of democracy and freedom not merely to advance our self-interest but to bring more light to the world. This is ultimately a spiritual impulse, but one that isn’t confined to a particular religion.

The clearest and most powerful symbol we have for this compassionate, universal mission is the Statue of Liberty. First, she was a gift from France and is thus symbolic of our strong relationship with other countries, which breaks down the isolationist impulse nationalism can trigger. She is carrying a torch, which has multiple levels of symbolism connected to light, freedom, and expanded awareness. She also compassionately welcomes the poor and the huddled masses of the world, who come to create a better life for themselves. On a still deeper level, she is symbolic of the sacred feminine in its powerful form, not subservient to a masculine God but carrying the torch of transformation with confidence.

As George Lakoff has pointed out, the values of the left are intrinsically more connected to the mother, to compassion, and healthy feminine qualities. Trying to use the American flag for the “branding� of the left is thus not a good fit. The flag symbolizes a political union of states. It is more linear and masculine in its design as well as its implications. Lady Liberty, by contrast, is a feminine symbol that evokes the compassion at the heart of democracy, the ultimate goal of which is liberation and happiness for all people. She is both beautifully symbolic of America’s special qualities AND she displays a more planetary concern for humankind.

In an age of hypermasculine government, retributive military action, and cutthroat business, the left needs a visual identity that embraces the feminine in its most powerful, compassionate, and beautiful form. It also needs to claim the sacred impulse that is at the core of progressive policies and platforms. Without that spiritual core, the level of connection people feel to the left’s political identity will remain weak. We need to feel the heart of the left. Lady Liberty is the best visual symbol we have for what we truly love – the liberation and advancement of all humankind. For Christians, Lady Liberty represents the same kind of love that Jesus expressed in his embrace of prostitutes and lepers, sinners and even Romans – a love that transcends class, race, and social status.

Lady Liberty thus represents the true heart of America and is a far more potent and accurate symbol for our mission than the American flag. Orienting the left’s identity around transcendent values via a strong connection to the Statue of Liberty begins to construct a new identity that is uniquely American AND global, spiritual AND religious, working-class AND elite. I see the potential to create a whole national awareness campaign driven by the left and using Lady Liberty to rekindle our commitment to what is most beautiful, noble, and generous about America. As that new, more encompassing view is reinforced, the left can re-emerge as stewards of America’s next political evolution.

Originally published at OpEdNews.com

Sacred America Series #29
If you’d like to read these weekly articles exploring a sacred vision for America, you can visit www.stephendinan.com or sign up on the distribution list by sending an email to stephendinan-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.

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Member Comments:

Submitted by Cougar Brenneman on September 20, 2006 - 9:00am.

The right has branded approaches to politics like Stephen's "healthy feminine" as weak, ineffectual, and devoid of ideas, and for a long time, this ridicule seemed to have the desired effect. Lately, I'm sensing that the right's denigration of this feminine approach is no longer so readily believed by the majority.

It should be easy to invoke Anodea Judith's age of the Dynamic Feminine. Riane Eisler's Partnership Way is so reasonable that actualizing it should be the path of least resistance. An antidote to the power and control paradigm and lifestyle seems so necessary that creating and deploying a Department of Peace should be a no brainer.

So why is it so hard? Is it because we lack confidence, because our self-esteem as carriers of wisdom has been damaged by being labeled "effete nabobs of negativity" and other poetically phrased aspersions or by our failure to overcome the well-funded fraud of two stolen presidential elections? Are we attached to polls and other measurements of Maya? Are we unable to view the current conflagration from the cosmic perspective that accepts what is as the essential proving ground for our expression of personal power?

Here on the left, we have something beautiful, noble, and right to sell. If we hold it up high and let it shine, our vision has an inner power that can inspire greatness that is tempered by humility, social organization that expresses and supports personal power, political discourse at an adult level of personal and collective responsibility, and social standards that recognize the inherent goodness within each of us.

What do we need? We need fearless statespeople who are able to paint vivid and powerful pictures of what we stand for and sell them to the cheering crowds. We need orators that can skillfully evoke our vision with its maturity and wisdom in the minds and spirits of the masses. We need evangelists of enlightenment to call forth the rapture of the new age that we seek to build.

We need to recruit and create our own communications structure in this country to evolve to the next stage organically, and when we do that, we will trump what the right did when they organized a direct pipeline from Karl Rove's desk into the cold, dead ears of the zombo-Americans that he targeted.

But most of all, we need to be proud of the vision that we carry, and righteous in our unwillingness to let our vision be ridiculed. Some people declaim such responses because they seem to be negative, divisive, and alienating--and as a result, many opt to let the right's disparagement of our vision stand.

There is a third way, which involves responding powerfully to the right's dishonest derision without rancor. It includes holding them to account for their lies, but it also includes enrolling others in an alternate message that directly responds to their lies: one that says that we can move from el mondo mal to el mondo bueno by embracing, promoting, and living our values.

Submitted by Jeffery DeCelles on September 21, 2006 - 5:51am.

Following Cougar's invokation of Eisler, I propose an event resonant with the Chalice, a sacred vessal. This vessal is a measure of time, an interval of stillness, a meaningful moment of no-action, when the millions of mindful pause, cease their labors in service to Dominator agendas, and turn their individual attentions to the emergent Mother.
I see this event integrated with planetary cyclicity, on Winter Solstice, 12/21, that point of turning from increasing darkness to increasing light. I envision millions of people disengaging from the rat-wheel of Western Industrial Culture and walking to the nearest window for a few minutes of silent meditation on their most beloved feminine archetype.
I smile, contemplating the ripple of consequence propagating across the globe as this interval of conscious repose interrupts Busy-ness As Usual. A tsunami, no, a Nou-nami, a Mind Wave races at the speed of Gnosis across human awareness. (The Global Consciousness Project records a blip in the Matrix).
To change everthing, do nothing, but briefly. An apt application of non-violent principles, or just another vain daydream? What say you? Jeffery DeCelles

Submitted by Jeffery DeCelles on September 19, 2006 - 6:52pm.

From 1917 to 1947, the U.S. minted a coin called the Walking Liberty Half Dollar. This image strikes me as especially relevant to this excellent discussion. Lady Liberty lifts high her lamp, but remains on her pedestal, passive. She welcomes, but does not confront. She seems an icon of qualities Anodea Judith might term Static Feminine. What if Liberty walked boldly onto the world stage?
Last night I watched a tv show debunking the background material behind The Da Vinci Code. Not news, but reminded me of what I found most compelling about Dan Brown's work: its presentation of a coherent template for the Divine Feminine; an unambiguous advocacy for this suppressed spiritual power. A profound yearning for this vital aspect of human potential is stirring. This, I suspect, is what drove the box office for movie and parent book.
I would like my iconic feminine figure to incorporate Athena, a Wisdom archetype, and Kali for Righteous Wrath, a la Xena, The Warrior Princess. All are ascendant in popular culture, if on the periphery. While we're at it, bring Samantha Carter of Stargate Command in to show a tech-savvy genius side. This IS the 21st Century, y'know.
Thanks, again, Stephen, for fresh thinking and polished wordcraft.

Jeffery DeCelles

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