Master your love life in 5 weeks with Mastin! Love Uni-versity 5 week online course starts soon! → Check it out!

The Audacity To Wield Power!

Americans are good people, and at times we can be wise. But we’re often under-informed by media, misinformed by our government and ill-served by both. Issues are presented to us wrapped in the illusion that we really have much choice in the matter, the issue having first been processed by a corporate and political machinery that determines what we’re even permitted to consider. This leaves the people of the United States pretty low on the food chain of vital decision makers regarding activities of government that affect our daily lives.

The primary social contract between the people of the United States and their government — quaint though it might seem to even mention it at this point — is that ours is to be a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.”

Abraham Lincoln wrote that phrase while on the battlefield of Gettysburg, where bodies strewn across Pennsylvania farmland determined that this extraordinary experiment in self-governance “shall not perish from the earth.” “A government of the people, by the people, for the people” was not a slogan concocted by political consultants, paid for by PAC money. It was a statement rising from the extraordinary mind of one of the greatest Americans who ever lived, and it was paid for with the blood of thousands.

Now, removed by over a century from the struggles of the Civil War, we face what Abraham Lincoln himself considered the greatest threat to the United States at the end of that war: the rise of corporate power. In Lincoln’s words:

“I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. As a result of the war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed. I feel at this moment more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the midst of war. God grant that my suspicions may prove groundless.”

Since the Civil War, America has recreated a virulent economic dynamic the likes of which, in part, we fought a War of Independence to be free of: A veritable aristocracy that, in keeping with its own self-declared entitlement, takes for the most part whatever it wants, and leaves the rest to us.

At a time in our history when gargantuan financial interests are allowed to flood political campaigns with contributions that dwarf the ability of average citizens to match, it is thoroughly reasonable both to question this unfortunate turn of events, and to take vigorous action to change it. If we’re going to renegotiate our basic social contract from government “of the people, by the people, for the people,” to government “of a few of the people, by a few of the people, for a few of the people,” then at the very least this change should be accompanied by vigorous debate. For such a change, should it indeed become permanent, marks the end of the great democratic experiment that our ancestral geniuses bequeathed to us and for which so many have struggled and died.

The undue influence of financial interests — both corporate and personal — on the government of the United States is a cancer that underlies all other cancers. Euphemistically called “special interests,” many are corporate entities whose bottom line is the short-term interest of their shareholders and management only. That of itself is not the argument here, for it is the purview of corporate America itself to address its internal ethics; indeed, such questioning is already alive and well in certain circles. The pertinent issue here is not how corporations operate per se, but rather how they exert undue influence on the United States government, thus affecting the lives of the vast majority of ordinary Americans.

Every American citizen is affected when health insurance companies, reaping more than $14 billion in annual profit, for all intents and purposes prohibit the consideration of Uni-versal health care in congressional committee; when oil companies, reaping more than $88 billion in annual profit, limit our problem-solving options in the face of global warming; when gun manufacturers, reaping an annual profit of $1 billion, fight fiercely even the most moderate proposals for gun safety; and when defense contractors, often against the counsel of our own military leaders and reaping an annual profit of more than 14 billion dollars, promote the increasingly obsolete contention that an outsize defense budget is in direct relationship to the degree of our safety.

Meanwhile, those without financial leverage see their political influence continue to wane. America’s children, for instance, who obviously wield no financial leverage whatsoever, are increasingly at the effect of the unsustainable and perniciously unjust influence gap in Washington, D.C. America’s child poverty rate — at 23.1 percent — is so high that it is second only to Romania among 35 industrialized nations. One in four American children are “food insecure.” We even lack air quality safety standards in our public schools. A “cradle-to-prison pipeline” now makes the lifetime likelihood of incarceration for an African-American male 1 in 3, a Latino male 1 in 6, and a white male 1 in 17. Indeed, our private prison industry, reaping annual profits of more than $3 billion, gains economic benefit from the scandalously high incarceration rate in the United States. With 2.4 million of our citizens now imprisoned — compared to 300,000 in the 1970s — we now have the highest incarceration rate of any nation in the world, or even in history. We incarcerate more African-American men today than were slaves in 1850. The amount of unnecessary suffering that lies behind these statistics — the sheer despair of so many Americans now burdened by our imbalanced scales of social justice, is a wake-up call to the conscious heart. For no one is more of a “citizen” in the United States than is anyone else, and large groups of desperate citizens should be everyone’s concern… if for no other reason than that desperate people do desperate things.

All of the issues mentioned above — plus, as well, the difficulty faced by far too many young Americans trying to get a higher education; an opportunity gap that begins the first day of kindergarten, as the economically advantaged among us send our children to nursery school and the rest of America’s public school children lack educational stimulation until age five; a lack of paid maternity and paternity leave that in other countries has proven to reap social benefits for decades; and an issue that truly does affect us all: the corruption of America’s food supply and its infiltration by genetically modified foods — time and time again the average American is left to accept the diminishing returns of a rampantly unjust economic system.

To many Americans, this information is not new. What is new, perhaps — or maybe I’m just dreaming — is how many of us understand that if any of this is going to change, really change, then it won’t be because our current crop of leaders change it. For how can a system that derives its survival from money be the system that cuts off the money supply? If the buying and selling of the American government is ever going to change, it won’t be because the political status quo voluntary changes it. It will be because we, the people of the United States, having realized how dire the situation has become, create a new, nonviolent political movement out of which emerges political candidacies that make the public financing of all federal campaigns, plus a Constitutional Amendment overriding the effects of Citizens United and prohibiting the undue influence of moneyed interests on our politics, the cornerstone of those campaigns.

America has basically two choices at this point: to do the above, or to continue to water the leaves of a dying plant. If our wish is to water the roots of the plant — and there is still time to save it, for every two years half of the Congress of the United States comes up for election — then we had best get moving. Candidates who will run such campaigns as I’ve described will certainly not be the best funded, at least initially. But there are enough organizations to train candidates and elucidate the issues I’ve mentioned, that though the hour is late, Americans may still yet rise up and do the right thing — the “right thing” being something “Americans can always be counted on to do,” according to Winston Churchill, “after they have first exhausted all other possibilities.” This time, it’s not so much that all our options are exhausted, as that we ourselves are exhausted… not so much by effort as by lack of effort. Internally, it is our failure to engage that exhausts our souls. For we are currently abiding the incremental dismantling of American democracy, and surely somewhere inside ourselves we are sick at the realization. We need more than the audacity of hope this time. We need the audacity of courage. We need the audacity to wield power. We need the audacity to act.

And if we don’t, things will continue as they are. Echoing again the words of Lincoln as he speaks to us from the grave, “the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed.” Lincoln prayed that his “suspicions prove groundless.” Whether or not they do, is up to us.

Love,

Marianne

###

Marianne Williamson is an internally acclaimed New York Times bestselling author. For more information see www.marianne.com.

  • BeeGee

    You haven’t said anything new most smart people know all this, put in simpler language it is called GREED, pure and simple but yet you didn’t say that.   Why is the government going to give you or anyone else their rights?   This is a machine and a machine needs to be tweeked!  First everyone across the US will have to get the ruling powers of their states to put into action to ban lobbyist!  That would be a start, then a way for the government to be accountable to the people, crooks and thieves aren’t honest so how are you going to keep them out of the cookie jar?  You are not going to!   A ceiling on how much there salaries are could help, stop the insane perks they get, and make organizations stop stealing money.   Now Mary Anne if you get any of this stuff fixed then you should run for president yourself.   Until then I’ll keep praying and doing what I can do here in my own little town, with my own life.   Your post I found negative and depressing please come up with some positive solutions and not just idol talk.

    • ChristyLaLoba

      I think if you really were taking action, you would not feel so powerless.  I have found that to be true for myself, at least.

      I have also found that any negative contribution made to a positive contribution is really no help at all and serves no purpose other than to tear it down a notch; to take a step right back in the wrong direction.  

      You ask, “Why is the government going to give you or anyone else their rights?”

      I think you missed the point.  The point is that we must take full responsibility for OURSELVES, take  action as best we know how, and with as much consciousness as we can muster, and not wait around for someone ELSE to get their act together.  That only serves to maintain a helpless and weak state.  That is playing the victim, and that is precisely the role we must step OUT of.  The victim just sits back and occasionally moans about their awful situation, thereby COMPLETELY abandoning their own power to take a stand and DO something to change it.

      So, to counter your argument, I say spend less energy attacking the positive efforts of a caring and intelligent human being who IS taking action, (as well as inspiring it in others) and spend more of your energy trying to make a POSITIVE and meaningful contribution of your own.  My prayer is that you will.

    • Malnicoll

      Voltaire famously said “No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible.” We are ALL in this together. Like it or not. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every
      human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?

  • nic

    I love this.  thank you!

  • Judith

    I love you,I love your words and I love your heart….Thank You!!!

  • http://www.aworldwithlove.com/ Sharon

    Everything you are saying is harsh reality, pity most people are asleep to even notice. 

    Government is unfit for purpose and we have the right to dismantle and abolish government as it states in The Declaration of Independence “Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just power from the consent of the governed, that when any form of government become destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it.” It is time to abolish government and put a new thing in it’s place.

    As in the film Avatar, the people were up against heartless, greedy, corrupt and devil like humans with dark, powerful and unyielding force of high technology, massive armary and devastating bombs.

    The people of Pandora grouped together and with the power of the universe were able to claim victory.  We too will triumph at the last hour.  What is right and what is the truth will always prevail as this is God’s Earth not the devil’s.  There will be mass devastation as it was in Pandora but they came through at the last hour and so will we.

  • ChristyLaLoba

    this stirs something Great within me and I am so thankful for this post.  I am going to allow it to move me to action.  This is the power that intelligent, considerative, positive, and courageous intent can wield.  More of us must share and more of us MUST take action.  Building is a slow process, but if we keep at it, something will someday stand tall.

  • Jerryleejackson

    Marianne – Your blog column today is a turning point. Especially coming from someone who’s ideas and writings have been a gateway for so many to enter the expanded consciousness of love and miracles. Your words today set the stage for those awakened beings to look around in the illusion and recognize that political activism is only another way to forgive forward and hasten the coming of in-light-ened life, if indeed our intentions and actions are truly for the Greater Good. So many of those I see on the path of light have ignored their political responsibility thinking it is part of the problem. Today you have corrected that thinking forever. Perhaps the Green Party will merge with A Course In Miracles and we can take back the promise of America from the corporations and return it to the people. Ralph Nader wasn’t so bad after all, just too early!

    Thank you, again!

  • AthenaRisingNow.com

    The new candidates she speaks of are women!  It’s time we became those candidates and teach our daughters do disengage from the perpetual messages of feminine inadequacy.

  • Malnicoll

    “No snowflake in an avalanche never feels respsonsible.”
     -Voltaire

    “I don’t vote. Two reasons, two reasons I don’t vote: First of all, is meaningless. This country was bought and sold and paid for a long time ago. ”
     -George Carlin

    “I just love the freedoms we used to have in this country.”
    -George Carlin

    “A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny.”
    -Alexander Solzhenitsyn

  • kathleen

    Wow, so much truth at what the future holds for WE THE PEOPLE if we don’t wake from our slumber. Unless we find the courage to take back our country we are dead in the waters of corporate corruption. Think Power to the people and down with Citizens United.

  • http://twitter.com/DelilahSullivan Delilah Sullivan

    Great piece…
    Awareness….
    Walls are knocked down brick by brick. Just one brick each would do it.

  • http://www.karinpinter.com/ Karin Pinter

    Thank you for this, so enlightening. I had no idea about some of these facts & figures…  Growing up in Europe I admit I looked at America with hints of skepticism (but that was also driven by certain media coverage). Living here now is a good reminder of the sheer power we all have as individuals to create our own reality, and that in this country’s ‘youth’ there is still much to heal and clear for everyone’s best interests going forward.

    I think every government around the world is going through its own necessary dismantling of old paradigms and systems of concentrated power/wealth to the few (because the masses at the time didn’t know any better or perhaps didn’t dare… food for thought on that point, since we all play our part, right?).

    Happy to do my part for a global benefit and awakening for those who are willing!

  • Andrewwchilders

    Marianne, you are my hero and out of love I am offering a resource to make a correction.  (I almost don’t want to bring this up because I fear it might take away from your message, but, I respect you so much that I want to help).  Lincoln never said that quote, which you can confirm here:  http://quod.lib.umich.edu/l/lincoln/   (Al Gore use the same quote in his book but unfortunately it doesn’t check out).  

    HOWEVER, everything else is spot on.  I am particularly moved about what you said concerning the private prison industry.  There’s an easy “wake up/V8 forehead smack” moment when we bring awareness to the fact that prisons are PROFITING from incarceration.  That literally means it is in someone’s best interest to make sure more people go to jail more often and for longer periods of time.  

    We only need a small number of prisons — what we need are root-cause-rehabilitation-centers.

    <3  

  • Rbishko

    Marianne, 

    I am sorry that a woman of your influence, power and stature agrees with someone like Al Gore.  

  • Rbishko

    P.S. Christy LaLoba, you are right on!

  • Kelly Montes

    Thank you Marianne for putting in words the frustration that many of us feel. I too am one of those who are keenly aware and have been for a long time. My mother surviving WWII became an American citizen. She loved what the U.S. stood for and never looked back at Germany. But my story would be different. After serving 4 years in the Navy, I would later marry a Salvadorean and move my family to El Salvador. It is very strange to watch the U.S. from a distance that includes 18 years of never returning. Why? Because it is not the United States my mother fell in love with. The veil has been lifted and I feel powerless to offer anything other than prayer. But your article offers hope and where there is hope there is time for a new generation to awaken and move quickly to realign the spirit of a nation through courage regardless of financial paybacks to the ‘good ole boys.’ Here I live ‘under the radar’. Meaning a conscious choice to step out of the insanity of a goverment that is choking on it’s own dysfunctional greed and live in harmony with life itself. Not everyone can move and nor do I recomnend it. But after watching my mother lose everything and walk away from Germany for the betterment of her family, I too chose to do the same for mine. Perhaps my children will return but I do not think so. They came to their own conclusions many years ago and believe that our beloved United States has cultivated a nation of insane politicians who have run a muck of the country.

    Your abality and skills to put into words the prescription for an ailing nation is a huge responsibility that I will support in any and every way possible. Thank you.

    Kelly

  • http://www.facebook.com/donna.workman.79 Donna Workman

    You have said it eloquently.  Now we need to roll up our sleeves and once again learn who is running for office and truly work to support and elect those individuals who come from and are still part of the masses that are being trampled by the fewpowerfully wealthy citizens of our country.