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Support Mr. Obama with Family Activism

By Roberto Vargas, AlterNet. Posted November 11, 2008.


Obama's calls for individual responsibility mean involving ourselves in a commitment that engages all of us in helping and supporting each other.

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There is a joy resonating throughout the country to be living during this historical moment when we have elected an African-American, an organizer, and a courageous man to be president. It also thrills me that young and old, laborers and professionals, realize that one man cannot advance all the improvements we want for our society, but that we must all move the change together.

In his August 2008 acceptance speech for the Democratic presidential nomination, Mr. Obama made it clear, "ours is a promise that says government cannot solve all our problems." He went on to say "we must admit that programs alone can't replace parents; that government can't turn off the television and make a child do her homework; that fathers must take more responsibility for providing the love and guidance their children need." Mr. Obama's appeal is that we all step up and assume our "individual and mutual responsibility" to improve life for our families and communities. To this I say, Yes! To me, family includes neighbors, friends, co-workers, and others within and outside of my community; and we can help each other become more caring people.

While Mr. Obama did not use the words "cultural" or "family activism," I believe that is what he wants from all Americans, and especially from those of us who have supported his campaign. The activism of getting someone elected or advocating for government or corporate accountability is absolutely necessary. Yet, equally important is that we involve ourselves in nurturing among family, friends, and neighbors, a personal confidence and a caring commitment that engages all of us in helping and supporting each other. This is the cultural change necessary in our nation -- that we each create life-styles of increased commitment to service and positive change. Family activism can do this by consciously fostering these practices of love, power, and mutual support beginning with all our relationships.

Many of our families struggle under the stress of multiple jobs, the rising cost of living, and insufficient time to support the positive development of our children or the well-being of our neighbors. While government needs to protect us and invest our resources wisely, we must all be each other's keepers, recognizing that caring for and supporting each other's success is equally as important as insuring that we can all live joyful lives and enjoy safe communities. Family activism involves making Family our cause, which includes being proud about taking care of ourselves, our loved ones, and others within our communities; and also developing the community power necessary to encourage all levels of government and corporate accountability.

The Obama Campaign enthused me and millions of people to step out of our comfort zones and talk to neighbors and strangers about the changes we want for our nation. These actions must continue. We can begin by considering the following ideas about family activism and its role in advancing the American promise.

1. Personal and Family Responsibility. Mr. Obama said we are our brother's keeper and sister's keeper. Even good government is limited in what it can do to ensure the education and welfare of our children or the safety of our streets. The positive changes we want require every one of us to ask, "How can I be a better person, more fair and respectful of others, more committed to personal development and the development of those around me?" As a family activist, I have been doing this for years and encourage others within my family, business, and community to do the same. We must all own our responsibility and power to care for each other and move the positive changes we want for our own family, friends, and neighbors.
2. Family and Future Mindfulness. Family must be our cause and we must think about families with the future in mind. Let's be honest. The coming years will get harder because of the unavoidable effects of global warming, poisoned environments, overpopulation, and greedy corporations. We will see more expensive food, water, and energy; and fewer jobs. Considering this future, it's important that our circles of family and friends develop mindfulness, creativity, and skills for survival and success. Many people I know have already begun. We communicate within our families and each other to support and inspire each other. We hold family or group meetings to develop our success plan and to share support. We seek to make our gatherings, including birthdays or holidays, experiences that foster happiness and love. For us, family activism is developing the knowledge, connections, and skills to better support each other and our communities.
3. Multicultural Respect. I am inspired by the way Mr. Obama has repeatedly modeled respect for all people. It reminds me that we are all part of the human family and share the responsibility to advance the well-being of our entire society. While many of us belong to communities that have sustained greater degrees of racism and exploitation than others, it is time to recognize that most of us are working class people doing our best to take care of ourselves and families. It's time that we liberate our minds and hearts from the prejudices that divide us. The truth is that when we get beyond prejudice, we feel connected, enriched, and hopeful to be in relationship with diverse people. Many people enjoy this type of connection -- so they will continue practicing it-yet, it is also important to recognize that multicultural respect is a political necessity. We will need to work together to force the insurance industry, big business, and the super wealthy to act responsibly for the good of all.
4. Sustainable Life Styles. Our society has become overly wasteful and the world can no longer sustain it. We cannot continue depleting our resources, poisoning our environment, producing throw-away stuff, and causing global warming. Increasingly, more people realize that the promise of a future for humankind requires that we change our life styles. We must be wise and less wasteful in what we buy, use and eat; conserve energy; and encourage choices that take better care of our environment and our finite resources. For years, our family and friends have sought to develop traditions that are about buying locally, recycling, conserving, and prioritizing the precious gift of sharing quality time over purchasing fancy toys. To us, this is family, or cultural, activism that cares about our Earth and human relations.
5. Community Involvement. Bad government and the push for consumer life styles have made us lazy about our civic and community involvement. Too many people have the attitude that government will take care of our unsafe neighborhoods, our children's education, or protect us from exploitation. Again, government can only do its part. As individuals we can make our neighborhoods safer by reaching out and developing relationships with those around us. We can talk to neighbors and co-workers about what needs to change in our city, jobs, and society; and then determine what we can do as a community. Maybe the need is to start a neighborhood network to support each other, elect new leaders, or meet with business owners to urge them to do the right thing. For many of my friends, community involvement has included helping each other with child care, organizing block parties, launching a campaign to lift local wages, electing more responsible officials, and more. For many of us, family activism involves improving our communities as part of our responsibility to take care of our families.

Let's give President Elect Obama our support by beginning conversations about the family or cultural activism required to be good parents, uncles, aunts, neighbors, and co-workers - people who strive to achieve the American promise of a good life for all. As a community organizer, I have been living this practice of change among my multiple circles of family and friends for many years. Now, in my recently published book titled Family Activism (2008, Berrett-Koehler) I offer communication, meeting, and ceremony tools for all readers who desire to develop healthier families, organizations and communities. Let us all be the change, we want to see!

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See more stories tagged with: obama, election 2008, family policy

Dr. Roberto Vargas is a leadership trainer and organization development consultant living in southern California. Contact him at RobertoVargas.com His new book, Family Activism, is available at Amazon.com.

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Looking for an Obama quote/position...
Posted by: nihilozero on Nov 11, 2008 12:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I recall Obama stating something that I really liked. It was to the
effect that everyone has a civic duty/responsibility to keep him
honest and to make sure he keeps his promises. Can anyone tell me
where I can find this quote, give me a link, a video, whatever?
There is likely more than one out there. I plan on being aware of
what he does as president and I think this quote will be a reminder of
how we should monitor all of the politicians and try to keep them
honest.
Nihilo Zero

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Left out government involvement!
Posted by: gunboat diplomat on Nov 11, 2008 12:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can't just go limit your concerns to yourself, your family and your community, in the hope that the government will now fix itself, or the very same problems are going to crop up again.

Don't go back to sleep after this election. At the very least, pick some issue that matters to you and start pressuring elected officials and career bureaucrats to take a look at it - that's the least you can do. If you don't, then the Obama presidency will go down in flames - the corporate goons are just waiting for a misstep.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Third parties Posted by: truthlover
» Beck you are seeing things again Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» Bliss, you need to read more. Posted by: Live Gently
» RE: Bliss, you need to read more. Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» Even if you think that Posted by: truthlover
Good parenting and something else
Posted by: craighorowitz on Nov 11, 2008 4:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We began reading to our son when he was less than a month old. He is now four and can read at an 6th grade level. We have no TV, we borrow DVDs from the library's children's section. Our house often has music playing, Beethoven, Beatles, Janis Joplin, Thelonios Monk, Hungarian traditional, Music from all over the world, Neil Young, Vladamir Horowitz, Rolling Stones, Animals, Bing Crosby, Lena Horne, Oscar Peterson, Howling Wolf...
(sorrty no rap or hip hop except when it appears in a far more benign form in one of his DVDs) We talk science to him, we encourage his artisitic efforts, we're teaching him chess we are not pushing this but encouraging it to expand his mind. His mother has him speaking very well in Korean, me English, a little French, a little Spanish. We are also trying to inculcate him with concern for others' feelings, sharing, being polite and waiting his turn. We give him a lot of love besides. Every parent can do these things if they disconnect their television.

I am a psychologist who frequently urges patients to volunteer. ANY volunteering is better than being unemployed and laying around waiting for others to feed, house or clothe you. We have two fuel efficient cars. We buy organic when we can. We recycle. We use CFLs throuout the house.

I used to volunteer, all through college and it is good for the soul and a very good way to get back to paid work. If we all do a little bit, the world would be a better place.

When Obama asked everyone to inflate their tires the GOP tried to make it seem like a stupid, insignificant move, but hey, have you ever ridden a bicycle with soft tires? It takes a heluva lot more energy that hard tires.

Sorry for this pollyanish pontificating.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The history of Austria, and of some of it's people, is too painful to allow these racist comments
Posted by: Squarehead on Nov 11, 2008 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry if this is off topic, but check it out

I read something appalling in today's newspaper. I encourage anybody who feels similarly to contact the Austrian Embassy. See below:

Dear Sir/ Madam, May I express my disquiet at the reported comments of a senior Austrian journalist, Mr Klaus Emmerich. The history of Austria, and of some of it's people, is too painful to allow these racist comments to pass without some kind of censure.

This morning, I received a mail from a business associate, describing the merits of an Austrian designed and manufactured solar heat system; that is representative of the many good things about your country. The blinkered racism, (casual in its naivety, dishonest in it's lack of intellectual rigour) of Mr Emmerich deserves, I suggest, a mention in your parliament. (Both National Council & Federal Council) For the stupidity of this man to go unremarked upon, will be bad for Austria in many ways.

I hope you can agree and perhaps convey this message on to relevant diplomatic personnel and politicians

Thank you for your time. Yours,

From the Irish Times, 11th November 2008
"DEREK SCALLY in Berlin

AUSTRIAN PUBLIC broadcaster Orf has distanced itself from a senior commentator who suggested Barack Obama and "all blacks are not as far advanced in the civilisation process".

Klaus Emmerich, a former US correspondent and one-time editor-in-chief of Orf news, said in a discussion programme: "I don't want to let myself and the western world be directed by a black man."

The 80 year old, an institution in Austrian news circles, continued: "When I say that, it's a racist remark, correct, no question." Mr Emmerich said he "still consider[s] the Americans racists who must be going through a really bad period to elect a black man and a black, very good-looking woman, into the White House".

"That would be like if the next chancellor [in Austria] was a Turk. That'd be something," he said.

He went on to speculate about whether Mr Obama's election marked the "retreat" of "white America".

Orf has distanced itself from Mr Emmerich's remarks and "every kind of discrimination" but has declined to end the contract of the station's leading US pundit.

Later, Mr Emmerich took an even harder line in a newspaper interview, calling Mr Obama's victory "a highly disturbing development" because "blacks are not as far advanced in the civilisation process nor in their political progress". Mr Obama, he said, possessed a "a diabolic ability to present his politics so effectively".

Sehr geehrter Herr gnädige Frau, Mai drücke ich meine Besorgnis an den berichteten Anmerkungen eines älteren österreichischen Journalisten aus, Herr Klaus Emmerich. Die Geschichte von Österreich und von einigem von it' s-Leute, sind zu schmerzlich, diesen rassistische Anmerkungen ohne irgendeine Art Kritik überschreiten zu lassen. Heute morgen, empfing ich eine Post von einem Geschäftspartner und beschrieb die Verdienste eines österreichischen entworfenen und hergestellten Solarhitzesystems; der ist Repräsentant der vielen guten Sachen über Ihr Land. Der blinkered Rassismus, (beiläufig in seiner Naivität, unehrlich in it' s-Mangel an intellektueller Härte) von Herrn Emmerich verdient, schlage ich vor, eine Erwähnung in Ihrem Parlament. (Beides Nationalrat & Der Bundesrat) für die Dummheit dieses Mannes, unremarked auf zu gehen, ist für Österreich in vielerlei Hinsicht schlecht. Ich hoffe, dass Sie dieser Mitteilung relevantes diplomatisches Personal und Politikern an zustimmen und möglicherweise übermitteln können Danke während Ihrer Zeit. Ihr,

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The history of Austria, and of some of it's people, is too painful to allow these racist comments
Posted by: Squarehead on Nov 11, 2008 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry if this is off topic, but check it out

I read something appalling in today's newspaper. I encourage anybody who feels similarly to contact the Austrian Embassy. See below:

Dear Sir/ Madam, May I express my disquiet at the reported comments of a senior Austrian journalist, Mr Klaus Emmerich. The history of Austria, and of some of it's people, is too painful to allow these racist comments to pass without some kind of censure.

This morning, I received a mail from a business associate, describing the merits of an Austrian designed and manufactured solar heat system; that is representative of the many good things about your country. The blinkered racism, (casual in its naivety, dishonest in it's lack of intellectual rigour) of Mr Emmerich deserves, I suggest, a mention in your parliament. (Both National Council & Federal Council) For the stupidity of this man to go unremarked upon, will be bad for Austria in many ways.

I hope you can agree and perhaps convey this message on to relevant diplomatic personnel and politicians

Thank you for your time. Yours,

From the Irish Times, 11th November 2008
"DEREK SCALLY in Berlin

AUSTRIAN PUBLIC broadcaster Orf has distanced itself from a senior commentator who suggested Barack Obama and "all blacks are not as far advanced in the civilisation process".

Klaus Emmerich, a former US correspondent and one-time editor-in-chief of Orf news, said in a discussion programme: "I don't want to let myself and the western world be directed by a black man."

The 80 year old, an institution in Austrian news circles, continued: "When I say that, it's a racist remark, correct, no question." Mr Emmerich said he "still consider[s] the Americans racists who must be going through a really bad period to elect a black man and a black, very good-looking woman, into the White House".

"That would be like if the next chancellor [in Austria] was a Turk. That'd be something," he said.

He went on to speculate about whether Mr Obama's election marked the "retreat" of "white America".

Orf has distanced itself from Mr Emmerich's remarks and "every kind of discrimination" but has declined to end the contract of the station's leading US pundit.

Later, Mr Emmerich took an even harder line in a newspaper interview, calling Mr Obama's victory "a highly disturbing development" because "blacks are not as far advanced in the civilisation process nor in their political progress". Mr Obama, he said, possessed a "a diabolic ability to present his politics so effectively".

Sehr geehrter Herr gnädige Frau, Mai drücke ich meine Besorgnis an den berichteten Anmerkungen eines älteren österreichischen Journalisten aus, Herr Klaus Emmerich. Die Geschichte von Österreich und von einigem von it' s-Leute, sind zu schmerzlich, diesen rassistische Anmerkungen ohne irgendeine Art Kritik überschreiten zu lassen. Heute morgen, empfing ich eine Post von einem Geschäftspartner und beschrieb die Verdienste eines österreichischen entworfenen und hergestellten Solarhitzesystems; der ist Repräsentant der vielen guten Sachen über Ihr Land. Der blinkered Rassismus, (beiläufig in seiner Naivität, unehrlich in it' s-Mangel an intellektueller Härte) von Herrn Emmerich verdient, schlage ich vor, eine Erwähnung in Ihrem Parlament. (Beides Nationalrat & Der Bundesrat) für die Dummheit dieses Mannes, unremarked auf zu gehen, ist für Österreich in vielerlei Hinsicht schlecht. Ich hoffe, dass Sie dieser Mitteilung relevantes diplomatisches Personal und Politikern an zustimmen und möglicherweise übermitteln können Danke während Ihrer Zeit. Ihr,

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

This is why we need to take our local elections seriously.
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 11, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You're gonna get both sides preaching "personal responsibility" and while we're all well aware of it and will do our part, the pols in Washington will still be busy selling your soul to the corporate/religious/military monied elite devils. It's time we increased voter turnout in local elections and kept it ongoing so that in time we would actually have a really representative government in Washington that isn't out of touch with its constituents.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The best way to get good parenting is to applaud the childless
Posted by: janvdb on Nov 11, 2008 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Until Childlessness is applauded as loudly as procreation, we will continue to have too much bad parenting. And just plain too much parenting.

Those who never find a situation good enough to justify procreation are those who are keeping the world whole for everyone else's kids.

So, let's not forget to applaud voluntary childlessness while we are at it here, going on about "family." Let's not leave out the childless. Everyone else is better off for the cautious and prudent behavior of the non-procreator.

Humans are in such excess now that even the best kid in the world is worse for the planet than no kid at all.

More people need to abstain -- it's the right thing to do in these days.

Taking good care of your kids is the absolutely minimum decent thing for parents to do for the sake of society, but actually having had kids is NOT actually a good thing.

We'd all have preferred you hadn't, actually.

There are so many. No danger of any shortage.

So, if you do a really bang-up job of raising those kids, you might be back to zero, in terms of your impact on the rest of us.

So, work hard. And appreciate those of us who haven't added to the "family" problem.

And, hey -- I'm not yapping at women here. MEN are responsible for every child that arrives. They are the ones making it all happen.

Jan VanDenBerg

Jan VanDenBerg

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» thank you Posted by: veggiegrrrl
Think Globally, Act Locally
Posted by: suckerbeagle on Nov 11, 2008 8:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To find out how, go to: www.november5.org

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» RE: Think Globally, Act Locally Posted by: Bliss Doubt
Community organizer
Posted by: willymack on Nov 11, 2008 11:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember how the rethugs belittled Obama's experience as a community organizer in their typical sneering, derisive fashion? That worked well, didn't it? Implicit in Obama's relating this experience is the knowlege of a community as an extended family. Is it not true that the world community is an extended family as well? Is it not also true that most normal humans look after their family's well-being without regard to petty squables over inconsequential trivialities? Is there any doubt in anyone's mind that President Obama will be a splendid advocate of our human family?

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Articles like this aren't helping.
Posted by: lindat on Nov 11, 2008 2:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We're fighting right wing smears that Obama is a stasi type civilian group type Marxist.

This creepy article isn't helping.

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The Family-Community Relationship
Posted by: hopefilled on Nov 17, 2008 9:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To expand upon the excellent content of this article, there are enlightened educators who see a growing need to involve children at a young age in full-blown community activities so that they see themselves from the very beginning as part of a community, wider than the family and different from the school --not to replace the school, but to enhance what the school can bring to life. Parents can begin this process by linking with other families as suggested.

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