Representative Spencer Bachus is one of
the only people I know from Alabama. I bet I'm the only socialist he
knows. I'm certainly the only one the congressman from Birmingham could
name after darkly claiming that there are 17 socialists lurking in the House of Representatives.
I doubt that there are any other socialists, let alone 17 more, in all
of the Congress. I also respectfully doubt that Spencer Bachus
understands much about democratic socialism. I hope this is an
opportunity to shed some light on a viewpoint that deserves more
attention throughout America and in our capital.
At its best, Washington brings people like us together to fight for our
principles and work things out for the good of the country. Spencer and
I used to serve together on the House Financial Services Committee.
I don't mean to hurt him back home, but the truth is that he even
cosponsored an amendment of mine once on credit card ripoffs.
At its worst, Washington is a place where name-calling partisan
politics too often trumps policy. A standard refrain in John McCain's
presidential stump speeches last fall was a claim that
Barack Obama's Senate voting record was more liberal than Senate's only
socialist, yours truly. That is nonsense on several levels. Even as
political hyperbole, the attack didn't work out all that well for my
colleague from Arizona.
Still, branding someone as a socialist
has become the slur du jour by leading lights of the American right
from Newt Gingrich to Rush Limbaugh. Some, like Mike Huckabee,
intentionally blur the differences between socialism and communism,
between democracy and totalitarianism. "Lenin and Stalin would love
this stuff," Huckabee told last winter's gathering of the Conservative Political Action Conference.
If we could get beyond such nonsense, I think this country could use a
good debate about what goes on here compared to places with a long
social-democratic tradition like Sweden, Norway and Finland, where, by
and large, the middle class has a far higher standard of living than we
do.
I was honored last year to show Ambassador Pekka Lintu of Finland around my home state of Vermont. There was standing-room only at a town meeting where people came to hear more about one of the world's most successful economic and social models.
And what we learned impressed us. Finland is a country which provides
high-quality health care to all of its people with virtually no
out-of-pocket expense; where parents and their young children receive
free excellent childcare and/or parental leave benefits which dwarf
what our nation provides; where college and graduate education is free
to students and where children in the public school system often record
the highest results in international tests. In Finland, where 80
percent of workers belong to unions, all employees enjoy at least 30
days paid vacation and the gap between the rich and poor is far more
equitable than in the United States.
One reason there was so much interest in the Finnish model was that even before Wall Street greed
drove the world economy into a deep recession, more and more Americans
were wondering why the very rich were becoming richer while our economy
failed our working families. They wanted to know why the middle class
was shrinking, poverty was increasing and the United States was the
only major country without a national health care program. Despite all
the rhetoric about "family values," workers in the United States now
work the longest hours of any people in a major country. Our health
care system is disintegrating. At last count, 47 million Americans had
no health insurance while we spend twice as much per capita on health
care as any other nation.
We have the highest rate of
childhood poverty in the industrialized world. Our childcare system is
totally inadequate. Too many of our kids drop out of school, and
college is increasingly unaffordable. One of the results of how we
neglect many of our children is that we end up with more people in
jails and prisons than any other country on earth. There is a
correlation between the highest rate of childhood poverty and the
highest rate of incarceration.
Let's be clear. Finland is no utopia. Not so many years ago, it
experienced a severe economic downturn. Its economy today is not immune
to what is happening in the rest of the world. There also are, to be
sure, important differences between the United States and Finland – a
small country with a population of only 5.2 million people. Finland has
a very homogenous population. We are extremely diverse. Finland is the
size of Montana. We stretch 3,000 miles from coast to coast.
Despite the differences, there are important similarities. Both
countries share many of the same aspirations for their people. When one
thinks about the long march of human history, it is no small thing that
democratic countries like Finland exist that operate under egalitarian
principles, which have virtually abolished poverty, which provide
almost-free, quality health care to all their people, and provide free,
high-quality education from child care to graduate school.
Whether we live in Burlington, Vt. or Birmingham, Ala., we should be
prepared to study and learn from the successes of social-democratic
countries. Name-calling and scare tactics just won't do.
Bernie Sanders is the independent U.S. Senator
from Vermont. He is the longest serving independent member of Congress
in American history. He is a member of the Senate's Budget, Veterans,
Environment, Energy, and H.E.L.P. (Health, Education, (more...)
Crossposted from OpEdNews
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Socialist-Successes-by-Bernie-Sanders-090422-182.html
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