| 2002
Wells College Commencement Address
by
Frances Tarlton "Sissy" Farenthold
I consider it a singular
honor to address the Wells College Class of 2002. You have been an outstanding
class in your questioning and action. You have witnessed many changes,
and you have effected some of these changes. You have demonstrated civic
motivation, an essential component of a citizen in a republic. I am here
to urge you to carry this spirit of activism into the next phase of your
lives. I believe activism is a truly pressing need and a major challenge
for your generation.
Today, however, is a joyous
day, a day of celebration for you, your family, and your friends. It is
worth all the sacrifices, struggles, questioning, and disappointments that
have been a part of the past four years. Your graduation from Wells is
a mixture of high anxiety and good fortune.
Good
fortune comes in many guises. For example, I was hoping for good fortune
as I walked out of the Bellinzoni Building on a cloudy day in the summer
of 1976. The financial numbers for the college I had spent the day poring
over were just as dreary as the day. In true Texas style, I thought what
Wells needed was an oil or gas well. Later a gas well was drilled. It only
provided enough gas for the dining hall. It did not provide for the college
balance sheet. Low gas production is the underside of the Texas dream that
is seldom discussed.
Today, I join the great majority
of the citizenry in celebration of good fortune that has come to this lovely
village and unique college. For both will be enhanced and restored due
to the generosity of an alumna and the leadership of the college and the
village. Good fortune is often hard won. It has to be earned by benefactors
and recipients alike - and so does democracy.
Democracy is a fragile mechanism.
We saw how fragile it is in the breakdown of our electoral system in the
presidential elections of 2000. We have witnessed wholesale erosion of
our civil liberties during the failed drug war and especially after 9/11.
We see our democratic institutions seriously weakened. These elements have
come together at this moment in history as a challenge to the activism
of your generation. From the outset, I want to tell you, activists experience
setbacks.
Author Sam Smith writes in
his latest book Why Bother: "Those who think history has left us
helpless should recall the abolitionist of 1830, the feminist of 1870,
the labor organizer of 1890, and the gay or lesbian writer of 1910. They
like us did not get to choose their time in history; but they, like us,
did get to choose what they did with it." There are a cluster of policy
issues and trends in this fragile democracy that now confront your generation:
1) One is the ever increasing
disparity in income and wealth between the rich and poor in our country.
(Such an extreme gap between the haves and have-nots is inimical to democracy.)
2) Another is the overriding
power of the multi-national corporations, with the consequential private
benefits they derive from militarism and a culture of violence
3) Lastly, the related drug
war contributes to militarism, a culture of coercion, incarceration, and
intrusion on personal autonomy.
Let
us start with the drug war. It has been used to incarcerate African-American
women and men on a wholesale basis. Incarceration is the number one civil
rights issue of our decade. On a percentage basis, more Americans are now
incarcerated than at any time in our history; and America incarcerates
more Americans than any other county in the world. Debate on alternatives
to the present prohibition policy has been stifled. In 1972 the Schaefer
Commission appointed by President Nixon proposed the decriminalization
of marijuana, a report obviously ignored as the money has poured into various
agencies at every level of government making for more and more interest
groups eager to preserve the status quo. The most recently released Nixon
tapes are a revelation. He said, "I think there is a need to come out with
a report that is totally oblivious to the difference between marijuana
and other drugs."
Personally, I have never
smoked a joint nor do I intend to; however, it strikes me that regulation
and taxation rather than prohibition would be far more rational than the
unexamined and destructive policy we have today.
I ask you, look into this
issue for yourself and all other public issues. Whatever your opinions,
express them. Without expression of your opinions, elected officials will
continue to implement failed and destructive policies. For example, prior
to September 11, only criminal defense lawyers raised alarms at the erosion
of civil rights in the administration of justice.
Again I quote Sam Smith:
"We have difficulty perceiving our current condition because of our aversion
to a single word - fascism. We seem only to understand or mention the climax
of fascism, the Holocaust, not its genesis..." Italians who invented the
term fascist also called fascism estate corporativo, the corporatist
state. A corporatist state is one in which large corporations have the
powers that in a democracy reside in the citizens and the institutions
of democratic government. "Corporatism is fascism with a human face." It
is no exaggeration to call the United States a corporatist state. The handmaiden
of the corporatist control of our government is, first, the private corporate
control of campaign finance through PACS, coerced giving by employees,
orchestrated corporate fund-raising and donations, second, the targeted
placement of corporate representatives in strategic governmental policy
positions, and, third, an open door and open agenda policy for those lobbyists
whose corporations have paid for the election of a public officeholder
who is supposed to represent the public good. To compound the abuse of
private influence in public life, a revolving door cycles officials among
public agencies, public office, and powerful private corporate positions.
The campaign finance reform legislation is a mild effort to correct a situation
inimical to a representative form of government.
Enron is a poster child of
corporate abuse. It is an example of the dangerous merging of public and
private interests, where public institutions were used for private gain
at public expense. Many levels of government were infiltrated by Enron’s
private corporate agents. The public agenda was tainted by Enron’s greed
in the Congress, the presidency, vice presidency, federal agencies under
the executive branch such as the Export-Import Bank, and OPIC. In its home
state of Texas, Enron held the keys to all three branches of government
and the media. I personally think it is naive to believe that Enron is
an isolated case. It is merely one flagrant case that has come to our attention
among many corporations that wield inordinate political influence and power.
The consequences of this
corporate concentration of power and a generally supine government are
as follows:
1) Our military budget equals
that of the budget of the next 14 countries.
2) We rank number one in
overseas bases.
3) We are the chief exporter
of weapons to the world.
In everything related to
war, war making, and violence, we are numero uno. However, we pay
a crippling cost in reduced access to health care, in poor education, and
a damaged environment. Our welfare and the welfare of our children are
undermined by excessive private profit seeking.
As
for the culture of violence - I am reeling from a conference I recently
attended. Our society teaches and encourages violent behavior by our cartoons,
video games, television, and movies. A 1972 report to the Surgeon General
of the United States documented that media violence causes violence in
society. A 2001 Surgeon General’s report reiterates that virtual media
violence causes real violence in society. A study from Stanford University
indicates that violence in elementary schools can be reduced by 30-50%
by educating parents and children about the toxic impact of media violence
and by weaning children from television. The study shows that the most
violent children benefit the most by reduced exposure to media violence.
Media violence is toxic, but the media does not publish information about
the proven impact of media violence because it is addicted to violence
to bolster earnings and attract ratings and advertisers.
I urge you to look beneath
the endless stream of public relations and advertising both private and
governmental to what is actually going on. You will need to utilize the
Internet, scholarly journals, and the alternative and foreign press because
the American corporate media is part of the problem. You will also need
to utilize your fine education to rectify the abuses of our government
by private corporate interests and return our government to the people.
We acknowledge that no utopia
is to be found in this world. It is an imperfect world, but we can work
to improve it as did the abolitionist of 1830, the feminist of 1870, the
labor organizer of 1890, and the gay and lesbian writer of 1910. The world
can be improved. For example, we are edging toward the acceptance that
we are all part of the human family and that our world is precious. I know
you will do your part in realizing this life-affirming belief.
- Delivered on Saturday,
May 25, 2002, on the Wells College campus.
Last updated 1/22/2002
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