I had the good fortune of being in Atlanta for the first Moral
Monday in Georgia. More about that in a moment but first some background.
Moral
Mondays started in North Carolina In response to an aggressive right wing state legislature and governor the people of
Moral Monday started protests at the state legislature building. These weekly
protests gradually grew until they were regularly attended by 2500 protesters. In
2013 over 900 people have been arrested in civil disobedience cases in North
Carolina. Moral Mondays came out of coalition organizing work going back at
least 8 years. Moral Mondays are to a large
extent lead by Reverend Doctor William Barber
who is also the North Carolina head for the NAACP. In North Carolina these
protests have focused on countering several pieces of legislation that were railroaded through by
the Republican controlled North Carolina state government. The legislation included
attacks on voting rights, cuts to unemployment benefits, opting out of the Medicaid
expansion associated with the affordable care act, an increased tax to lower income
workers, restrictions to abortion access, and
cuts to public education. This
right wing legislative blitzkrieg reminds me a bit of what Michigan went
through once Rick Snyder and the Republican Party took charge of our
state. To the Moral Monday coalition the
North Carolina Legislature was engaged in an immoral war on the poor.
In Georgia apparently planning efforts have been underway
for a while to build a similar political response to a conservative state
government, and on January 13th 2014 the protest was launched. It was a rainy day, not the most encouraging
of outdoor demonstrations, but by my count I think about 500 of us were
present, many huddling under umbrellas, but all generally in good spirits. The focus of the protest was the governors opting
out of the Medicaid expansion. This expansion
would bring coverage to approximately 600,000 citizens in Georgia, with my
quick back of the envelope calculations this is about 6 % of the population of
the state. Initially the Medicaid
expansion will be covered by the federal government, later the states will be
required to take up 5% of the costs,
then later still 10% of the costs. Even if
you’re a fiscal tight wad providing healthcare benefits for some 6% of your
states poorest people is a fiscal win. A
healthy population is a more productive population; productive populations bring
in more tax review and cost the government less. Reverend Barber traveled to
Atlanta this week to join us on the Georgia state house grounds. While my
general patients for clergy is not so high I found his talk encouraging. Specifically
he contrasted the so called construction of “morality” by the right to the
morality of his faith. Jesus was clear
about one thing, helping the poor, and Reverend Barber pointed out that there
is no inconsistency in using the government to provide the help. A next Moral
Monday Georgia style is scheduled for the end of January.
I was lucky to be in Georgia on the 13th, I was
there for my mother’s 80th birthday. We celebrated on the Saturday before
and she actually turned 80. Moral Monday
felt like part of the celebration , as an activist family participating in a
protest that is a launch of an effort for economic justice in Georgia was certainly
celebratory, rain and all.
As I reflected on this demonstration I thought about the
2011 protests in Wisconsin, and the Occupy Movement. I remembered the many demonstrations against the
keystone pipeline in 2012, I thought about the efforts to prevent anti-abortion
legislation from passing in Texas this past year, I also thought about the growing
fast food workers strikes and demands for living wages. It has been argued that
many of these efforts haven’t really brought about significant change; Occupy
fizzled out, the Republican legislatures continue to pass their anti-worker, anti-poor,
anti-women, anti-gay legislation, and no change to minimum wage seems immanent.
Moral Mondays? How long will they last you might ask. But its important to see
each of these protest movements as part of, and the first tiny steps in an
uprising. More and more people are
getting that things are amiss, and people are starting to do something about
it. I have two hopes, one is that these
protests and direct actions continue and grow, and the other is that as the protest
movements grow activists from different sectors learn to listen and communicate
with each other. I hope that the anarchist from Zuccotti park, can understand the
Minister from North Carolina, that southern anti-poverty activists, can see the
struggle against global warming as a struggle for a sustainable and fair
economy, that women’s rights to choose are linked to rights for a living wage,
rights for access to health care. All this and more. Somewhere in here is also
a struggle for democracy, against the rule of the 1%. As I participated in the
demonstration this past Monday I had the feeling that there was space for a
broad coalition and I felt encouraged. Good luck Georgia going forward.
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