The Jewish Week
 
 
 
 
“Radical  centrism” and the Jewish community 


 
06/24/2010 


 
James Besser 


 
Does hyper-polarized America need a new “radical centrism” to get us past 
the  stale ideologies of both right and left and the resulting national 
paralysis? In  a _Washington  Post op-ed_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/23/AR2010062302328.html)
  today, Matt Miller says we 
do, and I think he's onto something  that also applies to out increasingly 
dysfunctional Jewish politics. 
Miller, a fellow at the Center for American Progress, writes that both 
right  and left are “correct about the obsolescence of the other side's key 
premises,  yet blind to the staleness of their own. What partisans on neither 
side seem to  sense is that events are poised to consign many traditional 
priorities of both  conservatives and liberals to the ash heap.” 
With party affiliation declining, independents are the nation's biggest  
voting bloc – but “the left and right retain a stranglehold on the debate. 
Only  the shrill prevail. On TV, talk radio or the campaign trail, it's almost 
 impossible to hear the kind of common sense that takes us beyond the usual 
 partisan tropes.” 
The result: debates on critical issues like regulation, taxes, Social  
Security - the list is endless - that ignore changing, increasingly complex  
realities in favor of rigid positions and outdated slogans that add up to 
policy  gridlock. 
Miller focuses on economic issues, but it seems to me the same trend 
defines  Jewish politics today, both in terms of domestic issues and the 
endless  
squabbling over Middle East peace. 
Jewish voters, increasingly, are independents, but Jewish  commentators 
preach mostly from the extremes; what we hear from our  organizations and 
opinion leaders are old slogans, not new and creative ideas to  meet the 
demands 
of a radically changing environment. 
Miller concludes: “The challenge is to build a new creed and a new 
coalition  that can move us past the inability of left and right to tackle our 
real  
problems....Whether it takes two years or 10, this new creed is coming, 
because  the inexorable march of the global economy and our aging population 
have made  old ideas and coalitions unsustainable. Whoever is savvy enough to 
build the new  policy, messaging and constituency architecture for a genuine 
problem-solving  path to 51 percent will win the future -- and deserves to.”
 
Seems to me that makes a lot of sense for a nation caught in the grips of  
paralyzing polarization – and for a Jewish community that seems headed in 
the  same direction.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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