Finding the country’s conscience - The Daily Iowan

 Finding the country’s conscience
 BYSHAWN GUDE | JANUARY 28, 2011 7:10 AM
Forget the much-mythologized vanguard party.

We young people have often been the ones at the forefront of political
movements, the courageous catalysts for social change. Free of the
jaundiced inertia that can accompany old age, students and other youths
around the world have repeatedly positioned themselves as the conscience
of their respective nations, speaking out against injustice and
mobilizing for democratic freedom.

And now?

As Egypt erupts after years of latent indignation (Thursday’s New York
Times: “Youth Upend Cairo’s Taming of Opposition”) and Tunisians revolt,
our campus — and, for the most part, our age cohort — is largely silent.

Little public outrage over Republican attempts to slash state funding
for higher education. A relative absence of opprobrium over an
ever-metastasizing national-security state. And no broad-based,
multi-ethnic youth alliance pushing for humane immigration reform.

I don’t mean to equate America’s shortcomings with the autocratic
dictators and venal institutions that plague such countries as Egypt and
Tunisia. Anti-21-only histrionics aside, Iowa City isn’t governed by a
tyrannical City Council. And citizens don’t have to bribe crooked
officials in order to receive rudimentary services.

But while blind patriots and adherents of American exceptionalism might
have you believe otherwise, our country does have its fair share of
foibles. We have perfidious politicians, rather than dictatorial rulers;
mass incarceration of nonviolent drug offenders, rather than jailing of
government dissidents; and Big Business-Big Government collusion, rather
than quid pro quo corruption.

In the past, American students have protested such invidiousness.

The 1960s saw the zenith of student activism in the United States. The
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Students for a
Democratic Society protested some of the country’s worst anti-democratic
tendencies — white supremacy, militarism, and economic injustice. The
nation saw North Carolina A&T students display an astounding amount of
sangfroid during the Greensboro sit-ins.

International youths have often done the same.

Sophie Scholl and others in the White Rose resistance group were
executed for producing and distributing anti-Nazi literature. In 1989’s
Tiananmen Square massacre, Chinese students and other citizens rose up
and demanded reform. Twenty-six-year-old Iranian Neda Agha-Soltan became
a symbol of resistance after being gunned down following 2009’s
fraudulent presidential election.

Throughout the years, numerous youths — Roger Allen LaPorte, Jan Palach,
and Romas Kalanta, to name a few — have even set themselves ablaze in
protest. Last month, 26-year-old Tunisian Mohamed Bouazizi joined that
list.

I don’t mean to lecture (or suggest students should resort to
self-immolation to protest potential tuition hikes). But as young
people, we have an obligation — not just to turn out for or against the
21-ordinance, but to hold our elected officials accountable for the
policies they support.

Robert Maynard Hutchins, an education philosopher and administrator, put
it well: “The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination
from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and
undernourishment.” And with an emasculated democracy, indignities (or,
at the very least, ill-conceived policies) are more likely to go
unchallenged.

Democratic agency is more than voting every couple years or supporting a
charismatic politician. It means mobilizing, protesting, and resisting
for the policies and causes we hold dear.

Our nation isn’t incorrigible. Progress, while possible, isn’t
inevitable. The rapidity of reform is malleable.

We just have to shake off our lethargy and reclaim our role as the
“conscience of the nation.”

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