Dignity - A Unifying Value for the Democratic Party

This article about democratic values is a cross-post from Robert Fuller's blog.

Democrats acknowledge the need to clarify their core values. Crashing the Gate by Jerome Armstrong and Markos Moulistas Zuniga calls for a conceptual breakthrough, but the grassroots/netroots process it describes falls short of providing the unifying idea that Democrats seek.

What basic, compelling idea can do for Democrats today what "The New Deal" did for FDR; what "The Great Society" did for LBJ? Can progressives create a slogan to match the conservatives: "lower taxes", "less government", "strong defense", "family values"?

They can do so with a word. That word is "Dignity."

From that word comes a unifying slogan: "Dignity For All."

The idea of a universal right to dignity seems too simple to pull together the disparate elements of this divided nation, but it's not. Dignity is what people want, on the left, on the right, and most importantly, in the vast, non-ideological middle.

Dignity is not negotiable. People will stand up for their dignity and once they're on their feet, they'll insist on justice.

Two hundred years of blood-soaked history have shown that there is no direct path from Liberty to Justice. But if we interpose a steppingstone, we can build a bridge to justice. The name of that stone is "Dignity." By establishing the right to dignity, and then enacting legislation that protects everyone's dignity on equal terms, we can deliver on this country's founding promise of "liberty and justice for all."

A dignitarian society pulls what's best from the three broad strands of civic culture that have dominated politics since the French Revolution--Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. The stranglehold that these ideals exert on the contemporary imagination is a major source of the incivility that infects our politics today.

Conservatives see themselves as Liberty's defenders; progressives pride themselves as the champions of Equality. Both parties promise Fraternity, but neither delivers. Dignity is more encompassing than Liberty, Equality, or Fraternity. It's the missing link that restored will yield an electoral mandate that heralds an historic extension of "liberty and justice for all."

The politics of dignity puts the "We" back in "We the People." It spans the conservative-liberal divide. It closes the ideological fissures that separate libertarian, egalitarian, and communitarian philosophies, breaking the stalemate that has stalled the advance of justice since the 1960s.

A dignitarian society does not tolerate indignity--towards anyone. When this principle is translated into policy, it rules out acceptance of a permanent underclass. It disallows prejudice and discrimination toward all the groups that have rallied around the various flags of identity politics. It makes a woman's right to choose and gays' right to marry self-evident. It proclaims everyone's right to a sustainable environment.

The disparate interest groups that make up the Democratic Party will not be able to unite until they have identified their common foe. That foe is not conservatives or conservatism. It is indignity.

What is the source of indignity? The precise and universal cause of indignity is the abuse of power. Make a list of the most distressing issues of recent years: corporate corruption, the Katrina catastrophe, sexual abuse by clergy, Abu Ghraib, domestic spying, persistent poverty, etc. Every one of them can be traced to an abuse of power by individuals entrusted with high rank.

However principled their cause, progressives can't present themselves as the party of dignity so long as they reserve the right to treat their opposite numbers with indignity. Treating political opponents in a condescending manner is counterproductive and self-sabotaging. A great many of those who've been voting Republican feel that political elites, intellectuals, liberals, and the media look down on them. It's a charge that sticks because there's truth in it.

Crashing the Gate notes that progressive interest groups can and do pay employees less than conservative groups because they compensate with a moral premium. But when the coin of the progressive realm is moral superiority, the result is disdain for the very people progressives seek to represent, and this undercuts their message.

How would a society that prioritizes dignity differ from ones shaped by ideologies that accentuate liberty, equality, or fraternity? The difference is one of nuance, not opposition, for a dignitarian society combines the strengths of all three traditions.

A dignitarian society promotes individual freedom, but it tempers the uninhibited free market with institutions of social responsibility that insure that economic power does not confer unwarranted educational or political advantages. For example, you shouldn't have to be rich to attend good schools, or command a fortune to stand for office.

A dignitarian society provides real equality of opportunity. In a dignitarian society, loss of social mobility, let alone division into master and servant classes, is unacceptable. There's a way out of poverty in a dignitarian society. Everyone earns a living wage and has access to quality health care.

The politics of dignity sees democracy as a work in progress. Democracy's next step - one that will enlarge liberty, deliver justice, and foster fraternity - is building a dignitarian society.

Dignity is an idea whose time has come. Under its flag, we can mobilize the energy not merely to win at the polls, but to win with a mandate to fulfill our nation's promise - "Dignity For All."



Display:


What I Love About Robert Fuller's ... (none / 0)

concept is that it's principled without rancor. I admittedly have been a very angry liberal at times. I've ranted and raved like we all have. Robert Fuller however has a concept that stands up for what we all believe in a powerful way without screaming. Dignity is really a valence conception. Who could be against dignity for all? Robert Fuller is the "Apostle of Dignity."


Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun May 21, 2006 at 08:12:08 PM EST

Re: What I Love About Robert Fuller's ... (3.00 / 1)

I agree, and I appreciate how he looks at the transitional processes. Dignity for all means dignity for all in his book.


Manifest Dignity!
by breakingranks on Sun May 21, 2006 at 09:35:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]

What He's Proposing Is Reform ... (none / 0)

by marketing enlightenment instead of revolution at the barrel of a gun.


Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun May 21, 2006 at 09:36:27 PM EST

Re: What He's Proposing Is Reform ... (none / 0)

I was just thinking about that a couple of weeks ago. For the last 30 years academics have been saying we've been going through a skeptical crisis akin to the 17th century: well, the next step after that was the Enlightenment.


Manifest Dignity!
by breakingranks on Sun May 21, 2006 at 10:49:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]

For the Current Cabal ... (none / 0)

in power its as if the enlightenment never happened.


Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun May 21, 2006 at 10:50:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Dignity is great.. But strategic comprehensio (none / 0)

dignity is great, but democrats need to learn not just how to win elections, but how not to lose them to far right wing conservatives without having the country so disillusioned with the current leadership that the president is at a 30% approval rating.

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2006/5 /21/191425/825


by Carter on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:20:23 PM EST

True (none / 0)

Dignity is only a place to start.


Manifest Dignity!
by breakingranks on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:33:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Dignity - (none / 0)

dignity is also largely a private thing, (though apparently in the past presidential election, George Bush, who won on "trust," while Kerry lost on "trust," the republicans were nevertheless able to convey a whole lot more of it than democrats).  

On the other hand, the government phone tapping lines, and spying on reporters, threatening prosecution of reports for breaking a story about a governments abuse of power in violation of FISA and the Constitution, and doing a horrendous job in a host of other areas, while leading with rhetoric that turns logic upside down, are very public things.


by Carter on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:22:00 PM EST

Not always (none / 0)

For instance, a lot of U.N. diplomacy seems to revolve about who can claim at the moment their dignity has been injured.


Manifest Dignity!
by breakingranks on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:34:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Dignity - (none / 0)

There are basic, systemic reasons, that can be summarized in a few sentences, as to why.

And a strategic political reality that democrats are going to have to come to grips with, kicking, biting, screaming, fighting all the way, if they are going to make substantive, and not just predictable backlash type progress.

http://theoctillion.com/2006/05/one-part y-that-fails-to-make-case.html


by Carter on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:23:15 PM EST

Bookmarked (none / 0)

Thanks - I'm still coming to grips with the agenda items myself.


Manifest Dignity!
by breakingranks on Sun May 21, 2006 at 11:35:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]

And the policies that go with that? (none / 0)

The last thing the Dems need is more abstractions!

(And those that might be useful are those with which the GOP would vocally disagreee.)

What the Dems are currently short of are a snappy defining phrase (like the GOP's smaller government, lower taxes) and some policies - like universal health care - both of which distinguish them from the GOP.

And, be it said, ixnay on the homo-marriage thing: the purpose of a wedge issue for a party is to create divisions in the other party...


by skeptic06 on Mon May 22, 2006 at 08:59:13 AM EST


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