Campaign Message 7
m.rosenzweig 2009
Community.
Wow, besides jobs and families, is there anything more
important than community?
I grew up in Morris Cove.
That community has changed,
and changed and changed back in those seven decades
since I trapped muskrats in the creek behind the airport there.
New Auburn, during that time, has changed as well
and is now in the process of resurrecting itself again.
Government must do everything in its power to help
communities be the place
where residents can nurture their children
and enjoy this fleeting world we find ourselves in.
In fact, our communities continue to be quite good.
Look around the world and you will quickly see
a lot of communities that we would all be thankful
not to be a resident of.
There are two things, however, where this world of ours
might be improved.
At first glance, they may seem in conflict.
I never felt unsafe as a kid even when crossing the runway
while walking my trap line before school each morning.
Today there is a climate of fear that adversely affects us all.
It is very complicated and I don’t think it is possible
to make it go away from above.
It is, however, possible, I think, to assuage its impact
from the bottom up.
One of the things that has been happening is that communities
have been forced to reduce the budget bottom line.
This is a hateful process.
It turns good people against each other and undermines
the capacity of people to feel safe.
It does not take much of a world view to see that we have
a superior public safety component
as do the communities to our north and east
along the IAT.
Unfortunately, as we cut back resources from public safety,
they tend to come from the protection side
of the two major functions of that government component.
Not only does this leave us feeling a bit less safe,
it makes the job of enforcement less safe as well.
This is another area where I think it would be wise
to transition resources from the federal government
to the state and local governments.
Unarmed, uniformed folks who get to know me
as a community resident
have some idea of my potential as a threat.
I, too, gain some comfort from their smile
as I see them on the street.
The other piece is a bit more difficult to appreciate
and may initially seem in conflict with feeling more safe.
Audre Lorde, a black woman, very clever with words,
urges us to think differently about diversity.
“Difference must not be merely tolerated", she says,
"but seen as a fund of necessary polarities between
which our creativity can spark like a dialectic.”
Maybe, with more protectors on the streets,
we can feel a little more comfortable with the diversity
that has evolved with our more globally defined community.
Audre suggests, “Difference is that raw and powerful connection
from which our personal power is formed.”
What that means is that diversity is one of the ingredients
that enable the actuality of full potential
both for individuals and for the communities we live in.
m.rosenzweig 2009