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A Big Moment for Volunteerism

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Posted on Mar 16, 2009

By E.J. Dionne

    Every politician speaks glowingly about service to country, but few see national service as an important political issue. The temptation is to dismiss service proposals made by someone in the other political party as trivial or part of some hidden agenda.

    When the first President Bush called for “a thousand points of light,” Democrats chuckled at the metaphor and saw his calls for volunteerism as an inexpensive way to keep his promise to create a “kinder, gentler nation.”

    When President Clinton pushed AmeriCorps, some Republicans denounced the idea of “paid volunteerism” and saw the national service program as an effort to create a new generation of progressive activists. Maybe one of them might become a Democratic president. 

    As it happens, we do have a former community organizer as president, though funding for his early work came from a Catholic organization, not AmeriCorps. Both Barack and Michelle Obama have a passion for the service idea, and, with almost no fanfare, the United States is close to making its largest commitment to civilian service since the New Deal.

    This week, the House is expected to pass a bill that would increase the number of federally funded service slots to 250,000, and the Senate will soon begin moving similar legislation of its own. The proposals build on the initiatives of our last three presidents—yes, this is an issue on which George W. Bush deserves credit, too—and it may even produce that much prized but elusive Washington commodity: a large bipartisan majority. The House proposal won committee approval last week with overwhelming support from both parties.

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    Credit for the consensus goes in part to Washington’s most durable bipartisan duo, Sens. Edward M. Kennedy and Orrin Hatch, co-sponsors of the Serve America Act.

    Utah’s Hatch has worked with his Democratic friend from Massachusetts so often and so respectfully that when he describes their joint bills—the most famous is the State Children’s Health Insurance Program—he insists on referring to them in one big mouthful as “Kennedy-Hatch-Hatch-Kennedy.” He doesn’t want either name to get second billing.

    Volunteering is very much part of Hatch’s Mormon tradition, and he and his children served as missionaries when they were young. But Hatch also speaks for a strong strain of conservatism that sees the creed as being about more than just support for free markets and low taxes.

    In fact, the service idea is rooted in the best and most communitarian forms of both conservatism and progressivism.

    As William F. Buckley Jr. suggested in the title of one of his books [“Gratitude: Reflections on What We Owe to Our Country”], gratitude is a conservative disposition, a belief that for all our individual endeavors, we owe a debt to the free society that nurtures us and affords us our opportunities.

    “Why would Republicans and conservatives support this bill?” Hatch asked during an interview, and then he answered, noting that it promotes help for faith-based as well as secular groups and gives a vital role to state governments. Modest government support for a core of volunteers also strengthens the capacity of hundreds of community groups to grow and do more. AmeriCorps’ 75,000 existing volunteers, Hatch said, “leverages out to roughly 2.2 million traditional volunteers.” 

    For its part, a sophisticated progressivism recognizes that while government is essential, one of its roles should be to foster a thriving voluntary sector. Government alone cannot solve all the problems that ail us, and the responsibilities of citizenship encompass more than just paying taxes.

    Rep. George Miller, a Democrat who chairs the House Education and Labor Committee and is leading the House effort for a service bill, is known as one tough legislative strategist. But he is positively tender when he describes visiting Habitat for Humanity projects, meeting with Teach for America volunteers, or spending time with church groups that have provided relief in natural disasters. “It’s one of the great rewarding things in politics,” he told me.

    There is also this: In the middle of a deep recession, when jobs, particularly for young people just entering the work force, are in short supply, could there be any more efficient (or, face it, a cheaper) way to cut unemployment than through modest subsidies for voluntary service? When they sit down to form a final bill, the House and Senate should agree to ramp up to 250,000 volunteers quickly rather than drag the growth over several years. In this case, idealism is realism’s best ally.
   
    E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is postchat(at)aol.com.

    © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By JL Wallace, March 17, 2009 at 6:03 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Republicans, Democrats, Liberals, Conservatives… STFU!

Nothing is ever going to be accomplished in the name of WE THE PEOPLE if we continuously let our “elected” officials divide us by using certain key words against eachother.

Our “elected” officials DON’T CARE ABOUT YOU! Yet, nearly every commentary or discourse on any political topic is awash in under-currents of masturbatory, “The Democrats are wrong because…”, or “Republicans are wrong because…” - STFU!

We are serfs living in a falling Empire. “Rome” is crumbling at our feet - the time for believing participating in this masturbatory endeavor of he said/she said political hogwash needs to come to an end.

EVERY political party wants to see us setup the “Brownshirts” of America. It’s all part of the Security and Prosperity Partnership (spp.gov) plan that Bush setup and that Obama is further developing.

Support an Article V Convention. Abolish the Fed. And take by America for WE THE PEOPLE. Not Republicans. Not Democrats. WE THE PEOPLE.

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By JT Lancer, March 17, 2009 at 10:38 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

What a bizarre article.  Government is the antithesis of voluntary.  Every government action is coercive, by nature.  How can coercion by government foster ‘volunteerism’? 

There are countless private volunteer organizations out there that have managed to form without any government assistance at all.  They are always looking for more people that can donate their time and efforts in service to others. 

Furthermore, the idealists fail to recognize that any government-organized ‘volunteer’ organization will likely draw many of its volunteers from existing service organizations - and weaken the effectiveness of those organizations in the long run.

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By Folktruther, March 16, 2009 at 4:09 pm #

What Dionne operatively means by voluntary national service is a military draft.  this has been initated as a bill many times by Dem Rangel in the House, on the grunds of Fairness.  Instead of a few being obliged to enter the military economically, the idea is to compel all the young to.  that way US imperialism can be maintained longer over a wider sphere of action.  And much cheaper too!  And, surprise! there is bipartisan support for this idea.

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By Roberto, March 16, 2009 at 3:43 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

AWM;
Let me put you and your ilk(e.g.KISS)at ease; You are wrong. You don’t need to hope, you need to think (at least a few seconds) before you speak. You may find that many of your fears are self-begat and illusory.

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By Chris Herz, March 16, 2009 at 1:04 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Hi Kiss,  You’re right about one thing; we need more people made to do unpaid/low paid work like Custer needed more Indians.

But you’re wrong as wrong can be on the rest of your comment to my posting:  It’s the dissidents of all kinds who warned all you main-stream good Christian Americans where your crackpot and crooked leadership were taking the country. 

You all can be just as cruel to your dissidents as any Chinese or Russian government.  Now we all get to live with the consequences.

Chris Herz

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By Druthers, March 16, 2009 at 11:43 am #

AWM

It is time to graduate from kindergarten.  You seem to have no idea what Hitler’s regime was like!

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By AWM, March 16, 2009 at 11:39 am #

The parallels between Obama’s and Hitlers rise to power are many. I sincerely hope that I and those who feel as I do are wrong but the more I see the more I fear we are right

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By Chris Herz, March 16, 2009 at 10:38 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

As Che put it, one becomes a revolutionary out of feelings of great love.  Love for humanity, love for the planet.  And one must live and work from a true moral center. 

We who oppose the killer state do so without reward and usually receive only opprobrium, even imprisonment or occasionally even death from our fellow citizens. 

But this vital form of community service is what I have done for many years, and I am honored with the acquaintance and friendship of many others of like mind.

US political prisoners like Eddie Conway or Leonard Peltier are the world’s longest-serving political prisoners and have given to our own State as much as any soldier or peace corps person.  Never forget them.

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By SteveK9, March 16, 2009 at 10:10 am #

KISS: Are you as crazy as you sound?

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By KISS, March 16, 2009 at 8:47 am #

Volunteerism is something I always considered freely giving one’s time or talents for charitable, educational, or other worthwhile activities, esp. in one’s community. Now I see our government wants to use the word volunteerism as Hitler did in the Nazi rein. Freely being directed by jack-booted thugs in a uniform, oh wait this is Amerika, the government has a more insidious way. Use the threat of not being allowed to graduate or hold a job in government without the volunteer credentials.
I guess the freely giving of one’s time is how you see it.Reading the fine print kind of takes away the joy. Time to be afraid, really afraid.

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By KISS, March 16, 2009 at 8:37 am #

Volunteerism=

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