Socialism in America Is Closer Than You Think [View all]
http://www.thenation.com/article/socialism-in-america-is-closer-than-you-think/
Another promising strategy is to combine elements of these various approaches. There is no reason that large-scale enterprises couldnt be structured as joint ventures that would include worker, community, and regional institutions. Many states and localities across the country collaborate to manage, regulate, and share the benefits of publicly owned electric utilities.
Roughly 25 percent of the nations electricity is, in fact, supplied by publicly owned firms and co-ops. In conservative Nebraska, every resident and business gets its electricity from a local public utility or cooperative. In both liberal and conservative states, examples of public ownershipmunicipally owned hospitals, hotels, convention centers, transit systems, ports, and airports, among many other servicesare ubiquitous. A new politics might one day infuse these local efforts with fresh purpose and energy, and perhaps scale them up to the state or regional level.
None of this is to suggest that large-scale political change is imminent or inevitable. Social, economic, and environmental conditionsto say nothing of assaults on traditional libertiesare likely to get worse before they get better. For precisely this reason, the systematic development of a practical alternative to the status quo is critically important.
The change we need will not come from the top. As weve seen in countless ways, our current political system limits the potential for traditional progressive strategies. A new visionone that encompasses fresh political strategies as well as new political-economic contentmust be built from the bottom up. The overarching goal must be to develop a set of ideas that challenge the dominant ideologies and move the country in a fundamentally new direction.