Springsteen on America CHORDS FOR CHANGE
By BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
A nation's artists and musicians have a particular
place in its social and political life. Over the years I've tried
to think long and hard about what it means to be American: about
the distinctive identity and position we have in the world, and
how that position is best carried. I've tried to write songs
that speak to our pride and criticize our failures.
These questions are at the heart of this election:
who we are, what we stand for, why we fight. Personally, for
the last 25 years I have always stayed one step away from partisan
politics. Instead, I have been partisan about a set of ideals:
economic justice, civil rights, a humane foreign policy, freedom
and a decent life for all of our citizens. This year, however,
for many of us the stakes have risen too high to sit this election
out.
Through my work, I've always tried to ask
hard questions. Why is it that the wealthiest nation in the world
finds it so hard to keep its promise and faith with its weakest
citizens? Why do we continue to find it so difficult to see beyond
the veil of race? How do we conduct ourselves during difficult
times without killing the things we hold dear? Why does the fulfillment
of our promise as a people always seem to be just within grasp
yet forever out of reach?
I don't think John Kerry and John Edwards
have all the answers. I do believe they are sincerely interested
in asking the right questions and working their way toward honest
solutions. They understand that we need an administration that
places a priority on fairness, curiosity, openness, humility,
concern for all America's citizens, courage and faith.
People have different notions of these values,
and they live them out in different ways. I've tried to sing
about some of them in my songs. But I have my own ideas about
what they mean, too. That is why I plan to join with many fellow
artists, including the Dave Matthews Band, Pearl Jam, R.E.M.,
the Dixie Chicks, Jurassic 5, James Taylor and Jackson Browne,
in touring the country this October. We will be performing under
the umbrella of a new group called Vote for Change. Our goal
is to change the direction of the government and change the current
administration come November.
Like many others, in the aftermath of 9/11,
I felt the country's unity. I don't remember anything quite like
it. I supported the decision to enter Afghanistan and I hoped
that the seriousness of the times would bring forth strength,
humility and wisdom in our leaders. Instead, we dived headlong
into an unnecessary war in Iraq, offering up the lives of our
young men and women under circumstances that are now discredited.
We ran record deficits, while simultaneously cutting and squeezing
services like afterschool programs. We granted tax cuts to the
richest 1 percent (corporate bigwigs, well-to-do guitar players),
increasing the division of wealth that threatens to destroy our
social contract with one another and render mute the promise
of "one nation indivisible."
It is through the truthful exercising of the
best of human qualities - respect for others, honesty about ourselves,
faith in our ideals - that we come to life in God's eyes. It
is how our soul, as a nation and as individuals, is revealed.
Our American government has strayed too far from American values.
It is time to pick up the pieces and move forward. The country
we carry in our hearts is waiting.
Published in The New York Times, August 5, 2004
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