Welcome to TrueBlue
Monday, January 1st, 2007Welcome to TrueBlue, a new blog dedicated to a historian’s reflections on liberal politics, liberal religion, and the liberal arts. Here I want to spark lively, democratic conversation among liberals about these subjects in the hopes of reinvigorating blue culture in America.
For too long liberals have been apologizing for our very existence. We allowed the word “liberal” to be turned into an epithet, the “L-word.” It’s time to take back the word, wear the label, and see what we can learn from each other.
Politics. The real national nightmare that’s over today is the undisputed dominance of the Right in national politics. For the first time in years, what liberals think actually matters in Congress and the White House. On TrueBlue we’ll have some fun (and some misery, of course) talking about blue Washington, and how we might elect a blue President in 2008.
Religion. Since Ronald Reagan got elected in 1980 with Christian Right support, “religion” in the public eye has meant conservative evangelical or fundamentalist Protestantism or conservative Catholicism. Even Jews, once reliably blue on most issues, have produced a distressing number of hacks and ideologues for right-wing politics. Too many of us forget (and some don’t know) that there’s been a lot more liberal religion in the past century than we’re getting credit for. On TrueBlue I’ll talk about what I mean by blue religion, and why it’s making a comeback.
Liberal Arts. History and literature, languages, philosophy, and art, used to be the foundation of all higher education because more than any other subjects, they teach students to read and reason—to think critically about the world, past and present. In the past 25 years, as the Right has run the country, the liberal arts have taken it on the chin. Business accounts for nearly 25% of all college degrees, high schools teach to multiple- choice tests, and right-wing politicians love it. They know an uneducated citizenry can’t defend itself from its own government—which is why they got away with the Patriot Act and the Military Commissions Act. On TrueBlue, I’ll invite conversation about how the liberal arts sustain blue culture, blue religion, and blue politics.
My bet in starting this blog is that there’s an interest in this sort of conversation, and that as we get more practiced at it we’ll find better ways of talking about politics, religion, and culture.
I hope you’ll join the conversation, or subscribe, or both. See you soon.
TrueBlue
I’m Warren Goldstein, Chair of the History Department at the University of Hartford. I try to use history to better understand modern life.