|
The Association
of State Green Parties was formed after the 1996 elections to fill
a void in national Green politics. Our initial goal was to help
existing state parties grow and to promote the formation of parties
in all 50 states. Helping state parties is still our primary goal.
As the Green Party we will also devote our attention toward further
establishing a national Green presence in politics and policy debate
while continuing to facilitate party growth and action at the state
and local level.
Green Party growth
has already been phenomenal. State party membership has more than
doubled since our founding in 1996 and culminated in the Presidential
Nominating Convention in Denver, CO on the weekend of June 24th
& 25th, 2000. In Denver we nominated Ralph Nader and Winona
LaDuke to be the Green Party candidates for the Presidential election.
We are grassroots
activists, environmentalists, advocates for social justice, nonviolent
resisters and regular citizens who've had enough of corporate-dominated
politics.
The
Ten Key Values of the Greens
RESPECT FOR DIVERSITY
We must honor cultural, ethnic, racial, sexual, religious and spiritual
diversity within the context of individual responsibility to all
beings. We must reclaim our country's finest shared ideals: the
dignity of the individual, democratic participation, and liberty
and justice for all.
SOCIAL JUSTICE
We must respond to human suffering in ways that promote dignity.
We must encourage people to commit themselves to lifestyles that
promote their own health. We must have a community controlled education
system that effectively teaches our children academic skills, ecological
wisdom, social responsibility and personal growth. We must resolve
personal and group conflicts without just turning them over to lawyers
and judges. We must take responsibility for reducing the crime rate
in our neighborhoods. We must encourage such values as simplicity
and moderation.
GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY
We must develop systems that allow and encourage us to control the
decisions that affect our lives. We must ensure that representatives
will be fully accountable to the people who elected them. We must
encourage and assist the "mediating institutions" - family,
neighborhood organizations, church group, voluntary association,
ethnic club - to recover some of the functions now performed by
the government. We must learn the best insights from American traditions
of civic vitality, voluntary action and community responsibility.
FEMINISM
We must replace the cultural ethics of dominance and control with
more cooperative ways of interacting. We must encourage people to
care about persons outside their own group. We must promote the
building of respectful, positive and responsible relationships across
the lines of gender and other divisions. We must proceed with as
much respect for the means as the end (the process as much as the
product of our efforts). We must learn to respect the contemplative
inner part of life as much as the outer activities.
COMMUNITY BASED ECONOMICS
We must design our work structures to encourage employee ownership
and workplace democracy. We must develop new economic activities
and institutions that will allow us to use our new technologies
in ways that are humane, freeing, ecological and accountable and
responsive to communities. We must establish some form of basic
economic security, open to all. We must restructure our patterns
of income distribution to reflect the wealth created by those outside
the formal monetary economy: those who take responsibility for parenting,
housekeeping, home gardens, community volunteer work, etc. We must
restrict the size and concentrated power of corporations without
discouraging superior efficiency or technological innovation.
DECENTRALIZATION
We must reduce power and responsibility to individuals, institutions,
communities and regions. We must encourage the flourishing of regionally
based culture, rather than a dominant mono-culture. We must have
a decentralized democratic society with our political, economic
and social institutions locating power on the smallest scale (closest
to home) that is efficient and practical. We must redesign our institutions
so that fewer decisions and less regulation over money are granted
as one moves from the community to the national level. We must reconcile
the need for community and regional self determination with the
need for appropriate centralized regulation in certain matters.
ECOLOGICAL WISDOM
We must operate human societies with the understanding that we are
part of nature, not on top of it. We must live within the ecological
and resource limits of the planet, applying our technological knowledge
to the challenge of an energy efficient economy. We must build a
better relationship between cities and countryside. We must promote
sustainable agriculture and respect for self regulating natural
systems. And we must further biocentric wisdom in all spheres of
life.
NON-VIOLENCE
We must develop effective alternatives to our current patterns of
violence at all levels from the family and the street to nations
and the world. We must eliminate nuclear weapons from the face of
the Earth without being naive about the intentions of other governments.
We must constructively use nonviolent methods to oppose practices
and policies with which we disagree and in the process reduce the
atmosphere of polarization and selfishness that is itself a source
of violence.
PERSONAL AND GLOBAL RESPONSIBILITY
We must be of genuine assistance to grassroots groups in the third
world. We must help other countries make the transition to self-sufficiency
in food and other basic necessities. We must cut our defense budget
while maintaining an adequate defense. We must promote these ten
GREEN values in the reshaping of our global order. We must reshape
world order without creating just another enormous nation-state.
FUTURE FOCUS
We must induce people and institutions to think in terms of the
long range future, and not just in terms of their short range selfish
interest. We must encourage people to develop their own visions
of the future and move more effectively toward them. We must judge
whether new technologies are socially useful and use those judgments
to shape our society. We must induce our government and other institutions
to practice fiscal responsibility. We must make the quality of life,
rather than unending economic growth, the focus of our future thinking.
|