- Founded and headed by Van
Jones
- Opposes “right-wing attacks on the middle
class”
- Opposes "conservative" policies such as “giving tax breaks to the rich” and
“slashing vital services [which] families depend on”
- Closely tied to the International Socialist Organization
See also: Van Jones
Alternately known as the American Dream Movement (ADM), Rebuild The Dream (RTD) was formally
launched by Van
Jones at a June 23, 2011 New York City rally that was co-sponsored
by MoveOn.org. For details about the sequence of events that led to RTD's founding, click here.
Created to serve as a “progressive”
counterweight to the Tea Party movement, RTD vowed
to “stand up to say 'No' to right-wing attacks on the middle
class”—attacks
that allegedly had placed “the American Dream ... under siege.”
“Instead of investing in our shared future,” RTD charged,
conservative politicians were “giving tax breaks to the rich,”
“slashing vital services families depend on,” and “trying to
gut workers’ rights.”
As evidence of the foregoing trends, RTD cited
the example of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s February 2011
“power grab”—a
reference to Walker's request that state workers in Wisconsin, who
earned significantly more (in salaries and benefits) than their
private-sector counterparts, should begin to contribute a small
percentage toward their own pension and healthcare costs in order to
help keep the state's financially ravaged economy solvent. To Jones and
RTD, the governor's suggestion was both extreme and unreasonable.
Claiming that
“the
American Dream is under threat”
because
of “the
rampant greed
and deliberate manipulation of our democracy and our economy by a
tiny minority in the 1%”—most
notably “the
big
banks”—the
fledgling RTD lamented that “the
present economy has left 99% of Americans behind.” To address this
problem, RTD aimed to serve as “a
platform for bottom-up, people-powered innovations to help fix the
U.S. economy” by “creating pathways to prosperity for those who
are locked out of it.”
RTD uses
the term
"The American Dream" to signify a desire for entitlement programs, state-enforced social engineering, public
spending projects, and socialism—as
evidenced by its Contract
for the American Dream, which enumerates the following “10 most
critical steps to get our economy back on track”:
I.
Invest
in America's Infrastructure:
“Rebuild
our crumbling bridges, dams, levees, ports, water and sewer lines,
railways, roads, and public transit.... [I]nvest in high-speed
Internet and a modern, energy-saving electric grid.”
II.
Create
21st Century Energy Jobs:
“We should invest in … wind turbines, solar panels, geothermal
systems, hybrid and electric cars, and next-generation batteries....
We can create good, green jobs in America, address the climate
crisis, and build the clean energy economy.”
III.
Invest
in Public Education:
“A
high-quality education system, from universal preschool to vocational
training and affordable higher education, is critical for our future
and can create badly needed jobs now.”
IV.
Offer
Medicare for All:
“We should expand Medicare so it's available to all Americans....
The Affordable Care Act is a good start …
but
it's not enough.”
V.
Make
Work Pay:
“Americans
have a right to fair minimum and living wages, to organize and
collectively bargain, to enjoy equal opportunity, and to earn equal
pay for equal work. Corporate assaults on these rights ... must be
outlawed.”
VI.
Secure
Social Security:
“Keep
Social Security sound.… Pay for it by removing the cap on the
Social Security tax, so that upper-income people pay into Social
Security on all they make...”
VII.
Return
to Fairer Tax Rates:
“End,
once and for all, the Bush-era tax giveaways for the rich … Also,
we must outlaw corporate tax havens and tax breaks for shipping jobs
overseas. Lastly … we should add new [higher] tax brackets for
those making more than $1 million each year.”
VIII.
End
the Wars and Invest at Home:
“We're sending $3 billion each week overseas that we should be
investing to rebuild America.”
IX.
Tax
Wall Street Speculation:
“A
tiny fee of a twentieth of 1% on each Wall Street trade could raise
tens of billions of dollars annually with little impact on actual
investment.”
X.
Strengthen
Democracy:
“We
must ... slam shut the lobbyists' revolving door in D.C., and
publicly finance elections. Immigrants who want to join in our
democracy deserve a clear path to citizenship. We must stop giving
corporations the rights
of people when it comes to our elections.”
RTD
promotes the foregoing ideals by mobilizing
its 600,000-plus members via teach-ins, online petitions,
email campaigns, rallies, viral digital projects, and traditional
media. As of April 2012, RTD had 84 partner
organizations with which it had collaborated to build a grassroots network in all 435 U.S. Congressional
Districts. One of those partners, the Institute for Policy Studies, describes
RTD as “a new movement-in-the-making to challenge power, to reach
out to new allies, to build bridges instead of walls.” To view a list of RTD's partners, click here.
Rejecting the notion that America's 2008 financial meltdown was created by ill-advised government policies, unrestrained deficit spending, and ballooning entitlement programs, RTD maintains
not only that America is "not broke," but that it remains, to this day, “the wealthiest
nation ever.” The major problem facing the U.S., says RTD, is that “too
many at the top are grabbing the gains,” particularly “the
super-rich” who do not pay
their fair share in taxes. Such wealthy individuals were excoriated
during RTD's National Teach-In Day (November 9, 2011), when more than
375 local RTD leaders spoke publicly on the theme of: “How the 1%
Crashed the Economy—And
What the 99% Can Do About It.” In an effort to channel its members'
anger over the transgressions of bankers, RTD in 2011 waged a “Move Your
Money” campaign which drew pledges to close more than 80,000
accounts at multinational banks.
Another
noteworthy RTD initiative
was its October 2011 “Take Back the American Dream” conference,
which was held in partnership with the Campaign for America's Future
and was attended by some 2,000 activists representing 200
organizations.
In 2012, RTD planned a
campaign “to free college graduates from the crushing burden of
student loans, which can be almost impossible to repay under present
economic conditions.” This was reminiscent of Occupy Wall Street
activist Stephen Lerner's call
for college graduates to initiate a “debt
strike”
so as to “destabilize
the folks that are in power and start to rebuild a movement.”
In
early April 2012, RTD held more than 900 protest-training
sessions across the United States, to teach American activists how to
combat “corporate power, Wall Street greed, and the political
corruption of the 1 percent.” The goal of this initiative was to set the stage for a
“99
Percent Spring” movement in the U.S.—to be modeled
on the Arab
Spring of 2011, which, according to RTD, “stood up to totalitarian
governments and inspired
the Occupy movement here in America.”
Tax-deductible contributions to RTD can be made through its sister charity, the Rebuild The Dream Innovation Fund, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that uses the Oakland, California-based Movement Strategy Center as its fiscal sponsor. The Center, in turn, has been funded by such entities as the Tides Foundation, the Ben & Jerry’s Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Surdna Foundation, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and George Soros’s Open Society Institute and his Foundation to Promote Open Society.