It was a small and relatively intimate event—this small conference described as a “gathering of minds to envision the world we want”—that took place over three days as last month ended and December began in Burlington, Vermont.

No, it wasn’t a “hootenanny.” The serious topics discussed in detail and with passion were poverty, inequality, human rights, the climate crisis, racism, war, peace, refugees, workers, healthcare, housing, civil rights, independent media, corporate power, criminal justice reform, international solidarity, civil rights, voting rights, the rights of women, the LGBTQ community, immigration, democracy, economics, politics, organizing, and ultimately about how all of these issues can never be adequately understood or addressed in isolation.

“What do we need to do to improve the quality of life of our citizens of the world?”
—Jane Sanders, The Sanders Institute“I think it’s important that we realize the intersectionality of the issues,” explained Jane Sanders, who along with executive director David Driscoll founded The Sanders Institute and organized the Gathering. “I mean environmental sanity has to do with income inequality and so many things. And that’s why we intentionally do things more comprehensively because we don’t want to say, ‘We’re having an environmental conference,’ or ‘We’re having a housing conference.'”

The conference, she said in an interview with Common Dreams, was one that wanted to ask: “What do we need to do to improve the quality of life of our citizens of the world?”

And while Jane’s husband, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), was at the conference—delivering the keynote and sitting on several panels—the weekend was distinctly not about him. Throughout the weekend, the senator could be found waving off reporters, sitting quietly in the back row during panel discussions, trying not to be seen, but listening intently to what was being said by the assembled speakers and the engaged attendees.

“I’m a guest here,” Bernie told The Real News Network in an interview on Saturday as he credited his wife and the Institute for putting on the event. “And what Jane understood,” he explained, “is that when we deal with climate change, when we deal with the economy, when we deal with housing, when we deal with criminal justice or immigration issues—we have got to deal with them in a holistic way. We cannot see them as silo-ized, separate issues. And a lot of that has to do with the fact that we live in a nation owned and controlled by a small number of multi-billionaires whose greed—incredible greed, insatiable greed—is having an unbelievably negative impact on our entire country.”

Despite being sandwiched between the just-concluded 2018 midterms and the hugely consequential 2020 race—which is already driving frenzied discussion and speculation—the three-day retreat was devoid of the kind of horse-race, personality-driven noise that tends to dominate the vapid political discourse seen on MSNBC, Fox News, and in the pages of America’s major newspapers.

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Aside from the occasional “Bernie 2020?” outburst from an audience member—and former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis’ short but forceful demand that Sanders run for president for the good of the world—the Sanders Institute Gathering was predominantly driven by and organized around the issues and crises affecting the everyday lives of ordinary people in the United States and across the globe, from grotesquely unequal healthcare systems to the climate crisis, which threatens to render the planet uninhabitable for future generations if immediate and bold action is not taken.

What’s love got to do with it?

“Only all that we love is on the line,” declared Our Revolution president and Sanders Institute fellow Nina Turner during a panel on the moral necessity of Medicare for All, capturing both the ethos of the retreat and the urgency of the issues at hand.

How We Win Medicare for All

Applauding nurses and others leading the charge for progressive change throughout the U.S. and the world, Turner said success will only come from working together “to soften the soil, to have the conversations, one person to another, that are necessary to ensure that our family and our friends and our play cousins understand what is at stake. You can’t win somebody’s head unless you win their heart.”

“You can’t win somebody’s head unless you win their heart.”
—Nina Turner, Our RevolutionWinning over a critical mass of hearts—as the progressive experts and organizers emphasized repeatedly across panels on human rights, the criminal justice system, labor, and the climate crisis—will require an enormous grassroots movement that is not merely single-issue focused and national, but far-reaching and international in scope.

“Capitalism isn’t working for a huge number of people on this planet,” said journalist and activist Naomi Klein during a panel on the necessity of a Green New Deal as she explained why the crisis also carries with it a political opportunity that must be recognized.

“If we can come up with a framework for responding to climate change that is actually a challenge to economic inequality, joblessness, economic precarity, the need for Medicare for All, and the rest of it,” Klein said, “then actually we’re gonna build a much broader movement, and also a movement that will fight harder, because it has so much to gain. Because not only is it not threatened by systemic change, it’s hungry for it.”

“What is required now is transformation of every aspect of society,” Klein added. “In other words, a political revolution.”

The Climate Crisis & the Green New Deal

But simply winning over hearts is not sufficient, said many participants, for the kind of transformative change that is necessary for the United States and the world to confront staggering levels of poverty and inequality, lack of healthcare, and the existential threat posed by the climate crisis. In addition to a vision of justice for all, argued the diverse array of voices featured at the Gathering, any successful progressive movement must also rest on a solid intellectual foundation that demonstrates not just the moral necessity of bold progressive initiatives, but also the striking practicality of these objectives.

Social justice from below and the criminals at the top

Discussing criminal justice and the necessity of holding power to account in the U.S., academic and social justice activist Cornel West denounced the two-tiered nature of the nation’s justice system. “Why are the criminals at the top hardly talked about?” West asked during a morning panel discussion. “All that market manipulation, insider trading, predatory lending, fraudulent activity on Wall Street. How many of them went to jail? Not at all, not at all. Massive corruption in government, Republicans and Democrats. Republicans are not the only gangsters. And greed is a difficult thing not to be seduced by when you’re not accountable.”  

“When we talk about criminality,” West added, “we have to put it in the right context. If we had all the prison reform in the world and still had high levels of poverty, still had decrepit school systems, still had inadequate housing, still had dominant images of a corporate media in which you deal with conflict by killing other people, we still have a problem.”

Criminal Injustice