BY ARI CUSHNER
(unless otherwise noted)
SPECTACLE '08
ON
June 3, 2008 Barack Hussein Obama Jr. made history when he clinched the
Democratic nomination to become the first black major-party candidate
for President of the United States, and the first person-of-color with
an achievable path to the nation's highest office. Holding a campaign rally that night
in front of a packed arena in St. Paul, Minnesota--at the site of this
summer's Republican National Convention--Obama closed his speech with a
rousing rhetorical flourish, declaring: "America, this is our moment. This is our time. Our time to turn the page on the policies of the past. Our time to bring new energy and new ideas to the challenges we face. Our time to offer a new direction for this country that we love." Just
a few days shy of the fortieth anniversary of Robert F. Kennedy's
assassination following his victory in the 1968 California primary,
Obama took center-stage as not only the new standard-bearer of the
Democratic Party, but also the figurehead atop a "movement" energized
by African-Americans, young people, and progressive activists in the
(Howard Dean-inspired) "netroots"
community. The arena was shimmering with the usual Obama paraphernalia,
including blue or red "Change We Can Believe In" placards and stylish
posters of the candidate created by street artist Frank Shepard Fairey. Building to a crescendo with the momentum generated by the crowd's growing enthusiasm, the candidate proclaimed:
The
journey will be difficult. The road will be long. I face this challenge
with profound humility, and knowledge of my own limitations. But I also
face it with limitless faith in the capacity of the American people.
Because if we are willing to work for it, and fight for it and believe
in it, then I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will
be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment
when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs for the
jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow
and our planet began to heal; this was the moment when we ended a war
and secured our nation and restored our image as the last, best hope on
Earth. This was the moment -- this was the time -- when we came
together to remake this great nation so that it may always reflect our
very best selves, and our highest ideals.
Such stirring
oratory delivered with style and grandeur illustrates why many Obama
supporters and "fans" began comparing the Illinois Senator
to those slain 1960s icons who inspired a generation of youth during
the fight for civil rights and against the Vietnam war. As a
multiracial candidate with apparent progressive antiwar credentials,
some believed that Obama had inherited the legacy of Robert Kennedy,
whose 1968 murder just months after Dr. King's assassination was
arguably the moment when the hopefulness of the sixties slid into
bitterness, dissension, and ultimately the violence that spelled the
end for progressive social movements of that era. Born in 1961 to a
father from Kenya and a mother from Kansas who came of age in the
sixties, it seemed to many that Obama embodies the social change that
did nonetheless result from that struggle.
IOWA UPSET
The
virtual political upstart who refers to himself as having grown-up a
"skinny black kid with a funny name" staged a stunning upset when he
beat Senator Hillary Clinton in the Iowa caucuses on January 3, 2008.
And as Obama sent shock-waves throughout the Beltway by derailing what
was supposed to have been Clinton's swift and decisive march to the
nomination, he simultaneously ignited a wave of enthusiasm among a
growing mass of frenzied "Obamaniacs" reminiscent of those who swelled
the ranks of Kennedy's supporters in 1968. His win was attributed to
having built a strategic advantage in the trenches--a superior
"ground-game--made possible by his widespread appeal among "netroots"
activists and others who contributed modestly-sized donations that grew
impressively large in number. To be sure, he had also attracted a
number of "big donors" including liberal hedge-fund guru George Soros,
as well as individuals on the payroll of large corporations. Thus able
to compete financially in the high-stakes political pageantry of U.S.
presidential elections, team Obama managed to win the first round of
competition by employing charisma and political savvy towards building
a campaign "brand" founded on themes of "hope," "progress" and
"change." The candidate's Iowa victory speech
displayed this technique elegantly, as he began by declaring: "You
know, they said this day would never come. They said our sights were
set too high. They said this country was too divided, too disillusioned
to ever come together around a common purpose. But...at this defining
moment in history, you have done what the cynics said we couldn't do."
Then in explaining how "We are choosing hope over fear," the candidate
sent what sounded like a warning to the establishment: "We're
choosing unity over division, and sending a powerful message that
change is coming to America. You said the time has come to tell the
lobbyists who think their money and their influence speak louder than
our voices that they don't own this government -- we do. And we are
here to take it back." In closing, Obama connected the Revolution of 1776 to the black freedom struggle of the 195os/60s, while claiming the will to fight for a better future:
Hope
is what led a band of colonists to rise up against an empire. What led
the greatest of generations to free a continent and heal a nation. What
led young women and young men to sit at lunch counters and brave fire
hoses and march through Selma and Montgomery for freedom's cause. Hope
-- hope is what led me here today...The belief that our destiny will
not be written for us, but by us, by all those men and women who are
not content to settle for the world as it is, who have the courage to
remake the world as it should be.
The field of
candidates having effectively narrowed from eight to three after the
media spectacle surrounding the Iowa voting auditions moved to New
Hampshire, Clinton staved-off disaster by winning solidly over the
newcomer and deflating the sudden burst of attention surrounding this
"change candidate." John Edwards had also finished ahead of Clinton in
Iowa running under a populist message similar to Obama's, but the fomer
North Carolina Senator dropped from the race following the next primary
contest in South Carolina, where Obama (55%) and then Clinton (27%)
were again the top two vote-getters. Because of the overwhelming size
of his victory in a state with a large black population, many pundits
argued that Obama's Iowa triumph had signaled to many uncertain
Africa-Americans that he had a legitimate chance of winning white
votes--and therefore the White House--which made it safe to support his
candidacy as a symbol of racial progress.
Although this logic
had some holes in it, the rather fierce Clinton-Obama duel that ensued
was indeed marked by debates concerning both race and gender. Some of this discourse was intelligent and productive,
yet a great deal of it was guided by those in the mainstream
(corporate) media who articulated an uncritical, poll-driven "identity
politics" scenario in which Clinton was favored by older women and
"white working class" voters, while Obama attracted younger people,
college-educated voters, and African-Americans. Many Clinton supporters
were therefore cast as being committed to choosing her as the first
female nominee, while Obamaniacs were seen as dedicated to making
history by selecting the first black candidate. Latinos comprised a
critical "swing vote" divided between them yet heavily favoring
Clinton, to a large degree because of mistrust between
African-Americans and Hispanics. To the extent that these dynamics were
an actual factor in the outcome of each primary contest between January
and June, this was largely the result of the media's haphazard
discussions on race and gender, which distilled complex social forces
into simplistic narratives designed to feed dramatic coverage of the
"horse-race" rather than engage in a more substantive and penetrating
analysis.
Nonetheless, Obama continued drawing support among
many progressives, including a number of feminists (even some "older
white women") and Latinos who viewed the New York Senator, despite her
gender, as an agent of the status-quo running a traditional campaign
touting "strength" and "experience" over new ideas. There were also
those who had observed that ever since the former First Lady went to
work on Capitol Hill in 2000 as her husband left Washington, the
Clinton political machinery had set its sights on retaking the White
House--to which they felt entitled. Obama, by contrast, seemed to have
"outsider" written all over him by virtue of having just arrived in
Washington in 2004 after serving in the Illinois Senate since 1997. He
in fact had exploded onto the national scene in 2004 when tapped by
then presidential nominee John Kerry (D-Massachusetts) to give the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic Convention
in Boston. While he had not had the ability to vote on the legislation
that authorized Bush and Cheney's March 2003 invasion of Iraq, Obama
was on record speaking-out in 2002 against the planned "regime change."
Clinton, on the other hand, had voted for the war authorization in a
move that many observers saw as a decision of political expediency
based on her desire to not be painted as "weak on national security"
during her eventual run for the Oval Office. Thus especially after
Edwards left the race, the Illinois Senator was catapulted into the
limelight as a progressive alternative to the Clintons (both Hillary
and Bill), whom many on the Left saw as being moderate (corporate)
Democrats concerned above-all-else with their own power. On the other
hand, people generally knew very little about Obama's past, but what
they did know made him seem like a breath of fresh air: a former
community organizer from Chicago who put himself through school, had
become the first black editor of the Harvard Law Review, and was now a U.S. Senator pledging to help "heal the world" as President.
But
to others on the critical/progressive Left (whatever this means),
serious questions loomed: was this guy for real? Would his policies as
president match his soaring rhetoric? Was he really riding a wave of
mass enthusiasm for change among the downtrodden and disaffected? Was
his incredible fundraising machine actually driven by "netroots"
contributors?" How, in fact, did his campaign pull-off such a huge
political upset so as to be poised to snatch the Democratic nomination
out from under the Clintons' noses? Could it be that he is ultimately
nothing more than a skillful politician who has managed to brilliantly
market himself as a liberal reformer in order to win support from
progressives (in the primaries) whom he would then abandon when the
time came? In short: were all those who thought that Obama's candidacy
could become part of a genuine social movement simply being deluded--or
worse yet, were they deluding themselves?
Answers
to some of these questions emerged immediately after the Senator
rallied with supporters in Minnesota upon securing his victory over
Clinton. On June 4 team Obama began turning swiftly and decisively
towards the center, pursuing a general election strategy of
"triangulation" in order to win independent and even Republican votes
away from their GOP opponent, John McCain (R-Arizona). So, has Obama
already abandoned his leftwing base before even formally accepting the
nomination? Is he done building good-will among progressives and now
focussed primarily on courting conservative voters? Is this the end of
"change we can believe in"?
Stay tuned...
SPECTACLE '08
LURCHING TOWARDS THE RIGHT?
Obama's strategy of triangulation began in earnest with his June 4, 2008 remarks to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in New York in which he angered many Middle East scholars
and activists by going further than any recent presidential candidate,
Democrat or Republican, in declaring support for an "undivided"
Jerusalem. This seemingly unnecessary pander to the "Israel lobby"
(read: neoconservative/Likud alliance) infuriated Arabs committed to
making East Jerusalem the capital of a Palestinian state, as well as
many supporters who had taken Obama at his word regarding his desire to
not just bring the troops home from Iraq, but to actually "change the
mindset that got us into war in the first place." While he has since
attempted to clarify his remarks to indicate a less hard line position
on Jerusalem, it appeared to many critical observers that the Senator's
promise to break with the "politics of fear" and promote a more
multilateral foreign policy stressing international diplomacy was
quickly losing steam. Then Obama announced that he was forgoing his
right to receive public funding for the general election, which
signaled an apparent back-track from his pledge to help eliminate the
undue influence of private campaign contributions (i.e. money from
PAC's and "special interests"). It is debatable whether or not his
funding decision should really raise alarm bells on the Left, as many
progressives accept the argument that Obama's online fundraising
apparatus functions at least partially as a parallel public campaign-finance system.
It is also arguable that it would be strategically unwise to cede his
financial advantage in the general election against a GOP eager to
destroy his candidacy. Yet Obama's revised position on the issue of
campaign finance is certainly not a demonstration of progressive
instincts, nor can it be heartening for those paying attention to what
the candidate does rather than what he says.
But the floodgates
really seemed to burst open when the Senator announced that he was
reneging on a previous decision to withhold support for a bill that
would retroactively immunize telecommunications companies charged in
civil lawsuits with having participated in the Bush-Cheney
administration's dubious "warrantless wiretapping" program. This
"flip-flop" on renewal of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA) was viewed by many progressives as a disastrous capitulation on
the part of top Democratic officials including Obama, House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. To many in his
"netroots" base, Obama's decision to essentially condone illegal spying
on U.S. citizens crossed a most unfortunate line. Prominent
progressives in the media began expressing outrage with the Senator,
for instance MSNBC's Keith Olbermann issued a scathing "Special Comment" on the subject during the June 30 edition of Countdown, while that same day Arianna Huffington posted on her website a "Memo to Obama: Moving to the Middle is for Losers."
Impassioned debates and appeals to the candidate are now rattling
through the leftwing "blogoshpere" and have even extended into the
fringes of the Obama camp, as a collection of his supporters organized
a group whose message urging him to "Please Vote No on Telecom Immunity"
briefly headlined his official website. However, the Senator voted for
the bill while around the same time stating positions on gun-control
and Bush's "faith-based initiatives" that have further rankled
progressive sensibilities. To her credit, Hillary Clinton voted against
the FISA bill, but this of course added insult to injury for those
Obama supporters who expected their candidate to take principled stands on such issues.
"OBAMANIA" REVISITED
One
way or another, much has changed since the early phases of Obama's
campaign driven by youthful enthusiasm. In this sense, those who jumped
on the bandwagon as it pulled out of Iowa were bound to be disappointed
by the candidate at some point; given the extraordinary level of
excitement the campaign generated early on, it was only a matter of
time before it came back to reality. Although the punditry raised its
expectations for Obama rapidly after Iowa, in reality absolutely no one
in the media or the Beltway had initially expected him to emerge from
the pack or even be a factor in the race whatsoever. Thus his
second-place finish in New Hampshire was a reality-check both for team
Obama and the media that had recently become infatuated with this
political phenomenon. It was indeed shaping-up to be a long and
hard-fought primary campaign, and Obamania really took-off at this
point, as the candidate delivered another memorable oration, themed "Yes We Can!," meant to re-inspire supporters: "We
know the battle ahead will be long. But always remember that, no matter
what obstacles stand in our way, nothing can stand in the way of the
power of millions of voices calling for change." Part of this speech subsequently became the basis for a popular internet music video
produced by hip hop artist "will.i.am" of the Black Eyed Peas, in which
a cast of celebrities take turns singing over Obama's voice as the
candidate bellows:
It was a creed written into the
founding documents that declared the destiny of a nation: Yes, we can.
It was whispered by slaves and abolitionists as they blazed a trail
towards freedom through the darkest of nights: Yes, we can. It was sung
by immigrants as they struck out from distant shores and pioneers who
pushed westward against an unforgiving wilderness: Yes, we can. It was
the call of workers who organized, women who reached for the ballot, a
president who chose the moon as our new frontier, and a king who took
us to the mountaintop and pointed the way to the promised land: Yes, we
can, to justice and equality. Yes, we can, to opportunity and
prosperity. Yes, we can heal this nation. Yes, we can repair this world.
Armed
with a renewed sense of purpose as well as a new slogan, team Obama
reignited a wave of energetic advocacy by demonstrating to (would-be)
followers that the Illinois Senator was a different kind
of politician who sought not only to win the White House, but to also
build (or lead?) a movement--"powered by change and supporters like
you," as advertised by the campaign website. While no doubt inspired by
belief in their candidate's eloquently delivered message of hope, many
Obamaniacs (especially those on the Left) were clearly becoming swept
away in a "cult of personality" emerging around this multiracial "son
of the sixties" poised to be the youngest President since John F.
Kennedy. And just as JFK's daughter Caroline and her uncle Senator Ted
Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) publicly bestowed upon Obama the legacy of
their "Camelot" political dynasty, excitement surrounding the youthful
and handsome presidential candidate paralleled the elder Kennedy
brothers' status as both a political and cultural icon/"sex-symbol."
Therefore while the sixties had its "Kennedy Girls," the "Obama Girl"craze began in June 2007--before the primary season started--and spiraled into a YouTube
sensation as the candidate's fortunes skyrocketed along with his
popularity. Some on the Left projected their personal aspirations into
their vision of Obama, whose image thus grew into that of a "hip hop
generation" rock-star just as much as it came to symbolize the desire
among many for a post-Bush/Cheney political savior able to rekindle the
promise of the sixties (whatever that was exactly). But not everybody
necessarily thinks of Obama as the Bob Marley of presidential
candidates--or, if they do, it isn't necessarily meant as a compliment.
RIGHTWING REACTION
His
position as an essentially "empty vessel" has thus also fueled a
substantial amount of ardent anti-Obama sentiment ranging from his far
Left critics to hard core Clinton supporters, on the one hand, and on
the other hand encompassing a phalanx of rightwing detractors many of
whom engage in explicitly racist attacks. Thus beyond dealing with
those who present quite rational and thoughtful opposition to what is known
of his policies--as well as facing a certain backlash against the
sycophantic nature of some Obamaniacs--the candidate has been forced to
confront a unique and powerful "smear campaign" designed almost
entirely around the three Arabic names he inherited from his father,
who was born into a Muslim family; that Obama lived and attended grade
school briefly in Indonesia as a child has only added fuel to the fire.
FOX News producers, for instance, continuously "miss-spell" the
candidate's last name on screen, replacing the "b" with an "s" in order
to draw a visceral connection between Obama and Osama bin Laden. Some
on-air personalities, meanwhile, relish in mentioning the candidate's
middle name hoping to incite those viewers who harbor a patriotic
hatred of former Iraqi dictator (and most recent "bogeyman" for U.S.
power) Saddam Hussein.
It would be too painful and is
unnecessary to recall the litany of sound-bytes and images produced to
convey the idea that Obama is at worst a "secret Muslim"/terrorist
sympathizer, and at best an anti-American Christian, coming from a
church with fiery preachers in dashikis expounding "black liberation
theology" while excoriating "whitey" and Uncle Sam. The media fiasco
surrounding the Obama family's longtime pastor and friend Rev. Jeremiah Wright
was a highly visible manifestation of fears, both genuine and
manufactured, over the Senator's skin color combined with rumor-fed
uncertainties about his religious background. Recently FOX's E.D. Hill
wondered aloud on-camera if the quotidian hand gesture exchanged
between Barack and his wife Michelle Obama prior to the candidate's
June 3 speech in St. Paul may have been a "terrorist
fist jab." While Hill's comments arguably brought the Right's
anti-Obama smear campaign to a new level of inanity, the just-released
July 21 edition of the New Yorker magazine
features a cover-page cartoon (titled "The politics of fear")
satirizing the ridiculousness of such tactics. Unfortunately for Obama
and his liberal constituents who form most of the New Yorker's
readership, the image lacks just enough context so as to be exploited
by the very attack-machine it is obviously lampooning. Rather than
demonstrating why such satire is inappropriate during an election, as
some have suggested, the outcry surrounding this political commentary
demonstrates the volatile combination of differences--under the
particular geopolitical and cultural circumstances of the so-called
"global war on terror"--that are contained within Obama's multi-ethnic
background. Not only is there a sad reality that some voters will
simply not vote for a black candidate, even if he is half-white, it is
equally true that in the post-9/11 climate of drastically heightened
Islamo-phobia, even the perception of being Muslim
creates suspicion and fear among what are often described as
"low-information voters" like the one out of ten people who wrongly
believe (or perhaps are just keen to tell pollsters) that Obama is
Muslim.
It still remains to be seen whether his campaign will forcefully tackle the issue of religion in a manner similar to his speech in Philadelphia,
"A More Perfect Union," acclaimed by many for thoughtfully and
substantively addressing the superficial firestorm generated by media
attention to some of his former pastor's remarks. To the extent that
Obama spoke publicly about his own background and was able to open
space for a more sophisticated national conversation about race, he has
yet to take a similar stand with regard to rumors concerning his
religious faith. In fact while attempting to disassociate the candidate
from false information, team Obama brought itself eerily close to its
Islamo-phobic opponents during a June 16 rally in Detroit
when campaign volunteers had two women wearing Muslim head-scarves
moved so they would not appear behind the candidate--apparently out of
concern that such an image might be used as negative PR by those on the
Right propagating the "Obama is a secret Muslim" campaign. The Illinois
Senator issued a swift apology for the embarrassing incident, and it
therefore may be encouraging to some that he has recently gone on-record about the New Yorker
cover, saying: "You know, there are wonderful Muslim Americans all
across the country who are doing wonderful things...And for this to be
used as sort of an insult, or to raise suspicions about me, I think is
unfortunate. And it's not what America's all about." Nonetheless, Obama
has yet to give this besieged group what it deserves by delivering a
ceremonial public address on its behalf, or whatever one imagines he
might do to make clear the offensiveness of suggestions that being
Muslim is a liability or cause for concern.
All of this points
to another powerful dynamic underlying the 2008 presidential election
and Obama's role as the candidate of "change." For no matter what he
does to reassure the "war party" within the Beltway establishment of
his credentials to guide U.S. foreign policy, he will always have
skeptics among those neoconservative-influenced "hawks" and other
anti-Palestinian forces, in many cases rightwing Jewish-Americans and
Christian Zionists, who see Obama's past relations with progressive
Arab-Americans as a sign of his true, and now-hidden allegiances. Seen
in this light, Obama's rhetorical pandering to the Israel Lobby is part
of what has become a standard ritual for mainstream American
politicians, but it also has added importance given that he, for
instance, was photographed at a Chicago fundraiser breaking bread with
the eminent Palestinian intellectual/activist Edward Said. While this
would be a badge of honor for many on the Left (and perhaps was at one
point for Obama), the neoconservative universe has labeled (slandered)
Said as the "terror professor," and the rightwing blogosphere is
currently ablaze with such "evidence" of the Illinois Senator's supposed "anti-Israel bias." Said was at Columbia while Obama studied there in the early 1980s, but opponents have drawn a stronger connection between Obama and Rashid Khalidi,
a Palestinian scholar and activist at the University of Chicago who has
apparently had a personal relationship with the Senator in years past,
perhaps as part of an intellectual cohort that included former 1960s
radical William Ayers.
But it is not so much a concern over the
Jewish vote that is driving team Obama towards a strong embrace of
Israel. Rather, it is a question of the political and financial rewards
that accrue in official Washington to those seen as being a friend of
the Jewish state. So just as Obama was forced, in one sense, to
permanently dawn a flag-pin after the media consistently questioned his
patriotism, the candidate faced overwhelming pressure to jettison--at
least for now--whatever perception there may be that he has ever been
an advocate of Palestinian rights. This lingering reputation could,
ironically, be nothing more than the traces of Obama's early attempts
to make his way in Chicago politics by courting that city's relatively
large Arab-American population. Now that he faces an election in which
he needs the support of the Israel Lobby far more than he needs that of
prominent Muslim-Americans, his tune has perhaps changed accordingly.
It is also possible that he would, as President, seek to chart a new
and better course for solving the Israel-Palestine conflict yet
strategically chooses to wait until he's in office before rocking the
foreign policy boat.
Either way, Obama's statements concerning
the Middle East crisis, like his post-primary rhetoric in general,
express a willingness to engage all the traditional games a candidate
must play in order to be elected to the Oval Office. At the level of
presidential politics, one is undoubtedly faced with pressure to make
the right new friends and sell-out the right old friends. If this is
indeed what is now occurring with team Obama, it should not really
surprise those on the critical (and smartly skeptical) Left, even
though it may present a cause for sadness. Yet does this mean that the
candidate of "change we can believe" who promises to "turn a new page"
and "write and new chapter" is really just a slick snake-oil salesman?
Is there perhaps even a sinister conspiracy involving Obama as a
front-man for behind-the-scenes political operators (i.e. the Bilderberg Group), or is he in some other way just a pawn in the hands of the power-elite?
If
so, does this mean that progressives should rally behind either Ralph
Nader (running as an independent) or former Congresswoman Cynthia
McKinney (D-Georgia) , who on July 12 secured the Green Party nomination? What, then, should the Left make of groups like Progressives for Obama?
For that matter, what should such groups make of Obama these days? When
he formally accepts the Democratic nomination on August 28--the
fortieth anniversary of Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech--in front of
at least 75,000 people in an open-air stadium in Denver, could the
candidate of hope and inspiration reemerge to once again electrify the
nation and rekindle excited belief among youth and progressive
activists? Will Obama at that moment become the embodiment of King's
dream? Or, will the convention be just an elaborate show of pageantry,
an expensive spectacle that actually exploits the legacy of the civil
rights movement for crass political gain?
And
in the meantime, how will worsening economic crisis and festering
(perhaps also broadening) wars in the Middle East affect the
presidential campaign? Is it the case that the Democrats could almost
nominate a stuffed donkey in August and still be virtually guaranteed
to reenter the White House on January 20, 2009? Might Bush and Cheney
have one final trick up their bloodied sleeves?
Stay tuned...
SPECTACLE '08
BY most accounts Obama delivered a stellar performance during his August 28 acceptance speech
in front of 85,000 supporters at Mile High Stadium (Invesco Field).
While not making reference to Dr. King by name--and in that manner not
allowing racial politics to overshadow the wider imperatives of his
speech--he nonetheless concluded by channeling the historic nature of the moment, weaving
his campaign themes together with an eloquent plea to rekindle the
collective aspirations articulated in "I Have a Dream." Obama bellowed
from the convention podium:
This country of ours has
more wealth than any nation, but that's not what makes us rich. We have
the most powerful military on Earth, but that's not what makes us
strong. Our universities and our culture are the envy of the world, but
that's not what keeps the world coming to our shores.
Instead,
it is that American spirit -- that American promise -- that pushes us
forward even when the path is uncertain; that binds us together in
spite of our differences; that makes us fix our eye not on what is
seen, but what is unseen, that better place around the bend...
And
it is that promise that 45 years ago today, brought Americans from
every corner of this land to stand together on a Mall in Washington,
before Lincoln's Memorial, and hear a young preacher from Georgia speak
of his dream.
The men and women who gathered there could've
heard many things. They could've heard words of anger and discord. They
could've been told to succumb to the fear and frustration of so many
dreams deferred.
But what the people heard instead -- people of
every creed and color, from every walk of life -- is that in America,
our destiny is inextricably linked. That together, our dreams can be
one.
'We cannot walk alone,' the preacher cried. ' And as we
walk, we must make the pledge that we shall always march ahead. We
cannot turn back."
America, we cannot turn back. Not with so
much work to be done. Not with so many children to educate, and so many
veterans to care for. Not with an economy to fix and cities to rebuild
and farms to save. Not with so many families to protect and so many
lives to mend. America, we cannot turn back. We cannot walk alone. At
this moment, in this election, we must pledge once more to march into
the future. Let us keep that promise -- that American promise -- and in
the words of Scripture hold firmly, without wavering, to the hope that
we confess.
The
Democratic National Convention in Denver came on the heels of Obama's
highly successful overseas trip designed to demonstrate his grasp of
foreign policy and prove that he could pass the "commander-in-chief"
threshold. In Iraq the Senator appeared about as "presidential" as
possible while meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki who
all but endorsed Obama's timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. forces.
After capping his stop through the Middle East and Western Europe with
a July 24 speech
in front of 200,000 people gathered at Victory Column in Berlin's
Tiergarten Park, Obama turned his attention towards the selection of a
vice presidential running-mate. In what was initially viewed as a
generally pragmatic and strategic choice, Team Obama named Joe Biden of
Delaware--the sixty-five year-old chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. Biden matches if not surpasses McCain's
legislative bona fides (35 years in Congress) and is considered an
"expert" on foreign affairs. He therefore helps negate what has been
perceived as Obama's most glaring weakness: inexperience.
Biden's foreign policy leaves much to be desired
among many progressives, as he voted for the 2002 Iraq war
authorization and his general views on the Middle East are
conventional, i.e. titled towards the Israeli perspective by default.
Yet, his selection has also been more tolerable to Obama's leftwing
base than would have been a number of the rumored alternatives, such as
Senators Evan Bayh (Indiana) or Hillary Clinton. To be sure, Biden is
thoroughly enmeshed in the Beltway establishment and doesn't exactly
have a strong record of reform. Still, he is hardly among the worst of
the worst in the Democratic (let alone Republican) party when it comes
to being a corrupt "Washington insider" in the pocket of "special
interests" (perhaps his greatest offense relates to connections with
the credit-card companies based in his hometown of Wilmington). For the
most part Biden is regarded as an amiable and independent-minded
politician who offers his candid opinion on a regular basis, often
straying from the party's proscribed "talking points." Furthermore,
having a working/middle-class background filled with personal and
familial tragedy, Biden's biography tugs at liberal heart strings in a
manner similar to Obama's--he is in fact considered one of if not the
"poorest" member of the U.S. Senate with a current net worth of around
$300,000. Biden has also become a highly vocal critic of Bush-Cheney
policies, although he could have used his powerful Senate position to
do more by way of holding the White House accountable for its dubious
actions in the "war on terror," i.e. torturing detainees, spying on law
abiding U.S. citizens, and misleading the nation into an (arguably)
illegal war. To his credit, the Delaware Senator recently affirmed
Obama's stated commitment to pursue criminal charges against members of
the Bush-Cheney administration if and when merited by investigations.
Thus, Biden's selection can be seen as an attempt to combine the older
senator's realistic grasp of "how Washington works" with the younger
senator's desire for reform. And if Obama represents the reemergence of
an RFK-like figure appealing to young progressives, it should be noted
that Biden shares a birth date (separated by fourteen years) with
Robert Kennedy on November 20. Meanwhile much like Obama today, during
his primary campaign in 1988 many compared Biden's efforts to Kennedy's
1968 run for the nomination.
BEYOND THE CONVENTIONS
An
estimated 38 million people watched Obama's speech in Denver, the
largest audience ever for a political convention. "Mainstream" media
discourse focused on the willingness (or lack thereof) among Clinton
supporters to get on board with Obama-Biden, as well as which part of
the ticket was going to most aggressively attack McCain. At the same
time, "independent" media including Amy Goodman and Democracy Now! covered both the DNC and RNC
(in St. Paul Minnesota) from an "un-embedded" point-of-view that
focused as much on people and issues excluded from the conventions as
on the choreographed speechifying inside the Pepsi and Xcel Energy
Centers. DN's comprehensive
coverage, "Breaking with Convention," offered incisive analysis of the
insidious confluence of money and politics typified by these televised
gatherings produced in partnership with corporate sponsors who also
happen to be campaign contributors. Perhaps most egregious (or at least
obvious) in these regards, the AT&T logo was emblazoned across an
official 2008 DNC tote bag distributed to delegates, which reminded
critical observers that while AT&T donates significantly to the
coffers of both Democratic and Republican lawmakers, the company could
have suffered greatly due to pending civil lawsuits alleging that
telecommunications companies collaborated with the dubious Bush-Cheney
"warrantless wiretapping" program. Thus while these tote bags may seem
benign enough, as noted by media critics
such as Glenn Greenwald they symbolize the symbiotic relationship that
exists between politicians and corporations like AT&T, which in
fact threw a lavish private party for Democratic legislators in Denver
that has been construed as an expression of gratitude for those who
supported the retroactive immunity provision in the FISA Amendments Act of 2008.
As
the Democratic and Republican wings of the nation's political and
corporate elite gathered in celebration, dissent was therefore on
display both outside and inside the conventions halls. Protesters in
Denver and St. Paul were met by a massive and heavily militarized
police presence designed to intimidate activists and preemptively
destabilize their antiwar/anti-establishment mobilizations. While Democracy Now! provide unfiltered coverage of these demonstrations, Amy Goodman was arrested outside of the RNC as she and two of her producers were swept up by riot police who overreacted violently to sporadic
vandalism among groups that had broken away from the peaceful
gatherings. Meanwhile inside the DNC, Ohio congressman Dennis Kucinich
delivered a characteristically impassioned speech
that appealed directly to the progressive wing of the party. A twice
presidential candidate in the 2004 and 2008 Democratic primaries who
has within the last year introduced--so far unsuccessfully--articles of
impeachment against both Dick Cheney and George W. Bush, Kucinich told
the convention (in part):
Wake Up America! In 2001, the
oil companies, the war contractors and the neocon artists seized the
economy and added $4 trillion of unproductive spending to the national
debt...Wake up, America! The insurance companies took over healthcare.
Wake up, America! The pharmaceutical companies took over drug
pricing...We went into Iraq for oil. The oil companies want more. War
against Iran will mean $10-a-gallon gasoline. The oil administration,
they want to drill more, into your wallet. Wake up, America!...
Now,
this administration can tap our phones. They can’t tap our creative
spirit. They can open our mail. But they can’t open economic
opportunities. They can track our every move. But they lost track of
the economy while the cost of food, gasoline and electricity
skyrockets. Now, they have skillfully played our post-9/11 fears, and
they’ve allowed the few to profit at the expense of the many. Every
day, we get the color orange, while the oil companies, the insurance
companies, the speculators, the war contractors get the color green.
Wake up, America!
Kucinich is dedicated to the
"global peace and justice movement" along with those who took to the
streets in Denver and St. Paul. Yet, he continues to work within the
Democratic Party while many of his allies criticize it from the Left.
Thus in June Kucinich told Amy Goodman of his reservations about Obama's apparent abandonment of the progressive ideals that seemed to have helped him win the primary: "This election...is about hope, certainly, but it’s about something else, too. It’s about shifting
away from policies that have destroyed our economy. And I am looking
forward to having a conversation with my good friend Barack Obama about
what he intends to do about matters relating to NAFTA, about Social
Security privatization, about whether or not he’s going to be leaving
troops in Iraq...before I give a personal endorsement." Although it is unknown whether or not he has had a recent conversation with the Illinois Senator, Kucinich withheld his official endorsement of the Obama-Biden ticket until the very end of his convention speech.
At the same time, Texas Congressman Ron Paul is perhaps the Republican equivalent of Rep. Kucinich in terms of
electoral politics. A physician and longtime legislator who was the
Libertarian Party's presidential candidate in 1988, Rep. Paul generated
a wealth of enthusiasm among disaffected young conservatives during the
2008 primary season. As part of a grassroots internet following, Paul's "Campaign for Liberty" attracts a diverse group of political affiliates under
the banner: "The Revolution Continues." Paul's platform has some
ideological agreement with the Left, especially in the realm of foreign
policy where he calls for an end to "U.S. imperialism" and the closure
of all American military bases across the world. Former Alaska Senator
Mike Gravel, for instance, struck a similar chord at the first
Democratic primary debate in South Carolina on April 26 2007. When NBC's Brian Williams asked the assembled candidates about "the three most important enemies to the United States"other than Iraq, Gravel answered: "We have no important enemies. What we need to do is to begin
to deal with the rest of the world as equals...We spend more as a
nation on defense than all the rest of the world put together...The military industrial complex not only controls our government, lock, stock and barrel, but they control our culture."
Therefore after being quietly excluded from subsequent Democratic
debates, not to mention the DNC, Gravel made an unsuccessful bid to
become the 2008 Libertarian nominee. Ron Paul, meanwhile, more or less
excluded himself from the RNC and instead organized a
"counter-convention" across the river at Minneapolis' Target Center
where at least 10,000 people shadowed the GOP's nomination of John
McCain at a "Rally for the Republic."
Staking its claim on a return to the (conservative) principles of the
Constitution and Bill of Rights regarding small government, controlled
spending, and an isolationist foreign policy, the "Ron Paul Revolution"
is also fiercely committed to pure "free-market" capitalism, i.e. total
financial deregulation (a la Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman)
as well as staunch support for the Second Amendment.
THE "THIRD PARTY" FACTOR
A
true maverick within the Republican Party (unlike McCain) who is
generally respected even among opponents, Paul steadfastly refuses to
compromise his ideals by endorsing this years' GOP ticket. Instead,
Rep. Paul rather surprisingly organized a "Third Party Press Conference"
in Washington D.C. on September 10 in which independent candidate Ralph
Nader and Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney joined with the
(rightwing) Constitution Party's nominee Charles O. “Chuck” Baldwin. At
this forum Paul urged his supporters to throw their efforts behind one
of these candidates rather than vote for the "lesser of two evils."
Libertarian nominee, and former Georgia Republican Congressman Bob Barr
decided at the last minute to skip this event. But according to the the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
Barr joined the other candidates in signing a "statement from Paul
pledging their support for limited government, personal liberties,
bringing U.S. troops stationed abroad home, and for an investigation
into the Federal Reserve." Whether they be from the far Left or the far
Right, this collection of odd political bedfellows--Paul, Nader,
McKinney, and Barr is coherently united around the goal of reforming
government in order to expand the political process beyond the "broken"
two-party system. In an intriguing twist, Barr--who had helped lead the
1998 impeachment of Bill Clinton--has asked Paul to join him on the
Libertarian ticket. However, the Texas Congressman has apparently
declined his former colleague's offer.
Excluded from debates and
otherwise not covered seriously by the mainstream media, the Green and
Libertarian Parties in particular have rather sizable and devoted
followings that would conceivably be represented in Congress if the
American version of electoral democracy were closer to European-style
multiparty (coalitional) parliaments. It is also fairly obvious that
Ralph Nader's political fortunes would be quite different if the media
landscape were not dominated by the interests of Time Warner (CNN),
Disney (ABC), General Electric (NBC), Viacom (CBS), and NewsCorporation
(FOX). After his 2000 run as a Green
when he arguably siphoned enough votes from Al Gore to help put Bush
over the top, Nader ran again in 2004 as an independent earning less
votes and less attention. Nader's 2008 running-mate is Matt Gonzalez, a
former president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors who as a
Democrat-turned-Green lost a close race for mayor in 2003. But the
independent Nader/Gonzalez ticket is floundering in many respects this
election cycle, and thus during a June 25 interview with the Rocky Mountain News Nader caused a minor controversy when he made the following remarks: "There's only one thing different about Barack Obama when it comes to being a Democratic presidential candidate. He's half African-American." Nader added: "Whether
that will make any difference, I don't know. I haven't heard him have a
strong crackdown on economic exploitation in the ghettos. Payday loans,
predatory lending, asbestos,
lead. What's keeping him from doing that? Is it because he wants to
talk white? He doesn't want to appear like Jesse Jackson?"
Although
some pundits unfairly attacked Nader's comments comparing Sen. Obama
and Rev. Jackson as racist, a more sober assessment might echo the
words of Joan Walsh who asked in her June 25 Salon.com column: "Is Ralph Nader Losing It?". The same day on MSNBC's Hardball Walsh joined host Chris Mathews and others including Bob Herbert of the New York Times in agreeing with Obama, who after rebutting claims that he hasn't addressed certain issues, declared: "Ralph
Nader is trying to get attention. He‘s become a perennial political
candidate. I think it‘s a shame because if you look at his legacy in
terms of consumer protections, it‘s an extraordinary one. But at this
point, he‘s somebody who‘s trying to get attention and whose campaign
hasn‘t gotten any traction." Nader has indeed not received as
much attention in 2008 as he did in 2000 and 2004, in large part
because of the historic nature of this year's campaign and the fact
that, unlike either Gore or Kerry, Obama has a genuinely progressive
base of supporters. Hence the cries of outrage at Obama's perceived
abandonment of his core constituency, which was more or less at the
heart of Nader's charge that the Illinois Senator is simply another
centrist Democrat aligned with Wall Street and the corporate oligarchy.
Yet such a critique of Team Obama's strategy of triangulation, or
perhaps of the candidate's apparent willingness to compromise his
ideals, is rather different from Nader's musings that
"he wants to show that he is not a threatening...another
politically-threatening African-American politician. He wants to appeal
to white guilt. You appeal to white guilt not by coming on as a black
is beautiful, black is powerful. Basically, he‘s coming on as someone
who is not going to threaten the white power structure, whether it‘s
corporate or whether it‘s simply oligarchic, and they love it. Whites
just eat it up.”
Granting that he could have phrased
himself better, and giving him the benefit of doubt as far as his
intentions, it still seems rather clear that Nader is not grasping the
complexities of racial politics--nor of race in politics--by decrying
the fact that Obama is trying to reassure the ruling elite that he's on
their side. The Senator is, after all, effectively attempting to become
the ceremonial leader of a global "white power structure." Nader surely
knows that it would be foolhardy for any candidate--black or white--to
expect to run for and become president by appealing primarily to people
in poor communities who don't contribute to campaigns and, quite often,
don't vote. Jesse Jackson, Dennis Kucinich, or Nader himself might be
the president today if the American electoral system were truly
democratic in that sense. This is exactly why it is promising
that--despite his obligatory entanglement in the murky and dubious
realm of power politics--Barack Obama remains connected to a grassroots
(progressive) orientation informed by his ethnic heritage and
solidified through experiences in Hawaii, Indonesia, and Chicago's
South Side. This life story as
a multiracial community organizer and constitutional lawyer/law
professor separates him from other presidential candidates, as well as
from other high-profile black politicians such as Colin Powell and
Condaleeza Rice. Unlike previous African-American presidential hopefuls
on the Left including Jesse Jackson and Rev. Al Sharpton, who were
known as civil rights leaders and never gained sufficient antional
support, Obama has developed his image as a political leader who
supports causes attached to the legacy of the civil rights movement
without being seen as an activist. He can therefore claim to be
"post-racial" in the sense of not being a candidate whose constituency
is defined by skin color and limited to those who look similar to
himself. Nader's blanket dismissal of Obama as simply more of the same
therefore ignores reality: it is truly phenomenal for a black man to
potentially be a few months away from entering the White House, let
alone an African-American with progressive roots who appeals culturally
to the largely depoliticized "hip-hop generation" yet has managed to
not be vilified as a "black candidate" in large part because of being
half white.
While it is appropriate and worthwhile to be
skeptical of Obama's policies and campaign strategies, one must
question the wisdom of Nader's decision to launch haphazard attacks
that seem to have earned him only a brief spurt of negative media
attention focused on personality rather than substance. Moreover it is
clear from Obama's reaction to Nader's comments that it might have in
theory been possible for the longtime consumer advocate to have formed
a political coalition with the onetime community organizer now seeking
the nation's highest office. Yet Nader's stubborn and awkward
combativeness all but assured Obama's subsequent distancing from the
man who, despite being a tireless crusader for social justice, may
be most remembered for having helped (s)elect George W. Bush in 2000.
Admitting that he has no chance of winning the presidency in 2008,
Nader could have pursued a more strategic campaign aimed at opening a
critical dialog with the Democratic candidate in order to press Obama
in a progressive direction. To that end, he and Matt Gonzalez might have been better off working from within the
Green Party, but instead their independent campaign overlaps and in
some ways duplicates the efforts of former Georgia Congresswoman
Cynthia McKinney and her Green running-mate Rosa Clemente. Although
claiming to be in solidarity with McKinney and Clemente, Nader and
Gonzalez are inevitably cutting into their votes and ultimately
diminishing the strength of the Greens as a progressive center-of-gravity.
Ousted from the House of Representatives by energized opponents, and essentially
banished from the Democratic Party, the firebrand McKinney recently
relaunched her political career with the Green Party; Clemente is a
journalist and self-described "hip-hop activist"of Puerto Rican descent
who was raised in the South Bronx. Like Nader and Gonzalez, McKinney
and Clemente are having a difficult time gaining traction with voters
during an election that has been so focused on the nation's first
would-be black president. Hence, their evident frustration during a July 21 interview with Democracy Now!, when Clemente was prompted to tell Amy Goodman: "There have been some people caught up in Obama-mania, as I call it and other people, that are upset [about the possibility of the Greens taking votes away from Democrats],
but they don’t understand, I think, right now the situation that we’re
in. They don’t understand that the Democrats and Republicans joined
forces to keep the Green Party off the ballot. They don’t understand that we are being whited out of every mainstream and even some progressive media." Therefore striking a defiant if not also hostile chord, she continued: "And my question to them [Obama supporters]
is always, or my response: if we are not telling the truth, if we are
not about empowering the majority of the American people, why are
forces that are worth $200 million, $300 million not only keeping us
off the ballots, but not even talking about us."
Clemente's rhetorical stance is indicative of a tendency among ideologues on the Left to masterfully diagnose problems without being able to develop
a strategy for overcoming them. Furthermore, such progressives often
value idealism more than pragmatism in political leaders who thus find
themselves "preaching to the choir" as their radical rhetoric alienates
those who haven't already been won over. Many therefore respect what
McKinney and Clemente (as well as Nader and Gonzalez) represent, while
questioning the long-term effectiveness of their campaigns. From this
perspective Amiri Baraka of the Black Arts Collective published an uncompromising critique
of those who are voting Green rather than standing with Obama as the
only prospect for real and immediate progress from within the electoral
system. According to Baraka:
"The people who are supporting McKinney must know that that is an empty
gesture. But too often such people are so pocked with self
congratulatory idealism, that they care little or understand little
about politics (i.e. the gaining, maintaining and use of power) but
want only to pronounce, to themselves mostly, how progressive or
radical or even revolutionary they are."
Sure enough,
Baraka tapped into a controversy that has fractured the American Left
more or less since 1968 when the assassination of Robert Kennedy amid
an escalating war in Vietnam perpetuated chaos at the DNC in Chicago
and opened the door for Richard Nixon's ascendancy. What had in fact
climaxed that year as the inchoate beginning of a socialist-inspired
global revolution lost its cohesion and unraveled sending the movements
of the "sixties" in divergent and often competing directions. In a
recent reflection among scholars and activists on Pacifica Radio's Against the Grain (KPFA) titled "Appraising '68", Barbara Epstein and John Sanbonmatsu
argued that, as an outcome of 1968, a rather large portion of the
Left--often informed by some version of anarchism--views either
electoral politics in general or the two-party system specifically as a
tool of the ruling elite; another camp, inspired by elements of
postmodernism, rejects the oppressive nature of "politics" in favor of
a liberating "culturalism" devoted to exploring identity formation and
related concepts. While productive and perhaps even essential in an
intellectual/academic sense, this factionalism has contributed to a
steady decline of progressive influence in national electoral politics
since the late sixties. Scholars such as Epstein and Sanbonmatsu therefore refer to the insights of Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci, whose theory of cultural hegemony
posits that power is ultimately attained through overlapping economic
and ideological struggles in which the dictates of political compromise
often necessitate the formation of strategic coalitions. Although debate continues over how to best navigate the current system,
one important lesson of 1968 is that progressives can continue ignoring
electoral politics only at their own peril. Whether this means going
Green with McKinney, standing firm with Nader, or casting a vote for
Obama is a somewhat separate question. So to is the issue of how
progressives can and should re-unite after the election, especially
under an Obama-Biden administration.
THE "OTHER SHOE" DROPS
Yet
as the 2008 election enters its final forty days, it appears as though
neither McKinney nor Nader will be a serious factor, especially
compared to the potentially larger impact that Bob Barr and Ron Paul
could have among conservatives. Moreover, whatever momentum may have
developed inside the ranks of third party campaigns was surely blunted
by the McCain camp's shocking vice-presidential nomination of Alaska
Governor Sarah Palin, a deeply religious political neophyte with
hard-line conservative views and none of the heretofore requisite
qualifications for national office. Thus providing an emergency shot of
adrenaline to a campaign that desperately needed to shift the nation's
focus, Palin's RNC speech in fact drew slightly more viewers than Obama's
historic moment in Denver, as did McCain's remarks the following
evening. Many Left pundits gravitated to the notion that Palin's
selection as the GOP's first female VP candidate was a cynical ploy
designed to peel "white working-class" women voters--especially
disaffected Hillay Clinton supporters--away from the
Democrats. Yet with her performance in St. Paul, it became clear that
her primary function on the campaign trail would be to provide red meat
for the conservative base by using a combination of attacks and
one-liners to reignite the "culture wars," i.e. debates over abortion,
gun-control, gay marriage, etc. She thus went immediately for the
jugular against Obama while defending her record as Mayor of Wasila,
Alaska, telling the convention: "I guess a small-town
mayor is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have
actual responsibilities. I might add that in small towns, we don't
quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working
people when they are listening, and then talks about how bitterly they
cling to their religion and guns when those people aren't listening.
We tend to prefer candidates who don't talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco."
For a while it looked like the GOPs' quite risky decision to select
Palin might just pay-off, as she began drawing large crowds and became
a fresh face who could deliver a great speech; some even began calling
her the "Republican Obama." With the help of Palin's self-styled image
as "an average hockey mom"-turned reformist politician who successfully
challenged the corrupt Alaska lawmakers in her own party, McCain
managed to recapture his branding as a Senate "maverick" willing to
buck the Establishment. No doubt informed by a lack of enthusiasm for
McCain, the GOP campaign that had been built on touting experience as
an antidote to the risk involved in electing Obama suddenly felt
compelled to begin promising its own version of change. While keeping
Palin far away from the press, and in fact pursuing a reinvigorated
"attack the media" strategy of defense against mounting scrutiny of her
record (as well as McCain's apparently hasty decision), for a few days
the election reached the peak of inanity as political commentators
parsed the meaning of "lipstick on a pig" in order to detect a hint of
sexism in Obama's stump-speech. Meanwhile conservative women took to
wearing Palin paraphernalia and chanting, with reference to the
Governor's energy policy: "drill baby, drill!" But just as Republicans
could claim to have recaptured momentum and changed the election
narrative to their advantage, the "Palin bubble" began to burst. This
occurred first as serious questions arose regarding the Governor's
honesty, as she for instance claimed to have resisted Alaska's infamous
pork-barrel "bridge to nowhere" project
when in fact she had initially supported it. Meanwhile the Alaska
Senate is currently investigating the possibility that Palin wrongfully
fired the state's public safety commissioner for personal reasons and
is now covering-up her actions; thus, "Troopergate" threatens to be a
major political headache for the McCain campaign as an official
bipartisan report will be completed on October 10.
As all this was brewing, a sudden Wall Street nosedive on September 15
in what appears to be the largest economic crisis since the Great
Depression permanently changed the conversation. Both candidates have
now been forced to react to an unfolding financial meltdown of unkown
proportions. Combined with an increasingly tense geopolitical situation
in the Middle East, and now also between Russia and the West, it is
beginning to seem more than a little bit like the 1930s all over again.
What will be the effect on the election of collapsing financial markets
alongside a proposed $700 government bailout at a time when the Iraq
war has already depleted the Federal Reserve? Is Obama promising to be the next FDR as much as the next RFK? Where, for that matter, are Bush and Cheney these days? Is this just the begining of a whole new page in both American and world history?
Stay tuned...
Mr.
Congeniality chooses to cede all foreign policy arguments to his rival.
But you can't really blame him, the decision to take the Iraq War off
the table, and make the election a referendum on economic issues worked
brilliantly for John Kerry...
Why Obama continues to embrace
discredited neo-conservative interpretations of political developments
in places like Georgia and the Middle East is beyond me. He seems to
accept the notion that the American electorate is so stupid that it has
no tolerance for nuance on issues such as "Israel's right to defend it
self against an Iranian nuclear holocaust," or the "threat of Russian
aggression." (though in Obama's defense, there is a theory out there
that argues that if you treat someone like they are stupid for long
enough, they may indeed become stupid. As PT Barnum observed: "you'll
never go broke underestimating the intelligence of the American
public." I don't suppose that we should let the fact that Mr. Barnum
died in debt overshadow the simple elegance of his formula...)
Obama
may get lucky and be able to ride bad economic headlines into the White
House, but when it comes to the more fundamental problem of coming to
terms with American Empire, apparently we are not the ones we have been
waiting for. Apparently they will come along some time later. Perhaps
they will be able to reframe foreign policy issues in more realistic,
less militaristic and ideological terms than "we" are currently able to.
I wonder how they will manage to do that.
Posted by Brandon at 12:02 PM
TO WHICH I REPLIED:
I offer this response in the interest of solidarity:
Unfortunately,
the blindly pro-Israel and now "pro-Georgian" foreign policy position
shared by Obama and McCain is reflective of the larger framework within
which American Empire has operated since the end of WWII, and is by no
means solely a "neocon" ideology. Of course, the now infamous
neoconservatives (Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, etc.)
have played a major role in perpetuating US imperialism first through
the anti-communist "cold war" framework," and now through a "war on
terror" against "radical Islam (Islamofascism)." McCain, with his vast
resume as a militant American nationalist, has had ties to the neocons
for several decades stretching back to their ascension during the
"Reagan Revolution" and the beginning of a new "special relationship"
between Israel and the United States. McCain's top foreign policy
adviser Randy Scheunemann, for instance, is a participant in the
neocons' Project for a New American Century and Committee for the
Liberation of Iraq, while also being a paid lobbyist to the president
of...Georgia!
So the neocons, who rose to prominence in the
1980s through advocating the unilateral imposition of American power,
teamed-up with partners on the far Right in Israel and allies in
Washington to refocus the "Free World's" post-cold war attention on a
"terrorist" enemy lurking in the Middle East. Having peaked after 9/11
and the fulfillment of longstanding plans to re-invade Iraq, this
imperial structure built on an anti-terrorist foundation has weakened
to the point of near collapse. Thus by working through a proxy regime
in Georgia, what's left of Bush's "coalition of the willing" in
Washington and Tel Aviv is prodding Russia into joining the fray (which
could eventually include Moscow defending Iran against a US/Israeli
attack) thereby reigniting/reconfiguring their "Long War" into a more
familiar struggle among "Great Powers." McCain is 150% behind this plan
that would heighten global tensions dramatically through a new
articulation of Bush's zero-sum "you're either with us, or with the
terrorists" formula.
For his part, Obama appears to be more of
an internationalist who nonetheless seeks to protect and extend
American global leadership. An Obama foreign policy in this manner has
the promise of being similar to that of the Carter administration, as
in fact Carter's National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski is now
advising Obama. Of course, Carter was at the last minute denied a
speaking role at this year's DNC probably because of his recently
outspoken defense of Palestinian rights. For his part, Brzezinski has
also earned opposition from neocons and others affiliated with the
"Israel Lobby" (to the point of being labeled anti-Semitic) for his
advocacy of a more "evenhanded" approach to the Middle East. The Obama
campaign is clearly distancing itself in public from the Carter Middle
East strategy, yet it is still unclear exactly how an Obama
administration would or would not revise its stance on Israel/Palestine
once in office.
Ironically, Eastern Europe and Russia are
considered more within the purview of Brzezinski (who is of Polish
descent); some in fact consider Obama to be aligned with a
Brzezinski-led faction in the Democratic Party--also associated with
billionaire Hungarian emigre financier George Soros--that would engage
in a "realist" approach to projecting US power while shifting attention
away from the Middle East and towards Eastern Europe/Russia. By this
account, Obama's defeat of Hillary Clinton in the primary election was
a victory for the Brzezinski/Soros faction in cahoots with Howard
Dean's DNC, which is opposed to "neocon fellow-travelers" such as Evan
Bayh affiliated with the Clintons' Democratic Leadership Council (DLC).
To
whatever extent Obama may be connected to such a "realist"
anti-Clinton/anti-neocon axis within the Democratic Party, it would be
fully resonant with his campaign's foreign policy proposals centered on
shifting focus and resources away from Iraq towards "winning the war"
in Afghanistan. In addition to the stated goal of "rooting out al Qaeda
and the Taliban," this strategy has the obvious effect of placing
Central Asia and Eastern Europe/Russia at the center of US geopolitical
interest. This would certainly make sense as far as Brzezinski is
concerned, given how he bragged in his book "The Grand Chessboard" that
he personally helped bait the Soviet Union into invading
Afghanistan--what he calls the "Afghan Trap." Indeed, while it
escalated dramatically under Reagan and his neocon advisers, CIA
sponsorship of the anti-Soviet Afghan mujahideen began under Carter and
Brzezinski. So beyond the rhetoric of fighting terrorism, Obama's focus
on Afghanistan amounts to a 21st century version of the "Great Game"
for control over the strategically vital borderlands between Europe and
Asia.
His promise to escalate the war in Afghanistan is
therefore the most troubling aspect of Obama's foreign policy,
particularly since it legitimizes the concept of "war on terror" and
accepts the narrative framed by his neocon/American nationalist rivals.
By how fully it either embraces or rejects the notion of building a
foreign policy platform around retaliating against bin Laden and other
"terrorists" for 9/11, the next administration will determine whether
or not the neocon-inspired "war on terror/long war" has any chance of
congealing into an all-encompassing framework reminiscent of the Cold
War. Sadly, Obama's position regarding Afghanistan and Pakistan cedes
too much ground to the neocon, i.e. Bush/McCain agenda by proclaiming
to end a "failed strategy" in Iraq only to pursue a similar strategy in
Central Asia. The same may be said of Obama's current positions on the
Arab-Israeli conflict as well as recent fighting between Russia and
Georgia.
Yet, there are important nuances and crucial
differences between the McCain and Obama foreign policies. The militant
nationalist Bush/McCain vision promises to reinvigorate the war on
terror paradigm by folding the familiar Russian enemy into a new
bellicose framework in which "radical Islamic terrorists" and allied
states such as Syria and Iran pose the "transcendent threat" of our
generation. The Obama-Brzezinski realist/internationalist vision,
however, avoids such dubious rhetoric while proclaiming that terrorism
is one of many challenges facing the international community including
climate change, nuclear proliferation, genocide, hunger, and disease.
To
be sure, Team Obama is not promising to dismantle the American Empire.
But, they are pledging to engage in a more tempered use of military
power in which multilateral decision-making is a means of balancing the
perceived "national (material) interest" with imperatives of global
stability. A stark contrast therefore arose during the September 26
presidential debate with respect to McCain and Obama's assessments of
how the current economic crisis (and $700 billion bail-out plan) might
affect their respective agendas. McCain, showing his true militant
nature, proposed a government "spending freeze" for everything but the
military and veterans' benefits. Obama, on the other hand, answered the
question by stating which programs he would remain committed to
funding: energy independence, infrastructure redevelopment, affordable
education and health care. Thus while still affirming his commitment to
a "troop surge" in Afghanistan, Obama did not repeat during the debate
his previous statements about increasing overall military spending.
Moreover, he appeared to leave a door to demilitarization open by not
mentioning defense spending at all among his top priorities within the
context of a severely constrained budget. In fact, he went one step
further in this direction on Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer (9/28)
by suggesting that he might cut "foreign aid" in order to divert money
towards a Wall Street recovery while not sacrificing the main tenets of
his agenda.
What does all of this mean? Perhaps nothing. Maybe
Obama is just another Democratic "wolf in sheep's clothing" who poses
no dramatic departure from the miserably corrupt status-quo. Perhaps he
should come out and declare that he wishes to end America's role as the
preeminent military power by closing down its far-flung "empire of
bases" (to use Chalmers Johnson's phrase). That Obama doesn't choose to
take this stand could in theory make him ultimately no better than Bush
or McCain.
Yet in light of economic circumstances, an
internationalist Obama foreign policy would by nature provide
breathing-room for the Left to enact serious pressure towards
demilitarization. Team Obama has already produced ambitious goals in
terms of creating a New Deal-type economic recovery based on renewable
energy production. Such a "Green Revolution" has only become more
viable and indeed more necessary now that the nation is in the midst of
a financial meltdown threatening to rival (or even surpass) that which
produced the Great Depression.
Ultimately when it comes to
articulating and implementing a vision for how the world ought to be,
"we are the ones we've been waiting for." Barack Obama is simply a
politician and at best also the flawed figurehead of a political
movement far larger than him or any individual. Unfolding economic
collapse may now provide the opponents of imperialism with an
opportunity to make the case that money should be spent on
healing/rebuilding the nation rather than housing troops in Iraq,
Kuwait, Afghanistan, Germany, Djibouti, Diego Garcia, Colombia,
Guantanamo Bay, etc. At this critical juncture in which a number of
factors and forces are converging, our generation is faced with perhaps
its best and last chance to hoist a leader up and carry him on our
shoulders as we march progressively into the future. With a President
Obama ensconced in the White House, we just may have an opportunity to
write a new, positive page in American history. Under a McCain-Palin
administration, we'll be singing "bomb, bomb, bomb," from Moscow to
Tehran.
Drastic times are beginning to call for drastic
measures; as America and the world appear to be at a 1930s-like
crossroads, two candidates offer drastically different possibilities
for the fate of the United States. Indeed, the Obama option is not
perfect from the perspective of the Left. But how picky should we
really be at a time like this?
SPECTACLE '08/
EMPIRE WATCH
BRANDON'S REPLY:
MY THOUGHTS IN RESPONSE:
For
the most part, I don't think we disagree about much other than how best
to confront and/or negotiate the realities of the Democratic party's
hegemony over the American Left. The Democrats of today are a
Center-Left party just as the Republicans are fundamentally of the
Center-Right. Both of course are rooted in the European
liberal-humanistic tradition (à la John
Locke), although the contemporary GOP offers a more "conservative"
articulation of liberalism symbolized by the thinking of, say, Edmund
Burke. Our "two-party system" thus presents a pair of dialectically
antagonistic political opponents that are ultimately more similar than
not in most philosophical respects. According to Louis Hartz in The Liberal Tradition in America,
this ideological cohesion, i.e. lack of Marxian "class struggle," is
attributed to the absence of European-style feudalism in US history
(antebellum Southern plantations being the closest thing). While
Hartz's theory has significant holes, it does make a compelling case
for the argument that a lack of mass peasant-to-proletariat conversion
in America laid the foundation for what became a lack of class
consciousness and, ultimately, the failure of socialism to take root on
any significant scale. There being no actual Ancien Régime to
rebel against--only an upper-echelon of citizens organized into a
putatively benevolent political class--there has been no truly profound
social antagonism along the lines of Paris in 1848 or Russia in 1917.
Without an essentially feudal/aristocratic order that would beget its
revolutionary overthrow, there has permeated the Horatio Alger
mythology pointing a patriotic working-class upwards towards the always
just out-of-reach "American Dream." Rather than contest the power of
the ruling petit-bourgeoisie, people seek to join it.
Progressive
liberals are thus often only marginally different (if not
indistinguishable) from conservative liberals: Joe Lieberman, anyone? So
with regard to either Obama on Afghanistan or JFK on Vietnam, one might
generalize that the Democrats are ultimately good
capitalist-imperialists just like their Republican colleagues. That
said, we don't have the "luxury" (as they do in, say, Sweden or Spain
of casting a meaningful vote for a functioning Communist, Socialist,
Green, Labor or Social-Democratic, etc. alternative to the major
liberal and conservative parties. We have no coalition governments with
assemblies comprised of a myriad different factions representing
constituencies across the political spectrum. Rather, we have two
centrist parties that are in fact today heavily leveraged by corporate
power. Furthermore, there is no cohesive
anti-capitalist/anti-imperialist political force ready to materialize
any time soon. This was all too evident during the recent Wall Street
crisis and $700 billion Congressional bailout brouhaha: there is no
Marxist-Leninist oriented discourse available to provide a "serious"
(that is taken seriously) response to what can plausibly be
characterized as the real-time demise of free-market ideology if not
capitalism generally. The "critical Left" has been relegated to either
stomaching whatever pathetic solution the Democratic leadership offers,
or bitterly yet ineffectively denouncing it.
The same can be
said for what remains of America's overseas military-economic empire
and the ideology of "exceptionalism," i.e. "Manifest Destiny," upon
which it is premised. As US global power over-extends itself in Iraq
under the watch of a coalition led by the far Right, the moderate
Democratic Left proposes only to scale-back and downsize, if not just
refocus the nation's "foreign entanglements." While the Cold War
provided justification for US interventionism as a means of promoting
Lockean ideals throughout the world in response to the spread of
communism, the liberal-conservative foreign policy Establishment now
wrestles with how to craft a Global War on Terror (GWOT) into another
long-term paradigm under which a new "American Century" can be
sustained. And clearly, whether it be in the Iraq and Afghanistan
quagmires, or the fact of a swiftly "rising" China/ Euro-Asian power
bloc that virtually owns whatever remains of the US economy, signs
abound that the much anticipated "end of American empire" is upon us.
Yet we shouldn't look to the Democrats to begin immediately calling for
the dismantling of the military-industrial complex.
So what should we be doing?
Rather
than simply bash the Democratic leadership's centrist foreign policy,
the critical Left might focus its attention on how to articulate a
substantial and coherent strategy that could challenge a potential
Obama administration to move in a progressive direction just as Bill
Clinton found that he could not govern effectively without sliding to
the right so as to please Republicans in Congress. Recent conservative
successes can no doubt be attributed to the strength of their coalition
in these regards. If there is a new Democratic administration alongside
an enhanced Democratic majority in the House and Senate come January
2009, there ought to also be an energized progressive coalition that
includes members of Congress as well as movement activists associated
with MoveOn, Code Pink, and any grassroots organization interested in
solidifying a leftwing hegemony.
Hence, imagine if the
Obama-Biden White House (having begun a de-escalation in Iraq)
introduced a bill to fund the war in Afghanistan that was rejected by a
bloc of antiwar Democrats in Congress who were able to win over some
(libertarian) Republican support. The House of Representatives' initial
rejection of the Bush-Paulson Wall Street bailout has illuminated a
newly fractious political atmosphere seeming to produce a realignment,
on one hand, towards economic populism--77 Democrats (many from the
Black, Latino, and Progressive Caucuses) voted along with the majority
of Republicans against the bill. How this realignment might translate
into Congressional action in the realm of foreign policy is unclear,
yet one could at least envision a scenario whereby progressives in the
House work with allies in the Green Party and elsewhere (read: Dennis
Kucinich, Lynn Woolsey, etc. team-up with Ralph Nader and Cynthia
McKinney) to push for a massive shift of resources from foreign
intervention towards health care, education, infrastructure, and
renewable energy. Since a massive reduction in defense spending may be
the only way to pay for the social programs that Obama has rhetorically
committed himself to, progressives should contemplate how to
effectively challenge the nascent GWOT consensus and make isolationism
popular once again across the political spectrum. Such a reality could
be foreseeable, even if not necessarily likely, with Obama and the
Democrats in the White House.
So its ultimately not just a question of Obama being better than McCain, just as Kennedy was better than Nixon in 1960 or "Kang" better than "Kodos"
in 1996. The question is whether or not progressives might form a
coalition that could have actual influence in the direction of national
affairs. Given all the dynamics of Obama's current function in American
society, the political terrain would be infinitely more ripe for a
major transition should he win and take office with Democrats in
control amid a "new" Great Depression demanding another New Deal. At
this moment, we should be working for the solidification of a Social
Democratic bloc that can operate in a critical alliance (when possible)
with the Obama-Biden administration to produce a progressive
reformation of American society at the dawn of the "global century."
The
stakes are too high for anything but a grand vision of how to work with
what we are being given, and cooperate with whomever we can, in order
to create the other world that we all know is possible. If we are to
succeed in this albeit lofty goal, the critical Left must be willing to
abandon a certain sense of ideological purity in the interest of
creating the conditions that will be most conducive to radical reform
and, perhaps, revolution. While the "change we need" certainly does not
end with a new Democratic administration, any hope therein would surely
never begin should John McCain become the 44th President of the United
States.
Thus it boils down to three simple words: OBAMA, OR BUST!
Just as social movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s emerged from
a foundation laid by the radical politics of the 1930s, left-wing
activists today continue to grapple with the actions of those would-be
revolutionaries whose struggles culminated in the now iconic episodes
of global rebellion that flared in 1968. Yet the history of this
progression from an Old to a New Left (and now a post-New Left?) is by
no means a straightforward or uncomplicated process that can be
captured in the plethora of celebratory/nostalgic and generally
simplistic accounts of “the sixties.” A critical (if also sympathetic)
analysis of Left activism during this era therefore raises a number of
questions and concerns of direct relevance to those still involved in
“the movement” today. An understanding of the sixties as a period of
“blocked cultural revolution” provides grounds for a much-needed
discussion of the New Left’s goals and strategies or, as the case may
be, its lack thereof.
By
this account, the New Left emerged from a terrain shaped by the
Marxist-Leninism of the 1930s, even as many of the “red diaper babies”
who grew into this movement rejected what they saw as the old model of
Communist-inspired organizing. Class analyses therefore gave way to a
culturalist mentality whereby the revolutionary agenda entailed a
reorganization of society into an egalitarian democratic community.
Many on the New Left discarded the need to seize control of the state
or liquidate capitalism, arguing instead for the creation of
alternative and to some extent anarchist modes of life in which elected
leaders and organized political parties had no role except as evils to
be avoided. The question of violence intersected this split between
those moving towards cultural revolution and those who remained
committed to a class-based model of organizing; pacifism and the
pre-figurative power of love guided the younger generation of
activists, whereas those who still saw revolution as a matter of
political-economy argued for the use of vanguardist violence in order
to dismantle the global capitalist interstate system. The advent of
powerful national liberation movements throughout the Third World
bolstered the arguments of Marxist-Leninists against their (counter)
culturalist opponents in the United States.
In seeking to
understand the sixties historically and draw lessons for the Left
today, it seems fair to identify both visions as having major flaws.
For while the vanguardist approach modeled after the Bolsheviks was
still partially applicable to revolutionary movements in the Third
World, it was much less connected to the realities of social and
political-economic life in the Unites States in the late 20th century.
At the same time, the advocates of countercultural revolution operated
in a somewhat sheltered sphere of activism that fostered creativity and
individuality while failing to articulate a coherent revolutionary
strategy. Thus as the early New Left gave way to a more “radical”
approach characterized by the stunted actions of the Weather
Underground, forexample, these attempts at violent revolution proved no
more successful than the hippies’ efforts to cultivate a peaceful and
loving society.
It is crucial that one not overlook the
important gains made by the New Left, particularly in the realms of
civil rights, feminism, gay rights, and environmentalism. It is equally
important to recognize the contributions of those who have maintained a
dedication to class struggle throughout the post-1960s era. Whether
violent or nonviolent, the spirit of militancy and urgency that
persisted throughout the sixties has set the stage, perhaps, for a new
(post-Reagan) left-wing upsurge that has been long envisioned yet so
far unrealized. The key is to understand how potential Left coalitions
turned into opposing, if not warring factions that tended to rehearse
old divisions rather than work together to find new solutions. In this
sense, the Left might be best served by pursuing something close to the
Gramscian model of coalitional praxis that offers a revolutionary
strategy combining political-economic and cultural agendas. In the end,
however, social movements of the Left will find their most success not
by following a certain theoretical model but rather through developing
an organic struggle based in a common purpose around which broad
coalitions of political and social actors can coalesce.
It is
currently being argued by many on the Left that the need to protect the
viability of life on earth provides perhaps the most hopeful basis for
renewing progressivism in the twenty-first century. If this were to be
the case, a pro-environment movement articulated as collective
opposition to the global threat of catastrophic climate change would
become in essence a “meta movement” uniting various sub struggles in
much the same way that opposition to Jim Crow and the Vietnam War gave
“the movement” its coherence during the sixties. Of course with the
possibility of general antiwar sentiment resurging in opposition to
America’s costly “war on terror,” and now a global economic crisis that
no doubt will worsen before it can be resolved, a movement connecting
these three strains (environment, war, and economy) is actually
somewhat foreseeable. That is, if Obama is elected president and takes
office in 2009 with a Democratic super-majority in Congress. At this
point, social movements on the Left would have an institutional
framework in Washington from which to develop grassroots modes of
action—a “Green Revolution”—in concert with governmental reforms on the
scale of the Neal Deal and Great Society programs (a “Green Deal”?).
Progressive ideas might thus gain ascendency and become “common sense”
throughout society in much the same manner that conservatism blossomed
during the Reagan Revolution.
So while engaging in electoral
politics through the Democratic Party does not hold all the answers for
the Left, a new regime dedicated rhetorically (and at least somewhat
practically) to providing “hope” for the masses and bringing “change”
to Washington is at this point the only real place to begin. Should a
new era of progressive hegemony dawn in America and perhaps across the
globe, it will become manifest decades from now long after Obama has
come and gone, when the world will be a very different place. The 2008
presidential election is therefore a test as to whether or not the Left
in the US can overcome its fractious divides and begin establishing
long-term coalitions designed to gain power and govern effectively
while maintaining an ideological commitment to generating reformist and
revolutionary strategies from below.
Given the complexities of
this task, there is no guarantee that it could be accomplished even if
Obama wins. Certainly, such a movement will not coalesce if a newly
mobilized Left is not ready to immediately begin allying with or
forcefully petitioning/pressuring the Obama administration from within
and without. However, should McCain win in November, or should he lose
but nonetheless permanently remobilize the reactionary (racist)
right-wing fringe that his campaign has now activated, the prospects
for Left organizing will be greatly diminished. A McCain-Palin
administration would present most of the same obstacles that the Left
has faced under the Bush-Cheney regime. Meanwhile, an Obama-Biden
administration that lacks a strong base of dedicated progressive
support could eventually succumb to the anger and frustration of
working-class whites in rural America who will be easily convinced that
their problems are the result of the foreigners, socialists, and
terrorist sympathizers etc. that have infiltrated the Democratic Party
through Obama. In short, conditions at the present crossroads are ripe
for a concerted effort to push the country towards something like a
European social democracy (partial nationalization of US banks has, for
instance, just been announced). At the same time, some variant of a
violent reaction—call it fascism or whatever else—is lurking just
beneath the surface of an American populace, racked with panic and
fear, recently shaped by George W. Bush’s Republicans yet poised to
swing decisively leftwards into the arms of Barack Obama’s Democrats.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/oct/29/reggie-love-barack-obama
November 4 2008, Chicago
President-elect Obama:
"It's been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America...
The
road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there
in one year, or even one term, but America — I have never been more
hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you: We as
a people will get there...
This victory alone is not the change
we seek — it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that
cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen
without you...
This is our moment. This is our time — to put our
people back to work and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to
restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the
American Dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth that out of many, we
are one; that while we breathe, we hope, and where we are met with
cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we can't, we will
respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people:
Yes, we can."
In
2004 after Bush and Cheney “won” another bitterly divided and contested
election, Karl Rove heralded the dawning of a new "permanent Republican
majority" driven by commitment to conservative cultural values at home
and unwavering militarism abroad. Evangelical Christians in the
American heartland along with suburban “soccer moms” (or what Sarah Palin
calls “hockey moms”) were supposed to constitute the foot soldiers of
Rove’s movement, which, in practice, was an extension of the “Reagan
Revolution.” This Republican coalition was obviously not as strong as
its leaders liked to suggest, and there is no doubt that the recent
unpopularity of the Bush-Cheney regime contributed greatly to the GOP’s
dramatically sudden demise (and certainly the ineffectual McCain-Palin
campaign did not help the conservative cause, nor did the timing of the
current financial crisis). Yet in the wake of losing the 2004 elections
and facing four more years of Republican control in the White House and
Congress, there was a concerted, and it now appears highly successful
counter-movement launched by progressives who strategically chose to
work with, if not from within, the Democratic Party.
The origins
of this center/left coalition date most immediately to Howard Dean’s
2004 primary campaign during which he lost the nomination to John
Kerry, but attracted media attention for having produced a largely
youth-based, internet-run
campaign that called for ending the Iraq War and drawing national focus
towards such issues as health care, education, and energy reform. Not
nearly as radical as the platforms of progressives like Nader or Dennis
Kucinich,
Dean’s ideas caught-on within mainstream liberal circles for this exact
reason. As such, the Dean approach became a viable third-way between
excessive compromise and excessive purism. This was at least the
perspective of groups like MoveOn.org,
which generated a great deal of grassroots enthusiasm for Dean’s
campaign in large part as a refocusing of antiwar activity that had
tried and failed in March 2003 to affect a change in policy by staging
massive 1960s-style street demonstrations against the invasion of Iraq.
The
Dean campaign offered a bottom-up organizing and fund-raising model
that became a potent antidote to Karl Rove’s political machinery.
Especially in the wake of their 2004 electoral defeat, activist
Democrats in groups like MoveOn and Daily Kos
(founded in 2002) redoubled their efforts to promote liberal and
progressive media outlets while developing and strengthening new
left-leaning think-tanks and policy groups designed to refurbish the
infrastructure of Democratic electoral politics. For instance in 2003
former Clinton chief of staff John Podesta
founded the Center for American Progress (CAP) as a means of directly
countering the influence exercised by conservative groups like the
Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Dean, meanwhile, became chairman of the Democratic National Committee (DNC)
in 2005 and began pursuing a “fifty-state strategy” designed after the
goals of his presidential campaign. Dean’s party leadership produced
the opening salvo of the GOP’s demise during the 2006 mid-term
elections, when Democrats regained control of both the Senate and the
House. It is difficult to say how much of the antiwar left participated
in this electoral repudiation of the Republicans, but it was widely
believed that the Democratic victory clearly signaled a public mandate
to end the Iraq War. When the new Democratic Congress subsequently
failed to deliver on this promise, there was a logical conclusion among
many that only a change of power in the White House would allow the
antiwar/progressive wing of the party to make any real policy
difference.
Another
key factor in the emergence of this new center/left formation has been
a vibrant constellation of media outlets connected to, but also
distinct from the growing liberal and progressive “blogoshpere.” Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now!, a news magazine that originated in 1996 through New York’s Pacifica Radio affiliate and now broadcasts on over 700 public radio and television stations, as well as the internet,
bills itself as the “largest community media collaboration in the
United States.” Democracy Now! has become a leading communications
medium for progressives and some radicals affiliated with the
alternative/IndyMedia movement, including activists aligned with both the Democratic and Green Parties.
At the same time, a somewhat surprising avenue of critical left-leaning commentary has emerged on MSNBC,
a cable news collaboration between NBC (General Electric) and
Microsoft. The network began operating in 1996, the same year that FOX
News went on air, and its current flagship program Countdown with Keith Olbermann
began in 2003. Having become known for his scathing criticism of the
Iraq War and virtually every policy of the Bush-Cheney regime, Olbermann
offers his outspoken political commentary and news coverage within a
humorous and often fiercely satirical format designed to attract
younger viewers and people who want to be entertained as well as
informed. That said, Olbermann and his frequent guests from Newsweek (Richard Wolfe), The Nation (Christopher Hayes), and the Washington Post (Eugene Robinson), for example, combine liberal and progressive analyses presented in an intellectually stimulating manner.
Having first been a contributor and guest-host on Countdown, former gay rights (ACT UP!) activist Rachel Maddow recently began hosting her own show following Olbermann; The Rachel Maddow Show has become one of MSNBC’s top-rated programs while Maddow
continues hosting her daily show on Air America Radio, a nationally
syndicated liberal and progressive “talk-radio” network launched in
2004 as a potential antidote to the popularity of conservative voices
like that of Rush Limbaugh. Both Olbermann and Maddow are openly supportive of Obama while also being critical of his more conservative tendencies. MSNBC is earning a reputation as the diametric opposite of FOX News—owned by Rupert Murcdoch’s News Corporation—which functions essentially as a rightwing
propaganda outlet and makes very little effort to disguise its
ideological bent. Other significant elements of this left-leaning media
constellation include news/commentary websites such as The Huffington Post.com, Common Dreams.org, and TruthOut.org.
Perhaps
the most interesting development of all within this context has been
the large national and international popularity of the Comedy Central
Network’s “fake news” programs, The Daily Show with John Stewart (1999-present) and The Colbert Report (2005-Present). Appealing initially to younger audiences
who took no interest in the stale format of television news, John
Stewart and Stephen Colbert’s programs have helped re-shape the
commercial media landscape by offering brilliant and often hilarious
political/social satire that has been devastatingly critical of Bush
and Cheney while providing real news analysis embedded within the
framework of satirical comedy sketches. Stewart delivers an openly
left-leaning nightly “fake news” cast that parodies cable news programs
by making fun of how they sensationally cover events of the day. The
latter third segment of The Daily Show consists of guest interviews often featuring political leaders, for instance former Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf appeared with Stewart in September 2006, and Barack Obama
made his forth overall appearance (this one by satellite) on the
Thursday prior to his being elected President. Stephen Colbert spun his
program off from his role as a correspondent on The Daily Show, and very effectively plays an ultraconservative FOX News-like television host who refers to FOX's Bill O’Reilly
as “papa bear.” Although it can easily be overstated, one should not
underestimate the influence of Stewart and Colbert in terms of
connecting with and informing young people while contributing to the
foundation of a newly awakened progressive political culture with media
icons ranging from Amy Goodman to Rachel Maddow.
Barack
Obama’s rapid ascendancy is in many ways connected to this conjuncture;
his public opposition to the invasion of Iraq in 2002—while still a
state senator—propelled him to victory in the Democratic primary over
Hillary Clinton, who had been the odds-on favorite to win the
nomination but whose vote to authorize funding for the war made her
highly vulnerable. At the same time, while eventually gaining strong
support from the corporate/financial sector, Obama’s campaign first
developed along the lines of the Dean model and was able to build an
unprecedented grassroots mobilization that capitalized on the Illinois
Senator’s personal charisma and political savvy. As the campaign
progressed, the idea of President Barack Hussein Obama became a
powerful national and international symbol for generational, racial,
and political transformation. In this manner, the global social
movement that arose in support of Obama drew rhetorical strength from
articulating this moment in history as an opportunity to reengage the
fulfillment of Martin Luther King’s “Dream,” which in its broadest
sense is a vision of a world free from racism, militarism, and poverty.
If
this is a highly sympathetic and perhaps exaggerated portrayal of the
nascent possibility presented by an “Obama Revolution,” it is presented
in order to do justice to the tremendous significance of what occurred
on November 4, 2008. Voters in the United States did not just elect the
first African- American president, although the image of the Obama
family on stage in Grant Park and their imminent arrival in the White
House is surely historic. But there was a much larger, indeed a global
victory against the forces of reactionary hatred being celebrated by
weeping students at Spellman
College in Atlanta and jubilant crowds in Harlem; a throng of
hope-filled revelers surrounding the White House and spilling into city
streets across the country. In Kenya (where a national holiday was
declared), Indonesia, Japan, throughout Europe, both Israel and
Palestine: the world celebrated hope having triumphed over fear.
There
are, of course, serious questions about how far to the left of center
Obama’s administration and the Democratic Congress will venture. John Podesta
now leads the Obama transition team, and has helped install another
former Clinton-insider as the new White House chief of staff, Rahm
Emanuel, who is reviled by many progressives for his hawkish stance on
Middle-East issues. These developments do not bode well for an
immediate and decisive break with the status-quo,
but neither do they preclude the development of a center/left coalition
in alliance with supportive elements within the Obama orbit. It will
obviously be essential to maintain a parallel track of organizing from
outside the system, and in this sense there are already a number of
arenas in which the left should begin articulating an oppositional
stance to the new administration, the war in Afghanistan for instance.
With Emanuel now in-place one might also imagine that Israel-Palestine
policy could soon become a contentious issue. In fact, Emanuel’s
selection may represent how the centrist Democratic Leadership
Committee (DLC) associated with the Clintons
is attempting to assert control over Obama’s agenda, which might
otherwise lean in a more progressive direction closer to Dean’s wing of
the party.
Nonetheless, the Obama campaign as a social movement
has reopened space for public participation and progressive agitation.
At the same time, the current financial meltdown has ignited the
possibility of organizing a reformist coalition around the goal of
pressuring for an FDR-like “Green New Deal” whereby current economic
and environmental crises can be addressed through a strategically
designed green jobs, infrastructure, and social services program that
would aim to slowly dismantle the national security state by diverting
resources to an ascendant environmental/welfare state. There is no
guarantee that such a movement could be successfully built and/or
maintained in the coming months and years—indeed, there is much reason
to believe that Obama will be a disappointment to the left on several
fronts, from trade and corporate taxes to military spending. And yet,
the new President-elect set the stage rhetorically for what may be
possible in the days ahead: “this victory alone is not the change we
seek — it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that
cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen
without you.”
IF the Green Revolution is truly upon us, then nothing short of full decriminalization AND rationally implemented legalization
of cannabis must be central to the "change we seek." Now is the time to
begin a massive campaign geared towards pressuring (gently or more
forcefully) President Obama and his minions to move beyond the insane
folly of America's "controlled substances" policies--the tragedy of
which is exemplified by a longstanding federal anti-marijuana bias that
harms far more people than the outlawed plant itself ever has in its
centuries of existence. Indeed, cannabis has numerous proven benefits,
from its use as medicine for chronically ill patients to sustainable
industrial/agricultural product, not to mention as a globally popular
recreational drug used widely as a non-toxic alternative to alcohol as
well as a mild (sacramental) psychoactive agent.
For
reasons neither completely known nor relevant, 4:20 as a time and 4/20
as a date have become known internationally as symbols of cannabis
culture, the latter marking a recognized annual day of celebration.
Yet, April 20 is at this point an apolitical event that may in balance
harm more than help the serious and important work of cannabis
advocacy. All of this much change. April 20, 2009 ought to be a day
when people of conscience across the world come together to call for an
end to the "War on Drugs" by echoing the reggae prophet Peter Tosh's
simple yet profound demand: "Legalize it!"
An
Iraqi reporter hurls a shoe at Bush during his final visit to the
country that the 43 US president chose to unilaterally invade and
occupy. Said the man: "This is a goodbye kiss, you dog!"
Given
the structure of international law, after Jan. 20, Bush may have much
more than just flying footwear to be concerned about...
A
descendant of slaves, seven year-old Natasha (Sasha) Obama will soon be
the youngest person to move into the White House since John F. Kennedy
Jr. in 1961. And while she will not be in Cabinet meetings or receive
"national-security" briefings, she does have the ear of the President
(not to mention a lock on his heart). But more importantly, Sasha is an
uncorrupted child who is just coming into consciousness and in whose
eyes one can still see the glimmering magic of youth. While moving into
the White House will surely change her, she--with her vibrancy and
innocence--will surely also change the White House. Perhaps the ghost
of Sally Hemmings will even find some rest.
Seen here (thanks to a paparazzo) sporting what admirers are calling
"sassy vacation sunglasses" as she deplaned yesterday in Hawaii with
her father in tow, less visible but more revealing is her multicolored
peace sign t-shirt. On one level Sasha's fashion underscores the
unfortunate fact that the 1960s counterculture and its symbols have
become highly marketable and heavily marketed commodities. Yet this
troubling development aside (although it should be examined and
discussed in general), there is something fortuitously luminous about
seeing the strong, black, and beautiful daughter of our new JFK/MLK
hybrid president strutting her stuff in a sparkling peace sign without
a care in the world (granted, no one was supposed to see this
image...!?). If symbols matter, and they do, Sasha's a wonderful symbol
for what the next generation of influential Americans may look like.
As always, I love your optimism and enthusiasm, though i think you may be reading too much into Obama's internationalism and his connection to Brzezinski.
Brzezinski was perhaps the loudest critic of Obama's much touted plan to "surge" US forces in Afghanistan, describing his proposal as falling into the "Afghan trap" he set for the Soviets (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f031f936-56a0-11dd-8686-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1), but then Zbig was one of the loudest voices calling for a confrontation with Russia over Georgia- Zbig has an an acute case of what Roger Morris calls "the Baltic Syndrome" -- east Europeans driven by ethnic and national hatreds of Russia that render them incapable of any truly realistic fp analysis. But I think Zbig is neither here nor there. He says that he supports the campaign, but will not take any formal adviser role because he doesn't want to be forced to subordinate his analysis to the dictates of domestic lobbies (bywhich he means AIPAC). He would like to keep his ethnic and national hatreds pure, in this sense. And Obama for his part wants to have nothing to do with Zbig for fear of alienating his AIPAC base of support.
My sense is that there is no grand strategic thinking here, only election year posturing. The Dems have long believed that they demonstrate their fp and national security credentials by outflanking Republicans on the right in Afghanistan. They have not however, succeeded in explaining how escalating America's involvement in that country will make the situation any better, nor have they explained how exactly we are going to pay for said escalation (Fareed Zakaria had a great discussion with Rory Stewart on the subject a couple weeks ago:
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0809/07/fzgps.01.html).
Afghanistan is indicative of the moral, political and intellectual bankruptcy of the Dems (AKA the "me too" party) as a whole. I understand why the Dems are so eager to appear the Me Too Party on fp issues (see forthcoming post) but I think this kind posturing lacks moral courage and is strategically stupid. For eg, I have no idea why on god's green earth Obama would choose to tell O'Rielly that the surge has succeeded "beyond our wildest dreams," instead of arguing (as Dreyfuss did on DN this morning) that it flew in the face of all expert opinion and has kept us in there spending $10b a month for two more years. He could also compliment the intelligence of the electorate by citing the wealth of expert analysis that attributes the decrease in violence in Iraq (though still incredibly high) to factors intrinsic to Iraqi society and politics- namely the Shi'ite victory over their Sunni rivals in an Iraqi civil war that successfully imposed ethnic and sectarian segregation on a formerly integrated society (isn't it amazing how dramatically violence dropped in Virgina from 1865 to 1866-- the funny thing about civil wars is that once one side wins, violence goes down...).
when it comes to fp, Obama has assured all those that matter that he will not produce any dramatic departures from received practice and wisdom.
Sure, he may be better than McCain, but that is really not saying much. Its a bit like saying JFK was better than Nixon in 1960. Sure, I guess so, but isn't this a rather dubious distinction? Isn't JFK the one that escalated US involvement in Vietnam? Would Nixon have done the same, or would he have continued his predecessor's policy of limiting US involvement? We can never know, but what we can know is that presidents can become prisoners of their own rhetoric-just as JFK was held hostage to the discourse of communist containment - so too is Obama (BHO) trapped in the discourse of the GWOT. I don't suppose that it will be easier to challenge its dominant symbols on Nov 5, than it will be on Nov 3.
My sense is that the Dems will continue to get railroaded on fp issues until they invent a new language for challenging the presuppositions of received wisdom, and we will continue to be saddled with the burdens of Empire (ie low levels of public investment, high levels of public debt, and an anti-intellectual, anti-dissent, quasi-fascist political culture).
As I said in the post, economic circumstances may sweep BHO into the WH, and may force him to reevaluate priorities once there. But even if it turns this way (as I sincerely hope it does), Obama will have contributed nothing to the more fundamental task of refashioning the symbols of American national identity, and articulating a new vision of America's place in history and the world. On the contrary he will have the dubious distinction of having been on the wrong side of that struggle.
One little addition: JFK was a prisoner of the discourse of communist containment that HE HELPED CONSTRUCT (most famously by challenging the republicans from the right for going soft against the Ruskies (the "missile gap." and allowing a detente to to take shape)).
Discursive deconstruction is not just for our friends in the lit dept-- "going with the flow" is best left to dead fish.