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Saturday, June 25, 2016

Consider for a Moment: Why God Created the Two-Party System

Dissident Voice: a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice


Why God Created the Two-Party System

In the beginning — as you know — God created the heavens and the earth. On the Sixth Day, after creating cattle, creeping things, and the first two people (Genesis 1:26-28), sleepless, fidgeting, and for no particular reason, He created what we call “the Two Party System.”
(In God-language: מערכתדו-מפלגתית.)
Now, why the Two Party System? you ask. As opposed to something else?
As it turns out, that was the very question in the Creator of Everything’s own mind at that very time. You might think He’d have consulted with Adam and Eve, the first two humans He’d made in His own image. But there’s no evidence He did that.
God (known to some as “Yahweh,” or to King James readers as “Jehovah”) seems to have reasoned that, well, One Party would jeopardize His position as the One monotheistic deity. So that was out.
No way that will fly,” He vowed quietly to Himself — although there was no one else there able to hear His words (Adam and Eve out of ear shot at the time), uttering under His breath in Hebrew, the only language created at that point.
And — He further reasoned (having created Reason itself, and this being a wholly new thing) — a “Three Party System” would threaten His intentions to become a Trinity within the next 4000 years. The number Three needed a divine patent: the Hindu Trimutri, the Buddhist Trikaya, the Christian Trinity etc.
So that was out too.
The Supreme Being, looking down on His Creation, basically seeing it as “good” although already showing causes for concern, mulled it over. “One is the loneliest number that you’ll ever do,” he realized, in an insight channeled through Harry Nilsson, 5968 years later. “Two can be as bad as one. It’s the loneliest number since the number one.”
Nevertheless, in His infinite wisdom, God chose two. “Two are better than one,” He said to Himself, inspiring a scribe to set this down as Holy Writ. (See Ecclesiastes 4:9-11.)
God was probably not aware at the time of the twenty-first century French philosopher Alain Badiou’s argument about the ontology of numbers. (But, although I find Badiou the most provocative communist thinker of our time, and recommend him for your attention, let’s not digress.)
God thought to Himself (even before popping that Serpent on Eve, tempting her with that fruit and bringing evil into the world): There is good, and there is evil. If there aretwo parties, He further reasoned, one will be good, the other bad, and they will alternate in good/bad role-play to the very end of time.
It was a bold scheme to stabilize Creation, with one side blaming the other, everyone kept off balance but nobody really rocking the whole boat. You have to admire the genius of the divine plan.
When, six millennia later, God created the United States of America — as the Promised Land, Number Two (following the earlier Israel) — He created Two Parties to perpetually blame one another and associate one other with evil. Alternating in power, the two would both pledge fealty to Him.
There would be no basic differences between them, of course. (They would routinely join together in bipartisan prayers to Himself.) The people born in sin and stupidity would just keep electing them alternately. Even if one did something horrible it would be forgotten and forgiven by the next election (one held for the two-party legislature every two years). And relying on this base-two system, even the most awful of presidents could be elected for two four-year terms.
God ordained that the people vote for one of the Two Parties. Or at least vote for somebody within the ritual dominated by the Two Parties. God said: “If you don’t vote, you have nothing to say.”
But exercising “free will” — as naked Eve did in front of the fruit tree way back when — some humans don’t actually go to the ballot box! Just like they don’t go to the Holy Mass and take Communion! They reject the rite, finding it an insult to their intelligence.
They challenge the argument that the “competition” between the Two Parties produces any kind of progress. They note that many progressive movements, like those for gender and racial equality, have been sidelined into dead-end electoral politics.
When people rise up in outrage following another police murder somewhere, the media in the service of the Two Parties condemns “outside agitators” for teaching local youth how to make Molotov cocktails.
Local clergy unite with cable TV talking heads to urge God’s obvious solution:Register to vote! Get out and vote, for one of the Two!
They say: Be responsible, for God’s sake! Be grateful you don’t live in a ”multi-party system”—where two parties don’t trade off inevitably and there’s real competition between ideas!
That’s what we’re hearing now, quite literally, by pundits, politicians and press. They are the voice of the serpent in the garden, asking you (standing there naked, innocent and naïve) to eat the fruit, assuring you that it won’t kill you, will taste good and make you wise.
Sometimes the clever serpent affects a Brooklyn accent.
“Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” So Jesus addressed the above-mentioned God in the famous Lord’s Prayer. Since there is no way either Trump or Clinton will ever deliver us from evil, and are much more likely to hurl us headlong into hell, let us avoid the temptation to choose between the two evils, neither of them less poison than the other.
Both are — or at least should be — forbidden fruit, the swallowing of which leads to eternal shame.
Don’t bite, Bernie supporters! Don’t cave into the theology of the “lesser evil.” That’s the devil talking. Just say no!
Gary Leupp is a Professor of History at Tufts University, and author of numerous works on Japanese history. He can be reached at: gleupp@granite.tufts.edu.Read other articles by Gary.

Friday, June 24, 2016

Will the Revolution Continue Through a Political Ice Age?






How to Keep a Revolution Going in a Political Ice Age

Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock.com







Bernie Sanders is portrayed as a loner and cantankerous old senator in “Sanders’ endgame focused on keeping his ‘revolution’ alive” (Boston Globe, June 18, 2016). According to the article, Sanders main objectives are keeping his progressive/left movement connected to his presidential run and moving the movement into the future. Ending or lessening the income gap; creating an open primary election system within the Democratic Party; slowing and stopping environmental destruction; making college free or affordable; and getting big money out of the election process are some of the issues that the senator has championed during this presidential primary election season. But what does it take to sustain a revolution, even if that revolution has as some of its goals moderate demands on the economic, political, and social system?
Sanders wants to influence the Democratic Party platform with his ideals for change. What does that mean in the real world of politics? Platform positions are often jettisoned faster than the spent stages of a rocket flying off into outer space. They most often are hollow promises that are cast aside as soon as an elected candidate takes office. How real are the demands for electoral equality and social/economic equality once the very powerful have placed themselves in office once again? Without public interest  groups and masses of activists and protesters, the chances of changing the system of entrenched wealth are like the proverbial snowball. It could happen, but it’s not very likely, as today’s activists usually go on leading lives that were pretty much like they did before calls for revolution, at least here in the U.S. How much will college graduates care about reducing the cost of a college education once they’re out in the workforce?
Income inequality reform is even a tougher issue. It is linked to race and class, championed to a degree for some during the New Deal and reaching its high-water mark during the Johnson administration and has been on a steady and downward trajectory since the explosion of the global economy in the late 1970s. Arguments of am I my brother’s and sister’s keeper are quickly forgotten by those in power and those who call the tune for those in power.
The effects of a permanent war economy were given short shrift during this entire election cycle. Indeed, despite endless warfare around the globe, as the general election nears there is now a call among diplomats, including the current secretary of state, to more actively intervene militarily in Syria. That has always been Hillary Clinton’s position.
Billions of dollars spent on guns has a direct effect on butter, especially in a political and an economic environment that never was very good at providing butter for those at risk. Even the middle class has felt the effects of global warfare and a global economy as many good jobs have been shed over several decades and the role of government in the economy and social system has been lessened by forces of the political right and neoliberals.
Bernie Sanders energized hundreds of thousands of supporters, donors, and campaign workers.  Millions voted for him, with a lion’s share of those voters from the young. From a personal perspective, it was rewarding to be on the streets again talking about issues that actually mattered in people’s lives. Many people who answered their doors in the Northeast supported Sanders position on income inequality even if they believed that only Hillary Clinton could win in the general election. Rallies were electrifying experiences, and hearing this so-called cantankerous, old senator from Vermont was like manna from heaven after decades of drivel that passed for politics.
Will the young stay the course after the November election? It’s hard to stay connected to a movement when the whole political, social, and economic environment mitigates against action and every issue is turned into a nonsensical soundbite on the evening news and in the larger media. That’s why political movements have to be dynamic and fluid. Like the Vietnam anti-war movement and the civil rights movement, besides being exciting and at times dangerous, they enticed those with high ideals to join. And the young can take risks that many others can’t, or will not take.  The system wants citizens to consume and remain silent and it’s good at getting people to think that their only interests lie in increased consumption. But who would have guessed that a movement would have risen up like a Phoenix from the ashes of this failed (for some) system? And by taking part in that movement we were able to move it even farther to the left as was witnessed in Sanders June 16th speech to his followers. He made strong statements about gun control and against endless wars, positions that I believe he has come to realize over the course of his campaign are as important as environmental destruction, student debt, and income inequality. He also spoke about the need to put candidates in office with progressive beliefs and actions at all levels of government.
Some have championed candidacies such as the Green Party’s presidential candidate Jill Stein.  The argument is that Stein represents a socialist, environmental, and anti-war perspective superior to Bernie Sanders. While that may be true in some of the details of the candidates’ beliefs, the question is one of electability. The latter does not mean, however, that a vote for Stein is not a enviable act of conscience.
But enviable votes aside, readers may want to  read with caution “Warren being vetted as possible Clinton  VP pick,” (Boston Globe, June 21, 2016). The article begins by labeling Elizabeth Warren as a “Liberal champion.” While it may be true that Warren is liberal on economic equality issues, a closer look at her position on war and peace gives a glimpse into the neoliberal heart of the Democratic Party. Quite some time ago I wrote the senator about the issues of war and peace. In her response, she noted that she was a supporter of the war on terror (I would have much preferred her writing that she supported the intelligent use of intelligence agencies and humanitarian aid to combat extremist threats.). Could her endorsement of a potential wider war in Syria and other places by Clinton be far behind? And in another matter, despite my making direct contact with the senator’s science liaison, and following up with a written request, I never received so much of a perfunctory response to my appeal to the senator to act on behalf of myself and another writer in attempting to have the National Academy of Sciences examine the content of an audio tape recorded at Kent State during the May 4th massacre of students during an anti-war demonstration.
While the mole of revolution is out and about, it might be worth noting that a single issue is never enough to create the conditions under which change takes place. While student debt is onerous, other issues such as the guns vs. butter argument must be made to analyze and act on why so many grotesque inequalities exist in the US today.
The late activist Abbie Hoffman said of the movement days of the 1960s and early 1970s that  “There is absolutely no greater high than challenging the power structure as a nobody, giving it your all, and winning” (Soon to be a Major Motion Picture, 1980). It can’t always be quite that exciting, but it beats the deadly status quo.
Howard Lisnoff is a freelance writer.

Thursday, June 23, 2016

NEW YORK DEMOCRATS ANOINT CUOMO AS CHAIR AS CLINTON DELEGATE STRIKES SANDERS DELEGATE WITH CANE






NEW YORK DEMOCRATS ANOINT CUOMO AS CHAIR AS CLINTON DELEGATE STRIKES SANDERS DELEGATE WITH CANE

22JUN2016 Kevin Gosztola 


New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. Photo by Diana Robinson on Flickr.




Editor’s Note

Shadowproof is publishing accounts from citizens about their struggles to force change at state Democratic Party conventions, participate in caucuses, or cast their ballots during primary elections. If you are willing to share your experiences with us, please contaceditor@shadowproof.com.

Moumita Ahmed, an at-large delegate for Bernie Sanders and co-founder of Millennials For Bernie, walked down the aisle to rally fellow delegates at the New York state meeting. The chair of the meeting, Michael Reich, a lawyer for the Democratic Party, refused to accept motions from the floor. Ahmed attempted to mobilize people in the back of the room to challenge Reich. But, as she was walking, an elderly white man who is a delegate for Hillary Clinton reached out and grabbed her.
This man took his hand and smacked her on her upper back “really hard,” according to Ahmed. He gave her a “little bruise.” When she turned around, Ahmed said “he hit me with his cane” and “tried to trip me.” She asked people sitting by the man if they had seen what just happened. Some were a bit stunned, but one person suggested he was old, so she shouldn’t worry about it. Staffers at the New York meeting had a similar reaction and acted like nothing could be done to remove this person.
Ahmed told Shadowproof she went back to the man and sharply warned him never to hit her again. He took his cane and hit her with it. Staff working registration for the state meeting were urged to do something about this man, but they maintained it was no big deal.
Clinton delegate who hit Moumita Ahmed with his cane.
Clinton delegate who hit Moumita Ahmed with his cane.
“Can you imagine if that man was a Bernie delegate?” Ahmed asked. “All hell would break loose. Every media outlet would talk about how sexist this campaign is over one man’s action and just paint the entire movement as this sexist movement against women.”
Ahmed is a woman of color. She said, “the imagery of this old white man caning someone like me” is a potent symbol of “racial inequality.” And throughout the Democratic presidential primary, the Clinton campaign and Democratic Party establishment has tried to “erase people” like Ahmed, who support Sanders.
Clinton would like to be the first woman president of the United States, however, an older white man, who is one of her delegates, caned a woman at a delegate convention, Ahmed said. “To me, that is just ridiculous.”
When Ahmed and a few of her colleagues at the meeting confronted the Clinton delegate while he was leaving, he told them to, “Go to hell!” He also reacted to accusations of assault by saying, “Why do you beat your wife?” Ahmed has since filed a complaint with the police department.
It turns out the man is well-known within the Democratic Party in New York. He has hosted meet-and-greets and fundraisers at his home in Granville, according to Sanders surrogate and at-large Sanders delegate Nomiki Konst. But Ahmed said officials working the meeting claimed they had no idea who had hit her with a cane.
This is but one example of foul behavior or improprieties, which occurred at the New York State Democratic Committee meeting on July 21. It was held to select a chair, who will represent New York delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. It also was an opportunity to propose motions, like a motion to abolish superdelegates, which delegates could support at the convention. However, the leadership of the meeting effectively ensured that no motions were brought to a vote and that Governor Andrew Cuomo was anointed the chair of the delegation through an unfair process.
Kat Brezler, a delegate who serves on the People For Bernie press committee, told Shadowproof the New York for Bernie delegation plans to file a legal challenge against the vote because the party did not follow Robert’s Rules of Order or a proper procedure for the meeting. They believe the vote for Cuomo as chair should be nullified or a Sanders delegate should be granted a co-chairmanship with the governor.
As Konst recounted, a little over one hour into the meeting, Reich called for a vote on making Cuomo the delegation chair. Fifteen people stood up to say they did not recognize the nominee and that they wanted to make a motion to nominate another person for the position. Delegates wanted to nominate Sanders at-large delegate Linda Sarsour, an American Muslim activist and prominent figure in the campaign. Reich ignored everyone. He pounded the gavel and indicated Cuomo had won the vote.
Konst rushed up to the microphone, along with Ahmed, to demand the chair of the meeting recognize those individuals trying to make motions. She informed the chair that there were twenty motions. The chair maintained those motions were not made when he asked.
Nomiki Konst demanding to know why the microphone was cut.
Nomiki Konst demanding to know why the microphone was cut.
According to Konst, she pointed to all the people making motions and then the microphone was shut off. She tried to follow Robert’s Rules of Order and the leadership of the meeting silenced her and everyone in the room trying to participate in the meeting.
Konst claimed Basil Smikle, the executive director of the New York State Democratic Party, was under the impression no Sanders delegate would motion during the meeting. No such agreement was made with the Democratic state party, but regardless, that did not mean a procedure could be ignored. She also claimed Reich told her it did not matter what Sanders delegates did. What happened during the meeting was entirely up to him.
The delegates did not necessarily think they would stop Cuomo from becoming delegation chair, but they wanted a fair vote.
“It’s just very peculiar always to the Bernie camp why there is so much subversion of democracy,” Brezler suggested. “When democracy’s in your favor, why would you subvert it?”
Yet, Konst declared, “[This] shows that the party is controlled by Andrew Cuomo. He wasn’t there, but his presence was very real. He clearly didn’t want anything on the record that showed opposition. That’s why they shut down mics. That’s why they didn’t allow motions or objections.”
Konst added:
I’ve been a Democrat my whole life. My parents were very involved in the Democratic Party. My mom was an elected official. I’ve raised money for Democrats. This is the fifth national convention I’m going to. I’ve worked on presidential campaigns. I even used to volunteer for Hillary Clinton. This is not the Democratic Party that I want to be a part of. I’m disgusted. We’ve given up on all the things that we stand for. We go overseas and we teach other countries. I was representing the State Department in Libya, teaching other people about due process and electoral process and fairness, and we can’t even conduct it that way. And we turn a blind eye like this is the way it is.
Konst referred to the nomination of Cuomo as a “theatrical nomination.” It was not discussed with all delegates ahead of time. There was no deliberation.
She said, “Andrew Cuomo is very unpopular in our state. He’s being investigated by the U.S. Attorney. He shut down an anti-corruption commission when it started looking into his administration.” He also ran in a primary a few years ago against Zephyr Teachout, someone with little name recognition at the time, and Teachout stunned pollsters by winning thirty-four percent of the vote.
Moumita Ahmed, an at-large delegate for Bernie Sanders and co-founder of Millennials For Bernie.
Moumita Ahmed, an at-large delegate for Bernie Sanders and co-founder of Millennials For Bernie.
Ahmed said it was “so undemocratic on so many levels. It’s not how things should be done.”
“It’s not how a democratic society functions. Especially in a progressive state like New York, to allow such things to happen is absolutely, as someone who is getting involved for the first time with electoral politics, it just turns me off even more and just makes me want to never do anything with the Democratic Party,” Ahmed stated.
There were no people from the Sanders campaign allowed to play a role in the administration of the state meeting in New York, even though Sanders won 42% of the vote in the state primary.
Christine Quinn, a former speaker of the New York City Council and vice-chair of the New York State Democratic Committee, delivered a provocative speech that deeply offended Sanders delegates. Brezler said Quinn was “yelling at us from the floor.”
“They weren’t looking to settle the room. They very much seemed to be provocateurs,” Brezler said.
Konst said the speech was “tone-deaf.” She said Quinn was basically arguing they had no choice but to support Clinton so “we better suck it up.” She was essentially scolding Sanders delegates for being “bad Democrats.” She even suggested they might cost Democrats the election. So, Sanders delegates booed and then they stopped booing and turned their backs to Quinn. (Clinton delegates were not happy about that.)
“The party does not realize that it’s in crisis,” Konst asserted. “They’re losing membership at record rates. It’s not just they’re ignoring newcomers. They’re ignoring loyal members that worked very hard to keep the party alive.”
These are members, who have “raised money for them. They’ve organized for them. They’ve gotten elected. But unless they’re cutting deals right now for Hillary Clinton, it’s like they don’t exist,” Konst maintained. Democrats “can’t sustain themselves if they’re using that model because it’s just going to be a bunch of Democratic establishment members and nobody else to vote them in.”
Many of the Sanders delegates in New York are under 30 years-old, including Ahmed. She’s one of the youngest members of the delegation. However, the Democrats don’t really seem to want these people to be in their party.
Ahmed said they don’t like the way the Sanders people, especially young Sanders supporters, engage in politics. They don’t think these individuals “follow the rules.” They want them to “just sit down and behave.”
Nomiki Konst demands to be recognized by chair of New York state delegation meeting but is ignored.
Nomiki Konst demands to be recognized by chair of New York state delegation meeting but is ignored.
“Some people actually called me brainwashed and rowdy and uncivilized,” Ahmed recalled. “These were the words that were thrown at me and my other delegate friends, who are young just like me. So, they see us as people who are not equipped to run for these positions or to engage in electoral politics.”
Returning to the issue of the Clinton delegate, who hit Ahmed with his cane, Konst referenced Michelle Fields, the Huffington Post reporter who pressed charges against Donald Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski when she grabbed her arm. If Fields can do that, then Ahmed should definitely be able to pursue charges.
“You do not hit a woman and then be allowed to be a delegate,” Ahmed stated. “That’s unacceptable. He should be punished.”
With stark language, Ahmed wondered, “What are we going to do when their people are assaulting and ready to beat Bernie people into compliance instead of discussing party unity? What do we do?” She expressed concern about people’s safety at the Democratic National Convention.
“They clearly aren’t interested in party unity or having any civility. They just want to agitate. They just want to paint us a certain way, and some of them are actually willing to beat us and assault us.”
Sanders delegates can see clearly that the Democrats are going to try and avoid following the rules at the convention in Philadelphia. There is a sense that now is the time to prepare for it and warn others of what is to come.
Democrats are “used to getting away with this crap for so long because they have not had the media to shame them, to show how it really is run,” Konst concluded. “The more the media highlights this, the more people become aware and don’t want to be engaged in the Democratic Party. And that’s what they’re in fear of right now.”
Watch video from the meeting posted by New York For Bernie Sanders 2016 on Facebook:



A Plea to Sanders Supporters: Don't Fall in Line


PASTE



A Plea to Sanders Supporters: Don't Fall in Line

POLITICS  |  FEATURES


A Plea to Sanders Supporters: Don't Fall in Line

Now that the “superprepared warrior realist,” feminist superstar, and paragon of the mainstream left Hillary Clinton has “officially” secured the Democratic presidential nomination—thanks in no small part to a farcical and overtly corrupt primary process—Bernie Sanders supporters can prepare themselves for months of intensive sermonizing from agents of the American oligarchy who will scarcely bother to conceal their condescension as they politely disabuse us of our political illusions.
The formula is straightforward and naturally platitudinous. It’s been used often enough already to qualify as a cliché, but don’t expect that to give the Clintonoids a moment of pause. They will continue to push forward, doing their utmost to feign empathy with the quixotic “Berniacs” who over the past few months they repeatedly insulted with allegations of sexism, misogyny, racism and outright physical violence. Dismissing Sanders’ voter base as practitioners of one or all of the above was commonplace during the primary season, beginning with the specious “Bernie Bro” phenomenon, which sought to undermine Sanders’ legitimately populist image by highlighting chauvinistic comments (supposedly) made by a handful of his supporters on Twitter—that vaunted medium of sophisticated intellectual discourse.
“Bernie has a bro problem” the headlines gleefully read. It was a clever (that is, cynical, Machiavellian, cunning, etc.) means of diverting attention from his actual platform, the bottom line of which is equality across the board, and shifting it onto a nonissue that had exactly nothing to do with the candidate himself. And it was pretty effective. “Journalists,” “pundits” and “political commentators” righteously demanded that Sanders himself apologize for the “appalling” and “despicable” actions of his most ardent followers (Sanders, being the overly-obliging person that he is, actually did so).
Meanwhile, those same journalists, pundits and political commentators cried foul at suggestions that perhaps Mrs. Clinton should be made to answer for the vehement support she offered her husband’s destructive (and at times racist) policies when he was in the White House and she essentially served as co-president.
Putting the heat on Hillary for supporting her degenerate husband’s crime bill, welfare reform, “free trade” agreements, “humanitarian interventions,” etc. was actually a manifestation of our culture’s hatred of women; or so we were told by our liberal authorities. By tying Hillary to her husband’s atrocious record, we were denying her agency, holding her under the oppressive yoke of the fading patriarchy. Of course, few things could be more sexist than the argument a lot of Hillary’s acolytes deployed in defense of their queen: she was merely being a dutiful wife, going along with her husband; she can’t be held responsible. Talk about denying agency.
One would think that a woman who asserts that any allegation of sexual assault should be heard and investigated might have some hang-ups about staying wed to a man who has been accused of sexual assault by several women, one of whom maintains that Bill Clinton forcefully raped her. But this too is off limits—not because it’s sexist, but because it’s an old Republican canard. Since her story represents a threat to Hillary Clinton’s façade as a champion of women the world over, Juanita Broaddrick is accorded the same degree of credibility and respect that most accord Glenn Beck. Politics is a dirty business, indeed.
Getting back to the point, the people who maligned Sanders supporters as race-baiting women-haters are now, ironically enough, desperate for their solidarity. We must band together to slay the greatest evil this world has ever known: Donald J. Trump. That, of course, is the crux of the argument. But there’s also a sly attempt to take for granted that the arch-neoliberal and arch-neoconservative Hillary Clinton somehow shares important political ideas with Bernie Sanders. Absurd, to say the very least.
Take a recent column in the New York Times by liberal pundit Nicholas Kristof, titled “Sanders, Clinton and, er, President Trump?” It’s a typical patronizing appeal to Sanders voters in which the author takes a paternal tone with his target audience, issuing solemn warnings about the “liberal disenchantment” that supposedly led to the nefarious Republican regimes of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. In other words, Kristof is going to do us all a favor and kindly tell us why we’re stupid and what we can do to redress that stupidity (“punditsplaining”?).
But first is the obligatory Bernie-Sanders-has-done-great-things spiel. “Bernie Sanders has had a stunning impact this year, helping set the political agenda and winning the passionate embrace of a demographic a quarter of his age,” Kristof writes, before calling Sanders a “socialist,” immediately raising questions about the author’s knowledge of basic economic/political concepts.
He wastes no time getting to the point, however, concluding his opening paragraph with the following injunction: “It’s time for [Sanders] and his followers to stop sniping and start uniting” behind Hillary Clinton. If they don’t, Kristof cautions, employing a bit of sophism, “they could help elect a man antithetical to everything they stand for.” First of all, as loath as everyone is to admit it, Trump is not antithetical to everything Bernie Sanders stands for; which is to say, the orange-faced demagogue has actually made a number of valid points while bulldozing his way through the GOP establishment.
For instance, Trump’s position on “free trade” is identical to Sanders’, and it happens to be the right one, as far as 99 percent of the American public is concerned. Sanders and Trump also converge on the issue of the United States’ inordinate funding of NATO (the enormous military alliance that specializes in provoking Russia and thus courting WWIII). At the CNN Democratic debate in April, moderator Dana Bash put the following question to Sanders:
“And just following up, Senator Sanders, Donald Trump also argues that NATO is unfair economically to the U.S. because America pays a disproportionate share. So how is what you say about NATO and your proposal different than his?”
To which the obvious and correct answer is: Why does it have to be different than his? But the question’s insinuation is equally obvious: Making common cause with Trump, regardless of how logical it is to do so, is going to be frowned upon, because Trump is Caligula reincarnated. Again, common sense tells us that Trump is right on the NATO question, but admitting as much is akin to hating Mexicans, so we have to pretend that our position is somewhat different, even though it’s exactly the same. A small but representative example of the media’s abiding manipulation of political discourse.
Back to Kristof, who writes that “in 2000, many liberals regarded Al Gore the way some see Clinton today, as a flip-flopper short on inspiration and convictions. So a small number voted for a third-party candidate, Ralph Nader, probably helping put George W. Bush in office.” Once again his point is diminished by the fact that the underlying assumption is wrong. People who criticize Hillary Clinton from the left don’t do so because they perceive her as a “flip-flopper” lacking conviction. They criticize her for her well-documented service to corporate power, her enthusiastic support for Israeli atrocities, her insane hawkishness toward Russia and her predilection for killing innocent people with bombs, among other things.
That aside, the notion that voting third party is a reckless and ultimately dangerous decision is losing its cogency, if it ever had any to begin with. Third-party voters—and hopefully there are many more of them this time around—understand that meaningful change in this country presupposes a subversion of our inveterate two-party (or two-factions-of-the-same-party) political system. By “holding your nose” and voting for Wall Street’s vetted candidate, you are casting a vote for the system itself, and you’re hindering real progress. And all for the sake of… what, exactly? Expediency? It’s always rich to hear establishment pundits charge the #NeverHillary crowd with myopia. Nothing could be further from the truth. In trying to establish a viable third party, one not subservient to the economic elite, these voters have an eye to the distant future, one in which the U.S. actually functions as a democracy. How short-sighted of them!
An article aimed at bringing disobedient Sanders supporters into the Clintonoid fold wouldn’t be complete without a list of issues on which Clinton and Sanders allegedly agree. Thus, Kristof informs us that, in addition to a number of social issues, the two candidates see eye to eye “on Wall Street excesses, income inequality and college debt.” It shouldn’t be necessary to deconstruct the forgoing assertion, such is its inanity. Enabling Wall Street excess is Hillary Clinton’s raison d’être, hence the necessity of articles like Kristof’s, the central purpose of which is to convince us otherwise.
“I understand the passion and heartache of [Sanders’] followers,” Kristof concludes, “but I watched such idealism help elect Nixon and George W. Bush, and I flinch at the thought of similar idealists this year helping to elect a President Trump.”
Who says Sanders supporters are heartbroken? “Pissed off” might be the better descriptor, on account of the undemocratic fashion in which presidential nominees are elected in this country. Furthermore, the repeated use of “ideal” and its derivatives in this context (not unique to Kristof’s column) is significant: it implies that to desire a political system that works for 99 percent of the population is to dimly give oneself over to an impossible fantasy—just the sort of notion, incidentally, our corporate masters would have us adopt. So here’s a modest appeal of my own: Don’t fall in line.

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Spilling the Beans (Having a Fart Fest) During Hillary's Inaugurieties of 2016


Truthdig: Drilling Beneath the Headlines


World’s Largest ‘Fart-In’ Is Planned for Hillary Clinton’s Acceptance Speech in Philadelphia


Posted on Jun 17, 2016

  Hillary Clinton (Gage Skidmore / CC 2.0)


Philadelphia: Cheri Honkala, the leader of the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign, announced that her group was organizing the world’s largest “fart-in” to be held on July 28 at the Wells Fargo Center during Hillary Clinton’s anticipated acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination.

“We will be holding a massive bean supper for Bernie Sanders delegates on American Street in my Kensington neighborhood on the afternoon of July 28,” she said. “We are setting up a Clintonville there, modeled on the Hoovervilles of the 1930s where the poor and unemployed built shanty towns. The Sanders delegates, their bellies full of beans, will be able to return to the Wells Fargo Center and greet the rhetorical flatulence of Hillary Clinton with the real thing.”

Honkala said she would issue an invitation to Sanders to join the bean supper, which she is calling Beans for Hillary. She has asked donors to send cans of beans to 1301-W Porter Street, Philadelphia, Pa., 19148.

“Any remaining beans will be served to the homeless, although we will, of course, be urging Sanders delegates to eat as much as possible,” Honkala said.

Chris Hedges, an author and activist who is an ordained Presbyterian minister, will open the Beans for Hillary meal with a nondenominational prayer.

“I am happy to bless a meal that will be put to such effective political use,” Hedges said.
“The Democratic primary process, as Sanders supporters now realize, was rigged from the start,” said Hedges, a Pulitzer-prize winning former New York Times foreign correspondent. “The Democratic National Committee and the Clinton machine used a variety of mechanisms to game the elections including the appointing of superdelgates, the banning of independent voters from numerous primaries, purging voters from voting lists and using millions in dark money and from Super PACs to fund the Clinton campaign. Caucuses, as we saw in Nevada, were shamelessly manipulated on behalf of Clinton. Sanders never had a chance.”

“We need to build a third party and populist movements, freed from Democratic Party control, to defy corporate power,” Hedges said. “This will take more than one election cycle to accomplish. If Sanders will not join us, we will have to do it without him.”
Honkala, who was the Green Party’s vice-presidential nominee in 2012, said the poor and working men and women could not endure more assaults from the forces of neoliberalism and the two corporate political parties.

“The Clintons have done enough damage,” she said. “They decimated the working class with the North American Free Trade Agreement. They exploded the prison population under the 1994 Omnibus Crime bill and draconian drug laws that mandated life sentences. They destroyed the welfare system, and under the old system 70 percent of the recipients were children. They turned the airwaves over to a half dozen corporations by deregulating the FCC. They ripped down the firewalls between commercial and investment banks that precipitated the global meltdown. There is not a war they don’t support. And their record on civil liberties is appalling. We cannot afford more of the same. We are either going to build third party movements or an American Spring.”

Honkala is planning a march on the opening day of the convention, although the city has denied her a permit. It will begin on the south side of Philadelphia’s City Hall at 3 p.m. on July 25. She said the Beans for Hillary event would cap three days of protests during the convention to highlight the plight of the poor and the working poor.

“We get political mutations like Trump because the system does not work on our behalf,” she said. “Putting the Clintons back in power may remove Trump from the scene, but it guarantees that a political figure even more frightening will rise to take his place. Until we wrest back control from corporate power things will only get worse.”

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Hillary Clinton Is Worse Than Trump







Could Hillary Clinton be Worse Than Trump?



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The “Super Tuesday 3” elections went well for the Clinton juggernaut and for Donald Trump. The gods must be angry.
Or maybe the explanation is just that corporate media’s malign neglect of the Bernie Sanders campaign is paying off for Hillary. FAIR and other organizations that monitor the press have established beyond a reasonable doubt that The Washington Post and The New York Times might as well be Team Hillary’s Ministry of Propaganda. And, as anyone who can bear to watch MSNBC and CNN can attest, “liberal” cable news outlets are no better. National Public Radio may be the worst of all. Remember that at pledge time!
As for Trump, the cable networks have been working overtime for him too – all publicity, in his case, being good publicity. Let the pundits blame changing demographics and “authoritarian” personality structures all they like, the Trump phenomenon is on their bosses and them.
In Sanders’ case, it is because, as garden-variety capitalists, they don’t like his message. In Trump’s, it is because of what his reality TV campaign style does for their bottom lines. Either way, they are bastards, and they should rot in that special place in hell that Madeleine Albright wants to reserve for women who don’t support Hillary. Proud of her role in superintending the sanctions regime that led to the death of some half million Iraqis, Albright deserves a special place in hell too.
To be sure, it’s not over ‘till it’s over; and anything can happen. But now that Super Tuesday 3 has come and gone, it is looking like we are in for a long hot summer and fall, and for many gruesome years ahead.
The hope that the Clintons would soon go the way of the Bushes has always been a long shot; but then it was for the Bushes as well. Perhaps we should just be grateful that the gods saw fit to bless us with one out of two, and not complain too much about how a clean sweep is even less likely now than it seemed a week or two ago.
What is to be done, then, as the Democratic Party convention this summer approaches; and then, if Hillary is the nominee, between the convention and the general election? And, if it comes to that, what should we we be doing now to prepare for the time when a restored Clinton White House starts making even President Obama look good?
To answer these questions, it can be helpful to ponder another question that most right thinking people would say answers itself: is Hillary Clinton worse than Donald Trump?
Without a moment’s hesitation, everyone everywhere who is not morally or intellectually impaired would, of course, answer with a resounding No. If asked to explain, the response would probably be that the questioner can’t be serious. As Trump’s campaign descends ever deeper into the Dark Side, even former contrarians are coming around to this view.
It can therefore seem that there is nothing to discuss. But there is – even now.
For one thing, it still makes sense to distinguish the candidates from their supporters. Trump’s supporters, many of them anyway, are more worrisome than he is; most Clinton supporters are more estimable than she. This bears, of course, on how the candidates themselves should be assessed, but it is hardly the only factor.
Screen Shot 2016-03-03 at 4.29.41 PM-1
Trump’s support, everyone agrees, comes mainly from angry white people. To the extent that it really is driving the Trump phenomenon, this racial component is deplorable.
There is no doubt, however, that angry white – and black and brown – men and women have plenty to be angry about. Neoliberalism has not been kind to the ninety-nine percent.
Nevertheless, there is no escaping the fact that a good many of Trump’s angriest supporters do hate Muslims and Hispanics and African Americans too, except of course Ben Carson. They are not fond of uppity females either, or disabled people, homosexuals, and anyone less retrograde than themselves.
Panicked liberals call them twenty-first century “fascists.” Even using that term loosely, the description is, at best, premature. But there are alarming similarities between them and the rank-and-file of the bona fide fascist movements of the past.
At a minimum, Trump deserves blame for turning over the rock that had been keeping more than a few Americans’ fascist or proto-fascist demons down.  If he doesn’t soon put a damper over what he started, or if it turns out that he no longer can, he will be culpable for a lot more.
But since incitement has been working for him up to this point, he has so far not changed course.   Perhaps he has come to identify with the people he has been using to advance his self-promoting ambitions; perhaps, like many of them, he has now slipped out of control.
Nevertheless, the difference between the mountebank and his marks remains pertinent.  So far, at least, Trump’s supporters, many of them anyway, seem more dangerous than the man himself – to an extent that makes it reasonable even now to investigate ways that Clinton might actually be worse.
It is telling, of course, that he supporters are not like his; they despise the demons Trump has stirred up. Most of them would like nothing more than a world in which “the better angels of our nature” call the shots.
The problem with them is that their view of Clinton and Clintonism is flawed. They believe that Hillary is on the side of those angels, and that, thanks to her “pragmatism,” she can cause their will to be done.
People of sound judgment are now saying that a President Trump would be like a Berlusconi, or perhaps even a Mussolini, with nukes. True enough.
But hardly anyone realizes that a Hillary with nukes would be nearly as bad.
Ever since the Soviet Union imploded, American Presidents have found it expedient to bolster our perpetual war regime, and the military industrial complex it sustains, by threatening and sometime fighting against opponents too weak to fight back. Bill Clinton was no exception. His wife, however, seems intent on picking a fight with Russia or at least in going right up to the brink.  In view of her shoot-first-ask-questions-later nature, this is scary indeed.
Lesser evilists who are rightfully wary of a world in which the Donald could launch a nuclear war should take note.
Trump’s volatile nature and unpredictability does give more cause for concern than Clinton’s bellicose temperament and neocon convictions. But the difference is not clear-cut, and on other matters, it is an even closer call.
Trump is egomaniacal, vulgar and buffoonish. He is a man without principles who will say or do whatever he deems expedient. He is good at it too because he can sniff out what his target audience wants and make them think that he is giving it to them, even when he is not. More than his bluster or his penchant for bullying, this explains his success at unleashing his supporters’ demons.
But there is no compelling evidence, not so far anyway, that his own demons are calling the shots. With the Donald, it is all about winning. What he wants is only to get his way – neither more nor less.
Even so, he does have political opinions; and not all of them are bad. More often than not, they are based on sound intuitions and common sense.
And because he is neither a neoliberal nor a neocon, his views are often to the left of Hillary’s. This is a matter of instinct, however; not conviction. Trump has views, but there is nothing like a coherent ideology or underlying vision behind them.
Clinton, on the other hand, is a Clintonite; a devotee of liberal interventionism and of neoliberal economic nostrums. The difference does not necessarily redound in Clinton’s favor.
The Green Bay Packer’s legendary coach, Vince Lombardi, famously said that “winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.” Trump could say the same. In football, though, it is hard to make fast and loose with the rules; in business and electoral politics, it is a lot easier – as Trump has demonstrated time and again. Lombardi had no choice but to try to win fair and square; Trump is freer to take liberties.
As an individual, Hillary is not a whole lot more principled than the Donald. But she has a higher minded and more principled constituency to please. They hold her in line, while Trump’s supporters could care less what their man says or does, so long as his example, or rather his bluster, enables their rage.
Unlike Trump, Clinton has few ardent fans. But she has to please the few she has, enough to keep them on board, and she has to try to convince the rest, the ones that strongly prefer Bernie, that she is at least generally on their side.   This is why she tries so hard to stand for niceness for all; for all Americans and other worthies, that is.
She sees no percentage in being similarly nice, say, to the Russians or the Chinese. By her reckoning, Libyans, Syrians, Iraqis and other Middle Eastern and African peoples are similarly undeserving of solicitude.
And because her donors insist, Palestinians make out worst of all. Sheldon Adelson, Paul Singer and others of their ilk are, by now, inveterate Republicans; Hillary has no chance with them. But there are plenty of ethnocratic Zionists with serious money in the Democratic camp too. Hillary’s pal Haim Saban, for example, has pockets plenty deep; and he is far from alone.
It is therefore no surprise that Hillary readily accepted the invitation that AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the leading pro-Israel lobbying group in the United States, offered her to address its annual policy meeting in Washington next  week.
Is winning the only thing for her too? Perhaps not; it might not even be everything, though maybe it would be if she were better at it.   But, in this as in so much else, Hillary’s skill set is deficient. She is a better campaigner now than in 2008, having gone through it all once before. Still, in that regard, even a novice like Trump has her beat by a mile.
Part of the problem is that despite her vaunted “smarts,” the woman is loopy — not quite to the extent that, say, Joe Biden is, but loopy nevertheless. Why else would she think it appropriate to announce at a Democratic Party candidates’ debate that Henry Kissinger admired her tenure at the State Department? And what could she have been thinking when she praised fellow First Lady Nancy Reagan for her work on HIV/AIDS?
And when she saw fit to redbait Bernie, why would she do it in the knuckleheaded way that she did — attacking him for an interview he gave in the eighties in which he pointed out some of the obvious achievements of the Cuban Revolution?
And at a time when her support for the nefarious 2009 coup in Honduras is finally entering into mainstream awareness, causing people to think again about the long history of America’s predations in Central America, why on earth would she attack Sanders for supporting the Sandinistas in Nicaragua three decades ago?
Trump can get away with saying anything, but Clinton doesn’t have “attitude” enough for that. She doesn’t even have much imagination. How could it not have occurred to her to avoid such obvious howlers as that Sanders stood guard on the Mexican border with Minutemen vigilantes, or that he voted as he did on the Wall Street bailout because he wanted to quash the auto industry?
Hillary has now joined Sanders in calling Trump a pathological liar. She deserves credit for that; good for her. Her point would be more convincing, however, if she were not such a clumsy liar herself.
***
Is it possible, then, that she actually is worse than Trump? The answer, all things considered, is plainly No – because Trump’s vileness has crossed the line too many times, and to too great effect.
But the question is still worth pondering because Clinton actually is worse, a lot worse, on more than a few issues. It is important that voters in the remaining Democratic primaries realize this. And if, alas, she does become President, it is especially important that the forces fighting back against her realize it too –from even before Day One.
The “vast rightwing conspiracy” that she used to inveigh about is sure to oppose her for all the wrong reasons, just as they opposed her better half a quarter century ago. The most lasting damage they did then was to stifle criticism from the Left.
This time, if it comes to that, the Left opposition to Clintonism must be poised and ready to dominate the conversation.
Job Number One will be to do everything possible to keep the next President Clinton from straying too far off the progressive (for her) course that she has had to follow thanks to the challenge of the Sanders campaign.
And Job Number Two, starting yesterday, is to expose, for all to see, which side she is on; and therefore which side the Democratic Party is on.
To that end, I will mention briefly two of the many issues on which, compared to Trump, Clinton comes off worse.
Trade
Clinton now says that she opposes the TPP, the Trans Pacific Partnership, having praised it as “the gold standard” in trade agreements not long ago. The official reason for the flip-flop: she read the fine print. The real reason: Sanders could kill her on this, and so will Trump, if comes down to a Trump v. Clinton race in November. What would she do if she became President? The answer is obvious: “renegotiate” this or that fine point and flip-flop again.
She could hardly do otherwise: trade deals like NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the TPP are the lynchpins holding the neoliberal world order together.   Without them, well-paying jobs and the unions that make them possible could not be so easily made to disappear, and the handful of miscreants at the top of the income and wealth hierarchy would not be able to enrich themselves quite so egregiously at everyone else’s expense.
When pressed, Hillary argues lamely that NAFTA has been, on the whole, a good thing. Even a capable debater would find it hard to sell that notion.
And so, when timeworn neoliberal arguments no longer work, she insists that she not be judged by the policies that her husband advanced.
Fair enough, as a rule. Trump wants to punish the families of terrorists – in other words, Muslims. And collective punishment is the stock-in-trade of the Israeli Defense Forces, “the most moral army in the world.” But there is this thing called civilization that is supposed to prevent holding people accountable for what their family members do.
There is also settled international law. And so, even if there were a world justice system that was truly impartial and in which all were equal in the eyes of the law, Michelle Obama would never be held accountable for her husband’s “targeted” killing sprees with Navy Seals and other Special Ops assassins (when drones just aren’t enough); and Laura Bush would not be blamed for the world shattering death and destruction her husband unleashed upon the world.
There are exceptions to the rule, however, when family members are directly or indirectly culpable.
When Democratic Party muckety-mucks took it upon themselves to parachute Hillary into New York State to become its Senator, her “experience” as First Lady played a major role in their rationale. What else did they have to work with? Certainly not her special connections with the state; she had none.
Consistency in politics is a lot to expect, but surely she should not be permitted to get away with owning the achievements, such as they were, of her husband’s administration when it suits her purpose, and disowning them them when they do not.
And so, when it comes to dealing with the harm that neoliberal trade policies have done to American workers and Americans generally, and to workers and others in countries where labor is cheaper, Trump can run circles around her – not because he opposes neoliberal globalization, but because his enterprises only benefit from Clintonite trade policies, while Hillary’s machinations helped bring them about.
Trump is a card carrying capitalist: an enemy of unions and of regulations and wage policies that inconvenience himself and his class brothers and sisters. Hillary opposes all that too, albeit less blatantly.   Worse, though, she is, and always has been, dedicated to fashioning a world in which the Trumps of the earth can flourish unimpeded.
Israel-Palestine
Clinton will address AIPAC. Trump has accepted their invitation too. But if he is even a tenth as rich as he claims to be, he will have no need to grovel before them, the way that the Clintons always have. He probably wouldn’t grovel even if he needed the money, because, as a certifiable narcissist, groveling is not in his nature.
Sanders has been invited too. Many of his supporters are petitioning him not to accept. He shouldn’t need much convincing. If, to quote Hillary’s First Lady soul mate, he “just says no,” he could look good on the cheap to progressive Jewish voters, without alienating the moderate middle. Muslims vote too, as we saw in Michigan. Saying No wouldn’t hurt his standing with them either.
Opposition to the Netanyahu government is now the norm in all but the most retrograde Jewish circles, and opposition to Israel’s domination of Palestine is on the rise as well. Liberal Zionism may be an incoherent position, but there are lots of liberal Zionists out there, and they would readily cover Bernie’s back, joining the increasing numbers of progressives whose views are more evolved.
It would be better still, of course, were Sanders to address AIPAC and use the occasion, speaking as a Jew, to advocate for justice for Palestinians; and, speaking as a candidate, to announce that, if elected, the United States will stop enabling Israel’s efforts to ethnically cleanse Palestine.
But since that isn’t going to happen, Bernie should just not go. Let the light shine on Hillary instead; on how, on this, as on so much else, even the Donald has her beat.
She is worse because she will keep the spigot open – supplying Israel with money, arms, and diplomatic support, while Trump’s aim will be just what it always is – to magnify and glorify himself. To that end, expect him to say that, if elected, he will cut a “really fantastic” deal.
If per impossibile, he were ever to get a chance, who knows what that deal would be? Certainly, not Trump; he probably hasn’t given the matter a moment’s thought. The only sure thing is that he wouldn’t let himself be, or appear to be, bullied. That already puts him ahead of Barack Obama and every other American President since Dwight Eisenhower.
***
So, yes, of course: Trump is worse – a lot worse than Clinton; but not worse in every respect.
Focusing on the ways Clinton actually is worse – there are many more ways than two – can be good preparation for understanding and dealing with the varieties of buyers’ remorse that anti-Trump voters are bound to feel, if and when a seemingly inevitable full-fledged Clinton Restoration gets underway.
But, of course, we are not there yet. While we still can, we should therefore act on the premise that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure – firm in the belief that we are only up against angry and malicious gods, not Fate itself.
ANDREW LEVINE is a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, the author most recently of THE AMERICAN IDEOLOGY (Routledge) and POLITICAL KEY WORDS (Blackwell) as well as of many other books and articles in political philosophy. His most recent book is In Bad Faith: What’s Wrong With the Opium of the People. He was a Professor (philosophy) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Research Professor (philosophy) at the University of Maryland-College Park.  He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).
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