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Obama, As Predicted




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Those who bought into the slogans ‘Hope' and ‘Change' last fall should have read the fine print.  We were warned.

 - Scott Horton, March 4, 2009 [1] 

       

       

"WHAT BETTER GIFT TO EMPIRE?"

 

Barack Obama's deluded liberal fans love to say that his election to the presidency was an improbable long-shot.  They're still pinching themselves about the existence of a black U.S. president. "Who would have thought it?" they still ask.

 

Well, I did, for one. As one of Obama's earliest[2] and most persistent left critics, I actually thought a first black U.S. chief executive in the form of Barack Obama was a likely occurrence (in 2012 or even 2008) once John F. Kerry was defeated in November of 2004. My expectation that Obama would be "Empire's New Clothes" is no small part of why I wrote an inordinately large number of essays and ultimately a book on the Obama phenomenon between the summer of 2004 and the 2008 election.[3]

 

I was not alone in seeing Obama as enjoying more than an outside chance at the White House in the near future.  Other Left observers knew about Obama's longstanding outsized ambition and his related "deeply conservative" [4] ideological orientation and power-accommodating nature.[5] We were aware of his early (late 2003-2004) and close vetting by the national political and financial class[6] and of who really selects viable presidential candidates and winners - the corporate and imperial establishment.[7]  And we knew also that, as the brilliant left commentator and author-filmmaker John Pilger noted last June, Obama's racial identity could be a "very seductive tool of propaganda" working on behalf of the ruling class. "What is so often overlooked and what matters above all," Pilger ads, "is the class one serves. George W. Bush's inner circle from the State Department to the Supreme Court was perhaps the most multiracial in presidential history.  It was PC par excellence. Think Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell.  It was also the most reactionary."[8] As left black poet and political essayist Michael Hureaux observed in the comments section of Dissident Voice in February of 2008

 

"I had a hunch this was coming when I watched his speech at the convention four years ago, my wife and I both sat and took it in and looked at each other and said, almost word for word, ‘He's good, he's very good.' The rakish JFK style jabs, the clearly studied rhetorical grace. What better gift to the empire than JFK in sepia? All last year, numerous discussions with people from the old new left who told us, ‘He'll never get a shot at it because of racist US etc,' to which we maintained, ‘But what better figure to have out there than one to restore faith in the imperial project, but someone with a black face? They managed to live with Powell and Rice, why not Obama?'" [9]

       

For some of us in possession of such dark appreciation of the politician and his context, Obama was understood early on to be a distinctly possible if not probable next president - despite or even because of his race. We felt that he offered the U.S. power elite and its authoritarian business and military order and global empire a much needed re-packaging - a symbolic overhaul and "re-branding" - that none of the other serious presidential contenders in the mix could safely provide to the same degree required in the wake of the Cheney-Bush nightmare. For me and a few other lefties I knew/know, there was little all that unlikely or surprising or remarkable about Obama's rapid climb to the top of the American Empire. It all made perfect sense. The same goes for Obama's performance as U.S. president so far.

 

CANDIDATE CHOICES IN IOWA

 

In late December of 2006, a young progressive Democrat and recent college graduate stated to me his intention of seeking employment with one of the Democratic presidential campaigns that would soon be setting up shop in Iowa. My initial response was to ask "why?" I expressed my timeworn radical-Left distrust for American electoral politics and for the Democrats. All my life, I noted, I'd seen the Democratic Party and the broader corporate-managed political culture of which it (the "leftmost" of the nation's two dominant business parties) is a major part deceive progressive voters and citizens, betraying populist campaign rhetoric and drowning popular dreams for a more just and democratic society in the icy waters of corporate and imperial hegemony.  "If you must participate in all that," I said, "work for Ralph Nader or whoever the Greens put up. They won't win but at least you can feel good about yourself in the morning."

 

This "cynical"[10] lecture delivered, I offered some opinions on which Democratic candidates might be most worthy of support and which (a very different question) were most likely to prevail. The closest thing to a Left-progressive and antiwar candidate in the party's primary field, I said, was Dennis Kucinich.   But Kucinich wouldn't have enough money to hire more than an activist or two in Iowa. He had no chance of getting past the U.S. election system's big money/big-media gatekeepers[11] to win the nomination or even a single state during the primaries.

 

Hillary Clinton would have plenty of money to hire activists.  She would get massive financial support from the corporate and financial sectors, critical to success under America's openly plutocratic "dollar democracy." But I could not recommend working for someone as tightly connected to corporate power and the military as her. Hillary was a major war hawk.

        

Regarding her chances of winning the nomination, I felt that Hillary was too identified with "the old" (the 1990s and the two Bill Clinton presidential terms of that decade) for an election that was going to be very much about selling "the new" in the wake of the long national and global nightmare of the George W. Bush administration. She was directly connected to an especially critical dimension of that nightmare by her 2002 U.S. vote authorizing Bush to invade Iraq - a vote for which she would remain stubbornly unapologetic and which was certain to be a sticking point among the liberal base that tends to wield unusual influence during the early Democratic primaries.

     

The least objectionable and most "progressive" of the viable Democratic candidates, I argued, was John Edwards.  Edwards' rhetoric suggested that he would campaign against poverty, economic inequality, and corporate power and for the labor movement to a remarkable degree. Whether the multi-millionaire former U.S. Senator really meant it, I felt, was unclear.  Edwards could be counted on, I thought, to spout many of the same terrible (from my perspective) core foreign policy ideas - the standard imperial language - as other leading Democratic and Republican candidates.  But Edwards, the son of Piedmont mill worker, was staking out an unusually advanced (for a major party candidate) position of "fighting" for the poor and the working class against concentrated wealth and power. I felt he had a real chance of winning at least Iowa, where he made a strong late showing with his "Two Americas" (the wealthy Few versus the rest of us) theme in late 2003 and early 2004. At the same time, I figured that Edwards' "populist" rhetoric would doom his candidacy in the critically important realms of campaign finance (dominated by the wealthy and corporate Few) and corporate media. Corporate America and Wall Street were not about to permit the triumph of a candidate who spoke about "fighting the rich" in the name of democracy and ending poverty.  The reigning communications authorities (General Electric-NBC, Viacom-CBS, Disney-ABC, News Corporation-Fox, Time-Warner et al.) could be counted on to mock and marginalize his campaign rhetoric (sincere or not) on behalf of economic justice.

     

Edwards was also badly scarred amongst the liberal primary base by his past position on the Iraq invasion. As a U.S. Senator (D-North Carolina) in the fall of 2002, Edwards did not merely join Hillary in voting to give George W. Bush the right to use military force as he pleased in Iraq.  He (quite despicably) helped draft the ill-fated congressional war authorization document! (In contrast to Senator Clinton, Edwards would apologize again and again for his former pro-war position, but his regrets came too late in the wake of the abject imperial fiasco that was "Operation Iraqi Freedom" - a richly bipartisan affair, like the equally illegal Afghanistan invasion and U.S. torture practices before and after 9/11.)

       

WHY I PICKED OBAMA

       

"If you want to work for the next president," I told the aspiring Iowa campaign staffer in late 2006, "go with Obama." Barack Obama, I argued, came from the same disagreeable (for a leftist like me) centrist, corporate -neoliberal, and military-imperial moral and ideological space as Hillary.  This was clearly discernible from Obama's recent policy and political record as an Illinois state senator (1996-2004) and U.S. Senator (2005-2006) and from the content of his many speeches and writings, including his recently published "memoir" and (more to the point) campaign book The Audacity of Hope (released in the fall of 2006).[12] Well understood by the elite political operatives who had been vetting Obama since late 2003 (as journalist Ken Silverstein showed in Harpers' Magazine in November of 2006 [13]) - even before he became an overnight sensation with his instantly acclaimed Keynote Address to the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston - this Clintonian centrism would help him secure the elite financial and institutional support required for victory. It was richly consistent with, and reflective of, his grandiose political ambitions, of strivings that were well known in Chicago and Illinois' elite black and Democratic Party circles.

 

Five Advantages Over Hillary

 

Obama's power-elite backing would only increase, I felt, as it became ever more clear to political insiders and investors that Obama possessed five great and interrelated advantages over Hillary Clinton.  First, he was a significantly more charismatic public personality than her.  The uninspiring Senator Clinton was no match for the dashing young Keynote hero with the "odd name" when it came to wowing a television or convention-hall audience.

 

Second, the United States' incredibly powerful corporate media seemed uncommonly spellbound by Obama. The junior senator from Illinois had been riding a remarkable wave of media love since his deeply conservative [14] Keynote Address.  I expected that love to deepen and expand in the presidential campaign - an invaluable advantage whose importance could not easily be overstated. 

     

Third, and intimately related to that media approval, Obama was widely and falsely perceived as a strong and dedicated opponent of Bush's unpopular Iraq War. This was a critical plus in the primaries, where the Democratic Party's liberal and progressive base held significant sway. It let the in-fact imperial and militarist Obama appropriate "peacenik" consciousness that would have more appropriately worked to the advantage of more genuinely antiwar candidates like Dennis Kucinich, Cynthia McKinney, Ralph Nader, and (curiously enough) Ron Paul. With its strong attachment to Obama and its powerful tendency (shared with the broader U.S. political culture it both shapes and reflects) to privilege superficial matters of candidate character and "qualities" over substantive policy issues, dominant U.S. media seemed unlikely to disabuse progressive voters of the "fairy tale" (as Bill Clinton would rightly put it before the New Hampshire primary in mid-January of 2008) that Obama was a "peace candidate."

     

Fourth, Obama was widely seen as a left-leaning social-justice progressive. This false image was encouraged by his racial identity, his occasionally populist- and progressive-sounding rhetoric, and his short stint (after graduating from Columbia University and before attending Harvard Law during the 1980s) - heavily advertised in his campaign imagery - as a community organizer on the South Side of Chicago.  This would also give him a significant edge among primary voters, who had been pushed to the left by the harshly plutocratic and messianic-militarist Bush administration. It let the in-fact corporate-centrist Obama benefit from social-democratic voter sentiments that would have more appropriately aided Edwards and (more genuinely left) Kucinich. Again, the media could be counted on not to expose the liberal and progressive fantasy.

 

Novelty Dividend 

       

Fifth, it struck me that Obama was going to garner a big advantage simply from the fact that he was new to the national political scene. An "overnight sensation" who entered the national stage just two and half years ago, he was supremely fortunate not to have been in the U.S. Senate when that body voted to authorize Bush to use military force against Iraq (a vote that Obama candidly admitted he might have supported in the summer of 2004). This "novelty dividend," immeasurably enhanced by his race and by his "exotic" (technically Muslim) nomenclature, would be a great plus in a period when the existing political order fails in spectacular ways. Like toothpaste and automobile brands, U.S. politicians generally benefit from being perceived as "new and improved." But the benefit of seeming "fresh" and new-fangled takes on special importance in times of political and policy breakdown. A political system that had gone sour would prove to be a special plus for the candidate who could most credibly claim to not have been part of it.  (Ironically enough, Obama was deeply attached to the American corporate and imperial status quo, something that struck me as clearly indicated by his past record and which has certainly been born out by his subsequent record as president.)

     

The value of this "freshness" windfall, I sensed, was well understood at the elite level, in ways that mattered. In the wake of the Bush-Cheney disaster, the American corporate-capitalist system and its intimately related global Empire required a public relations makeover - a "re-branding," in advertising parlance - that Obama was uniquely qualified to provide among the existing field of Democratic candidates. (Beyond my general underlying Marxist suspicion that the U.S. capitalist system was overdue for a major economic crisis and recession[15], I  had little idea that the economy would go into recession (in the fall of 2007) and experience an epic financial sector meltdown on the eve of the election - developments that would deepen the system's need for "re-branding.")  At the risk of sounding like a conspiracy theorist (I am no such thing), it struck me that Obama offered the U.S. ruling class and American System an irresistible advertising and imagery overhaul no other candidate could begin to match.

 

A Killer Combination

      

Obama, it seemed to me, was poised to profit from a killer combination in U.S. politics.  He joined widespread popularity and a related illusory progressive identification among the citizenry to strong approval from elite financial, corporate, and military elites who determined his basic safety to existing dominant domestic and global hierarchies and doctrines.  Sophisticated corporate and military power brokers, I was sure, calculated that his deceptive (as they knew, after vetting him) progressive imagery and related newness would be useful when it came to "managing [popular] expectations" that were certain to be heightened by the passing of the Cheney-Bush regime and era. "Who better," I thought I could hear members of the political and investor classes saying.... "who better than Obama - with his outwardly progressive credentials, his ‘community organizing' past, and his non-traditional racial identity - to be the public face for the long-predicted massive taxpayer bailout of high finance?  Who better than Obama (with his supposed ‘antiwar' record and his Islamic-sounding name) to provide cover for the reconfiguration of U.S. military control of strategically hyper-significant Middle Eastern oil resources in the wake of Bush's Iraq fiasco?  Who better to safely channel popular angers and to attach alienated segments of the citizenry to the corporate and imperial state and to refashion America's image around the world?"

     

To make Obama's ascendancy seem more likely (to me at least) in the winter of 2006, it was clearly going to be the Democrats' year in 2008. The Republicans under Bush, Cheney, and Karl Rove had deeply alienated much of the electorate with their arch-authoritarian militarism and with their related regressive and repressive domestic policies.  To make matters worse for the Republican Party in 2008, the G.O.P.'s candidate field (likely and declared) was remarkably weak.  It was hard to imagine such highly flawed candidates as Rudolph Guliani, John McCain or Mitt Romney overcoming the Bush-Cheney legacy and the center-left drift of the electorate (itself highly evident during the 2006 congressional elections). It was clearly going to be time for the Democrats to be returned to presidential power and try their hand at managing the American System and Empire.

 

NOT Disqualified by Race and Name

     

Many liberal, progressive and other observers thought that Obama's blackness and technically Muslim name (including the middle name "Hussein") would doom his candidacy in a majority white nation that had been attacked by Islamic extremists (led by a man named "Osama") on September 11, 2001.  America, they argued, was simply too racist to elect a black man with an Islamic sounding name. Obama's color and name, the argument ran, disqualified him in advance.  This was a common claim of Edwards and Clinton activists in heavily Caucasian Iowa in the long lead-up to that state's pivotal 2008 presidential Caucus. It was a key part of the "improbable quest" and "impossible dream" narratives to which Obama's liberal fans have been so attached.

     

I had a different perspective, consistent with my opening quotes from Pilger and Hureaux. More than forty years after the peak legislative accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement, I felt, the nation's white majority was unwilling to meaningfully confront racial inequality and the institutional racism and living historical white privilege that sustained persistent steep black-white disparity in the U.S.  "Post-Civil Rights" "white America" was all-too fiercely attached to the false notion that racism no longer posed significant barriers to black advancement and racial equality in the U.S. It was, however, ready to vote in large numbers for a certain kind of black presidential candidate - one with special qualities who made a point of distancing himself from traditional black concerns, style, and rhetoric and indeed from the issue of race and the problem of racism.  It was prepared to significantly back a smart, unthreatening, expertly crafted "black but not like Jesse [Jackson]" and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" candidate like Barack Obama. This was particularly the case among the younger sections of the white electorate.  At the same time, I knew, the ever rising non-white (primarily black, Latina/o, and Asian-American) percentage of the U.S. voting population (whites' share of the active U.S. electorate fell from 90 to 74 percent between 1976 and 2008 [16]) meant that Obama would not necessarily require a majority of the white vote to win the presidency.

     

Just as importantly given my understanding that top U.S. politicians are fundamentally [s]elected by the investor class [17], I also felt that Obama's color and name enhanced the U.S. power elite's sense of his suitability for the project of post-Bush II American re-branding. The "first black president" story line would be an irresistible narrative for image-makers eager to restore the nation's sense and representation of itself as a model democracy where "all things are possible" and no deep or insuperable barriers to equality can be found. Along with Obama's purported antiwar history, his Muslim name and his brief childhood stay in Indonesia held great value in terms of tamping down "anti-American" (anti-U.S. Empire) feelings in the Middle East, South Asia, and the Islamic world more broadly - sentiments that had further fanned by Washington's deeply criminal and more than incidentally bipartisan invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.

     

With his distinctive promise to de-fang popular resistance to American Empire and Inequality at home and abroad, a properly elite-vetted Obama struck me as something of a ruling class dream come true in the post-Bush environment.  He would make a marvelous vehicle for wrapping core conservative, system-maintaining policy continuities in the deceptive flag of progressive "change."

     

EXPECTATIONS BORN OUT

 

Kucinich and Even Edwards' Rapid Marginalization

       

Looking back on the 2007-08 presidential campaign in the wake of events and developments since Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics went to press - the general election and the Obama administration's first ten months in power - I (at the risk of sounding overly self-congratulatory) am struck by great extent to which my late-2006 expectations (and concerns) have been born out by subsequent events.  Truth be told, I'm taken aback at how right (from the left) I was. 

      

Edwards mounted a fairly impressive if rapidly forgotten "angry populist" campaign notable for stunning platform oratory and detailed policy prescriptions.  To be sure many of those prescriptions were less progressive than Edwards' fiery rhetoric, some of which was hard to believe coming from the mouth of an opulent trial lawyer who had sat on the board of a leading Wall Street hedge fund (the Fortress Group).  Still, I came (like Ralph Nader)[18] to be somewhat impressed by the extent to which Edwards was willing to run to the aggressively economic-populist left of the "corporate Democrats" (as Edwards and Nader both called them) Clinton and Obama.  Repeatedly referring to the labor movement as "the greatest anti-poverty program in American history" and proclaiming (in a paraphrase of Franklin Roosevelt's 1935-36 campaign rhetoric) that he sought and welcomed the hatred of the rich, Edwards rightly (in my opinion) mocked Obama's "Kumbaya" notion that meaningful progressive policy change could be attained by conciliating and "finding the middle ground" with corporate interests and the Republican Party. Edwards in 2007 and early 2008 mounted what the prolific Marxist author and political analyst Mike Davis rightly calls "the most chemically pure pro-labor candidacy in a generation."  According to Davis in a recent retrospective on the election:

 

"However one feels about Edwards' character (as exposed in yet another bedroom scandal uncovered by right-wing bloggers), he was the only major primary candidate [to run as]...an insurgent with an ideologically distinctive platform - in his case, angry economic populism.  The former senator from North Carolina (the son of a Piedmont millworker turned into a millionaire lawyer) staked out a programmatic space that had been vacant since Jesse Jackson's mobilization in the 1980s: the priority of economic justice for poor people and workers.   Discarding the banal euphemisms of his 2004 vice-presidential campaign, he spoke directly of exploitation and the urgency of unionization, proposed a new war on poverty, denounced ‘Benedict Arnold CEOs' who exported jobs, and, in a debate with Obama and Clinton in Iowa, argued that it was a ‘complete fantasy to believe that a progressive agenda could be advanced by negotiation with Republicans and corporate lobbies.'  Only an 'epic fight' could ensure healthcare reform and living wages. (Obama's response was typical eloquent evasion: ‘We don't need more heat.  We need more light.')." [19]

 

Thanks to its fighting, anti-plutocracy tone, Edwards's campaign predictably mocked and marginalized (even prior to the exposure of his marital infidelities) by the dominant corporate communications and funding authorities. He was rendered officially "unviable" (along with the quirky Kucinich, who absurdly threw his supporters to Obama) by the middle of January 2008, [20] well before Edwards' bedroom shenanigans were exposed.

 

Corporate Money and Media on the Democrats

       

Corporate money and media sided on the whole with the Democrats in 2007 and 2008 [21], reflecting the Few's determination that the Republican Bush-Cheney fiasco called for putting the other dominant U.S. business party in power for a term or two.[22] The Obama presidential campaign set new corporate fundraising records, bypassing and probably blowing up the nation's public presidential election-financing system.  His take included $39 million from the finance, insurance, and real estate ["FIRE'] sector [23] and nearly $1 million from the leading investment firm Goldman Sachs (a big political and policy player that is not in the business of handing over the White House to leftist or even mildly progressive enemies of American plutocracy) alone.[24]  But just as significant and telling as such sponsorship was the remarkably favorable free coverage and commentary that Obama received from the nation's dominant media [25], which passed on the opportunity to sink his candidacy by going and staying strong with Clinton and right-wing Republican efforts to "Swift Boat" Obama on his past connections to the "controversial" black preacher Reverend Jeremiah Wright (who was savagely pilloried in and by the media for having dared to tell taboo truths about U.S. racism and foreign policy and their consequences) and the former radical activist Bill Ayers. America's powerful corporate communications authorities fell more heavily for Obama[26] than for any presidential candidate and president since John Kennedy. 

 

Overcoming Race - Enough to Beat a Damaged and Terrible Republican Ticket

       

It didn't help the Republicans' chance of success that they ran a transparently inadequate presidential ticket, headed by a blustering and exceedingly aged arch-militarist who chose an egregiously unqualified, far-right governor (Alaska's bizarre Sarah Palin) as his running mate. "Multi-tasking on his beloved Blackberry or plugged into his MP3 player during his morning workout," Davis notes, "Obama was easily cast as an epitome of those 21st-century competencies that some psychologists claim may represent a human evolutionary leap, while McCain, with his self-confessed computer phobia and archaic elocutions (‘My friends...') was prone to caricature as an escaped Alzheimer's patient."[27]

     

Obama's race and nomenclature did not in fact undo him in his contests with the unattractive candidacies of Hillary Clinton and McCain-Palin. To be sure, race and racism posed serious problems for the Obama campaign, which tellingly lost the majority white vote to both Hillary and - in a chilling statement on the persistence of flat-out white racial prejudice in the United States - to the ridiculous and scary McCain-Palin tandem.  Still Obama sufficiently overcame white electoral bias to win, scoring especially well with younger Caucasians (so called Millennials, ages 18 to 29), and garnering a critical boost from non-white voters.  As Davis notes:

 

"the ultimate fulcrum of the election was...the voting day unity of the Blacks and Latinos in a renewal of the ‘Rainbow Coalition.' Nationally, whites cast 700,000 fewer votes than in 2004, but African-Americans almost three million more, thus providing Obama with a third of his winning margin...Obama's sensational popularity among young Latino voters (76 percent in Florida and 84 percent in California), testifies to the growing importance of non-white or mixed identity as a cultural norm - as has long been the case in Obama's home state of Hawaii - as well as increased cultural and social integration of African-Americans, Latinos, Asians, and immigrants of all kinds in big-city neighborhoods and older suburbs.  Obama was clearly seen as opening the gates of opportunity to the larger Hip-Hop nation, including the possibility of a future Latino or Asian president." [28]

     

       

Demographic factors aside, the brilliant "race-neutral" Obama campaign and their legendarily calm and collected candidate played the race issue to perfection.  They masterfully balanced his skin color's attractiveness to certain parts of the electorate and the investor class against white anxieties over the perceived threat of black anger and against "post Civil Rights" white America's reluctance (refusal really) to deal in any substantive ways with the continuing significance of anti-black racial oppression in American life. Obama and his handlers brilliantly walked the racial tightrope, using race to their advantage and keeping its potentially fatal power at bay during and in the wake of the controversy that emerged over his past linkage to Reverend Wright in the spring of 2008.

       

Any chance that McCain might overcome his challenged candidate qualities,  changing electoral demographics, the terrible Bush record, and the stunning unpopularity of the Republican Party was undermined by his vice-presidential pick and by the onset of an epic financial crisis on the Republicans' watch in September of 2008.  McCain responded to the economic meltdown with shockingly ill-conceived comments. He was unable to remember how many homes he owned and preposterously proclaimed that "the fundamentals of the economy are good" - terrible mistakes that Team Obama instantly and effectively pounced on. McCain's running mate Sarah Palin was found to have been a highly problematic state governor and fumbled basic questions (she was unable to remotely identify any key components of The Bush Doctrine, for example) in disastrous interviews with ABC's Charles Gibson and CBS' Katie Couric.  Still, the onset of recession and the sub-prime mortgage and housing crises in 2007 had probably already provided the last nail in the Republicans' electoral chances, pushing millions of economically vulnerable white and Latino suburbanites and others  our of the electoral "red" (Republican) and into the electoral "blue" (Democrat)  for 2008. [29]

 

A Centrist, Corporate-Imperial Presidency Facing Minimal Popular and "Left" Resistance

 

Since the inauguration, Obama as president has governed as predicted - well to the corporate, imperial, and racially neutral center-right.  Heralded by Advertising Age for giving "tainted brand America" an "instant overhaul" (as open, progressive, egalitarian, and democratic) Obama has if anything out-done my "cynical" expectations (dating to the origins of the largely media-created "Obama phenomenon"[30]) on the extent to which he would betray his many progressive supporters (some deluded and some not) and his more progressive-sounding campaign promises. Washington under Democratic rule and the Obama administration (since January 20, 2009) provides potent evidence for left-liberal political scientist Sheldon Wolin's take last year ( before the election) on the chances for progressive change under the United States "corporate-managed democracy" and "one-and-a-half party system."  As Wolin predicted with haunting prescience in his chilling book Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008), "Should Democrats somehow be elected, corporate sponsors [will] make it politically impossible for the new officeholders to alter significantly the direction of society." In the United States' election-focused political culture, Wolin elaborated:

 

"the parties set out to mobilize the citizen-as-voter, to define political obligation as fulfilled by the casting of a vote.  Afterwards, post-election politics of lobbying, repaying donors, and promoting corporate interests - the real players - takes over  The effect is to demobilize the citizenry, to teach them not to be involved or to ponder matters that are either settled or beyond their efficacy....The timidity of a Democratic Party mesmerized by centrist precepts points to the crucial fact that, for the poor, minorities, the working-class, anticorporatists, pro-environmentalists, and anti-imperialists, there is no opposition party working actively on their behalf."

 

It's all been deeply enabled by a dominant national corporate media and propaganda system, of course, with disastrous consequences abroad as well at home.  Just ask the survivors of the many hundreds of innocent Pakistani civilians who have been killed by Obama's drastically escalated "secret" Predator drone war, for example [31].  By the New Yorker writer Jane Mayer's account, Barack Obama had embraced and deployed the controversial killer drone program with remarkable zest.  "During his first nine and a half months in office," Mayer noted, "he has authorized as many CIA aerial attacks in Pakistan as George W. Bush did in his final three years in office [emphasis added]....So far this year, various estimates suggest, the CIA attacks have killed between three hundred and twenty-six and five hundred and thirty-eight people.  Critics say that many of the victims have been innocent bystanders." [32]

 

The first two CIA Predator assaults of the Obama administration occurred on the morning of January 23, 2009 - the president's third day in office.  The second strike ordered by the "peace" president on that day mistakenly targeted the residence of a pro-government tribal leader, killing his entire family, including three children. "In keeping with U.S. policy, "there was no official acknowledgement of either strike." Thanks to the CIA/Xe Services/White House program's official secrecy, Mayer added, ""there is no viable system of accountability in place, despite the fact that the agency has killed many civilians inside a politically fragile, nuclear-armed country with which the U.S. is not at war." [33]

 

Obama's predictable (and predicted) betrayals of his more leftish campaign rhetoric and imagery have met only minimal and half-hearted opposition from what's left of a U.S. left. Unjust wars and occupations, mega-bankers' bailouts and other regressive policies that were seen as intolerable under the nominal rule of a boorish moron from Texas (George W. Bush) have become acceptable for many "progressives" when carried out by an eloquent and urbane black Democrat from Chicago (Barack Obama). A recent pathetic example - one of many - comes from the so-called liberal-left journal The Nation, whose bourgeois editor Katrina Vanden Huevel proclaims the following in an editorial titled "Obama, One Year On:" "Whatever one thinks of Obama's policy on any specific issue, he is clearly a reform president committed to improvement of peoples' lives and the renewal and reconstruction of America... Progressives should focus less on the limits of the Obama agenda and more on the possibilities that his presidency opens up" [34].

 

Ms. Vanden Heuvel announces here that she has fallen prey to what Chris Hedges, author of the recent book Empire of Illusion, calls "Brand Obama."  As Hedges wrote last May:

 

"Barack Obama is a brand. And the Obama brand is designed to make us feel good about our government while corporate overlords loot the Treasury, our elected officials continue to have their palms greased by armies of corporate lobbyists, our corporate media diverts us with gossip and trivia and our imperial wars expand in the Middle East. Brand Obama is about being happy consumers. We are entertained. We feel hopeful. We like our president. We believe he is like us. But like all branded products spun out from the manipulative world of corporate advertising, we are being duped into doing and supporting a lot of things that are not in our interest."

 

"... The Obama campaign was named Advertising Age's marketer of the year for 2008 and edged out runners-up Apple and Zappos.com. Take it from the professionals. Brand Obama is a marketer's dream. President Obama does one thing and Brand Obama gets you to believe another. This is the essence of successful advertising. You buy or do what the advertiser wants because of how they can make you feel [or because of crass and calculating motivations related to funding and perceived access to power at the upper ranks of the liberal Establishment - P.S.]." [35]

 

In the absence of meaningful anger and protest on the left, the dodgy Republican right wing and its still-potent "noise machine" is absurdly left to soak up and express much of the legitimate "populist rage" that ordinary Americans quite naturally feel over Washington's continuing captivity to concentrated wealth, corporate-direction, and the military-industrial complex in the Age of Obama. 

Resentment abhors a vacuum. [36]

 

This great left failure is, in part, a great, "expectation-managing" accomplishment of the fake-progressive Obama phenomenon and presidency. Obama was seen as a desirable candidate by the establishment partly because of his promise to encourage that failure. 

 

This left malfunction was foreseen. After noting that Obama was "backed by the biggest Wall Street firms," the prolific left commentator and author-filmmaker John Pilger wrote the following at the end of May 2008:

 

"What is Obama's attraction to big business?  Precisely the same as Robert Kennedy's [in 1968].  By offering a ‘new,' young and apparently progressive face of Democratic Party - with the bonus of being a member of the black elite - he can blunt and divert real opposition.  That was Colin Powell's role as Bush's secretary of state. An Obama victory will bring intense pressure on the US antiwar and social justice movements to accept a Democratic administration for all its faults.  If that happens, domestic resistance to rapacious America will fall silent." [37]

 

For my part, I wrote as much about "the Obama phenomenon" as I did before the election (see note 3, below) because I was concerned about Obama's special capacity to co-opt and stand down the antiwar movement and progressive forces (already in a terrible weakened state) more broadly. Obama had always struck me as an especially seductive corporate militarist in fake-progressive "rebel's clothing" and thus as a distinctive threat to popular-democratic force.  I was certain that he would prove to be an especially potent pacifier for the peace and justice activists and progressive citizens. Given the fact Obama had no meaningful ideological or policy differences with his fellow centrist corporate Democrat Hillary Clinton and that he actually ran slightly to her right on domestic policy, in fact, I would later come, along with the left and black political scientist Adolph Reed Jr. [38], to see the former First Lady as the "lesser evil" in her epic nomination battle with Obama.  A Hillary Clinton presidency, I reasoned, would do every bit as much (however limited) policy "good" as a president Obama but would not possess the same capacity as Obama to shut down progressive politics and protest and - intimately related to that pacification role - to deceptively "re-brand' and re-legitimize American capitalism, racism, secxism, eco-cidalism, and imperialism at home and abroad.  

 

AND SO IT GOES, UNLESS...

 

This great service to dominant domestic and global hiearchies notwithstanding,  the new centrist corporate-and military president has been consistently dogged with the preposterous but potent right-wing charges that he is a "socialist," a radical black "white-hater," and an enemy of American global power.  And this too, was foretold. As I noted in the preface to my 2008 book Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics:

 

"By the time this volume hits the bookshelves, I am aware, its portrayal of Obama as a relatively conservative, capitalism-/corporate-friendly, racially conciliatory, and Empire-friendly ‘centrist' will strike some readers as counter-intuitive.  The nation's still-potent right-wing Republican attack machine will already be regularly and unreasonably assailing Obama as a ‘far left' candidate, a ‘socialist,' a ‘black nationalist,' and a dangerous ‘anti-American' enemy of God, Country, the Family, and Apple Pie! Obama will also be subjected to no small measure of ugly racial bigotry.  The racial fears and bias and toxic color prejudice - already evident across the Internet as I draft this preface in early June of 2008 - that his presidential candidacy will arouse will sometimes make it seem like the Obama phenomenon represents a real and substantive challenge to racial hierarchy in the U.S."

 

"These unpleasant facts will make more difficult than it would be otherwise to understand the Left critique of "the Obama phenomenon" that comes in the chapters that follow..."

 

If only American politics wasn't so damn and boringly predictable, consistent with the old French saying: plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose - the more things change, the more they stay the same.  "And so it goes," as Kurt Vonnegut used to say.

 

So it goes, that is, unless and until the populace enters the picture and turns it upside down through dedicated mass, grassroots activism beneath and beyond the quadrennial, mass-marketed, corporate-crafted, and candidate-centered "electoral extravaganzas" [39] and re-branding exercises that pass for meaningful democratic politics in the United States.

 

Paul Street (paulstreet99@yahoo.com) is the author of many books, articles, chapters, reviews, and speeches.  His next volume is provisionally titled "Empire's New Clothes: Barack Obama in the Real World of Power and the Politics of Progressive Betrayal" (2010).

 

 

NOTES*

 

*Readers will have to activate the URLs below on their own; the author lacks the time and energy to make them active in-text.  

 

 

1. Scott Horton, "Finding Ways to Stay in Iraq," Antiwa.com, March 4, 2009.  

 

2. Paul Street, "Keynote Reflections," (Featured Article), ZNet Magazine (July 29th, 2004), available online at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=41&ItemID=5951.

 

3 My efforts included "The Pale Reflection: Barack Obama, Martin Luther King Jr., and the Meaning of the Black Revolution," ZNet Magazine (March 16, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12336; "Barack Obama's Wonderful Wealth Primary," ZNet Magazine (April 11, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12551; "Sitting Out The Obama Dance in Iowa City," ZNet Magazine (April 28, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12687;

"Imperial Temptations: John Edwards, Barack Obama, and the Myth of Post-World War II United States Benevolence," ZNet Magazine (May 28, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=12928; "Barack Obama's White Appeal: and the Perverse Racial Politics of the Post-Civil Rights Era," Black Agenda Report (June 20, 2007), read at http://www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=254&Itemid=34; "John Edwards and Dominant Media's Selective Skewering of Populist Hypocrisy," ZNet Magazine ( June 29, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13177; "Running Dog Obama" ZNet Magazine (July 29, 2007), available online at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13396; "Democratic Iraq Betrayal: Treachery on the Campaign Trail," ZNet Magazine (August 12, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13532; "Obama's Forgotten Wal Mart Endorsement," ZNet Magazine (August 28, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13635; "Obama's Insults," Empire and Inequality Report No. 25, ZNet Magazine (October 3, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13940; "Obama's Role: To Confuse and Divide the Progressive Base," Iowa Campaign Report, ZNet Magazine (October 20, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=14081;"What Would Obama Have Done? Voted for the War and Lied About It - Just Like Hillary," ZNet Magazine (October 13, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=14030; "Leading Democrats: ‘Expropriate the Expropriators' (A Satire)," ZNet Magazine (November 10, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=14243;  "Obama and Pluralist Illusion," ZNet Sustainer Commentary (October 31, 2007), read at www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-10/31street.cfm; "Trapped By Their Own Militarism?" Democrats Bare Their Back for the American Right," ZNet Magazine (November 15, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=14291; "Establishment Politics in ‘Rebel's Clothing': Corporate Power, Populist Pandering, and the Ironies of Identity in the Democratic Presidential Race," ZNet Magazine (November 18, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=90&ItemID=14316; "Obama's Latest ‘Beautiful Speech,'" ZNet (March 22, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/16947; "The Audacity of Reaction," ZNet (March 19, 2008), read at  http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/16918; "' No Refuge But in Audacity'  Barack Obama and the Democratic Party's Holocaust Denial," ZNet (April 23, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17231; "News Flash: Obama Lies," ZNet (June, 22 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17974; 

"No More Excuses": Putting Obama's Blackness to Racist Use (June 16, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17919; "Hidden Revolutionary Sentiment in the Heartland - a Reason for HOPE," ZNet (May 3, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17530;  "The Pastor v. The Politician," ZNet (May 1, 2008) read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17509; "Race and Class in the Democratic Primaries," ZNet  (April 25, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/17509; "Obama's ‘Shift to the Center' and the Narrow Authoritarian Spectrum in U.S. Politics," ZNet  (July 01, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/18052; " ‘ Anyone Out There?'" ZNet (November 10, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/19414; "Redistribute the Wealth?," ZNet  (October 29, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/19257; "John Kennedy, Barack Obama, and ‘the Triple Evils That Are Interrelated,'" Black Agenda Report (July 23, 2008), read at www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=710&I temid=1; "The Audacity of Imperial Airbrushing: Barack Obama's Whitewashed History of U.S. Foreign Policy and Why it Matters ," ZNet (July 6, 2008), read at http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/ viewArticle/18110

 

4. I owe the phrase "deeply conservative" to Larissa MacFarquhar, "The Conciliator: Where is Barack Obama Coming From?," The New Yorker (May 7, 2007). In an in-depth account of Obama published in the spring of 2007, MacFarquhar (no leftist) reported that, "In his view of history, in his respect for tradition, in his skepticism that the world can be changed any way but very, very slowly, Obama is deeply conservative."

 

5.  For left critiques (other than my own) of Obama along these lines, please see Adolph Reed, Jr., "The Curse of Community," Village Voice (January 16, 1996), reproduced in Reed,  Class Notes: Posing as Politics and Other Thoughts on the American Scene  (New York, 2000); Adolph J. Reed Jr., "Sitting This One Out," The Progressive (November 2007); Adolph Reed, Jr., "Obama No," The Progressive (May 2008); Ken Silverstein, "Barack Obama, Inc.: The Birth of a Washington Machine," Harper's (November 2006); John Pilger, "After Bobby Kennedy (There Was Barack Obama)," Common Dreams (May 31, 2008), read at www.commondreams.org/archive/ 2008/05/ 31/9327/; Glen Ford and Peter Gamble, "Obama Mouths Mush on War," Black Commentator, December 1, 2005, read online at http://www.blackcommentator.com/161/161_cover_obama_iraq.html; Glen Ford, "Barack Obama The Warmonger," Black Agenda Report (August 8, 2007), http://www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=305&Itemid=34; Glen Ford, "Obama's ‘Race-Neutral' Strategy Unravels of its Own Contradictions," Black Agenda Report (April 30, 2008), www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=603&Itemid=1; Marc Lamont Hill, "Not My Brand of Hope: Obama's Politics of Cunning, Compromise, and Concession," CounterPunch February 11, 2007; Alexander Cockburn, "Obama's Game," CounterPunch (April 24, 2006), read at www.counterpunch.org/cockburn04242006.html; Matt Gonzales, "The Obama Craze: Count Me Out," BeyondChron: San Francisco's Online Daily (February 28 2008) read online at www.beyondchron.org/articles/index.php?itemid=5413#more; Juan Santos, "Barack Obama and the End of Racism," Dissident Voice, February 13, 2008; Bruce Dixon, "Holding Barack Obama Accountable," Dissident Voice (February 15, 2008), read at www.dissidentvoice.org/2008/02/holding-barack-obama-accountable/; Pam Martens, "Obama's Money Cartel," CounterPunch (February 23, 2008) read online at http://zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/16601; Pam Martens, "The Obama Bubble: Why Wall Street Needs a Presidential Brand," Black Agenda Report (March 5, 2008); Chris Hedges, "Corporate America Hearts Obama," AlterNet (April 30, 2008), read at http://www.alternet.org/election08/83890/?page=entire.

 

6. Ken Silverstein, "Barack Obama, Inc.: The Birth of a Washington Machine," Harper's (November 2006).  See also David Mendell, Obama: From Promise to Power (New York: Harpercollins, 2007): 248-250.

 

7. Laurence H. Shoup, "The Presidential Election 2008," Z Magazine (February 2008); Edward. S Herman, "How Market-Democracy Keeps the Public and ‘Populism' At Bay" (2007), read at www.coldtype.net/Assets.07/Essays/0907.Ed.market.pdf;  Edward S. Herman and David Peterson, "Riding the ‘Green Wave' at the Campaign for Peace and Democracy and Beyond," Electric Politics, July 22, 2009.

 

8. John Pilger, "Obama and Empire," speech to International Socialist Organization, San Francisco, CA (July 4, 2009).listen to selected passages at  http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2009/08/18/john-pilger-obama-is-a-corporate-marketing-creation/  

 

9. Michael Hureaux, comment on Juan Santos, "Barack Obama and the End of Racism," Dissident Voice, February 13, 2008. 

 

10. "The power of accurate observation," the Irish dramatist and socialist George Bernard Saw once said, "is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it."

 

11. Herman, "How Market Democracy Keeps the Public and ‘Populism' at Bay."

 

12. For a detailed review and radical critique of The Audacity of Hope, see Paul Street, "Audacious Deference to Power," ZNet Magazine (January 24, 2007), read at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=11936

 

13. Silverstein, "Barack Obama, Inc;" Mendell, Obama, pp. 248-250.

 

14. Paul Street, "Keynote Reflections," (Featured Article), ZNet Magazine (July 29th, 2004), available online at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=41&ItemID=5951.

 

15. I am reminded here of the old joke about the Marxist who predicted eleven of the last four recessions.

 

16. Mike Davis, "Obama at Manassas," New Left Review (March-April 2009), p. 24.

 

17. Thomas Ferguson, Golden Rule: The Investment Theory of Party Competition and Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995); Edward. S Herman, "How Market-Democracy Keeps the Public and ‘Populism' At Bay" (2007), read at www.coldtype.net/Assets.07/Essays/0907.Ed.market.pdf

 

18. On MSNBC's "Hardball" on  December 17, 2007, Nader told political talk show host Chris Mathews  that  Obama had "excluded himself from the progressive coalition by the statements he's made, unfortunately.  He's a lot smarter than his public statements, which are extremely conciliatory to conciliatory to concentrated power and big business...The people of Iowa and New Hampshire have to ask themselves: who is going to fight for you."  Explaining why he was endorsing Edwards in Iowa, Nader noted that "Edwards raises the question of the concentration of power and wealth and power in a few hands that are working against the majority of people"  In Nader's view, "the voters of Iowa and New Hampshire have to ask themselves a question: ‘who is going to fight for you?'"

 

19. Davis, "Obama at Manassas."

 

20.  For some real-time reflections, see Paul Street, "John Edwards and Dominant Media's Selective Skewering of Populist Hypocrisy," ZNet Magazine ( June 29, 2007), read at www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13177; "A Very Narrow Spectrum: Even John Edwards is Too Far Left for the U.S. Plutocracy," ZNet Sustainer Commentary (August 29, 2007), read at www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-08/29street.cfm ; "A Message From the Corporate Plutocracy," ZNet (February 5, 2008), read at www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/16425.

 

 

21. Paul Street, "Corporate Money on the Democrats: The Bad News,"   Z Magazine (December 2007); Center for Responsive Politics, "Money Wins Presidency and 9 of 10 Congressional Election in Priciest Election Ever" (Washington DC:: Center for Responsive Politics, November 5, 2009), read at http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/11/money-wins-white-house-and.html; NEED MORE CITES

 

22. Lance Selfa, "Politics of Change or Politics as Usual?" International Socialist Review, vol. 61 (September-October 2008, read at http://www.isreview.org/issues/61/feat-obama.shtml.. "The challenge for the elites that have benefited so much from the neoliberal era," Selfa noted, "is to support a change in U.S. politics that will address the parts of these crises that impinge on their ability to reap profit and power, while containing popular demands for reforms to health care, workplace rights, or military spending that would challenge them. That is where the Democratic Party proves its usefulness to the people who run U.S. society. All things being equal, big business prefers Republicans, whose generally open pro-business stances aren't usually balanced against appeals to labor or the poor. But the current Republican Party—saddled with responsibility for unpopular policies, mired in corruption, and having demonstrated its incompetence in managing the affairs of state—has run its course as a vehicle for carrying out, and winning support for, big business's agenda. In the language of Madison Avenue that every pundit seems to have adopted these days, the Republican ‘brand' is damaged. And business knows when it's time to pull a bad brand from the shelf."

 

23. Center for Responsive Politics [CRP] "Barack Obama: Sector Totals," read data online at http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/indus.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00009638 (accessed May 30, 2009).

 

24. Center for Responsive Politics , "Barack Obama: Top Contributors," read data online at http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00009638 (accessed May 30, 2009).

 

25. Project for Excellence in Journalism, Pew Research Center, The Invisible Primary Invisible No Longer: a First Look at Coverage of the 2008 Presidential Campaign (October 29, 2007), read at http://www.journalism.org/node/8191; Project for Excellence in Journalism, "Winning the Media Campaign: How the Press Reported the 2008 General Election" (October 22, 2008), read at http://www.journalism.org/node/13307;

 

26. Bernard Goldberg, A Slobbering Love Affair: The True (and Pathetic) Story of the Torrid Romance Between Barack Obama and the Mainstream Media (Regnery, 2009). I disagree with the noxious arch-reactionary Goldberg's preposterous claim that Obama, the Democratic Party, and the mainstream U.S. media are leftist.  I agree, however, with his notion of a media-Obama love affair. 

 

27. Davis, "Obama at Manassas." For a devastating portrait of McCain, see Tim Dickinson, "Make Believe Maverick," Rolling Stone (October 16, 2008), read at http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/make_believe_maverick_the_real_john_mccain.

 

28. Davis, "Obama at Manassas."  

 

29. Davis, "Obama at Manassas."

 

30. Street, "Keynote Reflections."

 

31. Jane Mayer, "The Predator War," The New Yorker (October 26, 2009), pp. 36-37.

 

32. Mayer, "Predator War," p. 37.

 

33. Mayer, "Predator War," pp. 37-38.

 

34. Katrina Vanden Heuvel, "Obama, One Year On," The Nation (November 23, 2009), pp. 6-7.

 

35. Chris Hedges, "Buying Brand Obama," Truthdig (May 3, 2009), read at http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090503_buying_brand_obama/

 

36. For important reflections on the dangerous far right opportunity created by the progressive vacuum resulting from "left" quiescence and irrelevance, see Noam Chomsky, "Noam Chomsky and the Workers Solidarity Movement Discuss Politics Over Breakfast" (November 10, 2009), at http://www.anarkismo.net/article/14942; Walden Bello, "The G20 After the Crash," International Socialist Review (November-December 2009), pp. 23-23. As Bello says, "there is [currently] space for a great deal of questioning of what direction economies should be going and to put forward a demand for greater popular control of the economy.  Progressives should go beyond just a critique of neoliberalisma nd push for more thoroughgoing social transformation that would people in control of the economy.  If they don't do it, then there are others that will do it from the right wing.  There is a big danger in many countries, which lack a strong progressive leadership for envisioning such a future and leading a fight for it, that the right will take advantage of the fears created by the chaos of the financial crisis and promote solutions of an exclusionist and tribal sort....Globally there is a mass of people, young and old from different classes, who are waiting to be mobilized.  We better get them, because if we don't, other unsavory forces on the right are going to get them.  Just as nature abhors a vacuum, so do history and politics."  Chomsky is struck by the disturbing fact that in the starkly business-dominated U.S. it is only the "crazy" right that is articulating any sense of popular outrage over things like rising unemployment and Wall Street bailouts under Obama.  The situation reminds him somewhat of pre-Nazi Germany.

 

37. John Pilger, "After Bobby Kennedy (There Was Barack Obama)," Common Dreams (May 31, 2008), read at www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/05/31/9327/

 

38. Adolph Reed, Jr., "Obama No," The Progressive (May 2008), read online at http://www.progressive.org/mag_reed0508

 

39. Noam Chomsky, Interventions (San Francisco: City, Lights, 2007), pp.

 

 

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Hobbes

By Street, Paul at Nov 28, 2009 10:29 AM

No sweat, Paul D. People can write me with such issues anytime. If I don't get back soon usually means I'm on the road or just burned out on the Web for a bit. I reviewed Audacity of Hope in (I think December of 2007) and the review was titled "Audacious Deference to Power." I preferred it when people read a ZNet piece and then contacted the writer with their praise and/or criticism. I still get some of that but what happens now more typically after I do a ZNet piece is ....I get 5-10 new Facebook Friends, for better and worse.   Hobbes receives some interesting treatment in Wolin's book Democracy Incorporated (2008).  Wolin extracts some haunting quotes from Hobbes and Alexis de Tocqueville...quotes that point to the masters' project of keeping the populace divided and diverted and privatiized/infantilized while policy is monopolized by (and put to the uses of) the rich and powerful Few.  Tocqueville saw this as a great danger in what passed for American "democracy" whereas Hobbes thought it was a desirable outcome in accord with his faith in the Leviathan state. "Leviathan, "Wolin writes, "was the first image of superpower and the first intimation of the kind of privatized citizen congenial with its requirements, the citizen who finds politics a distraction to be avoided, who if denied 'a hand in public business,' remains convinced that taking an active part means 'to hate and be hated,' 'without any benefit,' and 'to neglect the affairs of [his] own family.'" (Wolin. p. 75).   The kind of (ex-) citizen, in short, that many of us left Americans just endured during recent Thanksgiving family gatherings!

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Response to Paul D.

By Street, Paul at Nov 24, 2009 15:15 PM

Paul Donahue - A little off-topic I'd say! But that aside, I'd recommend that you read C.B. Macpherson's still-classic history and critique of Locke and Hobbes (and Harrington if I recall accurately) The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism to get a sense of where Wall Street Barry was coming from when he positively cited those two "Enlightenment thinkers." (quite a reach to call the arch-authoritarian Hobbes an Enlightenment thinker!) I'd say no need to be embarassed.  The deeply conservative Obama's question was based on the same  basic possessive-individiualist (bourgeois) assumptions and fears (of a world turned upside down by the people) as Locke and Hobbes and the Founders. And besides, this episode is marginal to this particular essay and thus best dealt with off site in a private communication IMHO. 

This note was revised

Original note (included so as not be Orwellain):

I'd say no need to be embarassed.  The deeply conservative Obama's question was based on the same  basic possessive-individiualist (bourgeois) assumptions and fears (of a world turned upside down by the people) as Locke and Hobbes and the Founders. And besides, this episode is marginal to this particular essay and thus best dealt with off site in a private communication IMHO. 

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583154

Re: Obama, As Predicted

By Donahue, Paul at Nov 24, 2009 11:10 AM

Paul,

I have fully agreed, and continue to agree with your Obama analysis.  However, I would like to point out a bit of rhetorical dishonesty in one of your past articles.  In an article around the time of the Iowa primaries, you including the following quote from "The Audacity of Hope":


"There were seeds of anarchy in the idea of individual freedom, an intoxicating danger in the idea of equality, for if everybody is truly free, without the constraints of birth or rank or an inherited social order... then how can we ever hope to form a society that coheres?


(I don’t recall if the ellipses were there or not).

I used this line arguing with an Obama-liberal in another forum, only to have someone correct me with the full context of the quote:

"We also understand that a declaration is not a government; a creed is not enough. The Founders recognized that there were seeds of anarchy in the idea of individual freedom, an intoxicating danger in the idea of equality, for if everybody is truly free, without the constraints of birth or rank or an inherited social order- if my notion of faith is no better or worse than yours, and my notions of truth and goodness and beauty are as true and good and beautiful as yours- then how can we ever hope to form a society that coheres? Enlightenment thinkers like Hobbes and Locke suggested that free men would form governments as a bargain to ensure that one man's freedom did not become another man's tyranny; that they would sacrifice individual license to better preserve their liberty."
p. 86-87

Yes, i was embarrassed.  The full paragraph says almost the opposite of what you were implying in your out-of-context  quote.  In no way is it implying Obama's support of social stratification.  Or was it me who was misunderstanding your use of this line?  A response would be appreciated.  Thanks.

Paul D.

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Re:

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 24, 2009 12:13 PM

you shouldnt have been embarassed because it still looks like he is agreeing with it but is using the preceeding and succeeding sentences to justify the systemic inequalities - even when one is no better or worse!

He is saying creeds dont make government, but deeds that consist of constraints of an existing social order to force people to cohere regardless of whether their differences produce inequality or not. - and he rightly recognizes that "the Founders" felt the same. Chomsky and Zinn and Beard have been saying the same. Even if youre no better or worse than me then by the inherited social order, and quite possibly due to the circumstances of your birth (which are beyond your control), you are unequal in rank and this is necessary to preserve our liberty... to be unequal.

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583154

Re: Re:

By Donahue, Paul at Nov 25, 2009 15:09 PM

That isn't how i read the paragraph at all.  It seemed a good rebuttal to the so-called "libertarian " argument that everyone should be allowed to pursue anything they wanted, regardless of impacts, and no one should ever be compelled to give as  mich as a penny for good of the greater society.   Obama wasn't arguing that inequality was necesary for a stable society at all.

I know all this is off-topic, but I know of nowhere else to bring it up.

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Re: Re: Re:

By Street, Paul at Nov 25, 2009 15:30 PM

Staying off topic, I'd say the thing to do here is read MacPphereson and Hobbes and Locke; the latter two should not be confused (I say in something of an understatement) with modern day social democracy   I do not get the meaning of "nowhere else to bring it up"  I put my e-mail address at the bottom of my ZNet pieces, for better and worse. The other thing is that you needed to go the primary source (in this case Obama's creepy right-center  book The Audacity of Hope [New York, 2006])) yourself if you were going to engage in a debate about its content. Let's say you're completely right in your criticism of my use of the quote in a relatively old essay or perhaps a book from last year ..what excuse do you have for not following Noam Chomsky's consistent advice: "don't take it from me, check it out yourself?"

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583154

Re: Re: Re: Re:

By Donahue, Paul at Nov 26, 2009 11:39 AM

I'll take your advice.  I should read the whole no-doubt creepy book before focusing on a single paragraph.  And I must admit, I was confused with the inclusion of the pre -enlightenment Hobbes,  altough until I checked a few encyclopedia articles I didn't know he specifically defended monarchy as a prescription to the nasty, brutish and short condition.

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More Truth-Telling, Re: Related Aforementioned Crimes

By Street, Paul at Nov 24, 2009 08:07 AM

Speaking at a bookstore in New York City in the late summer of 2009, the left journalist Arun Gupta asked an obvious rhetorical question: “what antiwar movement?” He noted that the nation’s dominant left-liberal “antiwar” organization United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ, whose member groups included the American Friends Service Committee, Code Pink, Veterans for Peace, and the War Resisters League) now functioned as little more than an agency for the channeling of popular antiwar energies into the “the grave of the Democratic Party.”  The UFPJ never openly “discussed strategy,” Gupta noted, because the notion that its core modus operandi – subordination of movement energies and potential to the electoral needs of the Democratic Party – was transparently “insane.” Since a young activist who works for as long as half a year in the antiwar cause quickly learns “that the Democrats are as much a part of the imperial state as the G.O.P.,” UFPJ would “collapse overnight” if it went public with its real politics.

 

Still, Gupta noted, it was possible for careful observers to discern UFPJ’s preposterous approach.  Gupta recalled speaking in May 2007 in Queens at an antiwar gathering, a meeting where he argued for activists to put pressure on the newly elected Democratic congressional majority to use “the power of the purse” to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan by cutting off funding. UFPJ leader and top U.S. Communist Party official Judith LeBlanc stood up to argue, “No, we don’t need the power of the purse.  We have a timetable.  We’re not on the outside shaking our fists.  We’re on the inside with the Democrats, meeting with them every week.” [1]

 

In November, Carl Davidson, a leading UFPJ “theoretician” and former Sixties Maoist turned “Marxist” Web-master of the oxymoronically named group “Progressives for Obama,” wrote a widely circulated essay claiming that Obama’s victory in the presidential election was “a major victory” for left progressives. Badly misusing the terminology of the brilliant Marxist Antonio Gramsci, Davidson claimed that the Obama administration represented the rise of “an emerging historic counter-hegemonic bloc” containing elements of Marxian/proletarian “class struggle.”  He strained the bounds of credulity by claiming that the new Obama presidency represented a decisive break with both neoliberalism and corporate liberalism and that the new White House was torn by a major tension between forces representing the capitalist class’s “old hydrocarbon sector” and forces (like Van Jones, presumably) representing a progressive new left-leaning “green sector.”  As Gupta quipped, "Obama must have missed Davidson’s memo," for the Obama White House had committed to spending $1 trillion a year on the Pentagon but just a “few billion on green jobs, mainly as subsidies to big corporations like the big three [automakers].”[2]

      

Ms. LeBlanc actually called President Obama’s appointment of Richard Holbrooke as a special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan last January  “an exciting moment for the peace movement, because its possible diplomacy will be the first step….it’s incredibly important that the antiwar movement reach out to this envoy,” LeBlanc said, “and speak directly to the White House about our concerns.” This was remarkable commentary given Holbrooke’s rather unsavory history as a leading U.S. foreign policy operative and commentator over the years – a record that included critical support (in his role as Under-Secretary of State for Asian Affairs in the Carter administration) for Indonesia’s U.S.-supported atrocities (bordering on genocide) against East Timor in 1975, promising (in his role as Bill Clinton’s special envoy to the Balkans) immunity to Serbian war criminal Radovan Karadzic (according to Karadzic himself and to former Bosnian foreign minister Mohammad Sacirbey), helping lead (in his role as special envoy to Kosovo) the “diplomatic” charge to the U.S. bombing of Serbia in 1999,  providing Democratic support for George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq, and serving as a distinctly hawkish, pro-war foreign policy advisor to the presidential campaign of the highly militaristic U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton. [3]

 

As Holbrooke took up his appointment with a ringing endorsement from LeBlanc, a left U.S. newspaper reported, “Angry protesters gathered in Mehtarlam, capital of Afghanistan’s eastern Laghman Province, to protest deaths of at least 16 civilians in a U.S. raid on a village Jan. 23. The same day, across the border in western Pakistan, a senior Pakistani official said two U.S. missile attacks may have killed up to 100 civilians. In Washington, administration officials refused to answer whether President Obama had okayed the missile strikes.”[4]

 

By the late summer of 2009, survey data clearly showed the popular opposition to “Obama’s War” was on the rise. [5] Thanks to the sorry Democratic- and Obama-captive politics of the ex-“antiwar movement” represented by Move.On and UFPJ, however, there was no institutional force present to capture and channel that opposition into relevant confrontation with the re-branded American state’s continuing and deepened imperial project. 

 

 

 

1. “Arn Gupta Asks, ‘What Antiwar Movement?’” (New York City, September 24, 2009), view and hear at www.democracynow.org/blog/2009/9/24/arun_gupta_asks_where_is_the_anti_war_movement

 

2. Carl Davidson, “Bumpy Road Ahead: Obama and the Left,” The Rag Blog: The Latest in News and Views From the Progressive Front (November 18, 2008), read at http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/carl-davidson-bumpy-road-ahead-obama.html. For a devastating critique by an actual Marxist, see Louis Proyect, “Marxists for Obama: A Bumpy road Ahead,” Louis Proyect: the Unrepentant Marxist (November 20, 2009), read at http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2008/11/20/marxists-for-obama-a-bumpy-road-ahead/. “For Gramsci," Proyect noted, “the goal was not to work within hegemonic blocs in alliance with the bourgeoisie, but to create counter-hegemonic blocs led by the working class and a (genuine) vanguard party...for those who take their Gramsci seriously, the task today as it was in the 1920s is to challenge the dominant powers, as Butko puts it. If Davidson is intent on maneuvering within the hegemonic bloc,that of course is his privilege as long as he understands that this has nothing to do with Marxism.”

 

3. Marylin Bechtel, “‘ Give Diplomacy a Chance’ in Afghanistan,” People’s Weekly World, January 29, 2009, read at http://74.125.47.132/search?q=cache:l4TkyZF6DYkJ:www.pww.org/article/articleview/14357/+judith+leblanc+and+richard+holbrooke&cd=4&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us#

 

4. Bechtel, “’Give Diplomacy a Chance.’”

 

5.  See, for example The Harris Poll, “Public Opinion on Afghanistan: All the Numbers Get Worse” (New York, September 25, 2009), read at http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/pubs/Harris_Poll_2009_09_25.pdf; Public Broadcasting System, Nightly News Hour, “Public Views Shifting on Afghanistan” (September 11, 2009), read at http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/july-dec09/afghanistan_09-11.html; NBC/Wall Street Journal Survey (September 2009), questions 36 to 41 on pp. 18-19, read at http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/i/MSNBC/Sections/NEWS/A_Politics/NBC_WSJ_Poll_090922.pdf.

 

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Telling the Truth and its Limits

By Street, Paul at Nov 23, 2009 20:48 PM

A  real left activist doesn't to ask a writer/intellectual like me what to do.  CD can google up "James Thwinda" + "Jobs for Justice" +"Moyers" for a nice piece on a good activist and how he works.  Same for "Steve Meacham" + "Urbana Vida" + "Boston" + "Moyers" (for a show on great work against evictions and for housing justice in the Roxbury and Dorchester communities of Boston).  Thwinda and Meacham and other good organizers like them don't waste time asking authors and writers like me how to do their craft.   The issue-areas that are ripe for activism are quite numerous and diverse, and often different by  locale and region (I am in one where a recent police shooting and flood recovery issues are part of what's relevant). 

 Having said that I will also add  George Orwell's comment: "At a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." We are in such a time right now and have been for some time. I try to fulfill Noam Chomsky's notion of "the moral reponsbility of intellectuals" [perhaps we should say of "people privileged and/or crazy enough to do intellectual work"]:  "to tell the truth about things that matter to people  who care and who can do something about them."

The best quote in the above essay, the one that really hits the nail on the head, is the Chris Hedges one (though the Wolin one is pretty nice too): "The Obama campaign was named Advertising Age's marketer of the year for 2008 and edged out runners-up Apple and Zappos.com. Take it from the professionals. Brand Obama is a marketer's dream. President Obama does one thing and Brand Obama gets you to believe another. This is the essence of successful advertising. You buy or do what the advertiser wants because of how they can make you feel [or because of crass and calculating motivations related to funding and perceived access to power at the upper ranks of the liberal Establishment - P.S.]."

I'm still working to peel away the mask of President/Brand Obama; it's work that still needs some doing IMHO.  It's not the revolution or even a community meeting; this was an essay meant to do some truth-telling that may or many not matter much in the larger scheme of things.

But --- and this is a key point that does make a direct connection between activist issues and the content of this essay (and of my next and last book) --- the Brand Obama illusion is a very big part of what's crippling/slowing activism in some, perhaps many places.  It is having a flat deadly impact where I live.  We call it "Obamaitis."

Ity would be interesting to survey left/progressive activists with a question along these lines: "What impact has the Obama election and presidency had on your efforts to organize for peace and/or justice and/or ecological sustainability?  Please explain and relate..." My sense is that many people would report that the Obama Re-Brand is a big obstacle to organizing, as and for reasons predicted....

 

 

 

 

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Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 24, 2009 06:58 AM

Well, that actually explains a lot. Your notion of being a 'writer/author' is at least once removed from the strategy, tactics and tasks of organizing. I'm a writer as well, but I have a different idea about what I'm doing with it that's more integrated with 'what is to be done?', not just in a general way, but from the perspective of 'next steps' at the base. And I do consult with Thindwa; we're old friends.

We write in a context. For me, criticizing Obama has to do with mobilizing forces to push him to do the necessary thing, not simply to unmask and tear him down. That might be the case, or even might become the case, if he were the primary and main enemy at the moment. But there's more players on the field, especially a revanchist right trying to tear him down however they can for the sake of 2010 victories, defeating legislation or launching new wars. So I write strategically and tactically. It doesn't mean I don't tell the truth. But it does mean that where and how I deliver my blows, even in a small way, matters of the battlefield.

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Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 24, 2009 07:04 AM

'Authoritarian and counter-revolutionary?' Goodness, McGehee, I'm usually pegged as the Marxist with a libertarian streak in other circles. If this just means I'm not an anarchist, I plead guilty. But I take revolutionary strategy and tactics very seriously, and I do try to draw people out. What's wrong with that? As for being 'exposed' here for the above crimes, we'll let others decide.

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Re: Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 24, 2009 08:44 AM

my problem with you, carl, has been that i dont think you are trying to have authentic discussions. point blank: you dont listen very well. i just dont feel that you have ever shown any consideration of the views of others. you like to regurgitate your views and feign interest in understanding the differences - which implies that you seek some resolution - and so on but when you encounter "where the rubber meets the road" (which is often), rather than show any willingness to budge from your position or consider the possible flaws of your argument you fold with comments about "if this just means such-and-such then i plead guilty" or "we'll let others decide." you dont recognize any merit to the counter-arguments or explain why they are deficient. you just cariacturize your opponent in an insulting way and say let others decide. or maybe you will hurl insults at others with the implied notiong that they dont "take revolutionary strategy and tactics very seriously" or will intentionally misrepresent their views by claiming they are "moving goal posts" or compare apples to oranges (i.e., Spannos' piece on exploitation) and so on and so forth.

im on to you, carl. and i dont find it productive or constructive. you do a good job concealing your dubious tactics but not good enough. i notice a reoccuring pattern: your constant antagonism to any revolutionary convictions that doesnt genuflect to hierarchical power systems. you sacrifice said revolutionary convictions for the sake of what you perceive as pragmatism and practicality to the repeated concern of others that perceive doing so as a death kneel.

you remind me of the kind murray bookchin had in mind when writing in A Discussion on "Listen, Marxist!" that Marxists have put "an emphasis on 'objectivity' that increasingly subverted the humanistic goals of socialism. [...] Freedom is divested of its autonomy, of its sovereignty over the human condition. It is turned into a means instead of an end. Whether freedom is desirable or not depends upon whether it furthers the 'objective' development. Accordingly, any authoritarian organization, any system of repression, any manipulatory tactic can become acceptable, indeed admirable, if it favors the "building of socialism" or "resistance to imperialism" - as though "socialism" and "anti-imperialism" is meaningful when it is poisoned with manipulation, repression and authoritarian forms of organization. [...] Marxism created a stupendous intellectual furniture that one must clear away to make contact with reality. The field abounds with "experts" and heavies, with academics and authorities whose bullshit makes original, indeed dialectical, thought virtually impossible. [...] The statement "power corrupts" is not a truism because it has never been fully understood. It may yet become understood because power now destroys. No amount of theoretical exegesis can place power in the service of history or of a revolutionary organization."

in many instances "where the rubber meets the road" it has resulted in opposition to your all too willingness to "eat of the pope" but not recognize the warning that you will "die of it," or to use the "ends justify the means" argument, or to fail to consider that structure breeds structure, evil begets evil, etc., etc., etc. this is where the rubber meets the road.

look at what you just said. you argued against unmasking and tearing down obama by assuming we can pressure him to do what is "necessary." you strategically think ignoring who and what he is can result in anything meaningful or have revolutionary potentials while street and others have made it clear that we should be clear and honest on what is going on - that speaking truth is revolutionary - and that whatever strategy we employ should compliment the end of a vision for a bottom-up society - this means no to death kneeling.

so again you have been shown where the rubber meets the road? are you satisfied? do i expect it to have any impact? unfortunately, no. do i expect you to return on a future piece with the same line? absolutely. do i expect you to look for a straw to grasp at, or a logical fallacy to present and that when these differences are pointed out, again, that you will say something to the effect of "if that means such-and-such then i plead guilty" or "let the readers decide" and leave it at that? absolutely.

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Re: Re: Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 27, 2009 05:51 AM

Lighten up, McGehee. I can authentically take part in discussions with many people I disagree with and not change my core views. I do it all the time. It doesn't mean that I don't learn many things from them, which is of some value to me. Building united fronts is important to my politics, and united front are for the purpose of uniting with people that you disagree with. You're already united with those you agree with. It's well known I'm a socialist, and not an anarchist or syndicalist, although I held those view for a while in my youth.

When I discuss things with people who share the same strategic path, I learn even more, and even make changes in my core views--which I view as working hypothses, not principles chiseled in stone. The future is open and we need fresh ideas.

That why I engage people here. Not only to win over any undecideds, but to explore differences, to get beyond opening salvos and try to discover what barriers there may or may not be on practical matters. Right now, for instance, I'm seeking to find ways to replicate the Evergreen Coops in Cleveland, working in tune with the United Steel Workers collaborative with Mondragon. What I've discovered that I didn't know before in these discussions is that there's a good deal of opposition among anarchist-minded people and other Z-Net netizens to working either with the USW or Mondragon because of hierarchies. There may be some exceptions, but I've learned that I'll have to look elsewhere for allies on this project, even if i can work with anarchists on things like protesting the G20 in Pittsburgh.

 

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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 28, 2009 15:36 PM

If you "can" take part then why dont you? There is a difference between what you can do and what you actually do. If you have gotten some "value" from the interactions I have witnessed then it would not include anything remotely close to consideration of oppositional views. You continue to make snide comments about "youth" and not taking things seriously.

I don't doubt that building fronts is important to you but you have shown repeated opposition to any building from below without hierarchical management constraining and subverting it.

Yes, the future is open and we need fresh ideas. We also need old cynics like you to quit trying to silence them with insults and pathetic defenses of the archaic ideas you cling to.

PS: I don't recall anyone saying they wouldn't work with USW or Mondragon because of hierarchies. I recall people sharing their concerns for them as a revolutionary model due to the hierarchies. I think you know this and intentionally distorted this into some useful criticism. Again, with sly tactics like these it is no wonder I find you so suspicious.

In fact, I remember specifically writing to you that while Mondragon is a vast improvement upon Microsoft it still falls short of optimizing its revolutionary potential because of the corporate divisions of labor and so on. This was at the center of your "moving the goalpost" nonsense. You said we moved the goal posts (ie workers liberation) and we said, no we didnt move it. But rather, you choose to claim so in order to continue denying that the goal was missed.

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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 28, 2009 17:24 PM

McGehee: The goal post that moved was workers self-management, not 'workers liberation.' When I posited Mondragon and its coops as the kind of self-management I supported, against the claim that I didn't support such things, the reply was that MCC coops didn't really have workers self-management because they had hierarchies among themselves and with the managers they hired. So workers self-management becomes self-management plus no hierarchies, then plus balanced jobs, then plus payment for 'effort.'  That's 'moving the goal posts,' At least I think a reasonable observor would think so.

In the discussions here, as I recall, my critics wanted alternative unions, not the USW or other hierarchical unions, and they wanted the ParEcon model, not the Mondragon model. That was something I didn't know before, at least about many contemporary activists who relate to Z-Net. (Obviously, not all of them) With that divergence, I doubt we could work well together in getting some new coops of the ground.

In my three years on the design team of Austin Polytech in Chicago, a public high school inspired by Mondragon, I know for a certainty that we could never have gotten it launched if hierarchies, balanced jobs or payment for effort were part of the initial or ongoing debate. Still, the school has worker ownership and coops built into the curicculum, it's had reps from the Italian Emilia Romagna coops lecture and discuss with its students, and a team of its students go to Spain for a work-study tour at MCC.

Of course, I'm sure there are some Z-Net netizens who would understand the importance of such work, even if it was not directly reflective of ParEcon or anarcho-syndicalist principles they may or may not hold. Depending on the circumstances, we may work very well together. We'll see how things develop. In any case, I think we should not hijack this thread any more than we already have. I have a post on MCC and the Steelworkers. If you want to continue it, I suggest we move it there.

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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 30, 2009 06:20 AM

how you hurl insults: you imply that others and myself are "unreasonable observers" by pointing out that hierarchies negate workers self-management.

no, carl. i will leave it at that. it's monday and i am not feeling up to beating a dead horse.

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Re: Telling the Truth and its Limits

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 24, 2009 06:39 AM

paul,

im sure you know he isnt really wanting you to tell him what to do but rather draw you into another futile online argument where he wont budge from what many others have pointed out as their feelings of his authoritarian and counter-revolutionary position that has been exposed and repudiated time and time again all over this site. he will continue to throw around logical fallacies and intentional misrepresentations of other people's views to satisfy what i can only suspect as being his antagonistic needs. i find it very difficult to believe that he hasn't already found "where the rubber meets the road." the issue of vision AND strategy has been a horse sadistically beaten long past its death. knowing he disagrees with you on american electoralism and hierarchical approaches to organizing he looked for whatever straw he could grasp at.

 

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Ok, I'm BEGGING you!!!!

By Kane, Paul at Nov 23, 2009 20:36 PM

PLEEEEASSSE put "centrist" in quotation marks whenever you use it about Obama.  

 

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What's Next?

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 23, 2009 11:31 AM

>>So it goes, that is, unless and until the populace enters the picture and turns it upside down through dedicated mass, grassroots activism beneath and beyond the quadrennial, mass-marketed, corporate-crafted, and candidate-centered "electoral extravaganzas" [39] and re-branding exercises that pass for meaningful democratic politics in the United States.<<

This closing papragraph doesn't help much, Paul. We need a little more than urging more mass activism from below.

In other words, suppose the entire left agrees to denounce Obama the same way you and Glen Ford do, to have nothing to do with Democrats save denouncing them, and little to do with elections as well. Then what? What are the next steps? How do we relate to labor and Black groups? What existing coaltions should we bother with? Do we run Greens against Dems in 2010? Or just skip the election? Focus on more and bigger street demos that fight with cops? What if few people come? (We learned a little about those limitations at the G20 in Pittsburgh).  What if A LOT of people come? You can only play tag with cops in the streets for so many days...what comes next?

If your analysis and call for grassroots democratic politics has a strategy and tactics, you need to spell it out. You reject all the alternatives in the left-progressive camp to your right; so the ball's in your court to tell us how you think we can proceed, and with more than a phrase or two.

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Re: What's Next?

By McGehee, Michael at Nov 23, 2009 16:23 PM

carl, your antics are getting real old.

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Re: Re: What's Next?

By Davidson, Carl at Nov 23, 2009 17:31 PM

Maybe because I'm getting old, Comrade McGehee, but I wrestle with the problems of strategy and tactics here every day, and put them out as best as I can, for others to criticize or make use of. Paul's views and mine on elections and candidates have clashed here for some time; I'm just trying to see where the differences are down where the rubber meets the road.

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Re: What's Next?

By Miller, Brian at Nov 23, 2009 14:53 PM

Start small: volunteer, work for, or even create outreach in your own town or neighborhood. A youth program for teens approaching voting age; a forum with a local progressive candidate or already elected official; etc., networking and collaborating with other groups from there...

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