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The Audacity of Fraud: How Barack Obama Is Losing My Vote
Barack Obama writes a 5,000-word manifesto on "Renewing American leadership" in the current issue of Foreign Affairs. I was expecting fresh, bold new thinking-the audacity of liberalism. What I got instead was a Republican hawk in Kennedy clothing. If this is what we are to expect from the new generation of Democratic leaders, Bush's legacy has nothing to fear. It's writhing with life under a new guise. Call it neo-conservatism with a human face.
Obama's essay hits all the right tones: Optimism, ambition, hope, American exceptionalism. It's your basic stump-speech style. He brackets the piece in references to FDR, with a little Truman and JFK thrown in. He delivers the kind of lofty one- and two-liners designed to get applause at a political convention: "We must lead the world, by deed and by example." "The American moment is not over, but it must be seized anew." "Our global engagement cannot be defined by what we are against; it must be guided by a clear sense of what we stand for." But this is Foreign Affairs. He can skip the fawning and flattery, which sounds no different than standard-issue speechifying. Give us your program. But what little of it he does give beyond the high-minded rhetoric sounds, with a couple of exceptions, strangely stale and uncomfortably familiar. Obama is going out of his way to sound tough, nationalistic, and most of all, grown up. I've heard that urge before. We've been deafened by it for the last seven years by the current president and his inferiority complex.
The essay's opening reference to FDR's Four Freedoms is deceptive. Those freedoms, Obama writes, "gave purpose to our struggle against fascism." Perhaps he should have listed them: Freedom of speech and worship, freedom from want and fear. The "purpose" wasn't yet the fight against fascism: Roosevelt delivered the speech in January 1941, a year before the country was dragged into war. The purpose held true universally, not just as a counterpoint to fascism. We don't get that sense of universalism from Obama's purposes in this essay. The Four Freedoms barely make it past their initial cameo, anyway. What we get is oppositional arguments. We must do so and so not because it's inherently good, but because-and here, fill in the blanks-we must fight al-Qaeda, restore alliances, ensure that the United States can still compete globally and against China ( China?!). At the very end of the essay he cites Kennedy's line about helping the world's poor to help themselves "because it is right," but by then it feels like an insurance quote so the previous 4,000 words don't get misinterpreted as USDA Grade A expedience.
His opening paragraphs restate, explicitly, America's role as self-appointed leader of the world and bearer of The Truth. That posture may have been bearable, if briefly demonstrably true, in the 1940s and early 1950s. But only Americans who refuse to hear the rest of the world still speak of the United States in Superman terms, as "Leader of the Free World." The United States is a leader. It isn't the leader: that's the inherent assumption of institutions like the G8, the UN's Security Council, even NATO, if NATO is to survive. No European Union nation considers the United Statesthe leader of the free world, especially not since the debacles those nations have witnessed and scorn they've endured from the Bush administration. So what's Obama doing when he's calling for a rebuilding of international institutions? "The mission of the United States is to provide global leadership grounded in the understanding that the world shares a common security and a common humanity"-as long as the world understands that America leads. Which means the rest follow. This is a restatement of the Bush doctrine in humbler terms, and without much substance behind it. A "common security and a common humanity" meets the objectives of a Sunday sermon. It doesn't tell us what Obama means by that common humanity, nor how he'd achieve it. What he does say angles away from "common humanity" and back to a staunchly America-centered world-view.
That world view restates the threats facing the United States in Bush's hyperbolic terms. The notion that al-Qaeda, for all its terrorism, represents a threat as vast and dangerous as fascism or communism has been a staple of the Bush doctrine. Al-Qaeda in particular and terrorism by definition could never amount to a threat on the level of fascism or communism. Terrorism is a crude and short-range method, not a program nor an ideology nor a sustainable enterprise. Yet here's Obama again, reinvigorating the absurd premise: "This century's threats are at least as dangerous as and in some ways more complex than those we have confronted in the past. They come from weapons that can kill on a mass scale and from global terrorists who respond to alienation or perceived injustice with murderous nihilism. They come from rogue states allied to terrorists and from rising powers that could challenge both America and the international foundation of liberal democracy. They come from weak states that cannot control their territory or provide for their people. And they come from a warming planet that will spur new diseases, spawn more devastating natural disasters, and catalyze deadly conflicts." That last, about global warming, is the closest he gets to an accurate comparison to global, existential threats. But conflating it with the threats of terrorism or rogue militarism confuses the issue to the point of sensationalism. Global warming aside, "this century's threats" are not as or more dangerous than the last. They've been made more dangerous than they are because of rhetorical exaggerations and catastrophic strategic mistakes: Bush calling the war on terror a war, and Bush fighting it by expanding it to Iraq while neglecting it in Afghanistan. If terrorism had been fought globally as effectively as it has been in the Philippines (for example), which is how some of us wanted it fought beginning on Sept. 12, 2001, the facile language of war that presidential candidates are using today, left and right, would have been shown to be folly. As it is, the language's folly pales compared to its ongoing execution.
Obama gets worse. Repeating his idea for a "phased withdrawal" from Iraq only to call it a "redeployment" in the same breath (the coy deflection from cutting and running, which is what this is and what it must be, dates back to Ronald Reagan calling the Marines' withdrawal from Beirut in 1984 a "redeployment"), he leaves open the door for a longer stay "if the Iraqi government meets the security, political, and economic benchmarks to which it has committed" and settles on the deceptive language of a permanent stay in the form of "a minimal over-the-horizon military force in the region to protect American personnel and facilities." Facilities? The previous line-I'm not kidding you-was this: "[W]e must make clear that we seek no permanent bases in Iraq." It isn't Obama's only blatant contradiction (more of those in a moment), although what Iraqis and other Mideasterners will read in this passage is nothing new under American policy's sun.
There's more to Obama's hawkish compulsions. He wants military ranks increased by 100,000. In this, he sounds indistinguishable from Mitt Romney's prescription for the military, in the same issue of Foreign Affairs: "First, we need to increase our investment in national defense. This means adding at least 100,000 troops and making a long-overdue investment in equipment, armament, weapons systems, and strategic defense. The need to support our troops is repeated like a mantra in Washington. Yet little has been said about the commitment of resources needed to make this more than an empty phrase." But where has the case been made for an expanded military force, if not for expanded and semi-permanent military commitments abroad? And who at this point ought to be enabling existing commitments, let alone expanded ones? We remain by far the nation with the biggest and costliest military in the world. The Pentagon's budget is well in excess of all other nations' military budgets combined. There's not a force on earth that can challenge the military conventionally. It doesn't need expansion. It may need some redirection. It certainly needs considerable contraction: There's no need for a fleet of 400 ships, no need for a $10-billion-a-year "missile shield," no need for the F-22 and the Joint Strike Fighter, no need for an endless list of military procurement that does nothing for the defense of the country and everything to grease the job-making base of a few congressman. And there's no need for an American presence in Europe anymore. Those forces should redeploy. The Pentagon is sucking the marrow out of the federal budget and making a Sparta of this alleged "city upon a hill."
Yet what does Obama do? He does Romney one better. He breaks down the numbers: "We should expand our ground forces by adding 65,000 soldiers to the army and 27,000 marines." He restates the doctrine of using the military for nation-building: "We must also consider using military force in circumstances beyond self-defense in order to provide for the common security that underpins global stability -- to support friends, participate in stability and reconstruction operations, or confront mass atrocities." And he restates Bush's doctrine of pre-emption, as in the case of Iran if it becomes necessary because "It is far too dangerous to have nuclear weapons in the hands of a radical theocracy" (because it's not dangerous to have them in the hands of a dictatorship like Pakistan? Or in the hands of the only nation that has used them?) Henry Kissinger must be on Obama's speed-dial. Just in case the jingoes haven't got the point that Obama is all for the bang-bang, he notes again, using that metaphor so beloved by every Fox News talking head plus terminology of Rumsfeld vintage, how "we must also become better prepared to put boots on the ground in order to take on foes that fight asymmetrical and highly adaptive campaigns on a global scale."
That last, incidentally, is another considerable contradiction. Three pages earlier Obama is lecturing us about how the "Bush administration responded to the unconventional attacks of 9/11 with conventional thinking of the past, largely viewing problems as state-based and principally amenable to military solutions." So what's this business about boots on the ground again? Intelligence, in every sense, is absent.
Obama does emphasize diplomacy. He's been reading Dennis Ross' "Statecraft." But Obama's openings are severely restricted. Iran and Syria are OK to talk to. But there's no mention of opening a dialogue with Hamas, let alone Hezbollah, the Taliban or al-Qaeda. So his international diplomatic initiatives are stuck in the very same "conventional thinking of the past, largely viewing problems as state-based," that he so eagerly and justly criticizes Bush for. On Israel, the best he can say is the same old rehash about Israel being "our strongest ally in the region" (a doubtful assertion anymore) and this incredibly obtuse prescription from a few decades back: "we must help the Israelis identify and strengthen those partners who are truly committed to peace, while isolating those who seek conflict and instability." In other words, don't talk to Hamas. How different is that from the Bush approach? Not very. Obama's thinking is muddy, haphazard, half-baked. And every few paragraphs - like money shots in porno movies - he throws in his bit of brawn to remind us again and again what a tough man he is: "To defeat al Qaeda, I will build a twenty-first-century military and twenty-first-century partnerships as strong as the anticommunist alliance that won the Cold War to stay on the offense everywhere from Djibouti to Kandahar." Take cover.
His understanding of this modern-day terrorism seems simplistic to infantile, too. He quotes an unnamed, "senior U.S. military commander" saying how "when people have dignity and opportunity, 'the chance of extremism being welcomed greatly, if not completely, diminishes.'" The thinking is as harebrained as the syntax. As Lawrence Wright reminds us in "The Looming Tower," terrorism's founders, leaders and ideological gurus-Qutb, bin Laden, Zawahiri-are all the product of middle class wealth. The rank-and-file follows the same pattern. According to the research of Saad Eddin Ibrahim, a sociologist at the American University in Cairo who studied Egypt's political prisoners, "most of the Islamist recruits were young men from villages who had come to the city for schooling. The majority were the sons of mid-level bureaucrats. They were ambitious and tended to be drawn to the fields of science and engineering, which accept only the most qualified students. They were not the alienated, marginalized youth that a sociologist might have expected." The same can be said of the 9/11 hijackers. The same is being said of Britain's current boil of would-be terrorists-doctors and such, for Khadija's sake. Obama's thinking about terrorism is stuck in a romanticism as pre-conceived and inaccurate as notions of the noble savage. It sounds good to the masses. It's simple. But it's false.
I could go on. But to say what? That Obama decries Darfur but doesn't say what he'd do about it? That he wants to give nations like Brazil, India and Nigeria- Nigeria, one of the most corrupt, violent, repressive, U.S.-supported nations on the planet-"a stake in upholding the international order" without explaining what he means? He goes as far as saying that American foreign aid for the last 20 years "has done little more than keep pace with inflation," but for all of Bush's endless faults, the one thing he has accomplished is spike the amount of money going to foreign aid, such as it is. The problem isn't the amount. It's its spending restrictions to military purposes or American goods. Is Obama proposing to change that racket? He doesn't say. He proposes to increase aid to $50 billion a year by 2012. Let's see now. Even if the $50 billion was measured against today's economy, that would amount to 0.38 percent of American GDP. That's still well below the 0.7 percent agreed to by the European Union (by 2015), and of course well below the percentage contributed by Sweden (1 percent) and other Scandinavian countries, which come in at 0.8 percent or more. (See the chart here.) By 2012, Obama's pledge will actually amount to barely 0.3 percent. Again, a projection that sounds much better than it really is. Again, a page out of Bush tactics.
Obama's last segment is called "Restoring America's Trust." But by then I've lost trust in Obama. "We can be this America again," he writes, evoking the days "not all that long ago [when] farmers in Venezuela and Indonesia welcomed American doctors to their villages and hung pictures of JFK on their living room walls, when millions, like my father, waited every day for a letter in the mail that would grant them the privilege to come to America to study, work, live, or just be free." In that case why is he painting himself as just another Democrat posing as a Republican and using every sly trick in the book so recently written by George W. Bush? The answer, too, is stale. It isn't Obama's. It's the two-party system, triumphant.
Pierre Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net or through his personal Web site at www.pierretristam.com .
© 2007 Pierre Tristam



93 Comments so far
Show AllI support John Edwards campaign for the Presidency, and his campaign against poverty. I support Edwards Presidential bid BECAUSE of his fight against poverty!
Edwards was not afraid to get his hands dirty working in the 9th Ward in New Orleans before he announced his campaign. He's spent the past 4 years working to eliminate poverty and to improve the lives of working people. He's walked picket lines with Steel Workers and supported labor rights here and Internationally.
While the rest of the candidates debate who will end the war in Iraq at the last possible moment and who can ignore the erosion of our Civil Liberties the longest, at least John Edwards has the guts to be FOR something.
Dennis Kucinich has the guts to call Bush on his criminal corruption of the Constitution, and deserves the respect of all progressive voters.
Edwards has the courage to advance the needs of the American workers and poor - the people who make it possible for the rest of us to waste our time posting on these blogs.
Unless you are like me, over 70 and living on a Union Pension and Social Security, you probably haven't raised a blister on your hands with anything other then a golf club in the past 20 years.
I was raised poor by a Long Shoreman [ILWU]. Harry Bridges was next to god in our house, which really isn't saying much when I think about it. The Old Man worked for every Progressive Campaign from the labor wars on the docks in 1936 till the day he died disappointed as hell in 2002.
It's about time some fat-ass politician remembered that most of the country lives outside the Beltway, and a lot of us get our hands dirty and our backs screwed up doing hard, physical, labor.
And, if you've earned the money for a good haircut, and your bills are paid, go for it. What the hell, the barber can use a little grease too.
While we waste time on this drivel, Obama says that Bush hasn't committed any High Crimes or Misdemeanors. Clinton is trying to prove she has the biggest balls in the crowd, which may not be an improbability. The Republicans have their own Goon Squad routine going.
I really don't think either party expects this election to actually decide who runs the government in 2008.
US Presidential Politics, gotta love it. The only thing more entertaining is watching the NFL justify illegal dog fighting as just a minor problem - Felonies be damned.
Of course the NFL pays millions of dollars to young men encouraging them to knock other kid's heads off and break their legs. I guess they do draw the line at electrocuting the losing QB though.
Sir,
America is at this point in it's history, a one party state. There are no more Republicans and Democrats, but all REPUBLICRATS. The parties of the elephant and donkey no longer exist(even though the Democrats are still asses).
The new logo of the unified corporate party should be the SNAKE. Republicans represent the poisonous head (fangs) of the snake while the Democrats represent the useless tail of the snake. Now we have a Black Mamba running for president.
Sadly - even tho Obama is my senator here in IL - I have to agree with this view of him.
I was hoping for so much more in the beginning.
This reader is grateful for Pierre Tristam's clarity on the Obama phenomenon. I had the displeasure of a glimpse of a current Obama bumper-sticker in traffic, simply the man's last name in large white letters on a dramatic black field with an exclamation point behind it. As usual, the "democratic" party machinery- which includes all the so-called "new blood" in the Obama camp- is incapable of simply crafting a political message without giving it a spectaclist tone,or a culty feel. The Obama cult, led largely by true believers who understand little of the history of their own country as Pierre Tristam notes above, is unafraid of the fact that they're just another political religion with a man on horseback, an ubermensch in sepia.
As usual, the true believers, fooled by the appearance of racial progress, think themselves cutting edge because they're willing to tolerate a black candidate. The black candidate, himself no threat to the established order, is willing to play this for every ounce he can get.
And he'll get a lot, because there are all too many people, black and white in this country, who will cheerfully follow this Obama cult out into yet another imperial crusade, which is why they can ignore his complete capitulation on the war issue. God help this country, and indeed, the world, if they win. Imperialism could be given no larger favor then to have a black face running interference for the monied elite who seek to dominate all of the cultural expression of humanity.
I'm surprised it's taken Mr. Tristam this long to be convinced of Obama's tack toward the right. Like any other front running politician in this country, Obama is a shill and a blackguard.
Ron Paul 2008
I did (past tense) consider voting for Obama. But the more that fool opens his mouth, the more that it is obvious, he's just another cookie cut-out of what is and has gone wrong with our government in the USA. And thankfully, there is a good chance that he won't be president.
I'm hoping the same about Hitlary Cliton, but that's another rat that's clawing her way to the top. And as recent history dictates, people are just stupid enough to put her there.
Obama..same product, new packaging. And why does everyone keep saying he is black..he is bi-racial.
Ron Paul...even further right, wants no Social Services at all. Stated he would do away with Medicare and Medicaid. No healthcare for the aged and disabled.
We need someone without corporate strings.
Kucinich 2008, 2012
So, we've now ruled out all of the "viable" candidates for president. Great. A handful of progressives will be voting for good guys like Gravell and Kucinich, while almost half of the voters stay at home watching TV and the rest vote for one corporate shill or another. Americans' apathy and general lack of informedness will guarantee that we get the same old thing once again.
right on. I wonder what will happen to the Democrats when the republican party explodes. Will this country be run by a tyranny of the majority? or like I think, the Democratic party cannot exist without it's opponent.
I haven't read Obama's piece but i trust Mr. Tristam's analysis...except for hitting the "right tone" with so-called American exceptionalsim. The sooner the people of the US abandon that dangerous human condtion the better....
There is very little difference between a Democrat and a Republican. They both suck at the teat of the war machine, the drug machine and the insurance machine.
The people have NO VOICE. There is no "democracy" in America. Our president was selected by a court and then ratified four years later in a rigged election.
TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION HAS NEVER BEEN MORE APPARENT NOR MORE ABHORENT.
Kucinich '08.
Pierre Tristam's criticism actually makes no sense, because he's listening to what Obama *says* instead of looking at his deeds. By that standard, Bush should be an isolationist (remember? He *said* on the campaign trail that he was opposed to "nation-building", for example) but, obviously that turned out not the case...
Politicians (who want to get elected) *say* a lot of things on the campaign trail.
I'm not saying I'm voting for Obama. I live in California, so I have time to listen and learn before I make up my mind. But the fact is that Obama voted *against* the war. That's a *deed*, my friends. Words are cheap.
The audacity of ignorance.
I've been following him for about a year now and I really, really WANT to like him. After reading his books I felt he really had a plan and could change the direction of this country from the primrose path to destruction it is currently on. While I don't think he's the "perfect" candidate by far, one has to keep in mind what is "electable' and what is not. The sheeple are not going to elect a dove no matter how much they hate this particular war because they are always afraid of some other "bogeyman" around the corner. There is nothing wrong with having a strong military to protect ourselves, the key is to keep them HERE. Bush closed countless bases which provided jobs and security in the communties they were present in. Our military has been effectively gutted by this adminstration, God forbid we really were attacked by any substantial military force, we'd never be able to protect our own country. Again, he's not a perfect candidate by far but he does tend to unify people and that is something this country is in desperate need of right now.
As much as I like Kucinich he is NEVER going to be President, the red state neanderthals are just not going to allow a TRUE progressive to lead this country. Obama might be the best bet at this juncture although I am still watching and hoping for some "perfect" candidate to present themself.
Kristina
>>>
THIS PASSAGE IS IN DESPERATE NEED OF A COMMA AFTER THE SECOND "WORLD."
One of my problems with Obama is the same one I had with Edwards in '04. I voted for Edwards for the Senate, not to send him on his way to the White House. He and Obama walked away from their first term in the Senate and tried to be president. Way too much ambition for me to trust either one of them.
I was about to thank the writer for a detailed item-by-item analysis of Obama's demagoguery, but than I came across this: "On Israel, the best he can say is the same old rehash about Israel being "our strongest ally in the region" (a doubtful assertion anymore)..."
What is meant by this "doubtfull assertion" thing? Is it, by implication, that Hamas is a stronger ally? What about Al-Qaida? Or possibly Hitler was a "strong ally" of USA in the confrontation against USSR? After all - he was "democratically elected" by German people...
Obama is a professional political whore. Why would anyone expect more from a whore?
Hoa binh
Io Q. Lellity wrote
"I'm not saying I'm voting for Obama. I live in California, so I have time to listen and learn before I make up my mind. But the fact is that Obama voted *against* the war. That's a *deed*, my friends. Words are cheap."
A) He wasn't in the Senate when the Iraq resolution came up,
B) He has voted for Iraq supplementals while he was in the Senate, and
C) The Iraq supplemental he just voted against happens to have been voted on after he became an official candidate.
Now, mind you, he spoke out against the war before he was in the Senate. My question is why he supported earlier supplementals and not the one just passed? I find it strange that someone who's opposed to the war would vote FOR any of the supplementals.
I think "old hippie" is on to something here.... i also think Mr. tristam goes a bit far in some of his characterizations and inferences based on the writings of mr obama.. i dont think in this instance it is fair to put words in the mans mouth...
"The mission of the United States is to provide global leadership grounded in the understanding that the world shares a common security and a common humanity"
I dont really see this as a "restatement of the bush doctrine" thats a stretch... While i am not sold in any direction in this campaign, (except against Hillary) I dont see how this statement is offensive... looking at it, it could have come from any president since wilson... i often find myself forgetting that not all politicians are george bush, and i think its unfair to immediately dismiss a candidate this early based on paranoia of a continuation of whats happening.. to fight those urges, imagine fred thompson in the white house, then tell me obama is just as bad.
I'm not voting for any of the so-called front-runners. This particular one is just another waste of time. Until I find one that can tell the whole truth and stand up for it regardless of the smoke and fury of opposition I am pretty much without a hope. As, in my opinion, is our country.
obama did NOT vote against the war; he wasn't in office then. obama is a lot worse than this article makes out; check out paul street's numerous articles on b.o. at zmag.
ann coulter: if you want to vote for a hallmark card, vote for obama. she's right (on this one). 99% of what he says is absolutely nothing, and his 1% of specifics are frightening (100,000 more troops, eg).
People call Obama "black" as opposed to "biracial" for a number of reasons. "Biracial" is a postmodern term coined by white progressives who want to feel good about being intimately involved with someone from another racial background. It does not change the fact that the experience of the "biracial" child, particularly if they are black, is the experience of blackness in the United States. Light skinned- or racially mixed blacks- are given a "free pass" by many whites, depending, of course, on the time of day in the neigborhood we are walking through. But the long-term institutionalized racism that drives this country, and which would like us to believe it has gone away though its acceptance of the idea of a corporate shill with black skin in the white house, remains reality. The very quality of Obama's candidacy is eloquent testimony to the power of racist culture. If Obama spoke with the parlance of say, Al Sharpton, he would not be afforded anywhere near so wide a berth in the national dialogue. It's okay he's black, so long as he covers for his Chicago influences.
We call Obama black, because he's black. Having one white parent, I can assure you, does not make you one less iota black in the United States. What computes at a moral or semantic level doesn't always have any basis in everyday life.
That's right so-called common dreams,,,fiscal and moral responisbility equals republicanism and Billary Clinton's 10 million dollars a year earned as a despicable sell-out to sexaholism, opportunism, and celebrity presidentism instead of substantive social change agenting ...that's i presume the real liberalism?
well i am a leftist for all my life and have made real sacrifices to work shoulder to shoulder with the poor even when whistleblowing has cost me my health and working in social service has cost me my solvency..and i believe that Barack Obama TRANSCENDS LABELS and bankrupt ideologies and manufactured political divisivness, to offer REAL AUTHENTIC dignity, harmony, accountability, hope and honesty to a sick corrupt corporate-entitlement-bound jaded disunified degraded and disintegrating nation so why don't you take your trash talk and stuff your elitist "liberal" ideology (who would want to be one?) and stuff it up your inane self-congratulatory sell-out ass?
Why did he court a foreign-connected PAC (AIPAC) for money?
http://www.aipac.org/Publications/SpeechesByPolicymakers/Barack_Obama_-_AIPAC_Policy_Forum_2007.pdf?
Is he even-handed enough with regard to the mideast to act as a genuine peace broker, or is it more of the same?
"…global terrorists who respond to alienation or perceived injustice with murderous nihilism."
I like that phrase, "perceived injustice". America is threatening and attacking other countries for no justifiable reason and bombing and killing their citizens, and this monkey calls it perceived injustice? I hate to see the real injustice. Who is he kidding anyway, football, Paris Hilton, and American idol watchers?
This guy is even crazier than Bush. Bush started with "compassionate conservatism" and ended up being a war criminal. This guy is going straight for the jugular from the get go, diverting our financial resources to the military by adding at least 100,000 troops and making enormous investment in equipment, armament, weapons systems, and strategic defense. For what purpose and against who, a ragtag bunch called Al Qaeda? Dump the monkey, vote Kucinich.
rjones2818,
It was oldhippie who wrote the passage you quoted from; all I said was "The Audacity of ignorance," though I thought of correcting oldhippie that, indeed, Obama wasn't in the senate when the fateful vote for authorization came up. I do live in California at the moment, but I'm voting for Dennis.
New person here, although not a new reader:
I agree with aminahyaquin. Barack Obama hasn't been in politics long enough to have many corporations in his hip pocket. Give him a chance. Sure, he'll make a few mistakes, but he has less baggage than the others. And he has a real chance of winning.
And, can we quit the name-calling, please!! It's disrespectful and useless. It says more about the person who writes it than it does about the intended target.
The problem with careful critiques like this is that we've been through two cycles of democratic failure in the general election and the thing that was clearly missing was charisma. Even if Obama's policy positions turn out to be as contradictory and disappointing as Gore's in 2000 and Kerry's in 2004, he still has a capacity to relate to people that could put him over the top. But if people like Tristam persist in tearing him down at every opportunity, what will we be left with? Clinton? Giuliani? Romney? Like the anti-war left of the McCarthy-Nixon race, Tristam is missing the forest for the trees. Sure Obama has warts, but he, Kucinich, and Dodd are alone among the field of candidates in having opposed the Iraq war vocally from the beginning. Moreover, judged by his voting record on primarily domestic issues, Obama is light years apart from Bush, who Tristam would have us believe is a similar politician. I've been disappointed in Obama's embrace of a bigger military, among other things, but in the end I am willing to interpret much of what Obama is doing as posturing. When you consider that he is undoubtedly spending a lot of time working the phones and raising money, it is a wonder he has time to put together semi-coherent policy papers on anything at all. Submitting his strategic policy papers to such academic analysis is therefore not all that constructive. The question I have for Tristam is whether a system of elections so profoundly directed by the power of media corporations could possibly lead to a president as pure and uncompromised as he would like? Given that Kerry's ascent in the primaries was connected to his 'electability', is it any wonder that Obama is staking out a centrist position? I think not.
Isn't there anyone who can tell it like it is? Ron Paul, I guess, but he doesn't have the charisma to capture voter's attention. He has the facts, but no evidential leadership qualities. C'mon, someone, step forward. Maybe Colin Powell? He will talk with the Hamas as opposed to "buck teeth" Rice and all the rest.
Give him a chance to do what? Not give us free universal health care, college education and living wage laws? Give him a chance to stay in NAFTA and WTO? Give him a chance to prolong the occupation of Iraq, to start a nuclear war with Iran, and contribute to Palestine never becoming a free nation? Give him a chance to not give full marriage equality to LGBT people?
Because this FAKE has said nothing to make us believe he will do any of that; in fact, he has made it clear he will do none of it. He is a vapid celebrity candidate; a "personable" speaker, but one who is politically centrist to rightist. And if you agree with him, so are you.
But it doesn't matter anyway, because the only position he is "electable" for according to the media and big money is vice president to clinton or Gore. IGNORANCE.
http://www.dreamingearth.net
DUMP THE DEMOCRATS!
UNITE INTO A NEW THIRD PARTY NOW!
We the people, opposed to the destruction of the planet and it's peoples, now atomized and powerless in "grass roots" and "special interest" groups, must unite our efforts and resources into a new party to replace the corrupt Democratic Party! A new party that rejects corporate funding in order to end the corporate plunder of the federal government.
A new party explicitly opposed to the Project for the New American Century. Opposed to unending war for profit and power. Cut the military budget by 50%, shut down the 700 military bases around the world. Re-instate taxes cut by Bush gang.
A new party that commits the entire resources of the country to end global warming, end imperialist wars, implements true non-profit universal health care. promotes mass transportation, develops renewaable energy, and produces the essentials for human survival.
A new party that promotes an economy that works towards fulfilling the economic needs of all the people, not just to profit a tiny minority of super wealthy. No more people living on the streets! No more hospitalized people being dumped into the streets when they have no money or health insurance! (See the film SICKO)
A new party to unite all of the oppressed people of this country. A new party that cuts across all the false social and cultural divisions that keep us forever powerless (racial, ethnic, age, language, etc.). A new party to unite us against the unending destruction of peoples and planet.
A SOCIALIST HUMANIST PARTY to promote the end of gangster capitalism, run-amok capitalism, which is supported by both Democratic and Republican parties.
A new party to support the labor movement and all working people. We urge the labor movement to stop supporting the Democratic Party (already besotted by corporate money), and to focus its precious resources to fund a new national radio and television network. By being on the air 24 hours a day the labor movement can provide the latest news, information, education and current affairs analysis desperately needed by all working people. This effort, combined with the formation of the new party, will be a bold step towards reviving the organized labor movement.
For years we have listened to radio programs like DEMOCRACY NOW! that has discussed with numerous "grass roots" groups desperately struggling to make a positive change in society. Anti-war protest groups, civil rights groups, union struggles, affordable housing groups, teachers unions, health care access, seniors about Social Security, have involved millions of people. Now is the time to unite the energy and resources of the people into a new party.
The new party provides a means of uniting the "special interest" agendas of each group into the platform of the new party. The new party candidates, selected from the various individuals and groups, would become the candidates representing their cause and the new party. The new party will contest for office at every level of government in order to take power. The new party will provide the new leadership and new programs this country desperately needs.
There is still time before November 2008 elections to start this process. Even the announcement and preparation for a founding convention of such a new party will shock both Democrats and Republican incumbents. They will know that their days are numbered!
The needs of all previous "minority" and "special interests" people now become the platform of the new party representing the vast majority of people. Can the existing activists of so-called "minority" and "special interest" groups overcome their existing powerlessness, and link up with each other to start this new party?
This all-inclusive struggle will attract millions of atomized working people, often non-voters and uninvolved people, who have been atomized, exploited, brain-washed by corporate media and ultimately destroyed by gangster capitalism.
Just a little historical note to iafrompa. Adolf Hitler was not elected to office in Germany. This is a story that has made the rounds especially in right wing circles but is now a generally accepted urban legend. Hitler ran for president in 1932 and had a poor showing. He was appointed chancellor by President von Hindenburg in 1933 during a political crisis. He quickly assumed full power after von Hindenburg died in 1934.
As for Senator Obama, he is obviously sending a signal to the defense contractors. He wants them to know that the party is not over if he is elected. That way they may not decide to contribute against him, if you understand my meaning.
Primaries in a few states early next year will determine the putative Democratic nominee. For the rest of us, once again the system will serve up a Democratic nominee for whom we will have to vote holding our noses (unless we live in "safe" states like NY or CAL, where we could vote for a Green or somebody like it).
Stop making believe you actually get to decide these things.
Still, Tristam's analysis is important lest activists invest their time campaigning for someone like Obama instead of educating and organizing for important social change issues.
"The American moment is not over.." Hogwash! Of course the American moment is over. The question is whether the US government and its people are willing to accept their fate humbly, with dignity and grace, or are they going to thrash around like a dying giant, not only violating every standard of decency but threatening the very survival of the human race. And Obama is doing his best to convince me that as president he would choose the latter, as would Hillary and all the Republicans (except Paul, who can be branded a lunatic for other reasons).
Not that Gore is any great or admirable man, but he may be the only one who could possibly win the presidency and get us through the next 10 years without starting a thermo-nuclear war.
Elect Obama but let Bill Richardson run foreign policy.
I shudder at the prospect of administrations led by Obama or Clinton, our two front runners. They both are jingoistic in view, and they both stand for an engorged, fat military, presumably because they fear being called "weak" by our multitudes of hawks. What the hell is wrong with peace? Why not admit that America no longer is "the" world leader, if we ever were? Woe be unto us, because the likely new President will be almost as wrong as Bush, just less stupid.
I'm somewhat surprised at all the negative comments about Obama, and in response to a particular treatise that he wrote. I strongly disagree with most of the criticism, but there isn't enough space here -- nor do I have the time just now -- to rebut all of it. However, I will comment on one specific issue; I absolutely agree with Obama that the army and marine corps must be expanded. I am not a warmonger, and I believe that military action should never be taken unless absolutely necessary. I supported the action in Afghanistan (though never Bush), and was absolutely opposed to the invasion of Iraq. And while I believe that Bush's "war on terror" is a tragic misnomer, I recognize that in order to combat the militarized Islamists effectively, we need to have, on the one hand, a significant number of special forces who can seek out and destroy those who wish to destroy us, wherever they are. On the other hand, we had better learn how to truly win the hearts and minds of moderate Muslims by showing that we are not in a holy war against Islam, and that we seek only to live in peace with other peoples and other nations around the world.
I am supporting Obama because I believe that his heart and mind are in the right place...or should I say the correct place. Nevertheless, I'm not sure that he can be elected. Frankly, my fervent wish would be to see a Gore-Obama ticket. Now that would be a winner, and our country and the world would be infinitely better off. Perhaps that might still happen.
I have a question: What's wrong with Oprah? I guess racial identity politics (in this case thankfully not gendered ala' Triangulator Hillary Worship, Inc.) is still thicker than water. So much political delusion and confusion in the U.S.! Edwards is the only minimally decent mainstream candidate, and Kucinich is the only wholly desirable one. Oh, but he's too short and funny looking. The tall but also funny looking Abe Lincoln also could never make the cut today. So tragic...
Hey Jess...
http://www.kucinich.us
Vote for Bill Richardson
Io Q. Lellity, my apologies. I'm new, and I'm used to names being under their comments. I still stand by my question as to how support for supplementals is not support for the war. I'm glad to see you're supporting the same candidate I am!
I couldn't agree more with the article and most of the comments here. In particular steve p : " As for Senator Obama, he is obviously sending a signal to the defense contractors. He wants them to know that the party is not over if he is elected."
It is becoming clearer by the day that Obama is really GWB in 'sheep's clothing."
Or even more ominously :a St.John of Patmos desperately trying to pitch fork himself into becoming the ( Holy) Roman Emperor.
One couldn't conceive of a better ,more sure-fire way to precipitate Armageddon.
God help the world should Obama be elected. Remember Richard Nixon - who dramatically escalated the Vietnam War once he got elected.
Why are Americans (despite all their learning , their rugged individualism, and all their accomplishments) such sheep .Practically begging to be led by such dangerous demagogues down the high road to ruin.
They are ALL US exceptionalist-imperialists - every single goddamn one of them - except Kucinich, and Paul, who is completely unacceptable for other reasons namely that he is ass-kissing Ayn Randite lover of dog-eat-dog capitalist brutishness.
Obama is an ambitious politician like the Clintons and he has the necessary financial backing like the Clintons.
Ask him if he approves of GATT, WTO, NAFTA, CAFTA and the ultimate SHAFTA of US citizens as a result of these trade agreements written by, for and of the corporations.
OBOMBA
There are some honest insightful individuals that are speaking the truth, but who's listening? Who's holding their hands over ears?
Scott Ritter, former Chief UN Weapons Inspector sums it up nicely ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O125hGt9qt4
When Obama said that impeachment should be reserved for grave offenses, and that Bush had not committed any grave offenses, I knew the man to be a fool. When attacking a country for no good reason and killing a million people is not a grave offense in your mind, you don't have a mind.
Good question, Gail (three comments ago)---let's find out how he thinks about the trade agreements. I think that is the big test. Maybe it comes down to whether he supports labor and strong international labor standards---and human rights, all of which are tied together and could expose a candidate.
Edwards has the advantage of having been the only candidate (aside from Kucinich, of course) who talks consistently about poverty and who has kept the victims of Hurrican Katrina in the forefront in his e-mails. I think he is pretty plastic, but I like him better than the others. Kucinich is the best but there's something about the way this country has been set up to look for a patriarchical type to run things that seems to preclude success on his part.
I read Obama's "Audacity of Hope" and found him to be more centrist than I had had the audacity to hope. His strength lies in his ability to inspire, but I am not feeling very susceptible to his seduction.
Also, I agree with Ron that Obama was 'way far off the mark when he said impeachment should be reserved for grave offenses. Wha??????
i thought he was OK until I read this
just another gd asshole only out for himself like the clintons
and probably tied to narco biz also
legalize it all
ask Hilary about Mena, anyone yet?
has she answered?
of course not
kill them all is best idea
all politicians and lawyers
engineers need to be in charge
not bloodsucking lawyers, or fat cat corporate greedy assholes
Viva La Revolution!
but not in complacent obese arrogant USA
forget it
will not happen, next voting time, will be the same thing
Jefferson,Washington,Franklin are rolling in their graves
Viva Cuba,Venezuela, Ecuador,Bolivia, Nicaragua
wake up stupid american people get off the TV
do something. or not
think of a future
Vote Hemp
the only salvation for USA and the american farmer