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Why Barack Obama Got My Vote
I just flew back from Australia, where I was speaking about the erosions of our civil liberties. Believe me, the rest of the world is agog at our inaction as what makes us Americans is being set aflame; and they are more scared of what an unsheathed US could do to the rest of the world than we are.
They also get more news out in the rest of the world about these depredations than we do here in our media bubble.
For instance: As the Australian reported earlier this week, New South Wales Justice of the Peace Mamdouh Habib is suing the Australian federal government -- which under the Howard administration had colluded with the US in committing various abuses against detainees and due process -- for having allowed him to be arrested wrongly in Pakistan in 2001, kidnapped and sent illegally to Egypt. There this Justice of the Peace was illegally imprisoned and tortured for six months. After that the United States held him for FOUR YEARS in Guantanamo. His complaint notes that he is a law-abiding citizen who was swept up under false pretexts. "It turns out that Habib has incontrovertible proof of his good standing," the Australian noted. "[H]e is a fully accredited Justice of the Peace in NSW. A search of the NSW Attorney General's Department website reveals that not only Habib, but his wife Maha Habib, is a JP." To become justice of the peace in New South Wales, the Australian added, "you have to be NOMINATED BY A MEMBER OF THE NSW PARLIAMENT and submit to a full character inquiry, including a criminal records check by NSW Police." (ALL CAPS mine)
Get that? A justice of the peace in a developed-world democracy. Had you heard of that?
Me neither.
This gave me chills because, once again, it is so scarily predictable: when I first started trying to alert people about the ramifications of the Military Commissions Act, and how it gives the US power to seize innocent people off the street simply by the President's naming them 'enemy combatants', I pointed out that nothing would prevent the US from rendering an EU minister off the streets of Belgium -- and flying him or her to a `black site' for torture -- if he or she opposed a US pipeline plan, or was prosecuting US war criminals such as Rumsfeld in the Hague. And that the clear lesson of Germany and other closing societies such as Argentina is that once those 'disappearances' begin, that is it; few are then brave enough to object -- and at that point objection is too weak to be effective anyway.
They rendered an Australian justice of the peace -- and that rendition did not even make the US news. So how can we be sure there is something so sacred about an American justice of the peace or even a judge? Say, an American judge who ruled against the Military Commissions?
This kind of leap to the next level of threat to us as citizens seems implausible to many people because they assume that there is an orderly and effective democratic response to this kind of eruption of lawlessness --- (oh gosh, actually it isn't lawlessness any more, now is it) -- or, I should say, to this kind of abrupt shift to a heightened level of state sadism; Well -- someone would bring charges!, one assumes. Or: someone would sue! Or: surely the ACLU would do something!
But seriously, I ask you to consider: What would indeed happen as a countermove if a US justice of the peace or a judge was rendered? The Bar Association would protest? Scary. Intimidating.
I raise this as an urgent matter in part because of a recent conference call I participated in with Hamid Khan, the head of the courageous movement of Pakistani lawyers and judges. In the call, which he made in spite of great danger to himself and probably to his family, there was a moment when he described the internecine warfare and factionalism of the opposition to Musharraf. In his voice was the tired, frustrated sound I have heard so often in this country when groups on the left JUST CAN'T GET IT TOGETHER. No matter how urgent the need is. Whereas in Pakistan's case they were having trouble getting the anti-Musharraf forces to act together -- and there was so much at stake.
What became clear from that call is that we are fools to assume that if the government makes a dramatically violent move, which all the laws I have highlighted now make entirely possible, that anyone will know clearly what to do or how to implement what should be done in response. In Pakistan, it was clear, in spite of this powerful grassroots movement, no one had a clear Plan B when Musharraf declared a state of emergency and began rounding up the lawyers and arresting the judges. No one had an unquestioned leadership structure in place for the countermovement; no one had a subcontinent-sized phone tree or a nice big -- oh, nation-sized -- conference room in which to meet.
We need to consider this right now when we think about our own country: In a sudden sharp move on the part of the US government, even a `small' one such as this imagined scenario of the rendition of a handful of US judges, there is nothing a democracy is prepared effectively to do; that is the nature of democracy. There is no War Room for democracy; no one has an organizational chart detailing who would do what; no one would have a master strategy.
When people think about the many laws that invite this kind of overreaching now in the US -- the National Security Presidential Directive (NSPD 51), for instance, that would give the President control over all branches of government -- executive, legislative, and judicial -- in the event of an emergency -- they just assume that, gosh darn it, WE WON'T TAKE IT. And it may well be that we wouldn't want to take it and we would be willing in great numbers to run to the ramparts. But here is what I have to report to you, that the conference call made clear, and my Pakistani friend would confirm this: in a crackdown, even in the best-case scenario, NO ONE KNOWS WHERE THE RAMPARTS ARE.
Many people have expressed faith in the Military. I am sure most of our military are patriots and cherish freedom; but who would direct a resistance to such an edict? What would be the chain of command? What about ordnance? Many people have expressed faith in the courts, but if they went after the judges -- just a handful of judges -- as they did in Pakistan, would the judiciary prevail? How? All closed societies have judiciaries; the judges just know which way to rule.
Many others assume the media will cover such a depredation and rouse people; well, ideally -- but just days ago we saw a curious blackout of a 60 Minutes report on Don Siegelman, the Democrat probably wrongly jailed in Alabama, by a TV affiliate with close ties to the White House.
Resistance? Sure, but how? The trouble with an aggressive move in any one of these directions on the part of the government is that THEY HAVE THOUGHT ABOUT WHAT IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN and we have not. They aren't surprised or shocked; we are. They have a plan; we don't.
So surely, better to roll back these terrifying laws. Just in case.
I have noted it is always true that societies that begin by torturing people at the margins end up torturing members of their own citizenry. Consider again: the Oscar-winning documentary for this year, Taxi to the Dark Side, which proves that any of us can become a monster torturer, following orders, and proves also that the edict to torture was systemic and came from the very top, won't be seen by most Americans. This is because the Discovery Channel bought it hoping to air it -- but then backed out. (Its affiliates have close ties to the military-industrial complex.) Will the Oscar win get it on the airwaves? Doubtful. Watch it somehow and drag all your friends to see it. Then consider that what happened to Dilawar, an innocent Afghani taxi driver, could happen to you or me.
When I went to see it in a theatre there were six people present. So America can't know in time what is being done to others to take steps to protect ourselves.
What is leadership? Leadership means getting out in front of where people are and waking them up. Right now, given these violent possible threats to us and our families, we are sleeping.
Which is why I am formally coming out of the closet with my support for Senator Barack Obama. Of all the candidates running now, he is the leader on understanding the threat to the Constitution and actually taking action, not just mouthing soundbites, on the need to deny torturers space in our nation and to restore the rule of law.
"Lawyers for Gitmo detainees endorse Obama," read a recent headline on the Boston Globe's political blog. In the article, reporter Charlie Savage notes that "More than 80 volunteer lawyers for Guantanamo Bay detainees today endorsed Illinois Senator Barack Obama's presidential bid. The attorneys said in a joint statement that they believed Obama was the best choice to roll back the Bush-Cheney administration's detention policies in the war on terrorism and thereby to 'restore the rule of law, demonstrate our commitment to human rights, and repair our reputation in the world community.'"
The lawyers who signed this letter -- prominent names on the list included Washington lawyer Thomas Wilner, retired federal appeals court judge John Gibbons, and retired Rear Admiral Donald Guter, who was the Navy's top JAG officer from 2000 to 2002 -- applauded Obama for having stood up in 2006 against aspects of the Military Commissions Act. Unfortunately, his fight was ultimately unsuccessful -- which is why we are all still in danger. But unlike other candidates he truly fought and he understood the nature of the danger: "When we were walking the halls of the Capitol trying to win over enough Senators to beat back the Administration's bill, Senator Obama made his key staffers and even his offices available to help us," the lawyers wrote. "Senator Obama worked with us to count the votes, and he personally lobbied colleagues who worried about the political ramifications of voting to preserve habeas corpus for the men held at Guantanamo. He has understood that our strength as a nation stems from our commitment to our core values, and that we are strong enough to protect both our security and those values. Senator Obama demonstrated real leadership then and since, continuing to raise Guantanamo and habeas corpus in his speeches and in the debates."
Senator Clinton also opposed the law. In 2006 she said: "If enacted, this law would give license to this Administration to pick people up off the streets of the United States and hold them indefinitely without charges and without legal recourse." She gets the danger; many of her colleagues do too. But this issue requires bold language and action. Senator Clinton has not foregrounded the issue of the subversion of the rule of law in her appearances or speeches; and I am very VERY sorry to say that she did not oppose torture until she opposed it.
I say this with regret: She and her husband really know how to run a country; they delivered eight years of peace and prosperity. I know her to be a skilled politician and motivated by sincere love of country. Mrs. Clinton would be a terrific executive -- in a stable democracy. But that is not enough right now. These are times that should try men's souls -- and women's also. In a closing society, a leader has to be willing to face down evil, engage it and call it by its name.
Remember: when activists started to push hard to raise awareness of the dangers of torture and indefinite detention, many on the Hill were scared to join the fight because it was then politically unpopular. But to me, if you are not really against torture -- always and under every political change in climate, and let us note that former torture victim and prisoner of war John McCain shamefully dropped his fight against the torture loopholes in the law as well -- then you are not really, in my view, fit to be an American President.
Gender has nothing to do with it. Race has nothing to do with it.
Integrity has something to do with it.
That is why Barack Obama has my vote. Of all the leading candidates, he is the only one on these issues who has consistently acted like a true American.
And if I hear -- as I am likely to -- from legions of US feminists outraged at me for choosing this man over that woman, I will gladly sit down and explain why I am certain that these issues are so urgent that they overshadow absolutely everything else.
Anyway, the man is a feminist; he has a woman-friendly policy vision. And while it would be a thrill to see the first woman elected President, in the last analysis, a real feminist need not define people or support on the basis of gender. Certainly not when our house -- with the precious Constitution held without representation within it -- is burning down.
Naomi Wolf is the author of The End of America (Chelsea Green) and the co-founder of the American Freedom Campaign.
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
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113 Comments so far
Show Allruthru March 2nd, 2008 5:36 am
in the spirit of debate,
"It sounds like you're suggesting that Nader become part of the problem"
"To suggest that running for president is a waste of time begs the question: Why is it a waste of time?"
"He's giving a voice to the very element of our government that has been neglected and blatantly ignored for the last thirty years - the people."
no, im just saying nader's aspirations are more then unrealistic and misguided, if he's looking for a platform to pontificate our misgivings (an important role) a voice in the senate/congress would be a much better way for nader to express his wisdom (and i agree many of his thoughts are outstanding, living minimum wage, taxing trades on wall street, believe me i've followed nader's celestial track for 15 years, his ideas have merit).
i think most posters hear have good ears. for example i'm listening to a recording on the radio of william buckley right now. i could identify his voice (in context) with in hearing it for 4 seconds. and so it is w/ pat leahey, russ fiengold, edward kennedy, dennis kucinich, patrick moynihan (just think for a moment what his voice sounded like), john conyers, amy goodman, noam chomsky, howard zinn, jonathon kozal and yes ralph nader. why can I instantly recognize their voices? (as many here can). it's because these people engage the public, the politicians (congresspeople/senators) engage the people/corporations daily. it's why their voices are easier for us to recognize (waxman, boxer, wellstone).
it's a legitimate question. why ralph nader, such a devotee of people's rights and dignity, will not attempt to actually represent people (help them/guide them/advocate for their needs)? despite his wisdom he doesn't have credibility as a representative of the people (yes, mckinney does have experience), of any people. the president actually represents people and interacts with everybody else in america (the other 92% that could care less about progressive agendas, those who can't distinguish between n chomsky's voice and david gergan's voice , or those who immediately perceived jessie jackson's 1988 campaign as a black campaign instead of a campaign representing a broad coalition - including progressives).
we have to help the masses and guide them, the next time a conversation arises about clinton or mccain being preferable candidates to obama, just remind them obama was endorsed by lawyers defending the rights of people illegally being detained and tortured in guantanamo (another good reason for dialog b/w leaders, perhaps after guantanamo is closed obama can return the land to cuba).
vote your conscience........
please donate to kucinich and sheehan.............
.....peace......................
did the media pre-selling of B.O. start at the 2004 Democratic convention? My hard earned gut instinct is to take the memes of the media with a truckload of salt so as SNL finally broke in the mainstream I have been for quite some time - frustrated with the patheticly obvious cheerleading for Mr Obama.
Why is he never asked if he will drop out if he doesn't win both TX and OH by miles? When he's back in the polls MSM news pushes the big MO theme. The MSM news spends half the time trying to discredit Hillary and the other half on trying to make B.O. look blameless and faultless.
"Senator Barack Obama.... Of all the candidates running now, he is the leader on understanding the threat to the Constitution..." and he taught Constitutional law.
A question for him: Bush and Cheney, have they upheld the Constitution as they swore to do, or violated it? If the later. does Obama support impeachment, why or why not?
"What Barak Obama offers me are speeches filled with promise and empty of fact."
Ditto on that. But the wanna feel-good folks like him lots.
Why was it when JFK ran for President we knew exactly for which he stood. Yet Obama all we here is pretty speeches which are vague.
Now Senator Clinton like it or not you know where she stands.
Me I think Senator Obama is just another puppet this time in Anti Bush clothing. But if you got to find that out for yourselves, Hey it is your grand kids future anyway right
I was there and JFK was no JFK. He was myth and legend. He was willing and able to conduct all sorts of imperialist adventures under the radar. He brought the world to the frightening brink of nuclear war with the Cuban missile crisis. Poverty and racism still reigned here. He may have done less than Eisenhower on those issues. That being said, there were probably worse elements who wanted him out of the way because he would not support everything they wished to do vis a vis Cuba, Vietnam etc.
We have to get over the angel vs. devil views of politics. It is silly and childish. Most politicians are malleable opportunists who go where the rewards are. Our job is to organize things that will reward those opportunists for doing the right thing and punish them for wrong behavior. We are competing against big money and power, but "we are many".
Naomi Wolf thinks Obama will not be inclined to invoke the fascist regulations that have come systematically creeping in on little cats' feet. After hearing Obama's speeches on habeas corpus and other issues, I tend to agree. How forcefully he or anyone else stands up to others is almost entirely up to us. The hordes of Obama supporters need to be educated that electing a rock star is not the end of our jobs as citizens. He has to be watched. Our job is to organize things that will reward him for doing the right thing and punish him for wrong behavior.
Frankly, I hope we get to the elections. I am holding my breath that we don't have an assassination or a crisis (as per the other Naomi) that allows Order 51 to be invoked before November.
This editor is very sticky. Please ignore double post, if it appears.
Thanks,
Joe
Your vote in a presidential election cannot at present get you radical change. It's important to understand the limits of a particular tactic, and, as a tactic, voting in an election limits you to choosing between two elite factions with similar agendas but significant differences that may make the difference between life and death globally, and, as Wolf points out, between civil liberties and fascism domestically.
In particular, we don't have the power to implement Nader's agenda by the simple means of putting a piece of paper in a ballot box. That will require electoral reform to put in at a minimum instant runoff voting, which could break the blackmail of the Democratic / Republican duopoly. Dems and Pubs will fight this like the plague, but that is the real fight. So Nader is proposing unrealizable change based upon some fantasy of implementing radical reforms via the ballot box.
Nader's legislative victories in implementing regulative reforms are in the past, and have always relied upon the grass roots pressure of civil rights and peace movements that preceded those achievements. Nader actually acknowledges this in a recent documentary (Ralph Nader: An Unreasonable Man) reviewing his work.
Those are the kinds of movements that we need now to create real change. Nader was not a significant part of those movements and he is not spearheading them now. Now, he is a reformer without a radical movement to
coopt (and I don't mean that in a bad way, but am only saying that he has reaped what others have sown; reaping is also an honorable and necessary activity). Because of the present lack of a strong progressive movement, the Bushies are presently in the process of trampling Nader's (very significant) past attainments underfoot.
That is why Nader's present campaign is at best a distraction and at worst will confuse people about what their real, attainable choices are in this election.
Regarding Obama, Naomi Wolf has far too many illusions. Obama is the person chosen by corporate and wealthy elites to clean up the mess made by the Bush Administration and make the world safe again for (a more subdued) U.S. Imperialism.
This represents a shift away from the neoliberal strategy and toward a more accomodative geopolitical strategy. There are still neoliberals, but the balance has shifted away from them due to the disaster they have created for the U.S., including U.S. elites.
This shift has been necessitated in part by the development of a de facto multi-polar world, in which other nations have significant influence, and increasingly have influence on U.S. foreign policy, and on the U.S. economy as well.
Bush has proven a bad manager of the imperial ship of state. The Bushies, in their greed and hubris, seem to think that they can ignore the stability of the U.S., even though classically imperialism has needed a stable aircraft carrier of a nation state from which to launch its dominating forays into the larger world.
Other nations have not forgotten their national interests and have gained significant ground vs. the U.S. China in particular has swept large amounts of industrial capacity behind its own borders, as the U.S. under NAFTA, CAFTA, APEC, etc. has encouraged the export of industrial capacity while allowing the import of goods produced by that exported capacity, resulting in huge trade deficits. Europe is in the process of securing for its own Euro the status of reserve currency that has up until now been the dollar's bailiwick and a cornerstone of U.S. economic power. In the meantime, U.S. military power has been humiliated and compromised.
All of this has driven up the U.S. trade deficit, driven down the dollar, and has consequently given creditor nations such as China unprecedented pressure points with which to affect U.S. political decisionmaking. I believe that this is a major reason that the U.S. has not attacked Iran.
Obama is the most talented politician to rise to prominence in my lifetime - even more gifted than Bill Clinton in his heyday. He will have to convince our own newly-impoverished population to keep its anger under wraps, while implementing modest reforms, and at the same time providing a more friendly and accomodating face to foreign governments, attempting to patch up the damage done by Bush to the imperial alliance. Then, he will turn his attention to subduing the "upstarts" like Hugo Chavez in our own "backyard."
He will also try to repair the damage done to the U.S. military chain saw, which Bush has been knocking teeth off of daily by hacking away at the surprisingly defiant little nation of Iraq.
If you listen to Obama in the various debates, the above is pretty much what he has said he will do, and often in fairly direct language.
In short, I see Obama as a choice that has been forced upon elites by imperial failures and foreign pressure. He will be much better than Bush has been, because he has to be.
This is of course a degrading situation for the U.S., that our people have so completely lost control of our government that it has to be partially brought to heel by foreign nations finally banding together to subdue the beast. We should all flagellate ourselves accordingly. Still, it is better than letting the Bushies continue to run amok.
I imagine everyone reading this article knows what is coming economically. These are the interesting times referred to by the proverbial curse.
Personally, I voted for Obama in the primary. As already mentioned, there is no sense in pretending that you have power that you don't have, for that may result in a failure to use the power that you do have. The power that we have, so far as an election is concerned, is to choose between these two elite factions. To attain more serious power will require a grass roots upsurge and electoral reform, including instant runoff voting that will break the duopoly, not just the casting of a ballot for one or another anointed candidate.
April 23, 2008
BARACK OBAMA HAS LOST MY VOTE BECAUSE HE IS NOT A STRONG LEADER and PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATOR (the PROOF lies in the fact BARACK OBAMA HAS NOT DEFEATED HILARY CLINTON by now - America's #1 negative low-life slimy politician)
I have actively supported 200% SENATOR BARACK OBAMA for PRESIDENT over the last year here in San Francisco, CA and because of the following reasons, I am switching my vote to JOHN MCCAIN:
1. Barack Obama cannot figure out how to defeat Hilary Clinton by now, America's #1 negative low-life slimy politician.
Hilary Clinton is an human monster, a poor excuse as a political leader, a fake Christian, and an evil human being.
Barack Obama does not have the RIGHT STUFF to be America's president and defeat Hilary Clinton by now like Ronald Reagan did to defeat Jimmy Carter in the 1980 election year - and JFK did to defeat Richard Nixon in the 1960 election year.
Only a WIMP or a WUSS would LET HILARY CINTON beat them!
2. Barack Obama conducted a weak negative campaign in the Pennsylvania primary which is totally unacceptable - Barack Obama has lowered himself to Hilary Clinton's evil low-life slimy politician level.
3. Barack Obama does not know how to focus on and solely discuss the most important issues of this 2008 election year that major concerns educated Americans - ending the US war in Iraq and the fixing US economy to be fiscally healthy again!
~DR. EDWARD PATRICK HILL, Author, Environmentalist, Decorated Vietnam Veteran~
*VISUALIZE WORLD PEACE & END ALL EVIL WARS=
*SAVE the EARTH'S ENVIRONMENT and PROTECT the ANIMAL KINGDOM
258 21st Avenue #2
San Francisco, CA 94121
Email - worldpeaceispossible@comcast.net
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The improper use of Payday Loans can lead to mortgage crisis that is why one of the biggest targets for politicians, as far as economics are concerned, is becoming the payday loan industry. Governors across the country are trying to rid their states of the industry altogether, and so far, Georgia, North Carolina, and Oregon have succeeded. The result was that bankruptcies, foreclosures, and also the number of overdraft fees due to bouncing checks went through the roof, which doesn’t do anything for the citizens afflicted in these turbulent times, and only is really good for the banking industry. Despite these negative effects, other states are looking to follow the example and do the same. Even at the national level, presidential candidate Barack Obama, is weighing in his own agenda on the issue, and advancing his own intentions on getting rid of the industry in the United States completely. If these measures, both on state levels and nationally, are successful, the results are going to be increased unemployment, more debt, more foreclosures, and an even worse economy.
Thank God for our new President. Lets all wish him the best of luck and hope he does a much better job than the last one. To tell you the truth not to do a better job than the last one is almost impossible. So, instead lets hope he is the best President ever. This is from Trading Forex Reviews.Com at http://www.tradingforexreviews.com/ and our entire staff hopes he does a great job.