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Making Ourselves Make Him Do It
At the start of last Saturday's antiwar demonstration in San Francisco it looked like about half the crowd had shown up to give the other half a leaflet or sell them a newspaper. I don't know what the attendance finally amounted to - maybe 1,500; maybe 3,000; some might think more. But I know it wasn't 10,000. And the irony of the situation is that I'm pretty sure it would have been a lot more impressive if John McCain were in the White House.
There's some interesting things bubbling up in the US these days, to be sure.
It took a major economic crisis to get here, of course, but all of a sudden it's no longer okay for people to just take as much as they can in salary or profit. The financier or investment manager is no longer necessarily your best friend and making it easier for people to join unions doesn't seem like an idea out of the nineteenth century or even the twentieth century - it's become downright relevant. Unfortunately, this new clarity does not yet seem to extend beyond our borders.
Take, for instance, the recent comments of Bush-holdover Defense Secretary Robert Gates to the effect that his Department's Quadrennial Defense Review would cast a critical eye on the supposition that the US need be prepared to fight "only" two major wars simultaneously. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the thinking goes, have been harder than they should have been - we've been at them longer than we were in World War II. Now, there is a genuine logic to this consideration because a country first of all obviously has to be prepared to fight as many wars as it starts. And then what if, on top of that, another country should actually attack us? This eventuality is, after all, the historical justification for maintaining armies and fighting wars and you arguably increase the likelihood of making more enemies the more countries you attack. But have we heard any response out of Washington to the effect that what we really need to do is stop starting wars?
The Republicans rose up as one to oppose President Obama's economic plan, but not surprisingly his foreign policy has aroused no comparable outrage among them. In fact, John McCain may be downright envious. He knows he couldn't have gotten away with ordering 17,000 more troops to Afghanistan while claiming it was part of his search for an "exit policy," as Obama has done, and not faced a revived antiwar movement.
No, in addition to having their man still in the Defense Department, Republicans have little to complain about regarding Iraq policy either. Yes, President Obama promises to withdraw all American troops from Iraq, while candidate Obama spoke of leaving tens of thousands of them there indefinitely, but then all he's doing is reiterating the troop withdrawal policy negotiated by George Bush. And his withdrawal timetable is sufficiently slow that it has drawn criticism not from congressional Republicans but from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, not generally known for going out of her way to criticize a Democratic president.
The most sympathetic apologist argument for Obama maintains that he is in some sense a captive of the White House who must give on these foreign policy matters in order to accomplish anything domestically. But even if we were to ignore for the moment the moral question of trading the lives of American soldiers and foreign nationals for more acceptable rates of interest or unemployment, the rest of us are not captives of the White House.
A recent article by long time antiwar activist Tom Hayden explained away last year's decline in attendance at antiwar rallies, arguing that given "a choice between supporting Barack Obama and attending rallies organized by various Maoists, Trotskyists and neo-anarchists opposed to Obama and electoral politics, the grassroots peace movement headed for the precincts by the thousands." But this, I think, is too generous. Yes, there were certainly Monty Python-like moments of obscurity at Saturday's San Francisco rally when it seemed as if the speaker from the Revolutionary Brotherhood of Brothers would turn the mike over to the representative of the Associated Federation of Organizations, and so forth. And yet when the war(s) seemed a pressing issue, it did not much matter who the rallies' organizers were - their identities and politics were subsumed in the larger throngs. Nor would it now, were there consensus on the need to put serious pressure on the White House.
The dominant rhetorical chestnut of the still young Obama era has been the one about FDR telling his supporters to make him do some of the things he already wanted to do but on which he perceived the need for visibly broad public support. Good enough, yet the telling and retelling of this tale comes in an environment where most of Obama's supporters seem to be waiting for a signal from the White House to tell them what issue to push Congress on - precisely what the Democratic National Committee's Organizing for America website proposes to provide.
Now the Internet is a wonderful thing but it only does what people make it do. And if you're waiting for an email from the White House asking you to head out to that rally to tell Congress to get our troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan as soon as possible, well you could be in for a pretty long wait.
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11 Comments so far
Show AllHe doesn't care.
He has already thrown in his lot.
Wow:
"although he hopes that anyone considering sending along unpleasantries will take it out on their significant other instead"
That's a really nasty thing to say. I don't find that funny at all.
No one is biting here, huh..
How sad, but then, here is where we stand:
http://www.counterpunch.org/donnelly03242009.html
I had the same thought (about the lack of biting).
Is it me, or has CD increased the number of articles appearing each day? New articles used to pop up in the late morning (Eastern Time); now they appear much earlier. I've wondered if this approach is intended to spread out comments over a wider range of articles, thus lessening the chances of long, contentious threads and comments that upset delicate readers.
It doesn't make much sense, but CD sends so many mixed signals that it's impossible to discern a consistent editorial policy.
ยท Yr Obd't Servant
I was active in the peace movement in San Francisco under Clinton and the movement was small and believed Clinton was progressive. Our protest to stop the "No Fly Zones" which killed over a million Iraqis during Clinton's rule drew a few hundred. The bombing of Serbia drew 50. Protests to stop Clinton from signing NAFTA almost none. The march to stop Clinton from doing away with the Glass-Steagall Act which opened the door to the current economic crisis attracted Food Not Bombs and the hungry. It is great that Obama is planting a Food Not Lawns Garden at the White House but we need to do more then ever to turn things around.
Things are falling apart and while it would be good if the public organized to move Obama towards an end to the wars and the creation of solar power it just might not be enough. Organizing local community solutions is urgent. Can we feed our communities and provide fresh drinking water? Can we create a climate where food riots don't destroy more food then we can grow. Climate change, the failing economy and the push by corporate leaders to maintain control through force is an ugly mixture. Building grassroots community based solutions free from corporate control is urgent. We saw how well it went for the people displaced by Katrina. Groups like Food Not Bombs, Veterans For Peace and Common Grounds were the only ones that came to the rescue. Now that we are facing a global Katrina maybe it is time for people to seek out low tech solutions like these groups. Returning to the glory days of American Empire just might not be in the cards.
"A recent article by long time antiwar activist Tom Hayden explained away last year's decline in attendance at antiwar rallies, arguing that given "a choice between supporting Barack Obama and attending rallies organized by various Maoists, Trotskyists and neo-anarchists opposed to Obama and electoral politics, the grassroots peace movement headed for the precincts by the thousands.""
Yes! YES!!! Exactly!!! At least someone understands.
Menu,
I agree with you 100%. It is clear that Obama has gone over to the dark side, even if at one time he was on our side. He is widening the war in the Middle East, giving away our national treasure to the financial elite who caused the global meltdown in the first place, is pursuing regime change in countries with elected governments, has not denounced extraordinary renditions (aka kidnapping for the purpose of torture)....Need I go on? Trying to make him to do anything is a waste of time. The only way to bring down this whole foul government and economic system is to stop cooperating with it. Therein lies our real power. We must stop buying anything other than what is absolutely necessary, stop voting for them, and create our own local alternatives to food production, building, education, healthcare...the essentials. Massive citizen noncooperation brought down monolithic Eastern European Communism and it could do the same here.
"It is clear that Obama has gone over to the dark side, even if at one time he was on our side."
He hasn't changed. Either you were delusional or you've changed.
You are correct, Joe. Obama was on the dark side before. (Just for your information, I'm not referring to skin pigmentation, so don't try to make something out of it.)
Dark side? Come on. Obama is not Bush.
Bush was dark. McCain was dark. Cheney was a black hole.
By comparison, Obama is pure illumination.
No, I have to confess I never did believe in Obama because a) I "followed the money" that was propelling him into the White House and b)I watched what he did, such as vote for the first bail out when he was a senator. I'm thrilled that an African-American is in the White House because of the significance of that for racial relations in our country, but I think he is a terrible President.