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Bush's Third Term? You're Living It
It sounds like the plot for the latest summer horror movie. Imagine,
for a moment, that George W. Bush had been allowed a third term as
president, had run and had won or stolen it, and that we were all now
living (and dying) through it. With the Democrats in control of
Congress but Bush still in the Oval Office, the media would certainly
be talking endlessly
about a mandate for bipartisanship and the importance of taking into
account the concerns of Republicans. Can't you just picture it?

There's Dubya now, still rewriting laws via signing statements. Still creating and destroying laws with executive orders. And still violating laws at his whim. Imagine Bush continuing his policy of extraordinary rendition, sending prisoners off to other countries with grim interrogation reputations to be held and tortured. I can even picture him formalizing his policy of preventive detention, sprucing it up with some "due process" even as he permanently removes habeas corpus from our culture.
I picture this demonic president still swearing he doesn't torture, still insisting that he wants to close Guantanamo, but assuring his subordinates that the commander-in-chief has the power to torture "if needed," and maintaining a prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan that makes Guantanamo look like summer camp. I can imagine him continuing to keep secret his warrantless spying programs while protecting the corporations and government officials involved.
If Bush were in his third term, we would already have seen him propose, yet again, the largest military budget in the history of the world. We might well have seen him pretend he was including war funding in the standard budget, and then claim that one final supplemental war budget was still needed, immediately after which he would surely announce that yet another war supplemental bill would be needed down the road. And of course, he would have held onto his Secretary of Defense from his second term, Robert Gates, to run the Pentagon, keep our ongoing wars rolling along, and oversee the better part of our public budget.
Bush would undoubtedly be following through on the agreement he signed with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for all U.S. troops to leave Iraq by the end of 2011 (except where he chose not to follow through). His generals would, in the meantime, be leaking word that the United States never intended to actually leave. He'd surely be maintaining current levels of troops in Iraq, while sending thousands more troops to Afghanistan and talking about a new "surge" there. He'd probably also be escalating the campaign he launched late in his second term to use drone aircraft to illegally and repeatedly strike into Pakistan's tribal borderlands with Afghanistan.
If Bush were still "the decider" he'd be employing mercenaries like Blackwater and propagandists like the Rendon Group and he might even be expanding the number of private security contractors in Afghanistan. In fact, the whole executive branch would be packed with disreputable corporate executive types. You'd have somebody like John ("May I torture this one some more, please?") Rizzo still serving, at least for a while, as general counsel at the CIA. The White House and Justice Department would be crawling with corporate cronies, people like John Brennan, Greg Craig, James Jones, and Eric Holder. Most of the top prosecutors hired at the Department of Justice for political purposes would still be on the job. And political prisoners, like former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman and former top Democratic donor Paul Minor would still be abandoned to their fate.
In addition, the bank bailouts Bush and his economic team initiated in his second term would still be rolling along -- with a similar crowd of people running the show. Ben Bernanke, for instance, would certainly have been reappointed to run the Fed. And Bush's third term would have guaranteed that there would be none of the monkeying around with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that the Democrats proposed or promised in their losing presidential campaign. At this point in Bush's third term, no significant new effort would have begun to restore Katrina-decimated New Orleans either.
If the Democrats in Congress attempted to pass any set of needed reforms like, to take an example, new healthcare legislation, Bush, the third termer, would have held secret meetings in the White House with insurance and drug company executives to devise a means to turn such proposals to their advantage. And he would have refused to release the visitor logs so that the American public would have no way of knowing just whom he'd been talking to.
During Bush's second term, some of the lowest ranking torturers from Abu Ghraib were prosecuted as bad apples, while those officials responsible for the policies that led to Abu Ghraib remained untouched. If the public continued to push for justice for torturers during the early months of Bush's third term, he would certainly have gone with another bad apple approach, perhaps targeting only low-ranking CIA interrogators and CIA contractors for prosecution. Bush would undoubtedly have decreed that any higher-ups would not be touched, that we should now be looking forward, not backward. And he would thereby have cemented in place the power of presidents to grant immunity for crimes they themselves authorized.
If Bush were in his third term, some of his first and second term secrets might, by now, have been forced out into the open by lawsuits, but what Americans actually read wouldn't be significantly worse than what we'd already known. What documents saw the light of day would surely have had large portions of their pages redacted, and the vast bulk of documentation that might prove threatening would remain hidden from the public eye. Bush's lawyers would be fighting in court, with ever grander claims of executive power, to keep his wrongdoing out of sight.
Now, here's the funny part. This dark fantasy of a third Bush term is also an accurate portrait of Obama's first term to date. In following Bush, Obama was given the opportunity either to restore the rule of law and the balance of powers or to firmly establish in place what were otherwise aberrant abuses of power. Thus far, President Obama has, in all the areas mentioned above, chosen the latter course. Everything described, from the continuation of crimes to the efforts to hide them away, from the corruption of corporate power to the assertion of the executive power to legislate, is Obama's presidency in its first seven months.
Which doesn't mean there aren't differences in the two moments. For one thing, Democrats have now joined Republicans in approving expanded presidential powers and even -- in the case of wars, military strikes, lawless detention and rendition, warrantless spying, and the obstruction of justice -- presidential crimes. In addition, in the new Democratic era of goodwill, peace and justice movements have been strikingly defunded and, in some cases, even shut down. Many progressive groups now, in fact, take their signals from the president and his team, rather than bringing the public's demands to his doorstep.
If we really were in Bush's third term, people would be far more active and outraged. There would already be a major push to really end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan/Pakistan. Undoubtedly, the Democrats still wouldn't impeach Bush, especially since they'd be able to vote him out before his fourth term, and surely four more years of him wouldn't make all that much difference.



82 Comments so far
Show AllI just have to say that this is one of the best articles I've read on CD. I could and will not say it any better than Bro. Swanson. Black Anarch out.
It's like Chris Hedges stated...Brand Obama gets you to believe one thing while President Obama does the opposite.
Oh come on, keep digging. There just HAS to be a pony under all this poop!
Watch the last two minutes of "Money-driven Medicine" - Bill Moyers Journal.
Candidate Obama's compassionate rhetoric on negotiating drug prices VS
Prez Obama reportedly making behind-doors guarantees with Big Pharma of non-arbitration. SWEET!
I just heard Senator Casey say in a town hall that he feared a govermnment run health care program as much as his right wing opponents. He tried to mollify them by saying that the public option would not threaten the private health insurance industry. Funny thing though-- he didn't sway or mollify a single right wing voice in the crowd. On the other hand, I a lifelong Democrat felt betrayed. I'll do nothing to help him win reelection in 2012. Likewise for my blue dog representative Jason Altmire in 2010. Do you think Barrack will rally his base in 2012? These people do not represent me. I would rather have Republicans in power and fight against them than be pacified and coopted by these corporatist democrats who say they represent the public interest. In 2010 and 12 Democrats will lose seats. As in 94 they will learn the wrong leason from it and mover further right. If we are to participate in politics and have our view represented it will have to be by creating a new political party or joining the Greens. This is where our energy should be focused. I'm not saying we are going to win--I'm just saying that if we go that way--we will not be betrayed or silenced by Democrats who are as much the party of corporate power s the Republicans.
I participated Mike Doyles teleconference-town hall on Monday evening. As I'm sure you know, Mike Doyle and his city constitients are regarded far to the left of Altmire, Murphy, Murtha, or Sen. Casey. He is a co-sponsor of HR676. Nonetheless, other than a timid remark about the Weiner Amendment vote, his whole approach was the timid "getting to affordable healthcare" approach.
Useless.
Change we can bee-leave-in!
What's that you say? (Pocket) Change we can be left with? Chains we can bereft in?
Remember this feeling when it’s time to give and vote.
Take the pledge:
I, your name here, pledge to not be fooled again.
I pledge to begin now to find, work for, vote for and support to the end of the election in question excellent candidates and a party who truly believe as I do.
I pledge to support candidates at every level who have and will continue to speak for, vote for, and work for the true progressive principles I believe in. I pledge to look at voting records, all statements, positions and party and individual platforms, employment history and voting records, and ignore vague and contradictory promises. I pledge that no matter what promises or threats the Democrats make, no matter what radical right wing loony Neanderthal Republican may win, I will hold firm to my belief in and support for the candidate who will support me and believes in what I believe in, rather than choose the evil of 2 lessers. I recognize that only by holding firm against comfortable mediocrity will our rapid death by climate catastrophe, impoverization, war and disease and shortage, abetted by authoritarian corporate rule, be avoided.
(Fill in your nom de net and repost this here; feel free to change the wording however you want.)
Obama's presidency so far is a failure, and he has no one but himself to blame. It's a huge success for the money guys, just like Bush, but the supposed ethics and principles Obama ran on...just more lip service, more campaign lies.
It's amazing how these career politicians tall about service, and too many people believe them, when in fact all they are serving is their own greed, time and time again.
Obama, you're just another POS politician. Your ancestors would be ashamed of you.
Spot on. Well written, cogent, relentless without screeching--
I've had the Kafkaesque experience of sitting in a room of educated, relatively affluent self-described ex-hippies who still radiate an unearthly glow whenever they talk about Obama. I asked them what he'd changed, y'know, specifically, and all I could get was, well, he's so much better for the environment--
Which here, in the land of the tree-sit and the so-called black anarchists (so-called primarily to discredit them whether they need it or not) counts for a lot. Except it isn't true (mountaintop removal continues apace, etc.)
When BHO won, the groups most likely to revolt--or cause serious unrest a la Vietnam--were effectively defanged, and the theft of our resources and liberties intensified. When the moment of relaxation ends and people realize, no, no, the house really is on fire, the structure of our republic (though arguably it happened when our Congress voted to suspend habeas corpus, without which none (as in NONE ZERO ZILCH NADA) of the rights in the Constitution matter--nothing does when you're getting a hot-lead enema or an electrified spoon in your womb)) will have already collapsed.
It was staggering. "My" people, supposedly folks who I agree with, simply can't see that they were lied to and Obama is as bad as (arguably worse than) W.
Game is rigged, folks. The only way to win is not to play.
By golly....someone who sees the reality rather than the storyline! Congratulations!!
Right on!
odoco
You are right about not playing their game - we need to play our own. I just got a call from the Dems asking for money - second time in a week - and told them in detail that as long as Obama refuses to stand for anything pursuant to the welfare of the people - they will neither see a dime of my money or a vote at election time. I know of several other people in my small town who have given them the same response. Not all progressives are deluded by this game; many are older and tired of fighting the fight for so many years, others believe the game is already lost.
We will play our own game - with our own party - with our own rules. I am 59 years old, a Democrat my entire life. I have never felt such disappointment as I feel now.
Hear, hear! odoco!
Please remember this and hang firm no matter what. See the PLEDGE posted previously. Repost and sign it.
Sioux Rose
THE PUFFIN: Excellent post. This hippie sees through the morass, as do at least a few of my friends.
Puffin, what constitutes not playing?
When the taxman comes, do you say, "Gee, I'll sit this one out"?
When the draftboard calls, will you say, "No thanks, I'm not having any"?
Have you another currency we might try, or a house off of the energy grid?
Surely you do not mean that one does not "play" in any significant way simply because one does not vote in a formal election.
How upset the boys in Congress will be that no one's watching the candy shelf!
Let's face it: we can't Mulligan.
IF you can't win, you can't break even, and you can't get out of the game, the only game is to lose less.
Even if the glass is neither half full nor half empty, but a quarter full, there's not much point tossing out the water.
I've had the same experience as thepuffin, witnessing many older pwogwessives still in thrall to this total fraud, believing him to be some long-awaited answer to all progressive prayers. It's astonishing how shallow so many become as they age. Or how conveniently inattentive. They don't want to notice what a complete sellout Obama is to corporate power (no healthcare reform), what a sworn militarist he is, and how he's really only helping complete the entire Bush-Cheney agenda, as Swanson clearly shows. There are far too many of these "old guard" pseudo-liberal Democrats exerting influence and making sure the Pelosis and Reids never go away. They're Blue Dog enablers while they think they're being sooooo politically correct. Never pass up an opportunity to tell them how deeply deluded they are.
I'd suggest while you may be correct
about a few older progressives....some progressives in general, you'll find that most older folks are not half as stupid as these idiots would like to believe.
Obama has already lost Seniors across the board. And they are fairly attentative to whats being done, the media and Congressional leaders has just been dismissing them asnd mislabeling them. They are pissed.
But like thepuffin you have it figured out! You guy's are why his numbers are headed for the basement.
President Barak W Bushbama of the Republicrat party.
That is the major flaw of your modern political system. The corporate powers, through the power of their billion$, make sure that only candidates acceptable to them make it through the process, so that when the election actually happens, the media-duped masses can only choose between identical options.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
The Greatest Canadian, Tommy Douglas, brought single payer health care to Canada by helping Canadians understand why a two-party system doesn't work: most of us are MICE, but we elect CATS to govern us. No matter what color the cats are (Democratic or Republican, in the case of the U.S.), their interests are not the same as ours.
We need to wake up and start supporting and building a real third party. The reason we are now living Bush's third term is that there is no real difference between the Dems and Repubs, yet we keep tricking ourselves into thinking there might be.
Tommy Douglas's famous "Mouseland" speech, set to animation, is brilliant.
Watch it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqpFm7zAK90
Yes - do watch this - it is excellent.
Excellent article. Hard to believe (for some) when you see it so well laid out. As the author says, Obama is not Bush but he seems to be doing an outstanding Bush impression. Once again, we must not stop at this knowledge. We must move forward with our deductions. If Obama is so comfortable imitating Bush then he lied and lied and lied in order to win the support of progressives. He only needed us for the first phase: to win the Democratic primary from Hillary. Thereafter, the only people he needed were those controlling the big money, and progressives were entirely dispensable.
Next deduction: Our time, money and effort went towards electing a man who despises our hopes for a better America and better world. Many say it was worth it to keep McCain and Palin out of the White House, but perhaps it is time to finally abandon the sham game of party politics which has been designed to leave us all feeling like the person who is asked "When did you stop beating your wife and kids?" The only rational response is to not answer the question. Don't play the game. There are other games that are not fixed, other ways outside of party politics to contribute to the sort of world we want.
Seems those who voted for "Hope and Change" instead received a "Change of Dope".
The PTB are playing a dangerous game. Having set up McCain/Palin to make O'Bummer/Biden seem the only sane alternative, they now have to find a way to gradually lower our expectations to a manageable level before this sense of betrayal and frustration spreads much beyond boards like CD.
A heightened level of expectation, followed by betrayal and frustration such as the RFK campaign ending in assassination, is frequently a precursor to widespread revolutionary sentiment.
No doubt they---you know, "they"---have factored this in and have a contingency plan or three, but the situation is fluid and not entirely predictable. As in chess, look for the forced move.
Yep -- you got it, Jethro.
What is the "PTB"?
Re pjd412 September 2nd, 2009 11:55 am
Sometimes seen as "TPTB," refers to The Powers That Be.
As always, bet on a war.
Wow. So good to read Swanson again, and as always, he nailed it dead-on. The power of it, of course, is seeing it all together in one coherent, "non-screeching" narrative -- "just the facts, ma'am...." And though I'd suspected just this since the beginning of Obama's campaign, I felt a distinct chill when I read: "Many progressive groups now, in fact, take their signals from the president and his team, rather than bringing the public's demands to his doorstep." That, I very much fear, was the whole point of his candidacy.
It's way past time for President Obama to stop floundering around with his Presidency and come out with a bold plan to completely remedy the hole the United States has dug itself into.
Please read Dave Lindorff's Blog page: "Obama's Narrowing Window of Opportunity." He's got it all together!!! You won't believe how simple the solution could be if the President really meant what he said during his campaign.
You can find it here:
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/?q=node/362
It's way past time for President Obama to stop floundering around with his Presidency and come out with a bold plan to completely remedy the hole the United States has dug itself into.
Obama will rename the "hole" a "grave" and keep on furiously digging. Six feet under isn't worthy for this country. Obama wants to make sure we are least a hundred feet under when they plant Uncle Sam's body.
lol, true.
But he doesn't and he won't..... the dream is over. It's morning now...
Bush may have been the village idiot, but BR is the super con man, just an intelligent Bush with the same policies.
If a person could read their own thoughts would it become like a series of mirrors, endlessly reflecting, or would it just echo in your mind?
What is all this complaining about? You folks got exactly what you voted for - change! You changed from old man with old ideas for a younger man with slightly new ideas based on the old ideas. You changed from a white man to a light colored black man. You changed from an old not so smart ivey leaguer to a younger smarter ivey leaguer. You changed from an old guy with limited speech capabilities to a younger guy who is a real smooth talker (a democrat style communicator like Ronald Reagin!!!). You changed from an old guy with experience at being a meany in Texas to a younger guy with little to no experience of any kind. You changed from an old guy with little math understanding (budgets, etc) to a younger man who hasn't a clue about math at all (it seems to me the wives probably take care of household finances). You changed from a guy to bragged about his wars and torture tactics to one who claimed he was against the war and would get us out asap, but who is trying to drag out Iraq and "surge" Afghastan and is still undecided what to do about torture! Real clear politics, don't you think?
You changed from an old white guy who is married to a pretty woman with a set of twin girls (who like to do drugs and get into trouble) to a younger black guy with a pretty wife and two underage girls, who are too young to know about drugs and getting into trouble (hopefully). Essentially, you folks voted for change from a man who makes promises he knows he can't keep to a man who sort of makes promises he might be able to keep some of the time, if pushed hard by enough people. You got the change you voted for! So why are you whining? Buyer's regret?
No you folks didn't vote for change, you just thought you did. If you really wanted change, you would have voted for Hiliary Clinton; but I suspect she represents too much change for most of you folks. The kind of change most of you talk about, but really don't want. You see, Hiliary is a woman and well that kind of change in the Oval Office has never been seen before. But I suspect, you are like so many of the repugs, the devil you know (a guy) is better than the devil (a woman) you don't know. So, stop whining, you got just what you voted for.
Re Rockerbabe1 September 2nd, 2009 12:59 pm, who rubs our noses in this:
"If you really wanted change, you would have voted for Hiliary (sic) Clinton; but I suspect she represents too much change for most of you folks."
This is just so wrong, on so many counts, I hardly know where to start. O'Bummer's terminal dithering on health care reform is a note-perfect cover of the Hillarycare debacle, and for exactly the same reason: they're both bought-and-sold corporate stooges, neither of whom is about change beyond the merely cosmetic.
If you really believe that being the proprietress of a womb is the sole qualification necessary for high office, presumably you'd have been equally happy with President-in-Waiting Palin (quote: "You see, Hiliary (sic) is a woman and well that kind of change in the Oval Office has never been seen before.")
The same is true of a man not entirely white.
So what?
I'm not the one complaining about President Obama; I knew when I voted for him that he might not live up to his billing and to his rhetoric, but I voted for him anyway and still have high hopes for his Presidency. My preference was for then Senator Clinton; she has taken lots of stands on may issues and has worked on behalf of the American people for many years; then Senator Obama had not been around long enough to do much of anything. She has had a few failures along the way [as opposed to voting "present" as then Senator Obama was prone to do]. So stop complaining about your standard bearer; you got what you voted for, now give him some time and a chance to do what he says he will do [or something that resembles his promises].
excuse me....
"MIGHT not live up to..."????!
He actually lived up to his billing in every way, except that silly vague and meaningless change and hope thing. His voting record, (you did pay attention on the telecom immunity vote, right?) his platform, his stated beliefs and intentions, his voting record... or don't you bother to look at such things when deciding who to project your desires onto?
My guess is you don't, or you would know Clinton II had almost exactly the same positions on almost every single issue as Obama. Probably would have had to continue to wear the Thatcherite/Indira Gandhi more-violent-than-thou attytude, but otherwise... virtually no difference except the meat package.
Before the election I had my serious doubts but thought despite all the obvious things it still just MIGHT POSSIBLY be a step forward to have a woman or person of color like HC or BO in the oval office. Having seen the combination of utter sell-out, ineffectiveness and resurgence of racism going on now, I don't even think that anymore. Why not work for a woman or a person of color who will adequately express truly liberal principles and who will be more help to women and people of color and all people? That's why I worked on Dennis Kucinich's campaign and then supported the Cynthia McKinney/Rosa Clemente Green Party ticket.
And how bout that Canadian tar sands deal? Wow, couldn't get much more feminist than that, eh?
Take the Pledge.
Re RichM September 2nd, 2009 1:42 pm
I see we're singing from the same hymnal again.
Do you also wonder sometime if Rockerbabe1 and Perry Logan are the same person?
No we are not. I'm not the one complaining about President Obama; I knew, when I voted for him, that he would not live up to his billing or rhetoric, but I gave him the benefit of the doubt and I probably will for a long time to come. What I find amusing, is all the wailing and nashing of teeth over his "failures" as voice by the lefties. Oh well, say la vie!
Rockerbabe1 surely you jest! Hillary Clinton who is now in her dream job functioning as a bag woman for muilti-national business interests in her role as Secretary of State? (as she has for her entire professional life as a corporate attorney and board member)
Hillary who can't find any reason to terminate Blackwater/Xe despite their scandalous and criminal dealings?
Hillary who babbles "y'know" as a kind of connective chant between nearly every phrase she utters?
Hillary who couldn't find much of anything with which she disagreed with Dumbya concerning the mid-east wars of agression?
Rockerbabe1 if gender is your issue, let me suggest that you hitch your hopes to either Barbara Lee, Shiela Jackson-Lee, Lynn Woolsey, Marcy Kaptur, or even Donna Edwards (freshman house member though she may be).
Hillary Clinton (like hubby Bill) is nothing more than a DLC neocon clone pretending to be something other than what she really is--a sell out for hire to the highest bidder.
Poet
Gender is not my issue; but you lefties are the ones doing the complaining about Obama, not me. I just pointed out that you voted for superficial change, as did I. But I am willing to give him a chance to make changes and hope that he does make good on his promises, sometime before he comes up before reelection. As for Hiliary, she will eventually do the right thing, she always does. . .she also works within the system to make change. As for a hired gun type - well isn't that what all lawyers are? President Obama is also a lawyer and so is Michelle. Be careful, you might shoot yourself in the foot!
Please tell me any change you can attribute to Hillary Clinton. She never held office before she carpet bagged her way into New York because our Democrats here needed a celebrity to equal that of Rudy (big "doh!" moment when marital infidelity forced him out early and it was too late for a New York Democrat to be put in the race), and she did not successfully promote any legislation while holding that job. She did, however, reliably support Bush in all of the worst things he was bringing to the floor of the Senate, and most of the second-worst. I personally witnessed her up in Albany during her specious campaign for a second term (which we all knew to be the start of her Presidential race) holding a major "jobs" conference ostensibly aimed at rust-belt upstate New York in which everyone at the dais with her was the head of a military-industrial corporation -- every single one. During her campaign for President she said she wouldn't rule out using nukes in Central Asia (nukes!) and wouldn't engage in diplomacy with nations that Bush had turned into political opponents, and ridiculed anyone who disagreed with those concepts as not only naive, but dangerous for America.
When she'd held her last day jobs before becoming a Washington wife, she was a) on the board of Wal Mart (with its stunning record with women, labor, the environment, and displacing American jobs by importing all its goods from China), and a partner at a corporate law firm that represented clients doing major business with the government of Arkansas, which so happened to be headed by her husband.
So where in this picture are you showing that Hillary would have changed anything more than the decider's gender? And if you somehow think that's enough of a change (even though you deny that, quite a challenge given your choice of nic), why is that a superior type of change, or more of a change, than a mixed-race, half-African man? And if the penis is what minimizes the change, on whom are you placing the blame for that? More than half the population is female. Almost all Black Americans maintained solidarity to support Obama. But clearly women, who tend to be more liberal than men, were ambivalent about Hillary, probably because they were politically astute enough to look beyond the vagina to the ideology and political and corporate biography.
odoco
Thank you Steve, for that eloquent and accurate description of Hillary. What a wonderful overview of the aspects of her being she has tried so diligently to conceal.
Gender is not my issue; but you lefties are the ones doing the complaining about Obama, not me. I just pointed out that you voted for superficial change, as did I. But I am willing to give him a chance to make changes and hope that he does make good on his promises, sometime before he comes up before reelection. As for Hiliary, she will eventually do the right thing, she always does. . .she also works within the system to make change. As for a hired gun type - well isn't that what all lawyers are? President Obama is also a lawyer and so is Michelle. Be careful, you might shoot yourself in the foot!
"...she also works within the system to make change."
Could you please cite a specific example?
"In our society, REAL POWER does not happen to lie in the political system, it lies in the private economy: that's where the decisions are made about what's produced, how much is produced, what's consumed, where investment takes place, who has jobs, who controls the resources, and so forth and so on. As long as that remains the case, changes inside the political system can make some difference -- I don't want to say it's zero -- but the differences are going to be very slight." ---Chomsky
Well said.
It seems that the source of power in our corruptocracy is the best kept secret.
Sorry, but Hilary "is a woman" in the same sense Margaret Thatcher was: a WINO. Her socialisation as a human being failed, just as Thatcher's did.
Now, if you'd suggested Cynthia, or Cindy Sheehan, or....
(I felt terrible for Hilary after the Blue Dress revelations. My feminist sensibilities were *boiling* hot. But I gradually realised that she wasn't going to divorce him or even criticise him in public, and that she's as bad as he is, just different in detail)
Hillary Clinton wouldn't have been any better than Obama. She might even have been worse. Obama is black but he's male and doesn't have to grow a dick. HRC would have had to grow one, or have one implanted to show the numbskulls who run this country, with their painted Halloween faces like the fans at a football game, that she can steal, murder and maim with the worst of them.