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Fear Comes of Age
Elena Kagan is the perfect Supreme Court pick for Barack Obama.
In fact, in so many ways, she is Barack Obama.
Moreover, they both represent their generation well. They are the leading edge of Generation X, and they embody its character fully.
You don't need a fancy degree in sociology to figure that generational politics are driven at in least part by generational life experience and social and economic conditions. It makes a certain degree of sense, to wit, that the last generations in American history known for their mobilization around progressive politics were products of extreme economic conditions, albeit polar opposite ones. In the Thirties, when socialism had real prospects in America, the economy could hardly have been more challenging. During the Sixties, on the other hand, the young people marching in the streets were arguably the product of the world's first-ever generation of widespread economic security, if not opulence.
Perhaps what they both had in common is little to risk. In any case, by the time Gen X came around, the doors were already slamming shut. In part this was because we were actually living beyond our means anyhow, and the principles of economic physics reasserted their inevitable gravitational pull. In part it was because the Boomers were such a large generation that they sucked up a lot of opportunity in the economy for those who came after them. And in part, this happened because regressivism had begun its thirty year (and counting) successful project to undo the anomalous fairer wealth redistribution of the mid-twentieth century, which had scandalously produced a somewhat just economic system for the first time since the industrial revolution, if not ever.
Whatever the explanation, I don't think it's an accident that the people coming of political and career age under such conditions have exhibited a certain degree of conservatism in their outlook on life. I don't mean here ideological conservatism, though there is that as well, but more of a hunkered-down, blinkered, instrumental, cautious, personal conservatism - one that is devoted to the narrowest agenda of self. One might even call it peasant conservatism, to which it is akin.
I don't mean that term entirely pejoratively. It seems to me a natural human survival instinct to act conservatively in times of scarce resources, and I don't fancy myself anymore immune to that sensibility than is anyone else. But I do think there are multiple possible responses to such challenges, especially to the extent that they are being driven by political decisions allocating those scarce resources, as opposed to natural phenomena like drought or disaster. One solution, in place of an atomistic enhanced to devotion to self-interest, is to seek a collective political response to insanely destructive societal policy choices. No generation I can think of has been handed a lousier deal by its parents and grandparents than Generation X (except Generation Y, of course), and none has responded to that as silently.
If Barack Obama isn't the epitome of this mentality, then Elena Kagan surely is. Nobody can figure out what she stands for, because she has been so careful never to stand for anything. Obama's really the same, although as a former candidate for the US Senate and the presidency, he's been obliged to make a few more vague noises about political positions than Kagan has or will in her confirmation process. In both cases, though, you can look long and hard - and ultimately in vain - for much of anything that resembles a political conviction. In the end, though, what both of these folks are really about is right there in front of you. They're about themselves. They are bloodless careerists.
They are also supposedly the left in America, and that's the disastrous part. You see nothing whatsoever of this kind of (non-)politics on the right. Regressives in this country are passionate, strategic, mobilized, extreme and effective. And because of that, they are winning, and have been for thirty years. Where there used to be a left in America, only a black hole exists today, sucking in everything around it, including light and truth. Obama, for example - the supposed socialist in the typical regressive's infantile paranoid nightmares - is actually one of the most conservative presidents of the last century. And he is not alone.
It's axiomatic among the grandees of the moronic mainstream media that he is a liberal, to such an extent that the question is never even discussed. In fact - though I suspect he is ultimately far more of an apolitical careerist than anything - the truth is that his policies are so regressive that they cannot meaningfully be distinguished from George W. Bush's. And I don't mean that in the powerfully true relative sense that reminds us of what a real liberal president would actually look like, either, though contemplating that long-lost comparative benchmark puts the point even more emphatically. And I don't even mean that in the sense of a Ralph Naderesque critique about the lack of fundamental difference between the Tweedledee and Tweedledum parties. I simply mean that a purely empirical side-by-side comparison across the board - from civil liberties to civil rights to ‘defense' budget to war fighting to Middle East policy to Wall Street sycophancy to every other meaningful policy area, including health care by the way - reveals a literal near identity between the two administrations, other than in style.
The upshot of all this is that America has been moving seriously rightward, at least concerning matters of political economy if not social policy, for a full generation or two now. Where once there was a right, now there is a rabid right. And where once there was a left, now there is a collection of apolitical careerists. Given the powerful ability of the right to tilt the playing field in every meaningful dimension, the policy options seemingly open to these would-be progressives when they gain office (which happens almost purely because of regressive over-extension, rather than on their own merits) are effectively, but not actually, proscribed to more of the same right-wing insanity that has brought this country so much grief and decline since the Hollywood Cowboy rode into town and borrowed insipid two-dimensional morality plays from the sets of B-movie lots and screened them as the cheap horror production known as American politics.
The same is absolutely true of judicial politics as well. As Justice Stevens has himself correctly noted, every single appointment to the Supreme Court since and including his own, 35 years ago and now again today, has replaced the prior justice with someone further to the right. The entire center of gravity of the Court (and the federal courts below it) has shifted dramatically rightward. Not only do regressives vehemently demand that Republican presidents nominate throaty young Troglodytes to fill any vacancy (as they did when they forced Bush to withdraw the Harriet Miers nomination), but this is in fact probably the single biggest reason that they fight so hard to win the presidency. Sure, they want some twisted pathological freak in the White House who will invade hapless third world countries, slash spending on the poor, keep the womenfolk in their place, and then piously attend church on Sunday (though both Reagan and W typically managed only the first three items on that agenda during any given week of their presidencies, but they faked their religiosity well enough that they were forgiven), but what they really want is somebody who will stick a Sam Alito on the Supreme Court for the next forty years. It's not quite as permanent an establishment of their repressive politics as would be, say, making up some religion for people to adhere to over the next couple of millennia, but it's as close as you can get as long as that pesky Constitution and its evil secular government is still around and in the way.
Democrats, on the other hand, do what Democrats do best when it comes to making judicial appointments, or anything else for that matter. Which is to say just about nothing. This is why Kagan is so representative of Obama, and Obama is so representative of the politically neutered Generation X. Imagine somebody living through some of the most contentious debates of the last decades, and serving in some of the most prominent positions in and out of American government during that time, and leaving absolutely no paper trail whatsoever that indicates any politics of any sort. I'm sorry. Elena Kagan is not a socialist, she's a Kaganist. She's not a liberal, she's just a nil.
And so, as Stevens leaves and she fills his seat, the Court marches yet further rightward, with a weak apolitical centrist taking the place of a towering progressive. Meanwhile, Obama continues to do his part to aid in the complete repudiation of liberalism by running a presidency so anemic Neville Chamberlain would be embarrassed by it, while continuing allow himself to be labeled as some radical leftist by the regressive right, whose bottomless cleverness is matched only by their sociopathic cynicism. The upshot is that Obama - the appointer of nothingburger apolitical nobodies to the Supreme Court - will soon enough be replaced by another Republican president appointing a fresh crop of Lil' Scalias to complete the process. As soon as one of those replaced is one of the moderates on the Court rather than one of their own, the show will be definitely over (as it almost entirely is already), moving the regressive voting dominance from the current 4.75 to 4.25 votes (Kennedy occasionally siding with the non-Neanderthals), to a full-out 6 to 3 instead.
And nobody says much of nuthin' about it. Nobody holds Obama's feet to the fire like the right did to Bush with the Miers nomination. Can you imagine the conversations in the White House? Maybe some twenty-something rube staffer is dumb enough to say, "Hey, don't we need to appoint a progressive every once in a while to take care of our base?" To which everyone in the room bursts out laughing, and Rahm Emanuel responds: "#$@%& those stupid #@$^&-@#$#%'s. What are they gonna do? Send us #$^@ing email? Have a @#$%ing rally with fourteen aging hippies doing a sit-in at Harry Reid's office? $#@&$ ‘em, and the horses they rode in on. We answer to Wall Street, son."
So the short version of the story is that the aberration of partial economic justice and democracy that characterized the middle of the twentieth century is collapsing all around us. That implosion has now swallowed up both political parties. It has long held sway on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue. And it is finally being ossified into place for at least the next several decades with lifetime appointments to the Supreme Court. The first priority is to create an all-powerful executive. The second priority is to create an all-powerful state. And the third priority is to make sure that both are put to the service of oligarchic interests. This is the regressive play book, rarely ever seen with greater clarity than in the voting records of the Scalia bloc on the Court. All else is commentary, if not diversion.
The astonishing irony, of course, is that there could hardly be a moment more propitious for an ideological swing in the other direction. People are hurting badly. Elites are vastly richer today than they were three decades ago. The connection between the two, in the form of predatory Wall Street plunderings continually aided, abetted and even funded by the government, is no longer even particularly hidden. And yet there is no left at all on the national horizon, apart from an occasional Bernie Sanders or Dennis Kucinich. Indeed, quite the opposite is the case. All energy is with the blind raging tea party mentality, which only seeks to vastly exacerbate the problem through some sort of vague libertarianism that will further unleash corporate dominance and further shred what little is left of a tattered social safety net in America.
You really have to hand it to the right. They understand mass psychology so much better than progressives do. They know that rationality is the first victim of fear, and that fear breeds upon itself, amplifying its own effects exponentially. They understand how fragile a thing is a thoughtful, sober and responsible democracy, and how readily undermined it can be for nefarious and hidden purposes.
And they understand how easy it is to buy off those with the capacity to prevent a country's political and economic suicide.
Barack Obama and Elena Kagan have gotten everything they've ever wanted from life.
All they had to do, in return, was to stand for nothing.



117 Comments so far
Show AllCicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
David Micheal Green is wrong about Obama in this respect: He is not the leading edge of Generation X. He is, in fact, three years shy of being the tail edge of the Baby Boom generation, which, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, extended from 1946 to 1964. Obama was born in 1961. All three of the worst, most destructive presidents were Boomers: Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barrack Obama. Elena "Chub-face" Kagan is a Boomer born in 1960.
That does sort of blow up dmg's entire thesis here.
What's the point, dmg? As Sioux-Rose posts below (or above, depending on one's 'settings') - follow the money...
The author's characterization of Obama and Kagan as centrist is misleading. Both of their track records are right of center.
The dates for Boomers are fairly arbitrary. I've seen some citations that say 1960 is the end date. What matters in this connection isn't Obama's exact year of birth but whether he in any way identifies with that generation, which he emphatically doesn't. I doubt he considers himself of Generation X either, but he went out of his way in his autobiography to denounce the values and ideals of the 60s generation, which is the Boomer generation par excellence. It's code for saying he hates the whole hippie thing and everything it represented, especially peace and love and all that impractical, unrealistic jazz. He believes in the power of the military every bit as much as the Bush crime family, which means he believes might makes right, and he's totally enamored of the corporate elite, as we all know. These are antithetical to what most of us think of Boomer "values," however inaccurate the perception may generally be. Although it once was. Obama and Kagan are more like Generation Ambitious Amoral Assholes.
An accurate and well stated analysis, Ephraim.
You're under arrest for slandering Obama and Kagan !
I've been saying, since Reagan, things are going to get a helluva lot worse before they get any worse. This is it.
"You really have to hand it to the right. They understand mass psychology so much better than progressives do."
I'm not so sure that is the case. I think it is simply a matter of numbers. The left has a few good non-profit organizations concerned with policy, fact gathering, analysis and even the human condition and response. The right on the other hand has a huge army in corporate jobs scrambling to advance the corporate agenda. They can fail miserably thousands of times and still win when they eventually stumble on an idea that deludes the public into supporting them. They've much closer to the infinite number of monkeys and infinite number of typewriters.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
"They're much closer to the infinite number of monkeys and infinite number of typewriters."
In their particular case that's an excellent way of looking at it.
The right has a great number of organizations with a major psycological background. I've picked up on the psycology being used in every move the right has made for many years - Fear being the most prominent. At the time of the Gulf war I used their psycological pattern, taken from letters by republican pacs' demanding money that my mother's mail was flooded with, to create a letter telling her to stop sendimg money to those pacs or anyone asking for donatations from her, but to save all that she didn't need for herself because the president was counting on her great generosity, and patriotism, to help him win the war, and that he'd contact her when he'd need her money. Naturally her total secrecy was necessary. This letter worked when nothing the family tried had.
Sioux Rose
SHADRE: IF you wish to make a case about the strength of psychology, it makes sense to know how to spell the word.
It is not psycology. Dang!
Not exactly on topic but .... I disagree. SHADRE's message would not have been any clearer had he/she used the dictionary spelling of "psychology."
When I was in grade school there was a short lived movement to regularize spelling, making it entirely phonetic. The King of Spain did it for Spaniards, why couldn't we do the same for
English speakers? English is horrid mish-mash, making life miserable for early learners and their teachers. Educators know there is little correlation between intelligence and the ability to spell English in the style of the Queen. Every teacher knows, students can write brilliantly even though their spelling might be "atrocious."
My daughter - 99th percentile on her SATs, I might brag for her - has gotten a tad better with the spelling, but to this day she often spells it like it sounds. When anyone complains she reminds them: Language is not for show, it's to convey meaning. If my spelling interferes with the meaning of my message, that's another matter.
We have enough to worry about. Let's not sweat the small stuff!
(sorry, Sioux, this is a sore subject with me, having had to defend my daughter from the spelling cops for 12 years!)
Sioux
RVRWALKER: I realize a person can have intelligent ideas and NOT be good at spelling, but it still reflects poorly on self-discipline when they don't bother to make any effort at spelling correctly. Being a former English teacher and a published author, I think it IS important to care about these things. There are many people who post in these threads who spell items incorrectly, and I hardly correct it all; but it would seem if a person has an opinion on a topic, they ought to know how to spell the thing they are speaking about!
I know psychics who can't spell that word. I've seen someone say "prey with me."
I've seen another represent their "suspections." I'm all for Dr. Seuss and realize that language IS organic, that is, it's both growing and losing (in terms of idioms in actual usage) words. It saddens me that people are coddling those who don't bother to post with respect to good language usage, instead of supporting the fact that they should implement these corrections.
It's like saying it's Okay for someone to insist that 36 degrees is the temperature water freezes at, or 218 where it boils. Mistakes are mistakes. Why should they be treated as other? It's pure sloppiness.
SR: You already know how strongly I agree with you on this. I've come to the point that I think everyone should simply drop the use of apostrophes altogether, as one example of how transcendently annoying it is to find that hardly anyone understands their correct use. Some of the most articulate comments here are illustrations, and have been for years. Over half the people seem to think apostrophes are meant for plural nouns, like "nazi's" or "meme's" and have no idea what possessives even are. Usually they get contractions, but that's it. Any other use of the apostrophe is more often than not completely backwards, or wrong. Pointing it out is useless. The same incorrect forms are used over and over, eternally.
So, just drop the goddamn apostrophe, if it's only going to be misused anyway, virtually all the time. How many people understand the simple difference between "its" and "it's"? Maybe 10%? And don't even get me started on spelling or punctuation. It's so universally atrocious that we may as well ban dictionaries, have a public burning of them. When the language is so thoroughly corrupted that scarcely anyone cares about these simple matters of accuracy, how can we expect to ever begin to understand each other? Maybe we should all just create personal private languages.
Sioux Rose - I read your reply to rvrwalker after responding to your comment about my misspelling of psychology. Your attack has been eating at me ever since, and was keeping me awake, so I decided I needed to respond to your presumptions about my character. I don't wrap myself in the flag, so I'm unpatriotic, I don't support war, so I'm a traitor to my country. I expect such from the cons out there. I'm a cold bitch because I don't go around with a fake smile pasted on my face. I expect that from people who don't know me. And now you accuse me of being a sloppy writer, and having no respect for good language usage. I never expected that on this forum.
My first and fifth grade teachers also believed in public humiliation for mistakes made. I was only a witness in first grade, but had the misfortune of being the recipient in fifth. My only memory of that year is of running from the classroom many times to be sick. I see only the side and part of the back of the teacher's desk in my memory, and the windows at the side of the room. Everything else has always been obscured in a thick fog. I only learned several years ago, from a classmate, who the teacher was, and just enough to understand what she must have done to me.
For the record, I happen to love the English language. I have a well-worn dictionary; a third edition Strunk and White: The Elements of Style; Essentials of English, and other reference books that I still consult regularly. Since my ancient computer doesn't have a spell check, I have my twenty year old hand-held Texas Instruments Spell Checker to help me out when a word doesn't look right. I depend on it a great deal these days.
I've been an avid reader since the age of eleven, and my dream from the age of four was to be a writer. Unfortunately I never "got" what was taught in English in elementary school, although in my thirties I did very well on college English papers. With a couple of checks on the mechanics, they were all A and A+. Over the years I filled notebooks with story ideas, having no idea how to turn them into real stories. In my mid-fifties I took a home study course in writing for children. After the first assignment, with a couple of corrections, my work was returned with glowing comments, not only on my stories but on my writing style. I was urged to send the stories to publishers, but never did because my health got in the way.
Sioux Rose
SHADRE: I had a most-excellent social studies teacher in 8th & 9th grade and he pressed upon students the importance of discerning the difference between the CAUSE of a war, and the event that triggered it.
If you got all bent out of shape because I pointed out a spelling error, then you are probably reacting to OTHER than what I related. You spelled something incorrectly. Punto. Those that want to defend you are on absurd ground. I agreed with your posted sentiment for the most part, and certainly have no interest in preventing you from stating your opinions... they are welcome. The issue (which is not specific to you) is very specific: spell the word right! Is it considered character assassination, some inverse take on "political correctness" that a fact or mistake should not be challenged? I am supposed to feel guilty for pointing this out? I'm sorry that you have a health issue and/or eye problem; but you are not the first or last person to whom I'd pose the suggestion that you check your text. I hope you DO write and get something published. Good luck with that.
Sioux Rose - I have bemoaned the decline of penmanship, spelling, and writing for years. And I've always spent a lot of time checking and rechecking what I write. I was upset more by the tone of your correction than being corrected, and yes, it made me feel exposed and held up to ridicule in front of everyone here, in the same way I'm sure I felt in fifth grade, even if I have blocked out that experience. A simple "that's psychology, with an "h" not psycology" would have sufficed without causing pain. For many years I subscribed to Psychology Today, and my daughter has a BA in Psychology, so I do know something about how it affects us. And unless you or anyone else decides to correct every mistake made by anyone posting on a forum, then none should be corrected. My opinion.
While my little stories will not be published, I do have three books bearing my name on the shelves, published by The Genealogical Publishing Company. If you want a real exercise in writing, try compiling a book such as The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Towns Vital Records: Hartford, or any of the other towns in the series.
rvrwalker - Thank you for your defense of my message. I agree with you on your point that language is not for show, but to convey meaning, and it being another matter when your spelling interfers with the meaning of your message. There are no doubt many reasons for misspelling, such as your daughter's problem, or whatever my occasional one might be. I'm sure there are many others as well, aside from those who don't even try to spell words correctly, or capitalize letters. I've been trying to imagine what our language will be after a generation of texting!
Sioux Rose - Sorry my poor spelling upset you so much. I do know how to spell psychology. I've always been a very good speller, and was at the top of my class all through school. Unfortunately, my brain seems to trip me up a lot these days, and my one good eye, with its distorted vision makes seeing the not so obvious mistakes not so noticeable. Maybe I should forget about trying to express my opinions in public forums.
shadre:
You have as much right to say your piece as anybody else. So keep posting. And why the hell are we veering off talking about spelling, or does it just make some people feel superior?
Sioux Rose
Thanks for the explanation. I didn't know you had a bad eye. There are a number of posters who are oblivious to spelling, and I think it diminishes the discourse. It used to be that if a person had to write an essay for college acceptance, or a letter to a would-be employer that such things as poor spelling would count against them. As RV WALKER related with the bright daughter, I used to think whatever I wrote was great and it wasn't until I got to college that I encountered two professors who used red ink abundantly on my various papers. I may have resented it at the time (who wants to face the need to correct anything?), but they did me a favor. I think credibility is favored through sound sentence structure, accurate spelling, and the proper use of grammar. It shows a well thought-out construct and that someone took the time to execute it with consideration.
I will cut you slack, given the mention of an eye issue. I have seen others respond to poor spelling in this forum, too. I am not the only one bothered by it. And when a poster submits a post with 3 or more errors, that usually sets off my spell (English teacher) alarm bell.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
In retrospect of the last 20 years of Amurkan history, I don't know whether to laugh or weep at this.
Sioux Rose
NEARLY: It's amazing that Mr. Green left this out! I saw it, too. His ideal of democracy seems to render him blind to a little thing like that missing level playing field, and the advantages of big money armed to the teeth with all kinds of strategies for holding the advantage. Legality, morality, decency... have nothing to do with their tactics, and that's why our government so resembles organized crime. In fact, it's better than Mafia at controlling the flow of currency and taking its cut from everyone up and down the "food" chain.
Isn't this what Francis Fukuyama posited as "the End of History"? We now look to the past for inspiration and for solutions to all problems. Our best was behind us and there is nothing out there in the future worth trying out.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Our ruling elite certainly do look almost exclusively to a scorched-earth 18th and 19th century laissez-faire capitalist past for their ideas, but the reality of the present world situation has already left them centuries behind in grasping what is now, in fact, in play. Global environmental degeneration compounded by human-overpopulation, too much resource pillaging too fast, too inefficient a global economic distribution system, too many toxic human concocted or concentrated substances and ideas will soon roll over every human attempt at civilization on this planet and render our ruling elite's world views as quaint and done as Two And a Half Men starring Charlie Sheen.
Isn't this what Francis Fukuyama posited as "the End of History"?
That's why we need something completely different.
We can't fix a system that is inherently corrupt.
We think our best is behind us because we can't quite grasp what should be done - because it's never been done before.
If humanity survives, we will look back on our ignorance and wonder how we could have believed the emperor had clothes (or the world was flat or the sun revolved around the earth). The solution is right here now but most people are to mired in short sightedness, self absorbed thinking and bad habits to see it.
We need more respect for nature and other sentient beings.. and less selfishness.
We need a new dream.
I do not agree with David Michael Green when he says that nobody can figure out what Obama stands for. During the 2008 presidential election Obama clearly stated that he believed that Afghanistan was the so-called good war [though war was never declared by Congress] while also expressing his aversion to universal health care. Despite Mr. Green's contention, Obama certainly made his intentions known. Unfortunately many progressives were under the illusion that they could somehow turn Obama to the left. It did not happen then and it will, in all likelihood, not happen now or in the foreseeable future.
Excellent comment Errol.
Anyone who was paying attention to something other than the millions of ad's bombarding them on T.V. could tell what Obama stood for. The simple fact that he is a democrat should have told them what he stood for.
What could one have thought when he was saying nothing about the exclusion of 3rd parties in the democractic primaries, AIPAC's endorsement of him, him not saying anything about Israel's attack on the citizens of Gaza, continuing the war in Iraq-still no exit of troops, not recognizing the Country of Cuba, starting a war in Afghanistan (ok escalating it) where the number one casuality is civilian usually children, the idea that any war was "the right war"?!?, his support of bailing out Wall Street because they were too big to fail, his cabinet picks—Hillary Clinton, Rahm Emanuel, Biden.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
It's crystal clear what these bums stand for: Barrack and Rahm are two Chicago pols on the make (from a long line) who are out for themselves and their families to get the best post-White House lobbying, speaking and book deals they can get. Obama has gone out of his way to painstakingly stroke Big Weapons, Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Insurance, Big Finance and Big Media. Those boys have probably already cut their sweetheart deals and are consistently ruling as if they WANT to be in & out, one term wonders in a hurry to get their goodies. Very similar to the business school mentality fostered by Harvard Business School and the Chicago school of neo-liberalism: Get in, use other people's money to make your huge nut as fast as you possibly can and get out until you see a sweeter deal. I think Obama's convinced himself he's going to create the first black neo-liberal political dynasty--sort of like an oreo version of the Bush Dynasty.
Well! You clearly didn't watch the Obama video, "Yes We Can!" did you? And you're clearly not "in crowd" material, are you? Hence, you're a nobody. That's what happens to people who happen to have a "clear eye" for the reality of things and who can read between the lines. They get the M&M. (marginalized & maligned)
Now that Obama's phenomenon is in clear view and people are getting permission from their betters that they're safe now to criticize Obama, what do you imagine will be the next scam of We the People?
It is quite possible that our next Republican President will give us the completely unfetturd hard-right Supremes. The Corporatocracy will then have complete control (yes, even slightly more than now). Oh, and don't forget there's no difference between Dems and Repubs.
With what we are getting now, it makes no difference if Barry gets a second term or some Republican wins. SCOTUS is a sick joke and other nations are laughing at it ! Yes, there are Obamabots there too but try explaining to them how both parties shamelessly allow corporate fascists on SCOTUS without being given horse laughs. :(
Believe what you will, but Sotomayor did not vote for the new free hand the corporations now have to influence elections. You might think many things are bad now, but they could get a great deal worse.
Ok, we will see how well Sotomayor can sustain. It is too bad that Kagan will cancel her remaining good judgments if confirmed.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
I'm with you, Jennifer. To me Obama is just Bush's third term in office. But then, I'm making plans to get the hell out of this fascist imperialist dunk'n'donut of a country before 2013.
"But then, I'm making plans to get the hell out of this fascist imperialist dunk'n'donut of a country before 2013."
I had thought of doing the same before I took my vacation overseas to see what life was like far outside this nation but I had second thoughts about it. In most countries, the cost of living is higher and getting a job isn't necessarily as easy. However, governments providing some real care for the people and people getting together especially when they are unemployed was remarkable. Here in the US, unemployed people are socially left out and that still hasn't changed even after 2008. I could have chosen to live in South Africa and have a new life altogether but my other concern is that the corporate fascism in the USA has been making its way all over the planet and most nations generally give in to some or more of it. It is for this reason alone that I decided to stay here in the USA and be a part of those fighting disaster capitalism here at home so that we can curb the flow of that poison. Some of us will choose to move and warn while some of us choose to battle it out right here at home. Both ideas could work well together. Good luck wherever you decide to move to.
DMG can keep going twiddle dee twiddle dum while his breed of Establishment Democrats and Republicans continue to go down in flames. The elections in NJ and VA 2009, MA Senate race 2010, and the primaries in AR, PA, and KY should already be a strong wake up call that the public already knows who Obama is and what he is doing to play tricks with us. If DMG were a decent professor, he would be reading today's articles from Glenn Greenwald and Ruth Conniff. Ruth Conniff makes the connection between Lincoln's staggering in the primaries and her sudden distancing herself from being a corporate blue dog democrat. Glenn Greenwald points out that despite the flaws of outsiders like Rand Paul, the anti-two party anti-incumbent sentiment is rising and that even the corporate media that keeps trying to say that people will settle down is finding itself in trouble as well.
One of DMG's better pieces, though he should have pointed out that the corporate media kneecaps any true progressives (partly by character assassination based on manufactured evidence and partly by attaching to them the pejorative label "populist demagogue") while it aids the political opportunists like Obama, and that has led us to this point. Ideologues and idealists on the right are sometimes given positive coverage and allowed to compete, but only if they are true class warriors for the upper class like G. W. Bush.
"Elena Kagan is the perfect Supreme Court pick for Barack Obama.
In fact, in so many ways, she is Barack Obama."
That one Green has right but he is wrong to suggest that America has been moving rightward. All this left vs right political nonsense only serves to shield the electorate from seeing what is happening behind the scenes. These people know exactly what they are doing and they have no fear. In fact, the longer someone holds political office, the less fear that comes of age. Maybe that's why defeating long term incumbents such as the ones from yesterday end up as huge shockers. The truth about Obama and Kagan is that they don't listen to conservatives or liberals. They only answer to monied elites and with no shame or honor.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
The latest Pew polls shows that most Americans are moving left and are increasingly suspicious of or alienated by our neo-liberal capitalist elite, but the trouble is, there is no authentic progressive national movement or Third Party to fire them up, tell them the whole truth and channel their confusion, angst and desire for something different into effective politics.
I've said it many times before. Every time Democrats like Obama and others allow right wing extremists to push the political playing field farther to the right, and liberals do not counter with their own pressure from the left, it realigns the legitimate center--where America needs to be.
Liberals today are the moderates of an earlier generation. Moderates today are the conservatives of an earlier generation. And today's conservatives are so far to the extreme right that one would have to search into the dustbins of history to find their counterparts.
Without pressure from principled Democrats (if there are any), the nation is destined to drift ever deeper into warmongering, repressive right wing extremism--until the rest of the world can no longer countenance the threat we pose to the human race.
"Apolitical Careerists" like Obama and Kagan who always play it safe are ironically making this nation a more dangerous breeding ground for right wing extremism.
Sioux Rose
DAVID MICHAEL GREEN demonstrates a glaring disconnect: put simply, he leaves out the whole issue of money.
It is big money that owns media, and thus big money that coronates who gets to receive a platform. From such a platform, opinions are shaped; and since the media no longer operates as a check against corruption on the part of the powerful, when things go badly, all the wrong targets are blamed and no leader is held to account. The public is left to figure things out for themselves, and often their opinions are shaped by fools, liars, and those with dubious agendas.
Big money buys access to congress critters, who in turn owe big money favors for gaining the necessary fiscal support to campaign and win offices.
It is not so much about failure of the left as the fact that big money tends to be conservative. Very few philanthropists really want to alter the tax game where they'd be obliged to pay more. They may fund certain think tanks (although few!), or donate to specific causes, but they do not for the most part rock the boat.
Therefore with big money owning the political machinery as well as the VOICE of media, how can the left get its message out there?
The few politcal figures who maintain any humane policies or beliefs are apt to NOT get funded in their election campaigns. A few may be willing to risk and lose their own money in such quests, but they would be the rare few in number.
Unless and until the influence of money upon elections, congressional content (and conduct), and media ownership is addressed, Green's case is superficial at best.
Hi Sioux Rose.
Good points. I sometimes wonder whether there is some sort of inevitability to this, in that in the competition of the clever and informed of the right vs. the clever and informed of the left to influence the voters and thereby elections and thereby policy, those on the right, by virtue of being the most self-interested, are the most likely to possess the greater wealth and power and thereby have a huge advantage in the competition. And when they win each little battle in the competition, they move the policy further towards serving their self-interest and that increases their advantage. There are certainly counter pressures, but over the long term they appear to be inadequate without at least the threat of Jacobin revolution.
Sioux Rose
KIVALS: There are a lot of factors that coalesce to produce what's taken for consensual reality. I pointed out the money factor because media is such a powerful tool through which to manufacture consent; and the right has the money.
It is also probable that in times of growing uncertainty, a large number of persons seek a religion (or moral philosophy) that gives them a sense (even if false) of some form of security or "guarantee." The merging of fundamentalist religions with the Calvinistic fiction that wealth = proof of God's blessing (and thus the reverse suggests the disfavor of the Deity) has worked hand in glove to grant special blessings upon those who have ostensibly arrived upon the gates of financial heaven. They don't have to justify how they got the money, or what ideals they stand for... being rich consigns them a special status in the eyes of too many.
So there is the control of media, and our public happens to be brainwashed by celebrity. Just as the lie told often enough is perceived as true, the celebrity SEEN often enough in media is perceived as a truth-teller. This is where (VISITING PROFESSOR) the issue of deception comes into play.
I also recognize specific astrological factors that have contributed to a very materialistic focus for most people, and a set of factors that have supported the mantras of conservatives. That will NOT remain the case. The entire template shows all the "celestial markings" of being torn asunder THIS summer. Watch events from June to (especially) August.
Authors, celebrities, and politicians from the left generally don't have the financial power or media clout to make the difference that David Green holds them accountable to and for. This is not the 60's when crowds mobilized and were relatively protected from the sort of police brutality (and surveillance, even of the pre-emptive sort) that now would be commonplace.
As KITAJ pointed out, the mechanisms for remediation and redress have functionally been disabled. Truth and justice eventually win out, and lots of people now poignantly feel their absence. A ground swell IS inevitable. And the elites know it. That's why they've gotten their Mafia-style lawyers to bend the law of the land to hold dissenters in the same league as terrorists and deal with our displeasure "accordingly."
At least we have the Internet for the moment, a venue from which to share our perspectives, and fine-tune our understanding. So many in the nation are asleep and hardly aware of that fact/or. But nature is summoning the wake-up calls, added to an economy built on a house of marked cards. What a failure of leadership at a time when it means so much.
"Fear Comes of Age"
That's a good run-through about Supreme politics, in some juicy language.
An observant, thinking person can only concur.
"You really have to hand it to the right. They understand mass psychology so much better than progressives do. They know that rationality is the first victim of fear, and that fear breeds upon itself, amplifying its own effects exponentially."
-It's axiomatic among the grandees of the moronic mainstream media that he is a liberal, to such an extent that the question is never even discussed. In fact - though I suspect he is ultimately far more of an apolitical careerist than anything - the truth is that his policies are so regressive that they cannot meaningfully be distinguished from George W. Bush's.
Too true!
Yes Siouxrose, there is big money in them there hills, but it seems to me that the rightward motion in America is not the stuff of illusion.
Among progressives, for argument's sake, even among you lot, you folks are way more right wing, on several issues than the conservatives in many other contries. I'm thinking of gun ownership, religiosity, crime and punishment. You guys make some neo-nazi groups nervous!!!! (ok, maybe not the neo-nazis ;)
I would think though, with all the good points the left has to make, and the excellent posters, like the ones on this site, making them, something has got to give.
"Among progressives, for argument's sake, even among you lot, you folks are way more right wing, on several issues than the conservatives in many other contries. I'm thinking of gun ownership, religiosity, crime and punishment. You guys make some neo-nazi groups nervous!!!! (ok, maybe not the neo-nazis ;)"
What ?!?!? Most of us progressives here are none of that unless the nature of the membership on this site changed in those 4 months. I am well aware of Europe laughing at us and I discussed some of this with Prometheus but I will have to warn Europe not to go too far with it because I worry that Europe is falling into the same trap as the US on going neolib and quietly cooperating with the neocons on things like Afghanistan. Listen, I love Europe and there is a lot there to make me jealous of them and angry at the US but watch out and do not allow Europe to slip into the same fate as the US.
-"do not allow Europe to slip into the same fate as the US"
JenniferBedingfield, that is already happening to some extent. Part of the advantage other anglo/western countries and their leftists have is that we can look at what is happening in the US. It gives us a "heads-up", an advance warning. For example, Obama's campaign people are working to advise other governments on how he did what he did. And Bush's guy too, Rove, he is doing the same thing, so we are starting to see some of the same bag of tricks. Of course we learn a lot of beneficial stuff too. We can learn from your mistakes, and learn how lucky we are (with our health plans, for example). We learn from you, in a way that you don't learn from other countries, being as self-absorbed as you guys are.
-"...unless the nature of the membership on this site changed in those 4 months."
I beg to disagree. Let me explain. For example, whenever the topic of gun-control pops up, I am reminded how much a minority I am, amongst you. Usually it is me and one other poster vs 350 people in favour of unfettered guns. I guess they could all be robo-posters, disguised as commondreams readers, but I doubt that all of them are. And to me, having guns everywhere, with the gun deaths you have and the weapons serving no purpose except for sport, despite the fantasies of some, who think that "when the revolution comes..." their six-shooter will come in handy to fend off the gestapo,...to me, that is not progressive. What do you think?
RE: when the revolution comes..." their six-shooter will come in handy to fend off the gestapo,...to me, that is not progressive"
Agreed. You can barricade yourself with all the guns you want, but it won't help much when the "guv'mint" drives over your house with a tank.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
It depends on how much you want your liberty. The "towel heads" in Afghanistan have done pretty well resisting the U.S. for nearly a decade with mostly rocket launchers, IEDs, Kalashnikovs and the willingness to sacrifice themselves for their cause. They've faced a hell of a lot worse U.S. weapons than tanks and they are wearing us out, militarily and financially. It also depends on how degenerate the U.S. government will become Stateside and how many will continue to believe in it enough to fight for it over time--especially when they see it clearly turning on the people, killing them or rounding them up and throwing them in camps.
Oh, and if the government does go into military crackdown mode, don't think there won't be puh-lenty of outside enemies of it willing to fund and arm resistance fighters at least as well as the Taliban or better. What would follow the collapse of our oligarchical fascist State if it militarily turned against its citizens may not be an improvement any time soon, but it could be defeated if the people want it enough.