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Lessons of the Obama Debacle
The problem with us progressives at this time of crisis is not that we lack an alternative paradigm to pit against the discredited neoliberal paradigm. No, the elements of the alternative based on the values of democracy, justice, equality, and environmental sustainability are there and have been there for sometime, the product of collective intellectual and activist work over the last few decades.
The key problem is the failure of progressives to translate their vision and values into a program that is convincing and connects with the people trapped in the terrible existential conditions created by the global financial crisis. This fluid process is preeminently political. It requires translating a strategic perspective into a tactical program that takes advantage of the opportunities, ambiguities, and contradictions of the present moment to construct a critical mass for progressive change from diverse class and social forces.
We must look at the political experience of the global progressive movement in order to understand why our side has been derailed and how we can fight back to political relevance. The experience of the Obama presidency is rich in this regard. In the U.S. political context, Obama is a social democrat, and the broad left supported his candidacy. Although he was no anti-capitalist, still we expected that he would initiate a program of recovery and reform similar in ambition to Roosevelt’s New Deal. The electoral base that brought him to power, which cut across class, color, gender, and generational lines -- was full of potential. Obama’s ability to bring this base together on a message of change achieved what was then thought impossible—the election of an Afro-American as president of the United States—and showed how smart political leadership can shape social and political structures.
Two years after his spectacular electoral victory, President Obama and the Democrats face a rout in the U.S. polls in early November. Indeed, Obama and his party are like a rabbit on the railroad track that is hypnotized by the light of an oncoming train. Whereas Obama seemed to do all the right things in his quest for the presidency, he seemed to make all the wrong moves as chief executive.
His prioritizing of health care reform, a massively complex task, has been identified as a key blunder. This decision certainly contributed to the debacle. But other important factors related mainly to his handling of the economic crisis, a primary concern of the electorate, were perhaps more critical.
Six Reasons behind the Debacle
Obama’s first mistake was to take responsibility for the economic crisis. In his quixotic quest for a bipartisan solution, he made George W. Bush’s problem his own. Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan never made this mistake. They took no responsibility for the economic problems of the 1970s, heaping the blame entirely on their liberal predecessors and eschewing any bipartisan alliance with those they considered their ideological enemies. Roosevelt, too, slammed – and slammed hard –his ideological foes, those he termed “economic royalists.”
Insofar as Obama and his lieutenants identified villains, this was Wall Street. Yet saying the financial elite brought on the crisis, while bailing out key Wall Street financial institutions such as Citigroup and AIG on the grounds that they were “too big to fail,” involved Obama in a terrible contradiction. The least that he could have done was to remove the existing boards and top managers of these organizations as a condition for government funds. Instead, unlike the case of General Motors, the top dogs stayed on board and continued to collect sky-high bonuses to boot.
The strong sense of disconnect between word and deed was exacerbated rather than alleviated by the Democrats’ financial reform. The measure did not have the minimum conditions for a reform with real teeth: the banning of derivatives, a Glass-Steagall provision preventing commercial banks from doubling as investment banks; the imposition of a financial transactions tax or Tobin tax; and a strong lid on executive pay, bonuses, and stock options.
Third, Obama had a tremendous opportunity to educate and mobilize people against the neoliberal or market fundamentalist approach that deregulated the financial sector and caused the crisis. Although Obama did allude to unregulated financial markets as the key problem during the campaign, he refrained from demonizing neoliberalism after he took office, thus presenting an ideological vacuum that the resurgent neoliberals did not hesitate to fill. No doubt he failed to launch a full-scale ideological offensive because his key lieutenants for economic policy, National Economic Council head Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, had not broken with neoliberal thinking.
Fourth, the stimulus package of $787 billion was simply too small to bring down or hold the line on unemployment. Here, Obama cannot say he lacked good advice. Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate, and a whole host of Keynesian economists were telling him this from the very start. For comparison, the Chinese stimulus package of $580 billion was much bigger relative to the size of the economy than the Obama package. For the White House now to say that the employment situation would now be worse had it not been for the stimulus is, to say the least, politically naïve. People operate not with wishful counterfactual scenarios but with the facts on the ground, and the facts have been rising unemployment with no relief in sight.
Politics in a time of crisis is not for the fainthearted. The middle-of-the road approach represented by the size of the stimulus was the wrong response to a crisis that called for a political gamble: the deployment of the massive fiscal firepower of the government against the predictable howls of anger from the right.
Fifth, Obama and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke deployed mainly Keynesian technocratic tools—deficit spending and monetary easing—to deal with the consequences of the massive failure of market fundamentalism. During a normal downturn these countercyclical tools may suffice to reverse the downturn. But standard Keynesianism could address such a serious collapse only in a very limited way. Besides, people were looking not only for relief in the short term but for a new direction that would enable them to master their fears and insecurities and give them reason to hope.
In other words, Obama failed to locate his Keynesian technocratic initiatives within a larger political and economic agenda that could have fired up a fairly large section of American society. Such a larger agenda could have had three pillars: the democratization of economic decision-making, from the enterprise level to the heights of macro-policymaking; an income and asset redistribution strategy that went beyond increasing taxes on the top two percent of the population; and the promotion of a more cooperative rather than competitive approach to production, distribution, and the management of resources. This agenda of social transformation, which was not too left, could have been accommodated within a classical social democratic framework. People were simply looking for an alternative to the Brave New Dog-Eat-Dog World that neo-liberalism had bequeathed them. Instead, Obama offered a bloodless technocratic approach to cure a political and ideological debacle.
Related to this absence of a program of transformation was the sixth reason for the Obama debacle: his failure to mobilize the grassroots base that brought him to power. This base was diverse in terms of class, generation, and ethnicity. But it was united by palpable enthusiasm, which was so evident in Washington, DC, and the rest of the country on Inauguration Day in 2009. With his preference for a technocratic approach and a bipartisan solution to the crisis, Obama allowed this base to wither away instead of exploiting the explosive momentum it possessed in the aftermath of the elections.
At the eleventh hour, Obama and the Democrats are talking about firing up and resurrecting this base. But the dispirited and skeptical troops that have long been disbanded and left by the wayside rightfully ask: around what?
The Right Makes the Right Moves
In contrast to Obama, the right wing understood the demands and dynamics of politics at a time of crisis, as opposed to politics in normal times. While Obama persisted in his quest for bipartisanship, the Republicans adopted a posture of hard-line opposition to practically all of his initiatives.
Unlike Obama and the Democrats, the right posed the conflict in stark political and ideological terms: between left and right, between “socialism” and “freedom,” between the oppressive state and the liberating market. The Republican opposition used all the catchwords and mantras they could dredge up from bourgeois U.S. ideology.
Finally, in contrast to Obama’s neglect of the Democratic base, the right eschewed Republican interest-group politics. Fox News, Sarah Palin, and the tea party movement stirred up the right-wing base to challenge the Republican Party elite and drive a no-compromise, take-no-prisoners politics. To understand what has happened to the Republican Party in the last few weeks with the string of tea party successes in the primaries, historian Arno Mayer’s distinction among conservatives, reactionaries, and counterrevolutionaries is useful. In Mayer’s terms, the counterrevolutionaries, with their populist, anti-insider, and grassroots-driven politics are displacing the conservative elites that have long held sway in the Republican Party.
With their anti-spending platform, the Republicans and tea partiers that might capture the House and the Senate in November will probably bring about a worse situation than today. As such, Obama and the Democrats might repeat Bill Clinton’s political trajectory when he scored a victory at the polls in 1996 because the Republicans led by Newt Gingrich overreached politically after their triumph in the midterm elections of 1994. But this is a desperate illusion. The current counterrevolutionaries and their backers are skilled in the politics of blame, and they will likely be successful in painting the worsening situation as a result of Obama’s “socialist policies,” not of drastic cuts in government spending.
Lessons for the Left
The problem lies not so much in our lack of a strategic alternative as in our failure to translate our strategic vision or paradigm into a credible and viable political program. Politics in a period of crisis is different from politics in a period of normality, being more fluid and marked by the volatility of class, political, and intellectual attachments. We should remember that politics is the art of creating and sustaining a political movement from diverse class and social forces through a flexible but principled political program that can adapt to changing circumstances.
Finally, there is no such thing as an objectively determined situation. The art of politics is using the contradictions, spaces, and ambiguities of the current moment to shape structures and institutions and create a critical mass for change. Class, economic, and political structures may condition political outcomes; they do not determine them. Who will ultimately emerge the victor from this period of prolonged capitalist crisis will depend on smart and skilled political leadership.
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274 Comments so far
Show AllFrank -
Excellent analysis. This crap from Bello is just more of the same old drivel dressed up to seem like astute analysis.
Bello still seems to have that 'stardust' perspective whereby he believes that the government is there to look after its citizens. Well, the government certainly has given up that illusion long ago. The government is there to attend to the interests of the elite ruling class period. Any scraps which fall from the banquet table are to be fought over by the unwashed herd.
Trying to describe the perceived ineptitude of the Dems, Bello states:"Obama and his party are like a rabbit on the railroad track that is hypnotized by the light of an oncoming train".
This statement would be correct if Bello added one word... "hypnotized by the light of an oncoming 'MONEY' train".
To be preceise, Obama or any other candidate would not be allowed to ever get close to the presidency if the masters of the oligarchy had any doubts whatsoever that their interests would not be served fully. Even if one had the idea of challenging his corporate masters once in office, the JFK solution always serves as the trump card.
Bello's final sentence: "Who will ultimately emerge the victor from this period of prolonged capitalist crisis will depend on smart and skilled political leadership".
It would appear that Mr Bello still believes the 'game is undecided...from where I sit it looks like a rout by the Washington Capitals.
FRANK & KAKH: Right on analysis. You took the wind out of my sails...
Here we go again ........ So now the excuse is:
"Obama and his party are like a rabbit on the railroad track that is hypnotized by the light of an oncoming train".
Poor bunnies. They just don't realize that there's an empire paying and bombing its way to world domination. What? Nobody told them there's a vast right wing conspiracy? With this kind of cluelessness, the grand ol' USA could be headed into fascism, and the Democrats will be the last to know! (sarcasm)
This Bello article is absolutely disgusting to read. He uses a common technique: make the empire's Democratic Party, who controls the Senate, the House, and the Executive, appear to be naive and helpless.
THEY MUST GET OUT OF THIS MAJORITY AND FAST! Otherwise, the duopoly dies. Better to pretend they're simply rabbits, "hypnotized by the light," rather than what they really are: sold out and disgusting, caring more about money and career than they do about the suffering of others.
Remember when the Dems took the House back in 2006 and had marginal control of the Senate? -- through a lot of work and determination by progressives, I might add. So, what did they do with that mandate? They proceeded to pave the way for the Bush agenda! Apologists were saying that it wasn't because they're sold out, NO, NO, NO, ... it was because, like the sweet big old lion in the Wizard of Oz, they had no c..c...c..COURAGE. It's BS at its finest. They have plenty of courage. Look how they stab We the People in the back, year after year. That takes guts.
rvr, right you are, "He (Obama) uses a common technique: make the empire's Democratic Party, who controls the Senate, the House, and the Executive, appear to be naive and helpless."
It IS the Empire's Democratic Party --- it IS the Empire's 2nd string (red shirt) Vichy Party, which is used in a confusing scrimmage against the Empire's first string fully padded fascist squad Vichy Party.
Two Vichy Parties (or squads) to fool the rubes and now the first team is taking the field for the end of game coup de grace.
Thanks Clinton.
Thanks Obama.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Only the Umpire can call a foul on the Empire and its two phony Vichy teams now, clear the field of deceits, and enforce a new game that is fair.
Ive read the responses here and the article. I have a few observations to make. Bellos article is not entirely without merit. The democrats have very severe problems with creating a progressive agenda and then connecting that to how it matters to most people and communicating that. The bipartisanship has been a failure, its clear Republicans are not friends and are not willing to share any kind of power.
Its clear obama is feeble and simply has not implemented and stood for a strong resolute agenda, even one that cannot pass, and he is a feeble communicator and seems to expect a 5 minute speech to be able counteract the juggernaut of Fox. He could use his position to do for more work to communicate directly to the people. However obviously he has to have an agenda to communicate that is affective. The problem is there is very little here for people to rally aro9und. Democrats are feeble at responding to constant low tax mantra for billionaire and aggressive spending cuts. Really democrats can not cower away from this in fear or give in and let Republicans sort of set the rules for rhe debate
.
However this is just one of many problem,s, the Democrats are often not progressive. It should be pointed out that progressive democrats are in a minority in congress. They are there but basically they dont have the votes necessary to overcome the senate filibuster so nothing gets done. Its not like every democrat has basically sat around the past few years and done absolutely nothing, there have been progressive bills proposed including all of the FDR like financial reforms and single payer health care and everything else. Part of the problem is he media does not report on these bills,. leading to the false impression that Democrats are doing nothing. Obama clearly is not a progressive however there are progressive democrats there.
Secondly, while people's perceptions and attitudes can change, currently we do have a right of center country,. I do not think this is the intrinsic nature of the people of this country but has been cultivated by the media which is corporate owned through clever manipulation. There is an extremely powerful right wing media that is very well articulated and highly skilled at mass manipulation and propaganda and which well communicates the underlying conservative ideologies in an in depth way, though completely wrong hey are, they do a good job of making it appear to be elebarote and deep. Becks blackboards and the discussion on fox news has made basically the conservative rubbish to appear to be well founded rather than some baseless nonsense. MSNBC on the other hand rarely if ever goes into any deeper discussion or progressive ideas and why they make sense and would work, and often focused the superficial and trivial. "Rep Boehner forgot his pen today at the committee meating today, just more proof of the Republicans incompetence". That kind of superficial and sophomoric nonsense does not build a strong case for progressive agenda. MSNBC is weak, oten conveys an overly sterile and often boring demeanor, while FOX uns 24/7 right wiong propoganda MSNBC is running prison documentaries, they lack many of the live aspects of the Fox network and have not resurrected the excellent Donohue live format. MSNBC typifies all that is wrong with Obama himself, aloof, disconnected, very poorly communicating, week and feeble.
The idea that we should break off or abandon the democratic party without in place a proportional voting reform is basically a recipe to assure that republicans will win. a splintered vote would hand the Republicans victory after victory. What we need to do is build stronger progressive networks around the agenda and have a subparty with progressive candidates working to get the nominations. We need to implement a proportional system fo representation and stands against the system of corporate finance as well and promote a public campaign finance.
its clear that the democratic party itself is influenced by corporate money, and that it has been a weak and feeble party at opposing republicans. If they take a strong progressive stand they may lose corporate support. Take a weak stand and we have an ineffective agenda that continues the further destruction of the middle class and corporate looting. I think its better for democrats to stick to a form progressive agenda rather than try to appease corporate donors. It may even give them the position of an anti-establishment underdog rather than a part of the wealth adn establishment of the country.
I do accept that the party leadership itself has been fumbling things, and maybe the party is so under the control of corporations that it exists to basically derail progressive agenda and assure the republicans always win. the media plays a role by simply ignoring candidates who wont play along with that and focusing on ones that will. Its very difficult to bootstrap real progressive change, we are underdogs, the media will ignore and marginalize progressives in whatever way possible the corporations will make sure that we do not receive any funding at all.
RIGHT ON THE MONEY, particularly your take on MSNBC....its all about making as many $$$$ as possible!
The lurid sensationalistic prison and crime programs that MSNBC also swears by fatally undercuts any serious journalism standing Olbermann-Maddow may occasionally achieve when they slip in REAL NEWS on their commerically topheavy and infotainment-laden hours of distraction.
The lesser of two evils isn't even a lesser evil ervadaras, they bring the same endless war and capitulating to the corporate agenda the Repigliecons do. If there is any hope we are going to have to do it ourselves outside the system cooperatively because the system is a write off IMO.
kakh zucker - Well said. The Obama era has served as an effective wakeup call to many of us who once allowed ourselves to be duped by the democrat vs republican illusion. I truly believe there is alot of truth to what you are saying, and there is mounting evidence to back it up.
Lesson is that in the usa it really does not matter who
is in office the corporations run the show.
I guess the cool-aid tasted damn good for those who put him in.
erclone, yes, you're right, it is not the "Lessons (plural) of the Obama Debacle", but rather the singular "Lesson of the Obama Deceit".
That the ruling-elite global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE, which fully controls our former country by hiding behind the facade of its TWO-Party Vichy sham of democratic government, had him in its pocket from day one --- which is why he never even whispered the word EMPIRE, and merely provided the foil of hope and change from the looming corporate fascist national security state EMPIRE that pretends to be a government.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
From another perspective.
I agree with most of the assessments posted here, though there are some things in that article that I tend to see as truth. My real problem with a blanket indictment of our political system is the place that it leaves us. If we all agree that our current democratic republic is already lost to the forces of corporate fascism then the recourse seems to be a violent overthrow of said corrupted system. I do note that none seem to mention such, falling short of said assessment amidst a cacophony of criticisms.
I refuse to endorse such an action ( of course doing so in public forum is rather both an act of counterrevolution and really stupid. They do listen after all....). While you state that you see no other way but non participation I see that as ceding the field by default, also unacceptable to any who love their country, have children and grandchildren whose futures one wishes to secure. So, if refusing to participate and violent revolution are both off the table what have we left?
My own course is to work for the growth of third party politics in this nation, specifically The Green Party as they promote candidates only if those folks pledge to refuse corporate funding thus refusing the strings that bind and make beholden. Some might say this is too slow, I say it is far quicker than simply turning ones back on one's obligations to your fellow citizens.
In conclusion I am always rather quizzical when reading endless diatribe, constant demeaning of the status quo sans solution. If my own solution is not a fit for you then offer another, but when you turn your back ,whether through non involvement or emigration , you leave the field to those who ruin our democracy.
We've had our disagreements, but I agree with you here .....
It would be rather odd to never disagree. The nature of politics and the urgency we feel does make for a sometimes testy exchange.
I do note that, so far, those who rant or cry and moan, those who refuse to participate, are rather silent concerning my remarks. Criticism is easy, and inexpensive as well. Actual action, on the other hand, requires much thought and getting up off the couch.
One of the best things that could happen to this country is for a right-wing moron to actually try to institute martial law, because it would end the red/blue divide in a day. The divide is sold for a reason. This nation is far too spread-out and armed for takeover to be possible. Who's gonna do it? The yokel govt-haters in the national guard? Give me a break. We'll just have the low-grade unreproachable fascism we already have, and more and more standards of living will decline. People put up with far worse across the planet.
Repubs will get into Congress, overreach, get sent packing, dems will sell out again, and on ad infinitum until some really disturbing event, like Great Depression ii, or a nuke going off, or global warming/starvation, or CA falls into the ocean, really send us reeling, except then everyone will play nice again.
It's hard to say in the modern world when we're finally going to push our luck into a really serious armageddon-style disaster, but the Indian Ocean lost a million people in the tsunami and they're still there. Americans don't know what real disaster is, at least not most of us.
Anyway, regional breakup seems more likely than military coup, but money talks, and ideology walks, on all sides. There are a lot of people in the elites that are NOT pleased with this psycho right-wing teaparty nonsense. It is not good for business, and the mob will sit on these clowns after they're used up. People should vote, but focus on surviving, because the elites are not going to do squat for you. You can't change them, you can only predict and position yourself for survival. We haven't even seen a good populist revolutionary group, mostly because people know surveillance is everywhere, and what exactly would be the point? Force politicians to act more selfless? No, the elites have to impoverish everyone, especially themselves, before anything will change.
I'd say one of the biggest long-term issues if we survive 30 years is that the youth will have zero sympathy for old people, and will prob be more than happy to cut every program in sight. In Turkey, mandatory retirement is now 50 for many jobs, whether you have money or not. Young people's welfare will come first, so welcome to Logan's Run.
Unless immaterial personal qualities have hypnotic appeal, obama has lost all credibility for leadership with the American people. SNL should update their scorecard.
No kidding!
In a battlefield, the "middle ground" is where you get shot at from both sides.
mujeriego; OOOH! I like that one. Bipartisanship at its finest. Tony
Original SNL scorecard, airing 10/09:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/video/TV_CLIPS/3191-SNL_s_Obama_Scorecard.php
How would you identify the current state of society??
purrsun, here's a good start in "identifying the current state of society"---
From an excellent article, “How Democracy Dies”, this week by Chris Hedges:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/how_democracy_dies_lessons_from_a_master_20101011/
"Our gutless liberal class placates the enemies of democracy, hoping desperately to remain part of the ruling elite, rather than resist. And, in many ways, liberals, because they serve as a cover for these corporate extremists, are our greatest traitors."
I just finished two older books; Michael Parenti's "Against Empire" (amazingly prescient for 1995) and Leon Trotsky's (even earlier and insightful) "Fascism --- What it is and how to stop it".
Trotsky targets like a laser beam on the gutless faux liberal social democrat party of the petty bourgeoisie, "the social democrats that paralyzed the revolution" unable to confront the growing fascist empire [in Germany], and projected by Trotsky to happen later in the US.
The only extension to Hedges’ harsh truism above, that I would add, and that I have been saying of people like Clinton and Obama for a decade, is that they are not merely "gutless" but even more insidiously, that they are knowingly and treasonously COMPLICIT with the EMPIRE.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Good post.
Bello is capable of far better than this soft-soap "analysis."
Yes, the "left" blew it by not intensely pressuring the Obama Admin from Day One. (I put "left" in scare quotes because there is no left in the US per se. There are individual and scattered leftists, and then there are the pwog-libs and their NGO's, interest groups, blogs, non-profits, lobbies, think tanks, media outlets, etcetera. Big difference.) But to make it sound as if the Obama Admin's firm embrace of a center-right agenda (which Bello refuses to characterize as such) was a failure of nerve, a lack of imagination, or some other character deficiency is sheer foolishness. It's enacted (or failed to enact) more or less precisely what it wanted to all along. Of course my saying this is just singing the correct tune once again, since 2/3 of CD posters will agree with this.
gluelicker-
Correct... we all seem to be singing the same tune within an isolation chamber and only have the comfort of our own echo.
"The problem lies not so much in our lack of a strategic alternative as in our failure to translate our strategic vision or paradigm into a credible and viable political program."
Obama had no "strategic vision." He only wished for things to return to the way they were before the recession.
Indeed. Like appointing Rahm, Gates, Fat Slob Summers, Geithner, etcetera in the first week after the election was some kind of erroneous miscalculation on Obama's part.
DROSERA: That statement hit my cords, too. The use of the pronoun "our" places Obama on the side of progressive interests when there is not an iota of evidence to support that thesis. Furthermore, the author's assessment places the blame on persons of conscience for THEIR vision not becoming implemented. It doesn't pay enough attention to the fact that big money prefers the current status quo; for it's one that has allowed THEM the fruit of laissez-faire capitalism without regard for annoyances like safety regulations, enforced EPA standards, or impediments to capital's flight in search of ever-cheaper labor markets.
Bello doesn't bother to tie in facts like big money sponsoring "think tanks" who gain cred by sending their graduates onto all the TV talk shows. There this body of established "experts" can seamlessly manufacture consent for the very agenda that subverts the needs of the majority.
Bello doensn't mention the awful truth that TRUE pundits of the left are almost never seen on TV at all. Therefore their philosophy can be inaccurately served to the public as adulterated pabulum, and without truly "fair and balanced" counter-opinions broadcast, the public is left to sift through the body of lies so dense, it tends to internalize the falsehoods told often enough to become perceived as true.
This article is another whitewash of Obama's motives, added to the tired strategy of blaming the left for its lack of power in the present sold-out scheme of American politics. Only money talks in this morally bankrupt nexus. How many billionaires wish to fund programs that decimate their ill-begotten (or otherwise) fortunes? How many wish to see benefits spread around?
Your statement that TRUE pundits of the left are almost never seen on TV rings true to me. Not only are they not seen, but their way of framing the argument is never featured on TV, either. For example, how often have you ever heard Brian or Katie or any of the other news anchors--including PBS's-- EVER refer to "corporate media" or the military-industrial complex or AIPAC or even "investment banks" as a separate constituency or interest group? On the other side, how often do you hear the viewpoints of "teachers," "UAW workers," "trade unionists", let alone "workers" or "farmers," or any term that denotes a certain body of people whose politics are not right-center? That is the main difference between now and the thirties: now there are but five owners of media and their interests all coincide. Back then there was a wider variety of news sources and the corporate world had not yet learned how to frame arguments using only terms they preferred. To me, it means the end of democracy. The choice of stories to be covered, the methods used to collect information, and the reporting language are all monopolized by a single interest group--the corporate oligarchy. Given the level of misinformation and ignorance, how can any voter make the right choice? Democracy is finished.
RE: This article is another whitewash of Obama's motives...
I agree. Obama was elected to re-brand the empire after the damage of Bush's bellicose style (Note "style" not substance; Bush did a lot for the ruling class). The business sector that contributed most to Obama's campaign was represented by Wall Street. So, it should not be considered a "betrayal" that Obama has been their greatest protector and benefactor.
The resurgence of the Right, aka, the Tea Party is vastly over-rated. Lance Selfa (isreview) says: "Some ultraconservative GOP candidates...may be so extreme that they scare away more voters than they attract. And the only major political force less popular than President Obama or the Democratic Party is the Republican Party." Anthony DiMaggio (Znet) has a well argued piece called "The Tea Party doesn't exist". The TP is a top down pseudo-movement created by GOP party hacks and the deep pockets of the super rich. It may be that the TP has two functions: 1) energize the GOP base, and 2) scare the Dem base to get out the vote (for fear of a largely fictional Tea Party take over) - meanwhile being screwed by their own party. This would be just another example of "lesser-evilism" which has been an effective strategy of the DP to move the country rightward - for decades.
Selfa again: "If Obama and his top advisers are looking for explanations for why their supporters aren’t more fired up about the midterm elections, they should look in the mirror." The real reason the DP is in trouble this November is that their own base will stay home.
But liberal/progressive organizations do have some responsibility here. So far, "the leading liberal organizations—like the AFL-CIO, the NAACP, and the Human Rights Campaign—have played 'good soldiers' in trying to carry out the White House’s agenda. As a result, there has been no sustained national effort to give voice to millions facing economic devastation today" (Selfa). In short, progressives need to break their knee-jerk allegiance to the Democratic Party and to electoral politics as the way forward. We can't "work within the system" and expect anything different. Looking at the history of the 1930's labor struggles would provide some good ideas. See Sharon Smith's "Subterranean Fire: A History of Working-Class Radicalism in the United States."
If, as you say, Obama was 'appointed' to re-brand the empire then he has done a rather awful job, actually stirring the pot of more and more dissent, dissent which is leading to action, if only on the right.
The endeavors of the 1930's Working-Class may have been too successful for its own good. A preponderant number of those who inherited the blessings for which their parents and grandparents struggled do not see themselves as connected to their working class origins. Their hands have never known a callus and their "work" clothes have never collected a spot of grease, and therefore, in their minds, they are part of the elite. Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck have got it "right," and, owing to their sketchy knowledge of even recent History, they all but drop to their knees in worship at the very sound of Ronald Reagan's name. The good news is that they are also extremely apathetic, and very unlikely to cast a vote.
i have often thought that "boomers" (of which i am one), on the whole, simply assumed that all the benefits our parents and grandparents won for us were "ours" forever and we could simply enjoy the fruits of their labor, after our "fling" in the 60's. That once we "stopped the war" in 'Nam and did "the Civil Rights thing", we could lean back and coast, without having to do anything more. We dropped the ball and now our children and their's and their's and ..... will pay a huge price, like Sisyphus having to push the ball up the hill again, only this time they may be crushed under its weight before they get there ....
Much fact here, and food for thought as well. As a fellow "Boomer" I am proud of what we did accomplish, and regret what we failed to achieve or address even. Yet there comes a point when one turns responsibility over the next generation,a group so far rather timid and far too uninvolved I fear.
Our form of governance has a major flaw, so to speak, in that it requires the constant involvement of our citizenry. We have a govt in three parts soas to provide checks and balances, but the primary overseer of the republic, the greatest responsibility for the direction of our nation, lies with the people.
dd,
"Our form of governance has a major flaw, so to speak, in that it requires the constant involvement of our citizenry"
I do not think of it as a "flaw" unless that is in the same sense that a major "flaw" of fauna is that they require to be constantly, or at least repeatedly, fed. If you think of democracy as a "living" form of government, it, of necessity, must continually be nurtured. Like critters, if you don't feed it, it will die ......
I think boomers need to at least try to make up for the fact that at least as far back as the Clinton years, we dropped the ball for whatever reason, and as a result of our neglecting to pay attention, much, much damage has been done - to the planet, to other critters, to our progeny.
Yes, the younger generations need to step up, but we need to humbly explain why their efforts may well need to be more Herculean than our own because of what we let slide. We need to explain to them that better things are, indeed, possible - that, even though our operating definition of "better", which we too often passed on, by osmosis, if nothing else, was too often co-terminal with "more", achieved as a result of "individual effort" and "fulfillment" was an "individual" affair - there "was" a time when collective effort made TRULY better things, such as security in old age, better wages, better access to health care, etc. etc.. That, instead of finding our "fix" in the drugstore, we should have been finding it in ourselves, that, instead of nurturing, protecting and expanding the hard won gains of our forefathers, we frittered them away, and that we are explaining that to them now, at least, in the hope that late is, indeed, better than never .......
My lack of use of the "" surrounding the word in question, flaw has led to a misunderstanding. My bad.
Well as I see it what good did the AFL-CIO do? when the factories were shuttering up and moving to China, did they use their billions to even raise the call, NO! I learned of the disolving of our industries and high-paying jobs on the internet (factoryrat.com) the MSM didn't cover it, Nobama didn't go out to fly over counrty and point look! their stealing everything not nailed down to take to China! Even Nader only bothered with wall.st's part, The end of 50yrs of advancing unionism, payscales. and the American Dream being stolen, nobody cared, nobody said a word. The end was not televised. Now people point at vacant factories and ask what happened, now they look at empty homes and ask where the people are.
Now it's gone, the only question is how do we get it back? Job training? I don't think so, Where are they gonna get a job? We have to re-constitute americas infrastrusture, factories, mills, mines, agraclture, nearly from scrach! We import everything! from the socks on our feet to the fruit in our refrigerators (also) imported with domestic labels glued on) I only hope we can do it so our kids and grandkids have something.
Maybe along the way we can also make it better, less polluting, but we have to get up and do it. Because nobody else will!
>^^<
I agree with just about everything you said, except about Nader - i voted for him in '96 and '00 based, to a great extent on his anti NAFTA/WTO stance (as well as in '04 and '08). Too bad labor didn't do the same ...
As far as how do we get it back - I suggest we start taking the "P" word (protectionism) out of mothballs, dust it off and restore it to respectability (check out Ha-Joon Chang's "Bad Samaritan" - pretty good read) as a start. Combine that with the concept of bioregionalism for more localized self sufficiency and go from there ....
i have often wondered how we can talk about national security when we don't even make our own underwear any more - talk about being caught with your pants down .....
Obama’s first mistake was to remain silent during the murdering of Gazans by Israelis in January 2009.
Obama's second mistake was to remain silent about the obvious lies of 9/11.
His first mistake was to be silent while the banksters were raping and looting the economy.
>^^<
That Bello propagates this b.s. is particularly disappointing. He has been and can be better than this. That's what happens when inside-the-Beltway pwog-lib NGO's like FPIF are signing your paycheck, I guess. Or maybe he's mealy-mouthed b/c he doesn't want to antagonize Obama-ites and DP dead-enders. Courtesy won't solve anything, least of all right now.
Jill
Well said!
Ever more commentators on the "left" are appearing to be essentially "left gatekeepers" in that while they focus on specific issues while scrupulously ignoring the most crucial, specifically 9/11. Amy Goodman is a good example, and Common Dreams may fit as well As the so-called "Truth Movement" continues to grow, already having drawn many organized groups incorporating thousands of physicists, engineers, pilots, military and intel people, and prominent figures all over the world, our "free press" absolutely refuses to mention the phenomenon.
"Six Reasons behind the Debacle"?
There are a lot more than six. Another article that blames the problem on a few strategic moves. We didn't even have to wait until he took the oath of office to realize his campaign was a ruse and he loyalty is to the Democratic party, corporate America and Israel. He doesn't dissapoint, week after week.
Bello forgot the elephant in the room--war. Every single one of our problems, economic and political, stems from the impossible costs of perpetual war.
Chrisll, and the unWHISPERED antecedent of war is the EMPIRE.
Best,
Alan
Is Obama a social Democrat--in any context? The article moves between Obama's failures and the failures of "we in the left" Since Bello thinks Obama is on the Left, is a social Democrat, he can, I guess, include Obama in the "we." I don't. A simpler explanation is that he is a centrist neo liberal Democrat, with lots of charisma, who could when needed move his rhetoric a little to the left to capture its support. Look at his actions, look at his plaintive attempt at bipartisanship. Obama felt/feels that of course, he has the left in his pocket and that he can easily manipulate them, all he needs to rule successfully is to get the right to see that his views really aren't much different. Is Romneycare different from Obamacare? Both sides voted for the tarp, neither side wants real financial reform etc. Tom Daschle has given us a cogent insight when he revealed how the public option was taken off the table. Of course the "stakeholders," get to call the shots, unless siding with them is so egregious and creates such outrage that it would threaten Obama's election. In that case what the stakeholders want is off the table--until he can get things back under control. You want to be a stakeholder? You want to influence the president? You have to be as organized as your opponents are and make it clear that he will not be reeelcted, or if elected he will have a very hard time governing unless he seats you at the table and treats you with respect. It's as simple and as hard as that. And the left is nowhere strong enough to do that yet. Obama tells us he likes to be pushed. A viable opponent, (I don't mean Dennis or Ralf) who can challenge Obama in a primary and at least make him sweat is the only chance I see that this president will ever respect the left.
The article made ONE BIG MISTAKE:
assuming that obama "made mistakes"....no, actually...OBAMA INTENDED to do exactly as he has.
the MISTAKE of Obama is.....quite simply...BEING OBAMA.
and that means -- a corporate Whore who talked from both sides of his mouth..knowing that the very parochial american public will have enough people lapping up "one side" of his talk...and another lapping up the "other side" of his talk...with both of them still fighting each other...
while HE TRIANGULATES in "between the two sides"...
and squeeze through what really is his corporatist Whoreship.
the MISTAKE of Obama is ...ambition. unbridled, narcissistic ambition and lust for power at "one with" his capitalist whoredom king-makers.
the Mistake of Obama is he has been the RIGHT MAN for his corporate masters. ..until the next right man comes of course.
the Mistake of obama is ...above all...he is an American President.
his Mistake is BEING american. Being a President and therefore being the most dangerous man on earth. it is PART of being an american president.... you see. until america sees that
THIS is what america produces. ANOTHER "leader" representing the BIGGEST MISTAKE OF ALL:
America and its Capitalism.
I agree with Jill. More propaganda.
"The key problem is the failure of progressives to translate their vision and values into a program that is convincing and connects with the people trapped in the terrible existential conditions created by the global financial crisis."
This seems to me to be an accurate and succint analysis of THE PROBLEM.
I think the progressive left in the US dances around this sensitive issue partly because it reflects one of our uncomfortably salient deficits: we've abandoned our traditional base, the working class, what's left of them, and they've been scattered to the 4 winds, some of which are deeply reactionary, all of which disserve this distinguished class.
The ties that bind have been broken. Oligarchs in the US understand 'class' all too well. They have been engaging in an assault on workers for decades. Liberals have joined in the assault with unrelenting fervor. Workers, on the other hand, have no concept of class from a political perspective and scatter at each new attack to be picked off a few at a time, virtually without a defensive response.
Over and over on these pages I hear diatribes about the devolution of the american working class.
We are reacting to symptoms.
We need to stop reacting to symptoms. And develop effective ways to treat the disease.
We need to reclaim and proclaim our allegiance to the working class. So that we can begin to focus the struggle correctly and develop effective strategy to fight THE PROBLEM.
Which is not the confused anti-immigration bigot on the corner of our block.
It's the very small cohort of very greedy, very well-connected, very socio-pathic and wealthy capitalists no where near our block.
Wonderful post.
IOWA: I see it somewhat differently, although I agree that your analysis holds merit.
Let's use the analogy of the Old Woman Who Lived in the Shoe.
That shoe is coming apart. I mean the laces no longer tie, the sole is run down, and what once constituted the shoe, itself, is in utter disrepair.
That shoe is our nation.
The left sees the myriad problems at play:
1. Jobs shipped overseas, lousy wages, an economy that has made it possible for wealth to remain at the top
2. An environment in stages of collapse: from infrastructure to actual ecosystems
3. Rising waves of racism and xenophobia.
4. The rallying storm of global climate change
5. War, war, and more war
6. An education system being pushed towards the "wonders" of privatization
And I left out others...
My point is that there are so many items that require therapeutic adjustment. Many on the left have chosen their preferred issue.
The right wing message is simple and designed for the simple-minded. It also reinforces the meme that's had 30 years of "gain time" insofar as it's humming its way through the MSM. That's the YOY message akin to personal responsibility.
With our elections based on corporate control of the vote count; and with our Supreme Court beholden to the corporations and their monetary bottom line, added to a media completely in the hands of those intent upon controlling the conversation... there are so many issues that have not been truthfully addressed. Each one is viable and endlessly important.
Jobs, capitalism, and the economy are certainly key factors. However, my point is that there are so many areas that require the energetic commitment of persons of conscience. I think it's disingenuous to turn the complexity of what we face into a PR problem based upon simplifying "message." In fact, that sounds like adapting the stance of the PR people, and/or George Lakoff.
There's more to life and truth than framing! Or staying "on" message. The shoe is coming apart!