Most Popular This Week
- Not to Worry, Rape Victims Who Want An Abortion: We Won't Charge You With Felony Tampering With Evidence, Just Your Doctor
- The Non Zero-Sum Society: How the Rich Are Destroying the US Economy
- Obama Administration Compromise Would Implement No-Cost Birth Control
- As Predicted, Austerity Policies Send US Economy Downward
- It’s All About Israel
- The Non Zero-Sum Society: How the Rich Are Destroying the US Economy
- Don’t Put a Fork in It: On the Perils of Genetically Engineered Salmon
- Five Possibilities for the Next Great Progressive Push
- The Paranoia of the Superrich and Superpowerful
- An Economic Alternative to Exploitative Free Market Capitalism
Popular content
Today's Top News
Stopping Obama's Next Betrayal
The debt-ceiling debate has been a sad one for the Left—and also, in large part, a boring one. Boring because we haven’t had too much to add. As a friend said to me, you know things are bad when the New York Times liberals say pretty much all there is to say.
In this case, they have. Paul Krugman noted that the debt deal
will damage an already depressed economy; it will probably make America’s long-run deficit problem worse, not better; and most important, by demonstrating that raw extortion works and carries no political cost, it will take America a long way down the road to banana-republic status....Republicans will surely be emboldened by the way Mr. Obama keeps folding in the face of their threats.
Joe Nocera added, “America’s real crisis is not a debt crisis. It’s an unemployment crisis. Yet this agreement not only doesn’t address unemployment, it’s guaranteed to make it worse.”
Plenty of people have already explored in detail how bad the debt compromise is. For those who consider themselves part of a social movement Left, the real conversation concerns something different: namely, how we can avoid being betrayed again.
Progressives felt hugely let down last December when President Obama caved on extending the Bush tax cuts. And they almost uniformly feel betrayed now. Yet this problem is not exclusive to Obama. Certainly, the Left felt just as badly abused under Clinton. (NAFTA anyone?) And the history of ill feeling toward the actions of Democratic presidents could be traced back much further.
Some argue that we should not be surprised that Obama has crafted the compromises he has. Rather than assuming he’s a poor negotiator whose blundering is undermining progressive outcomes, they contend, we’re better off recognizing that Obama isn’t actually seeking progressive outcomes. Salon’s Glenn Greenwald, a leading advocate of this position, argued in April:
I read all of these laments from liberal pundits that Obama isn’t pursuing the right negotiating tactics, that he’s not being as shrewd as he should be. He’s pursuing exactly the right negotiating tactics and is being extremely shrewd—he just doesn’t want the same results that these liberal pundits want and which they like to imagine the President wants, too. He’s not trying to prevent budget cuts or entitlement reforms; he wants exactly those things because of how politically beneficial they are to him—to say nothing of whether he agrees with them on the merits.
Greenwald added to his position this week by countering the idea that Obama was “forced into” the current debt deal “by the Tea Party hostage-takers”:
For those who believe this narrative, please confront the evidence there; how anyone can claim in the face of all that evidence that the President was “forced” into making these cuts—as opposed to having eagerly sought them—is mystifying indeed. And, as I set forth there, there were ample steps he could have taken had he actually wanted leverage against the GOP; the very idea that negotiating steps so obvious to every progressive pundit somehow eluded the President and his vast army of advisers is absurd on its face.
I think this line of reasoning has been a useful counterpoint to the widespread liberal tendency to make excuses for Obama and to claim him as someone who may be faring poorly against a rabid Republican Congress, but who is still a progressive at heart. It’s also useful for highlighting the Democratic tendency to campaign as liberals (or at least as center-leftists), and then govern as a market-focused neoliberals—as opposed to the Republican tendency to campaign as a moderates and then govern as hard-right conservatives.
Yet, while it was valuable as a corrective, I think the argument has problems of its own. Those who claim that the president is, at heart, a conservative (or at least a right-leaning centrist) are ultimately engaged in the same process of trying to discern the nature of the “true Obama.” And in the same way there is a yearning hopefulness—and perhaps a naivete—in the “progressive at heart” position, there’s a type of smugness in the “conservative at heart” position that I find troubling. It usually contains some contempt for those yearners, and I think that’s a problem. Any mass movement pushing toward the left in America in the future will certainly need to rely on a base of people who are hoping—even against the evidence—that Obama wants to advance progressive goals. We should take these hopes as signs of support for a more socially just and economically equitable political program, not merely dismiss them as foolishness.
Beyond that, I don’t think it is necessary that we divine Obama’s true desires. We don’t need to know what policies he’d chose in his heart of hearts. I think it is more useful to see the president as someone who is being constantly lobbied and pushed to appease different interests. He is surrounded by appointees representing a variety of ideological positions. Many of them are far more conservative than I would like (as are Washington Democrats as a whole), while some are solid progressives. Through the work of its many and varied branches, the administration is doing some things that are admirable (as I have argued with regard to the Department of Labor) and some things that totally stink (as I am inclined to say of the Department of State).
For his part, President Obama is making constant judgments, not only about which of the groups lobbying him he will appease, but also about what policy options he perceives to be politically acceptable and expedient. Forces outside of Washington go far in determining the range of those options. Indeed, those who believe in the power of social movements argue most forcefully that popular mobilizations can affect the range of policies seen as desirable, advantageous, or even inevitable.
Believing that Obama is more “conservative at heart” than the Left would like him to be—even if this is accurate—doesn’t lead very far in terms of suggesting a political response. It seems to lend support to those who, in utter disillusionment, would simply abandon electoral politics. In contrast, recognizing the multiple and sometimes contradictory faces of the administration—and seeing White House decision-making as reflecting a constant balancing act between different interests—gives us a different sense of what we need to do.
Obama is willing to compromise and cave because progressive movements are not strong enough to enforce discipline among politicians. Nor are they strong enough to consistently outweigh corporate influences within the Democratic Party. Immediately after Obama was elected, there was a widespread acknowledgment that those same forces who fueled his populist field campaign would need to “make him” stay true to progressive ideals. As it turns out, we have not made him do much of anything. Organizing for America, an outfit that was supposed to carry forth the grassroots energy of the Obama campaign, largely fizzled as the White House demonstrated that it preferred a loyal PR operation to a genuinely engaged and independent-minded base. Other efforts—such as the American Dream Movement (backed by labor, MoveOn.org, and other significant progressive players)—have only recently started trying to remedy the situation.
Until a vocal, dedicated, progressive grassroots, taking a page from the Tea Party, can show that it’s far more effective to reposition the center of the debate than it is to forever triangulate in hopes of appealing to “independents,“ Democratic politicians will continue to do the latter.
At this point, we can do little about the horrific budget compromise. We can only start working to stop the next betrayal.
* * * *
As a postscript, I would note that one leftist who has had something different to say about the debt-ceiling debate is Marxist scholar David Harvey. He argues that, since capitalism relies on the continual expansion of credit and debt spending, “a vote against further debt creation is a vote to end capitalism!” You can read more of his very interesting rationale here.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


51 Comments so far
Show All"He is surrounded by appointees representing a variety of ideological positions."
Let me be the first to call: BULLSH*T!!!
A variety of positions? A variety of positions?
No one in DC has deviated from the fascist neoliberal agenda for over 30 years, Mr. Engler.
Let me be the second, and:
Obama didn't "craft compromises", Obama is a serial collaborator in the destruction of the US working class.
Seymour Hirsh, the incredible journalist, pointed out that Obama is the most isolated president of the last 40 years.
He is surrounded by those he has chosen and is doing the bidding of the oligarchs.
The 2006 book "Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire" makes the point that when on the way down, leaders are chosen who accelerate the downward slide. I read the book when W was in office and it fit perfectly. Now Obama is continuing the slide by dismantling the core of the democratic party.
I came here because that idiotic statement stood out to me also. He's surrounded by a variety of viewpoints from from A to almost B.
The author is incredibly naive and, in fact, is echoing the very nonsense that Obama himself spews--balancing, weighing, considering. NOT. Obama has an agenda...a Wall Street agenda, but liberals have not not yet shed their denial. What will it take for Obama's liberal sycophants to get the stars out of their eyes and see this charletan for what he is--an ignorant corporate hack without an idea in his head that wasn't planted there by Wall Street. Can we spell "primary"? If we can elect a progressive Congress, it won't matter whether the greater or lesser evil is in the White House. A vote for Obama is a vote for Wall Street, so dump him and elect progressive congress people.
There is no way to stop Obama's next betrayal as long as he remains in office.
Impeach this corporate whore.
*******
Once you get past the illusion of two parties everything starts to make sense.
FREE AMERICA
REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY
*******
"Any mass movement pushing toward the left in America in the future will certainly need to rely on a base of people who are hoping—even against the evidence—that Obama wants to advance progressive goals. We should take these hopes as signs of support for a more socially just and economically equitable political program, not merely dismiss them as foolishness."
Really? Is the author's argument like religion, where the premise may be total bullshit, but it serves a useful purpose so the masses should rally behind it?
'Freedom is the freedom to say 2+2=4'. Foolishness is just that, foolishness. General support for Obama by a progressive is like shooting oneself in the head.
This article is nonsense.
The path forward has nothing to do with fucking groveling obsequious appeals to fucking Obama - whatever his "true heart" is!
The path forward is in the streets - in acts of institutional and physical (but, for now, non-violent) sabotage that disables the system for ALL the powerful.
And when the time comes, Obama will be sitting in shackles in an iron-bar enclosed dock to for high crimes against humanity - right alongside the Koch Brothers, Ryan, and GW Bush.
well mr writer which will it be
you offer grumwald's insight that von obummer wants and pursues the cuts - which as glen points out is the only rational explanation of his actions - and then you say "Beyond that, I don’t think it is necessary that we divine Obama’s true desires. We don’t need to know what policies he’d chose in his heart of hearts. I think it is more useful to see the president as someone who is being constantly lobbied and pushed to appease different interests."
so von obummer is a victim of all these apparently nasty people who lobby him
hmmm.............
is he that weak
is he that feckless
this writer should read up on occam's razor a but i suspect
"Occam's razor (or Ockham's razor)[1] often expressed in Latin as the lex parsimoniae, translating to law of parsimony, law of economy or law of succinctness, is a principle that generally recommends, when faced with competing hypotheses that are equal in other respects, selecting the one that makes the fewest new assumptions."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam%27s_razor
this writer says: "Beyond that, I don’t think it is necessary that we divine Obama’s true desires. "
wtf!!!!!!!!
we don't have to divine it at all - let's go back to his campaign promises which i assume he wanted us to believe
here's one: "I will call for a standing, bipartisan consultative group of congressional leaders on national security. I will meet with this consultative group every month, and consult them before taking major military action." — 10/2/07, Chicago Washington//
these days he says that 9000 bombing missions over libya doesn't amount to war or a major military action
hmmm..........
here: "When I am president, America will reject torture without exception." — 8/1/07, Washington
another: "I'll put in place the common-sense regulations and rules of the road I've been calling for since March — rules that will keep our market free, fair, and honest; rules that will restore accountability and responsibility in our corporate boardrooms."
"When you walk into my administration, you will not be able to work on regulations or contracts related to your former employer for two years. When you leave, you will not be able to lobby the administration throughout the remainder of my term in office." — 5/19/08, Billings, Mont.
"I will begin to remove our troops from Iraq immediately. I will remove one or two brigades a month and get all of our combat troops out of Iraq within 16 months. The only troops I will keep in Iraq will perform the limited missions of protecting our diplomats and carrying out targeted strikes on Al Qaeda." — 10/2/07
"I will bring to the White House an unshakable commitment to Israel's security." — 6/4/08, Washington - this one he has followed through on telling aipac last month that while the government is cuttiing services and support in america it is increasing its aid to israel
priorities priorities
here's a good one: "And if American workers are being denied their right to organize when I'm in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes and I will walk on that picket line with you as president of the United States." — 11/3/07, Spartanburg, S.C.
and let's not forget that whole hopey changey feeley thing
we have been played by a nwo manchurian candidate with birth certificate issues who lives like a ceasar and wants to be a dictator
his wife is on permanent vacations with her entourage of 40 plus - sometimes in excess of 70
"Michelle Obama today faced a fresh wave of attacks over her lavish break in Spain with 40 friends, which could easily cost U.S. taxpayers a staggering £50,000 a day.
The First Lady has been lambasted for her extravagance at a time when the economy is still struggling. One blogger went so far as to brand her a modern-day Marie Antoinette.
And her critics will be further annoyed when they learn that the president's wife had a Spanish beach closed off today so that she, her daughter and their entourage could go for a swim.
Spanish police cleared off a stretch of beach at the Villa Padierna Hotel in Marbella after the Obamas had finished a busy day of sightseeing.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1300852/Spanish-police-close-public-beach-Michelle-Obamas-250k-Spanish-holiday.html
at least clinton would lie and say: i feel your pain
to me obama is mk ultra - not unlike tim mcveigh - he can't remember his birthday, his age or his daughter's and when he signed the queen's guest book he showed he doesn't know what year it is
he said a few weeks ago that he would be turning 50 next week
"Actually…he’ll be turning 50 in three weeks. His birthday is August 4, two days after the debt ceiling deadline. Senior moment?
He messed up Malia’s birthday, too, calling her 13 when she was at the time 12 and still days away from becoming a teenager. "
"Visiting US President Barack Obama got the date wrong by three years when he signed a guestbook at the Westminster Abbey, despite apparently asking the dean what day it was"
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/obama-gets-date-wrong-signs-guestbook-2008-108179
probably all the stress caused by those damn lobbyists
and i used to think that mccain was confused.............
so when the writer writes: "Beyond that, I don’t think it is necessary that we divine Obama’s true desires"
i couldn't disagree more
thanks for all that, good stuff, let me add a few more quotes ;)
"The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation." - Presidential candidate Barak Obama 12/20/2007 "
"I take a backseat to no one in my commitment to Net Neutrality." Barak Obama
Democrats, just congenitally, tend to get - to see the glass as half empty. (Laughter.) If we get an historic health care bill passed - oh, well, the public option wasn't there. If you get the financial reform bill passed - then, well, I don't know about this particular derivatives rule, I'm not sure that I'm satisfied with that. And gosh, we haven't yet brought about world peace and - (laughter.) I thought that was going to happen quicker. (Laughter.) You know who you are. (Laughter.) - President Obama 9-18-10 At the Greenwich, Connecticut home of (I kid you not) a fundraiser named Rich Richman.
""I am for the public option. We need it. Elect me President and I'll see you get it."" obama in NH primary on the public option
'It turns out, by the way, that oil rigs today generally don't cause spills. They are technologically very advanced..' Barak Obama 2010, weeks before the deep water horizon spilling disaster.
"In the coming days and weeks, these efforts should capture up to 90 percent of the oil leaking out of the well." 6/15/10
"When your employers save money, they might give you a raise..." Barak Obama in 2009 explaining to workers how to get a raise (referring to health care).
"The pace of hiring is picking up." Obama 1-8-2011
btw: to make this quote: 11/3/07, Spartanburg, S.C.
and never even publicly mention Wisconsin?? What more do you need to know what kind of a person he is?
and even this one from 2 days ago:
"“We can’t balance the budget on the backs of the very people who have borne the biggest brunt of this recession.”"
pjd412
Your second paragraph is nonsense. Monkey wrenching made for a good novel by Ed Abbey, but isn't going to happen in real life. And the third paragraph is also fantasy. Except for what is happening in Egypt now, it too unlikely to believe.
As Gore Vidal once pointed out, the Democrats and the Republicans are basically two sides of the same coin. If only a modern day Eugene V. Debs or Robert LaFollette could emerge today in order to stir the consciousness of the American people. But if someone like those two were to appear it remains to be seen if the corprorate media would give voice to their thoughts and radicalism.
Well, we certainly and foolishly fell for Obama's promise: "I PROMISE YOU CHANGE YOU CAN BELIEVE IN!" It was the hallmark of his campaign!!!
He obviously had no intention whatsoever to follow through on this promise, which puts him in the same class as most politicians -- LIARS!!!
"Until a vocal, dedicated, progressive grassroots, taking a page from the Tea Party, can show that it’s far more effective to reposition the center of the debate than it is to forever triangulate in hopes of appealing to “independents,“ Democratic politicians will continue to do the latter."
The stupidity of this article is summed up at the end when the author uses "Tea Party" and "grassroots" in the same sentence. I guess he's never heard of the Koch brothers or the US Chamber of Commerce.
Democratic politicians are not triangulating to appeal to independents. They are following the instructions of their corporate masters. This "triangulation" crap is just the excuse they use.
You guys crack me up.
Obama all by himself has destroyed the country!!!!
Obama is not a good President at all. And we all know the reasons. But Obama didn't do it all. And because we refuse to address that. Allows the next POTUS to come in, and the same thing happens, because, we complain not nearly enough about the foundation of the house. That is where the true rot is .
Exactly! And it always drives me crazy how much pundits put into this notion. Bush Jr should have made it obvious that the prez, any prez, is just a figurehead. I almost wish Palin would get elected, because maybe then it'd be utterly obvious. I mean she's worse than Bush, the opposite intellectually from Obama, and yet we'd see the exact same outcome, thus proving the figurehead idea.
Engler seems almost intentionally naive, and this is one more slap at progressive movements' inability to "make Obama do what they want." Progressives are too weak to make him do anything. If only we had strong enough movements, Obama would eagerly do our progressive bidding. It's our fault.
This blame-the-victims explanation for everything Obama does to appease and placate the Right never seems to disappear. Never mind that the Tea Party is largely an invention of corporate media and a few mega-billionaire outfits like the Koch brothers--progressives should "learn" from that fabulously successful "movement" and get its act together.
But the Tea Party is more illusion than movement, so does Engler have some bright ideas how progressives can create a similarly compelling illusion that corporate media will have orgasms over? Obama and his team of advisers and the swarming lobbyists who are both "conservative and progressive" who always have his ear decidedly don't give a rat's ass what his progressive base demands, expects or fervently desires. They are playing to "centrists" and fence-sitting independents (know nothings) mostly because they WANT to distance themselves from liberals and progressives. They're convinced this is where the electoral action is.
There is nothing anyone left of Rahm Emanuel can realistically expect from this fully corporatized administration, no matter how much strong pressure they apply. That isn't smugness, that's everyday realism. Counseling progressives to wise up and "take a page from the Tea Party" so we can move Obama leftward is stale, unproductive claptrap. It's advising the left to remain mired in the same delusions that brought this pissant to power in 2008.
Ephraim -- your response is quite reasonable & succinct. Although Engler obviously means well, he should have stopped while he was ahead -- and that was quoting Greenwald extensively.
Several other responders have made telling points as well.
Anyone whose heart is not located on Wall Street -- Van Jones and Elizabeth Warren come to mind -- are not going to last long on team Obama.
The link to Marxist geographer David Harvey at the end was inspired -- Engler deserves a gold (or red) star for that.
Obama's betrayal will not stop until Jan 21, 2013.
Ok, can someone tell me why my post was removed?
"Believing that Obama is more “conservative at heart” than the Left would like him to be—even if this is accurate—doesn’t lead very far in terms of suggesting a political response. It seems to lend support to those who, in utter disillusionment, would simply abandon electoral politics. In contrast, recognizing the multiple and sometimes contradictory faces of the administration—and seeing White House decision-making as reflecting a constant balancing act between different interests—gives us a different sense of what we need to do."
This is the centerpiece of the essay here, and a vital one to understand. Obviously Engler's basically saying his job is to restore belief in the electoral system as the primary place where social change occurs, *in spite of the evidence*.
No Koch Bros. ad or Tea Party rally can do more harm to positive change than an assertion like this one.
I do find it intersting that even Engler concedes that if it is true that Obama is really a right winger, than the only position that benefits is the one advocated by many of us that electoral politics no longer matter for activists. And apparently Engler will do or say anything to avoid arriving at that conclusion.
Well, Mark, the empire thanks you for your efforts.
The Marxist is correct. A vote against debt is a vote to end Capitalism.
And Obama is leading the charge, because he is a socialist.
If you are not willing to make Obama pay the price for his betrayal then you give up your power. These jackals know One Thing: Power Politics.
For all the complaining about the teabaggers at least those craven sob's understand that -
Make Obomba and the dems pay the price or shut the fuck up and take your abuse with a smile!
The Author cleverly wrote this piece point to the conclusion that progressives need to 'Make Obama & the Dems do it' - WRONG! - Progressives need to dump Obama & Corp Dems for real Progressives [3rd Party, independents, or maybe the handful of DC Dems that have proven progessive track records].
This Author's recipe of 'Progressives need to make the Dems do it'- leads to the same ole crap - which ultimately keeps people trapped in the Corp controlled 2 Party / Dem vs GOP Paradigm - guaranteeing the same ole crappy or even worse results!
I find no evidence Obama has EVER betrayed those to whom he owes his allegiance.
You got that EXACTLY right!
Only the deluded believe Obomber "betrayed" liberals or Democrats.
He's been a corporate tool from long before his election, and he has been true and loyal to his REAL base: Wall Street/Corporations/War Profiteers.
OBAMA is a Republican, He is just like Reagan who was a Democrat until the winds changed and Reagan gave "The Speech" for Barry Goldwater. Also any one who has gone to one of the elite Eastern colleges ends up with a smug self image, way above the little people.........
Then you're naive as all hell, or nasty. Which is it?
I think you missed his sense of irony. Geobbels is suggesting that Obama's true masters aren't the people who voted for him, and in that sense, his is "faithful".
Thanks, drone. And here I was, all ready to self-identify as 'nasty'.
heh heh. sorry, man!
It's time for the AFL-CIO and members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus to break with the corporate/Wall Street-dominated Democrats, including Obama, and form a People's Party to represent working, middle class, and poor people, and start a People's Movement for an Equitable U.S. with fair taxes, fair distribution of wealth and income, health care for all, an end to all our wars and bases abroad, an end to Empire, and an end to corporate/Wall Street control of all branches of government in this country. Above all, catastrophic climate chaos MUST be reversed, or our grandchildren will face unprecedented hardships.
Great idea. This would give immediate legitimacy to the party, and could be the saving grace of America.
So how do we convince all those DC progressives to take such a step? Many have become comfortable voting against things because their vote is not needed, not because they would continue to vote that way if it was down to the wire. Look at poor ("I'll vote for health care bill") Kucinich.
the People's Democratic Party could seek local victories and a place of power within the Democratic Party, a counter weight to DLC. More efficient to infiltrate the party than try to build a new one. Tea party has taken over the Repubs, quicker path to success. A problem though is who will progressives get to provide money like the Koch and Chamber do for the tea party? What network will report progressive views as the Fox does for the Tea party?
Lack of Money and Media and progressive schools puts progressives at a disadvantage.
Robert Sheer interviews Representative Dennis Kucinich:
"The President has never made a deal he didn't want." -- to paraphrase his words.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/kucinich_says_obama_got_
the_deal_he_wanted_20110804/
Thanks to several commenters for effectively rebutting this weak attempt to establish a higher or more refined criticism of Obama and his maladministration.
Engler attempts an unpersuasive and fallacious equivalence between those who view Obama as an overwhelmed and embattled "progressive" and those who view Obama as a knowing ally and agent of the overclass power elite.
He employs a premise beloved by moderates, which incidentally is the basis of almost all mass-media Talking Heads infotainment: constructing the argument as a "point-counterpoint", or "thesis-antithesis", and offering a "synthesis"' which rejects supposed fallacies in the "extremes" in favor of a higher or more refined truth.
I agree with the previous commenters who assert that Engler's supposed "above the fray" insight amounts to (Finding Ways of) Working (More Effectively) Within the System.
I was briefly intrigued when Engler wrote, "... recognizing the multiple and sometimes contradictory faces of the administration—and seeing White House decision-making as reflecting a constant balancing act between different interests—gives us a different sense of what we need to do", and then went on to candidly acknowledge the obvious impotence of the supposedly "genuinely engaged and independent-minded base" to accomplish this result during the Obama maladministration.
Then I got to the conclusion: "Until a vocal, dedicated, progressive grassroots, taking a page from the Tea Party, can show that it’s far more effective to reposition the center of the debate than it is to forever triangulate in hopes of appealing to 'independents', Democratic politicians will continue to do the latter."
Or: "Clap harder!"
Which is of a piece with something I wrote the other day about
... a classic criticism from the liberal-lite realpolitik primer.
It's in the chapter that discusses strategic antecedents, e.g. "He WANTS to do it, and he's tasking us to MAKE him do it!"* and the dual necessity of resolutely "holding his feet to the fire" and "creating the 'political space' that will allow him to act".
Unfortunately, this kind of ostensibly pragmatic dogma is entirely compatible with battered-mate syndrome.
Because typically, the politician's cloven hooves prove frustratingly elusive, or show signs of being entirely comfortable while enduring brief and fleeting captivity above a flickering and fitful heat source.
Or the politician will balk like a mule at actually ENTERING that political space, and may even kick up its heels to fill it in with dirt as assiduously as earnest True Believers work to open it up.
Team Obama and the Democratic Party's response to the movement for "single-payer" health care or even the problematic "public option" is a classic example of the latter.
The problem with this orthodoxy is that it invariably sets up the practitioner to blame the victim, i.e. themselves. If this approach doesn't produced the intended, desired, and hoped-for results, the natural tendency for the frustrated and defeated actor is to assume responsibility for the failure-- and resolve to come up with an effectively-tweaked, improved version of more of the same.
Exactly like the abused mate, the failed and disappointed supporter will assume that "we" didn't make the fire hot enough, or didn't grab those feet firmly enough or hold them long enough. Or "we" didn't open up a big or attractive enough 'political space' this time around, and so forth.
This kind of exasperated and occasionally enraged blame used to pop up more frequently in CD comments threads, and there will probably be a resurgence as the next dreadful campaign cycle ratchets up.
It's like listening to some terrified but frantic and angry mom yelling at the kids for not washing the dishes fast enough or keeping the house tidy enough to please the demanding dad, who's probably already on the way home from the bar expecting dinner.
____________________
* Actually, Engler correctly points out the epistemological impossibility of knowing what Obama (or any political leader) actually "wants". He sets aside this point as moot, and instead proposes the ostensibly pragmatic view that the politician will ultimately do what he's "made" to do as a result of external pressure.
However, the underlying dynamic remains the same regardless of whether one postulates it as "persuading" or "appealing to" an open-minded leader to freely choose favorable ("progressive") policies or somehow "forcing", i.e. manipulating or indimidating, an essentially passive or hapless leader-- a puppet controlled by countervailing forces-- to move in a progressive direction.
BTW, I don't know beans about "Foreign Policy In Focus", except that from its frequent byline here it's obvious that CD draws heavily on it for material. It comes off like a fraternal twin to "The Nation", and perhaps a close cousin of "The American Prospect".
Representatives and Senators can vote to end the cap on Social Security. Why not?
Agreed, we are out flanked and surrounded. i doubt surrender is a viable option, they don't feed their prisoners although many in our ranks still think accommodation can work. We need money and media, I don't see either on the horizon. It's a monopoly game and the game is nearly over,
I've seen it all now.
"And in the same way there is a yearning hopefulness—and perhaps a naivete—in the “progressive at heart” position, there’s a type of smugness in the “conservative at heart” position that I find troubling. It usually contains some contempt for those yearners, and I think that’s a problem."
So those of us that demand transparency, and criticize, according to principle, dare criticize a President, who now has had almost 4 years to let his "real self" shine through, are now smug.
Expect that new label to be unveiled again and again.
I'm definitely smug then.
Mark Engler is pretty typical of most of the folks in the media these days: a self styled "expert" who has the gall to call himself an "analyst" (this guy would not know how to do a real "analysis" if his life depended on it)
Other than the quotes from Greenwald, this piece is just a collage of cliches.
Worst of all is the "Make me do it" cliche at the end (that FDR supposedly originated)
So, let me get this straight: millions of people around the country gave Obama their time and money so that he would be elected TO REPRESENT THEM... and then turn around and say, "Oh, by the way, if you want anything from me, you have to force me to do it ... and you have to give me more money than that lobbyist over there" ?
That's the definition of insanity and anyone who would actually buy into that should SEE an analyst.
Was there anything in this article suggesting how to Stop Obama's Next Betrayal other than we shouldn't be so uppity as to imagine he's not on our side?
If I find no candidates on my ballot besides R's and D's, I swear to god I'm writing in Ralph Nader whether he runs or not.
Bradley Manning
You are writing in Bradley Manning? That works for me too.
Obama is just US imperialism's latest CEO -- some of us have been trying to tell you that since immediately after the 2008 election. We need a real opposition candidate to challenge him in the 2012 general election (not wasting time with the Democratic Party's rigged primaries)!
The only way he's going to take his base seriously is when we don't turn out for him in 2012, and he loses. Then he'll learn, and I imagine he'll be mighty pissed. It'll be a beautiful thing.
Run, Obama, Run! Right off the fucking cliff and take madam Hillary with you!
One cannot complete know the intentions of another, alright.
Regardless of the intentions of the Democratic elect, we need grassroots work outside of the electoral system--right, thoroughly agreed.
Any such work will eventually need a lot of people currently in the Democratic Party--fine, that's where the heads and hearts of the best of them are anyway.
However, the elect of the Democratic Party is operating far, far to the corporatist and warmongering right of Democrats as they poll. The elect of the Democratic Party is operating to the warmongering right of the centrist and undecided population. Generally speaking, Democrats have not asked people outside the party to assume that Obama or HClinton or Pelosi are well intentioned in order to convince us to go outside of the party or outside of electoral politics, but to work inside of the party and inside of electoral politics.
Why should Democrats who do decide to work at least partly outside of the electoral system refuse to work with those who speculate that the politicians who consistently betray progressive causes do so on purpose, and not through some helpless accident? Why should they refuse to work outside of electoral politics with those who refuse to vote for, campaign for, or provide money for politicians who consistently betray left, liberal, progressive, sustainable, and popular causes?
It probably is worth noticing that it would be just as easy to argue that George Bush or Dick Cheney did not intend to invade Iraq and Afghanistan or that they were forced into such things by their funders. Sure, they said they wanted to do all that, but how trustworthy were they, really? How can one truly know the intentions of another party, let alone a psychopath?
With few exceptions, the Democratic elect has abandoned its left for its corporatist right--that's right, not center and not moderate. That is not a problem between progressive Democrats and Greens or socialists or communists or libertarians or anarchists or fellow travellers. That is a problem between Democrats and their elected representatives. I can only withhold one vote.