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Elections Are For Suckers
Let’s just dip our fingers in purple ink and pose for photos now that voting has the same significance for us as it had for those Iraqis who got conned into thinking they were participating in some grand democratic experiment.
Our own elections, the ones our government has modeled for the world, are a hoax. What other word should we use to describe this year’s presidential election, whose outcome will turn on which party’s super PACs gets the most generous bribes from billionaires? The Republicans, enabled by decisions of a Supreme Court they still control, were the first out of the gate and are far more culpable in destroying our system of popular governance. But the Democrats, no less committed to winning at any cost to political principle, have now jumped in.
The generally reserved New York Times editorial page responded to the Obama campaign’s decision to seek super PAC funding with a scathing editorial headlined “Another Campaign for Sale.” The Times reminded that Barack Obama, in his State of the Union speech two years ago, called out the Supreme Court justices sitting before him over their decision to free special interests from campaign spending limits. “I don’t think American elections should be bankrolled by America’s most powerful interests,” Obama said then. “They should be decided by the American people.” But sadly, as the Times editorial noted this week, “On Monday, the President abandoned that fundamental principle and gave in to the culture of the Citizens United decision that he once denounced as a ‘threat to our democracy.’ ”
Monday was the day the Obama campaign sent out an e-mail announcing that members of the president’s administration would solicit funds for Priorities USA Action, one of the super PACs that can now, thanks to the Supreme Court decisions that Obama had castigated, raise unlimited funds in an effort to sway the election.
Just as the super political action committee supporting Republican primary contender Newt Gingrich had raised $10 million from Nevada gambling kingpin Sheldon Adelson and his wife, The Wall Street Journal reported that the Obama campaign set its sights on media mogul Haim Saban.
A backer of Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries in 2008, Saban had not subsequently supported Obama because of criticisms over the president’s actions toward Israel. Perhaps because the president has done nothing to effectively pressure the Israeli government to make any concessions toward Palestinian self-determination, Saban recently made his first contribution to Obama and in a written statement Tuesday said, “We are looking at all the Super PACs at the moment, will surely participate, but haven’t decided on the details.”
Saban may be one of the more idealistic mega-donors the pro-Obama Priorities USA Action PAC is now courting. Less savory, if one cares about the hold that Wall Street has exerted over this administration, are some of the top donors Obama aides met with Tuesday to urge that they contribute to the PAC. The list included Hamilton E. James, the president of the huge private equity firm Blackstone, and Robert Wolf, the chairman of UBS Group Americas.
Not that the Republicans should worry, since their list of super PAC supporters is far more powerful. To date, the pro-Democrat PACs have collected a paltry $19 million as compared with the $91 million raised last year by committees controlled by Karl Rove and the allies of the Republican presidential candidates. This disparity is the president’s justification for abandoning his principled opposition to such groups. “We’re not going to fight this fight with one hand tied behind our back,” said Jim Messina, Obama’s campaign manager. “With so much at stake, we can’t allow for two sets of rules. Democrats can’t be unilaterally disarmed.”
That argument would be more compelling if not for the fact that it was the Republican presidential nominee, John McCain, who “disarmed” by accepting public funding in the last election. Obama subverted what remained of political campaign finance reform by turning instead to private contributions, with the result that major Wall Street interests greatly financed his victory. It is not entirely true that shunning the PACs would have left the president at a disadvantage, since he commands predominant media space by virtue of his office. He could have exploited the fat-cat contributions to Republicans as confirmation that they are servants of the 1 percent that has caused the rest of us so much misery. Once again he has failed to take that case for economic justice to the American people and instead validated the Republican assault on what remains of our democracy.
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65 Comments so far
Show AllVoting for a Democrat or Republican is like voting for cancer. Don't vote.
Sure, only if it's about Democrats and Republicans but leaving out other people who are running for office is disingenuous and offensive to progressive thinkers. It's one thing to have been a big time Obama pr idiot and then finally lose faith in the Democrats. If you don't want to vote because of that, then it's your personal choice but it's morally reprehensible to use such flakey arguments to justify the need to not vote. It's not about elections being miracles. We all know that elections alone won't change everything overnight but we also know that elections can make a difference if more of us got our voting in order. I may or may not choose to vote depending upon who gets to be on the ballot in my state but I don't like to be a disgruntled meathead and say stupid things such as "elections are bad, don't vote". Geesh !
"Our own elections, the ones our government has modeled for the world, are a hoax."
So true. George Carlin addressed the illusion of democracy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SC_wjQtfhZQ
I think I will write in my favorite independent, the incomparable Yuri Nat Dabossimi.
Voting for Obama would be like an abused spouse voting for the abuser. Forget it.
Voting for anyone else is like shacking up with Hannibal the cannibal. Bon appetite
The Democrats are much better. Obama, Clinton and Pelosi will serve us up with a nice sauterne sauce.
Voting for Obama (or for whichever troglodyte that gets the republican nomination) is an act of criminal negligence.
Agreed. US elections are a hoax, a fraud, a sickening farce. Don't vote. If you must, vote for 3rd party candidates, or spoil your ballot (a NO vote). Nearly half of voting age Americans get it: voting is a waste of time, since the voter has no real say, nor representation. Even worse, to vote is to be used, and to have your integrity diminished. It would be wonderful of voter participation rates fell into single digits. That would make it much harder for oligarchic quislings to crow about "the world's greatest democracy" (perhaps time to confer that distinction to our only genuine ally, and democratic beacon, Israel). One bewilderment: the NYT called Obama out for not living up to his rhetoric? Good lord, is the Times for real? Obama does not mean a thing he says to the people. Ever.
The whole idea of PACs is based on the belief that US voters are stupid. Those who oppose PACs further the belief in the stupidity of voters and how easy it is to influence them. PACs are a red herring. We need to change the focus.
Money contaminates the election process - we all agree on that. But it would be more effective to focus on eliminating the Party system. It is the Ds and Rs that got us here. The system needs fundamental change - not just getting money out of the process. This could be done if every voter refused to vote for any democrat or republican. It is a simple and easy choice. No Ds. No Rs. No incumbents. No Greens. No Purples. No Liberals. No Progressives. No Conservatives. Just candidates and issues. The idea that we need a Party with leaders and followers is so anti-democratic - anti OWS. I know this will not happen anytime soon. Voters love to play follow the leader.
We must stop thinking-in-the box. Just do it. I have been voting for NADER for decades.
Not to mention such minor matters as stolen elections and the Diebold controversy:
See:
"If You Want To Win An Election, Just Control The Voting Machines"
www.commondreams.org/views03/0131-01.htm
and
"Now Your Vote Is The Property Of A Private Corporation"
http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0306-04.htm
--- both by Thom Hartmann
Not only are elections a joke! Obama is a spineless moron! Like contraception is an issue to back down on? What the world needs to do is sterilize a whole generation to stop population growth. Kill the sperm before it enters the ovum or watch it die of starvation and poverty when it becomes a human. That is the choice as global resources are collapsing.
This country has gone insane! Catholics are idiots! There never was a Jesus either. But that's another debate for greater minds. The dunces can't handle that one!!