The phrase "participant-observer" comes from social science literature
to mean someone who writes about an event or process while having
participated in it. I'm going to have to do a little of that to make the
following remarks.
Bob Herbert is one of my favorite columnists. Writing twice a week in
the New York Times op-ed page, he regularly expresses factually based
indignation about widespread poverty in America, about its criminal
injustice system, about human rights violations, about the failed war on
drugs, about the other failed war-occupation in Iraq. He is one of the
few major media columnists who goes after corporate crooks and their
craven and crummy politicians.
Last year, Herbert asked again and again why the Presidential candidates
did not take positions or speak out on these matters. After the November
elections he continued his forceful outcries. On January 17th, he asked:
"Where are today's voices of moral outrage? Where is the leadership
willing to stand up and say: Enough! We've sullied ourselves enough."
Bob, this is what I and veteran human rights advocate, Peter Camejo,
thought we were doing throughout 2004 in all fifty states with our
campaigns for social and economic justice, for peace, for clean politics
and a strengthened democratic society. You never mentioned our efforts
once. Nor did you mention initiatives by former Attorney General Ramsey
Clark who reflects your views on the illegal Iraq war.
You write that "effective leadership can come from anywhere at any
time." Then why not give it a little visibility? If Nader/Camejo's
decades of standing tall and speaking out is too outside your Democratic
Party to mention, give some print space to other national and regional
big picture advocates who daily have to work anonymously due to their
being shut out by the commercial media. You're much better at
publicizing victims of criminal injustice than adding to their proper
recognition by writing about those civic activists or small
party/independent political candidates trying to change the system.
In your recent column, you end with these words: There was a time when
no one had heard of Dr. King. Or Oscar Arias Sanchez. Or Martin O'Brien
who founded the foremost human rights organization in Northern Ireland,
and who tells us: "The worst thing is apathy - to sit idly by in the
face of injustice and to do nothing about it."
There is another kind of abdication. That is when a progressive
columnist, who reaches millions of readers, sits idly by and watches the
Democratic Party spend millions of dollars with corporate law firms to
file phony lawsuits to push Nader/Camejo off one state ballot after
another, and unleash torrents of lies about this candidacy. Denying
candidates' right to freedom of speech and assembly, which is what
running for elective office comprises, might have been seen by a
consistent Bob Herbert as an important violation of civil liberties - if
not for the candidates, at least for the voters who were denied their
choice of candidates.
When progressive writers turn progressive candidates into non-persons
because the former have signed on to the "Anybody but Bush, Leave Kerry
alone, Make no demands on him" Club, they are undermining their own
scripted desires. The widespread reporting of corporate power, crime,
fraud and abuse in the independent and mass media is hitting two stone
walls blocking their disclosures from moving into the political arena
for attention and reform. Those two stone walls are the Republican and
Democratic Parties, (subject to a very few exceptions among Democratic
incumbents).
Herbert is not alone among progressive writers. The Nation and
Progressive magazines, and the Washington Monthly, proceeded to
demonstrate their policies of non-personhood, once they came out against
the Nader/Camejo or other progressive candidacies. Almost all other
liberal/progressive syndicated columnists were like Herbert.
Back in the 19th century, when the two party duopoly began to congeal,
progressive or reform publications did not come out against slavery,
women's suffrage, the industrial workers' rights to form trade unions,
the farmers need for federal regulation of banks and railroads and then
decline to support or even write about candidates and small parties who
were championing vigorously these same issues inside the electoral arena.
Those early journalists knew that positions of justice had to be moved
into election contests, no matter how uphill was the struggle. They
believed in small starts rather than least worst. And guess what,
eventually measured by decades, the small starts continued to lose
elections but their agendas took hold.
The current crop of progressives need to rethink their imprisonment by a
two centuries old, two party monopolized winner take all electoral
college system. Do they want to break out of jail? Or do they want to
continue sliding into the political pits with their least-worse
corporatized Party that takes them for granted because it knows they
have put out the "nowhere to go" sign?
Duke historian Larry Goodwyn, author of books on American political populism,
wrote in the Texas Observer last December that "To corral the minions
of entrenched corporate power, one needed to possess the rhetorical power
to be clear; and one additionally needed to be a long-distance runner."
Guess who Larry Goodwyn did not support?
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