Election 2008 – D. Hamilton

It is likely that in 2008 both major political parties will nominate a candidate for President who voted for invading Iraq and has never renounced that vote, voted for the Patriot Act’s infringements on civil liberties and doesn’t support its retraction, supports the concepts of the “war on terror” and preemptive US unilateralism, supports any and all Israeli attacks on their Arab neighbors, and supports military budgets approaching a trillion a year. Both will be against signing and strengthening the Kyoto Treaty, serious ethics reform, publicly funded elections, gay marriage and universal healthcare – to name only a few of their probable commonalities.

These nominations will take place in a political climate where it is also very likely that the electorate, educated by debacles in Iraq and Washington, will continue what they did in 2006 – moving left, especially the younger voters. Hence, there are going to be a record number of potential voters in 2008 whose political principles and goals directly conflict with the policies of both major parties’ candidates. Their opposition will derive primarily from left and libertarian critiques. This group seeking alternatives will be younger than those who find political satisfaction among Republicrats. They will also reject many cultural conventions of their elders such as bans on gay marriage and marijuana prohibition. The Democrats may nominate a woman and/or an Afro-American and some on the left who will argue that is reason enough to support them. Such reasoning will eventually lead the proponent to be completely taken for granted and their politics ignored by a future Democratic administration still operating entirely within established perimeters. A rerun of “Anybody but Bush’s chosen replacement” will have little resonance among these people. There will be many millions of them.

Presidential elections are the most corrupted level of US politics. On this highest level of power, the influence of corporate money on politics prevails most powerfully. However, it is the only national electoral stage provided, the official attraction to which all attention is directed. No other stage is so conducive to the discussion of basic principles and global issues. No other venue provides such a potential audience. For leftists, it’s like the lottery in that the odds are bad, but worse if you don’t play. But, Dean and MoveOn have demonstrated that the stranglehold of big corporate money may be mitigated by cleaver organization of large constituencies in cyberspace. Since the anti-Iraq War movement was largely organized on line, why not an antiwar presidential campaign against two members of the ruling elite and their narrowly focused pseudo-debates?

In order to have progressive alternative positions as part of the debate at all, the antiwar Left must have its own candidates, even if those candidates, if at all successful, might damage the chances of the Democratic Party nominees for the same offices. Unless the Democratic Party nominates an explicitly and forcefully antiwar candidate, which is unlikely, the potential impact of an antiwar Left candidate on the Democrats would be a very secondary consideration. Most importantly, having a distinct antiwar Left candidate is the only way that growing millions of Americans can have their viewpoints represented and feel that they have any stake in the process or in politics at all. It would be the ultimate objective of such a campaign to raise the Left from its current relative obscurity in this country to being an influential voice in the public dialogue. To do so, the antiwar Left needs an independent presidential campaign with completely distinct politics and articulate and attractive candidates capable of attracting millions of votes.

It will be argued that we must accept the good although it is not perfect and support Democrats. I disagree for many reasons. First, they are not the good. They are the less exploitive, the more flexible representatives of the capitalist class. Additionally, the current political system is seriously corrupted by the legalized bribery of campaign contributions. The Democrats may be less slavish than Republicans in their devotion to the mythology of the market and its principal beneficiaries. And they may have more palatable corrupters paying their bills. But they are very largely corrupted nonetheless. A perfect example is Democratic Senator Diane Feinstein of California whose husband is a war profiteer and who would support any Israeli abuse of Palestinians without batting an eye. No product of a system dominated by corporate money can be expected to take anti-corporate positions.

Crucially, a Left candidate must have policies that are fundamentally and profoundly different from ANY Democrat. Name the Democrat who favors ending the “War on Drugs” now and releasing all marijuana prisoners. Name the Democrat who favors US demilitarization, including the withdrawal from the hundreds of military bases the US maintains around the world and deeply slashing the military budget. What Democrat is willing to do what all European politicians implicitly do, renounce war as a means of conflict resolution between nations? What Democrat supports a single payer, government run universal healthcare system? What Democrat would stand up to Israel (now that Cynthia McKinney is gone)? What Democrat supports comprehensively progressive taxation? What Democrat opposes privatization in principle and supports public investment if not ownership of essential commodities like water, electricity, heating oil and transportation? In short, what Democrat can be relied upon to support libertarian socialism in even in its mildest form? The answer couldn’t be more clear. None. If it is left to Democrats, none of these positions and many others will ever be part of the public dialogue. Attempts to introduce such positions within the Democratic Party will be futile because they contradict the interests of those who control the party with their money, in a system where you need hundreds of millions in financing to be considered serious.

Unless the capitalist hegemony in public discourse is broken, the US will remain the only developed country in the world where there is no organized socialist voice in the public policy forum.

. The role of a Left presidential candidate would be to put forth progressive politics that reflect the views of a major constituency that now lacks representation. Whereas it would be unrealistic to immediately aspire to winning. The initial goals of the campaign must be to articulate these unrepresented positions and to establish an on-going political organization to espouse them in the future. To merely articulate a position in relative isolation without seriously seeking a strong candidate, ballot access and votes will not attract attention. To be taken seriously, the antiwar Left must be prepared to make this alternative a reality with money, organization and a formidable candidate. Like Nader, that candidate should have an existing national profile. Unlike Nader, that candidate should be primarily committed to establishing a permanent organizational voice for the Left.

. The Left crucially needs to define itself outside the boundaries of contemporary American capitalist political conventions. Then it needs the fortitude of its convictions and a long-term perspective to follow through on a difficult and in some ways divisive process.

The 2008 election has the potential to be a propitious moment for the Left in the US. Basically, the contradictions in the objective conditions are manifesting very rapidly on the ground and this process will be reflected in the public consciousness. It is time for the Left to attack the ideological underpinnings that have led to the unfolding debacle in the Middle East.

The primary political variables remain who the D’s nominate and the state of the Iraq war. Many Republicans are desperate not to have Iraq be the issue again in 2008 while Machiavellian Democrats might love that prospect, given how well they did running on it in 2006. But George Bush is a stubborn fool who can be counted on to continue to fuck up. I envision a move to impeach him led by desperate Republicans. Events are taking place at an accelerating pace. If the Democrats go for DLC types (Hillary) and the Republicans nominate someone like McCain who wants to escalate, the Left should offer an alternative. Everything would change if, forced by an ever unfolding crisis, the D’s put up an antiwar ticket, a long shot, or if the Bush regime finds a way out of the Iraq War that preserves some shred of their dignity, a near impossibility. Retreat from Iraq merely requires the US telling its puppets to order it. But that requires them to relinquish what limited control they think they still have and suffer enormous humiliation and retribution. Doing the right thing would require Bush to relinquish any claim to a positive legacy. Not likely. The confluence of these factors indicate that 2008 will be a year ripe with potential for an historic Left campaign to expand its horizons by participation in the US presidential race.

David Hamilton

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Paul Crassnerd Scoops World Press

Ragblog exclusive correspondent Paul Crassnerd sent us this dispatch from what he says is “the mountains in the soon-to-be state of Independent Kurdistan”:

The other day (Dec 3rd or 4th or so) when I saw Bush gladhanding Al-Hakim after dissing Nouri Maliki, and after the anti-Maliki “leak” by Cheney’s chief “security” slut Stephen Hadley, I strongly suspected Mr. Maliki was on the way out as Iraqi PM, and Mr. al-Hakim on the way in. So I called Hunter (still in hiding in Wales, where the future is so easy to see it’s scary), and he confirmed that that indeed would take place. “A done deal,” said Hunter.

So I reported what Hunter [Thompson] said had actually occured as the CheneyBush-Maliki meeting progressed: frat boy Bushtwig calling Maliki a pendejo, and suggesting in Spanish that Maliki was “already gone” and that al-Hakim would soon be the CheneyBush’s new puppet, or “fool by the whirlpool,” to borrow a phrase from Bob Dylan.

That story, with photos of the meeting and CheneyBush’s quotes, was posted a day or so later (Dec 5) on the Rag blog.

Today, Dec 11th, an AP story carried on the front page of the Austin paper, and likely elsewhere as well, suggests that the Ragblog was just about a full week ahead of events when the pendejo story was posted.

Today’s AP story (Page A1, Austin American-Statesman) says “Major partners in Iraq’s governing coalition are in behind-the-scenes talks to oust Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki amid discontent over his failure to quell raging violence, according to lawmakers involved.”

“The new alliance would be led by senior Shiite politician Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, who met with President Bush last week,” says the AP story. No jive, folks. Google it.

You want news from the future? Look ahead. Ask Paul Crassnerd. Read the Ragblog daily.

I await my Pulitzer. OUR Pulitzer, I should say.

Hunter says we should accept the cash part only in Euros, yuan, or yen. Not dollars.

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Cartoon Tuesday – C. Loving


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Eliminating Economic Apartheid

Economic Apartheid Kills
Published on Monday, December 11, 2006.
By Joel S. Hirschhorn – BLN Contributing Writer

To be successful in overturning our elitist plutocratic system we should add economic apartheid to our semantic arsenal. Better than economic inequality, economic injustice and class warfare, because apartheid is loaded with richly deserved negative emotions. Sadly, in South Africa, economic apartheid has taken over from racial apartheid.

How ironic that the Bush administration successfully talked up the global threat from terrorism while it pursued domestic and foreign policies promoting economic apartheid, a far greater and more pervasive threat to national and global stability.

The human race on planet Earth, taken as an aggregate mass abstraction, may be getting richer. But a new report from the World Institute for Development Economics Research of the United Nations University shows that wealth creation is remarkably – one might say criminally – unequal. Follow this hierarchy at the top of the wealth pyramid: The richest 1 percent of adults alone owned 40 percent of global assets in the year 2000; the richest 2 percent owned more than half of global household wealth; and the richest 10 percent of adults accounted for 85% of the world total. That leaves very little for the remaining 90 percent of the global population. Could it be any worse? Yes, the rich are still getting richer, more millionaires are becoming billionaires.

As to the world’s lower class: the bottom half of the world adult population owned barely 1 percent of global wealth, defined as net worth: the value of physical and financial assets less debts. Over a billion poor people subsist on less than one dollar a day. Every day, according to UNICEF, 30,000 children die due to poverty – that’s over 10 million children killed by poverty every year! Global economic apartheid is killing people.

Read the rest here.

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Now THIS Is Breaking News

Safe to say that the first domino has just fallen. If you haven’t yet watched Robert Newman’s History of Oil, perhaps now would be a good time.

Majlis agrees to replacement of US dollar with euro: MP
Tehran, Dec 9, IRNA

Iran-Majlis-Euro

The Islamic Consultative Assembly (Majlis) is agreable to replacing the US dollar with the euro in Iranian foreign transactions, said a member of the Majlis Planning and Budget Commission, Morteza Tamaddon, on Saturday.

Speaking to IRNA, the MP said the move is part of Iran’s general policy towards the West as dependence on the US currency would have negative consequences for Iran in the long-term.

Reducing Iran’s dependence on the US dollar would eventually make the country less vulnerable to the dollar, argued the MP.

Referring to the move as a “positive approach,” Tamaddon said Iran’s decision to replace the US dollar with the euro was not politically motivated.

“It has nothing to do with political issues. Even European countries have concluded that they should replace the US dollar with a stronger currency,” said the MP.

He said that although some problems could arise as a result of the shift to the euro, Tehran would enjoy monetary flexibility in its international transactions.

In case the West pulls through with its planned economic sanctions on Iran, Tamaddon said the country would still have access to its monetary accounts based on the euro.

Iran’s minister of finance announced last week that the government had decided to replace the US dollar with the euro in its international transactions.

He said that the move was in response to the Bush administration’s hostile policies towards Iran.

Read it here.

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Screw The Bagman – Listen to the Quakers

10 Reasons Why the U.S. Must Leave Iraq

  1. The human cost of war is unacceptable.
  2. The U.S. occupation is a catalyst for violence.
  3. U.S. actions inflame divisions and the chance of civil war.
  4. Iraqis want the United States to leave now.
  5. Democracy cannot flourish under an occupation.
  6. The United States has failed to rebuild Iraq or provide for Iraqis’ basic needs.
  7. The Iraq war and occupation waste resources needed for U.S. domestic programs.
  8. The U.S. occupation of Iraq destabilizes the Middle East.
  9. Humanitarian aid is crippled by the occupation.
  10. The global community wants the war and occupation to end now.

Source

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And Here’s a Bucket of Sanity

Congresswoman McKinney Files Articles of Impeachment
By Matt Pascarella

On Monday, gathering in a conference room in Washington D.C., Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney and her advisors worked on a draft copy of the articles of impeachment against President Bush.

At the heart of the charges contained in McKinney’s articles of impeachment, is the allegation that President Bush has not upheld the oath of presidential office and is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors.

Article I states that President Bush has failed to preserve, protect and defend the constitution. Specifically cited in this article is the charge that Bush has manipulated intelligence and lied to justify war: “George Walker Bush … in preparing the invasion of Iraq, did withhold intelligence from the Congress, by refusing to provide Congress with the full intelligence picture that he was being given, by redacting information … and actively manipulating the intelligence on Iraq’s alleged weapons programs by pressuring the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies.”

This manipulation of intelligence was done, the charge continues, “with the intent to misinform the people and their representatives in Congress in order to gain their support for invading Iraq, denying both the people and their representatives in Congress the right to make an informed choice.”

Read the rest here. The full document (PDF format) of the articles of impeachment is here.

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Rewriting the Dictionary

Impunity and Immunity
The Bush Administration Enters the Confessional

By Karen Greenberg

Confession, the time-honored, soul-soothing last resort for those caught in error, may not survive the Bush administration. It has, after all, long made a mockery of such revelations by manufacturing an entire lexicon of coercive techniques to elicit often non-existent “truths” that would justify its detention policies. And yet, without being coerced in any way, administration officials have been confessing continually these past years — in documents that may someday play a part in their own confrontation with justice.

The Bush administration trail of confessions can be found in the most unlikely of places — the very memos and policy statements in which its officials were redefining reality in their search for the perfect (and perfectly grim) extractive methods that would give them the detainee confessions they so eagerly sought. These were the very documents that led first to Gitmo, then to Abu Ghraib, and finally deep into the hidden universe of pain that was their global network of secret prisons.

Strangely enough, the administration confessional was open for business within weeks of the attacks of September 11th, 2001. It could be found wrapped in persistent assertions of immunity, assertions that none of their acts to come could ever be brought before the bar of justice or the oversight of anyone. The first of these documents was issued on September 25th, 2001. Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Yoo, writing for the Office of Legal Counsel, laid out the reasons for the President of the United States to assume broad executive powers in the war on terror. The last footnote of the memo declared, “In the exercise of his plenary power to use military force, the President’s decisions are for him alone and are unreviewable.”

This notion of unreviewable behavior, then still buried in the land of footnotes, has characterized the administration’s general stance on its war on terror policies. On January 9th, 2002, just as Guantanamo opened for business as a detention facility supposedly beyond the review of American courts, John Yoo and fellow Office of Legal Counsel member Robert Delahunty explained why a breach with international law would not constitute a crime for the Bush administration. In their secret memo, the United States, through the Justice Department, was to exempt itself ahead of time from the laws it was about to break. In essence, it was to give itself the equivalent of a hall pass for future illegal activities in the new policies and practices of detention.

Read this entire, remarkable analysis here.

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In the Chaos of Daily Life …

A Grain of Sanity:

Britain stops talk of ‘war on terror’

Foreign Office has asked ministers to ditch the phrase invented by Bush to avoid stirring up tensions within the Islamic world

Jason Burke
Sunday December 10, 2006
The Observer

Cabinet ministers have been told by the Foreign Office to drop the phrase ‘war on terror’ and other terms seen as liable to anger British Muslims and increase tensions more broadly in the Islamic world.

The shift marks a turning point in British political thinking about the strategy against extremism and underlines the growing gulf between the British and American approaches to the continuing problem of radical Islamic militancy. It comes amid increasingly evident disagreements between President George Bush and Tony Blair over policy in the Middle East.

Read it here. And frankly, the crap about the ‘increasingly evident disagreements’ between W and Tony has a good deal more to do with the Poodle’s personal political fortunes at home.

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On a Useless Sack of Protoplasm

Matt, over at Today in Iraq tells it the way it is:

And now for the infuriating quote of the day:

“Frankly, I think there is a greater recognition and awareness of the necessity for us to exercise checks and balances,” said Sen. Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine), noting how much the Nov. 7 election changed the climate on Capitol Hill.

Olympia, you useless sack of protoplasm. Have you ever read the Constitution? Do you think your constitutionally mandated RESPONSIBILITY to oversee the executive applies only in years your party loses an election?

God, I despise these punks. And the so-called ‘moderate’ Republicans are the worst of the bunch. At least with a Tom Delay you know right where you stand. -m

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Feingold Wants Disengagement

Editorial: Feingold’s skepticism

The Iraq Study Group report was greeted with a proper measure of skepticism by U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, the Wisconsin Democrat who has been right from the start about the ill-thought-out invasion and occupation of Iraq.

“I’m not buying the Washington embrace of this thing. … It’s time for us to have a clear plan to disengage in Iraq. This doesn’t do it,” declared Feingold, who notes that the report “leaves the strong possibility of an open-ended commitment.”

While too many other members of Congress – including members of the Wisconsin delegation who should know better – have tried to find something to like in the report, Feingold has been blunt in his dismissal of it.

Appearing on MSNBC’s “Countdown With Keith Olbermann,” Feingold, who in 2002 voted against authorizing Bush to attack Iraq, correctly characterized the report from the group headed by former Secretary of State James Baker and former Congressman Lee Hamilton as “a classic Washington compromise.”

Noting that the study group was made up of political insiders “who did not have the judgment to oppose this Iraq war in the first place, and did not have the judgment to realize it was not a wise move in the fight against terrorism,” Feingold told the national cable television audience that the problem with the report is this: “It does not do the job of extricating us from Iraq in a way that we can deal with the issues in Southeast Asia, in Afghanistan and in Somalia, which are every bit as important as what is happening in Iraq.”

Read the rest here.

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Monday Movie Time

We want to dwell a bit on the effects of legislation recently enacted that eviscerate the Constitution. We believe that people are not taking this matter very seriously, in large part because no one significant/important has yet been affected by these legislative changes. If Michael Moore, Martin Sheen, or the Dixie Chicks are thrown into jail as enemy combatants, without recourse to a lawyer, without any hope of seeing the light of day, perhaps people will understand the seriousness of these change. Or perhaps if YOU are thrown into jail as a terrorist, you’ll finally get it, just about the time that it’s way too fucking late !!!

In the meanwhile, curl up with the popcorn and candy, and enjoy Jessica Peanut’s couple of shorts about W. She says of the first, “Knowledge is power.”

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