What Are We Waiting For?
What Are We Waiting For?
Joel S. Hirschhorn
Long before the disastrous George W. Bush administration, I had been waiting for profound, systemic changes in our political system. Perversely, I saw the upside of Bush as motivating more Americans to demand political change. And that happened. But the national yearning for change was co-opted by Ron Paul on the right and Barack Obama on the left while John Edwards with the most authentic populist change message fizzled out early.
It is not enough to want, demand and support change, not when change is more of a campaign slogan than a carefully detailed set of reforms. Critically needed is a firm understanding of what specific changes can restore American democracy and remove the privileged rich plutocrats and corporatists running and ruining our nation.
A huge fraction of Americans have bought into the Obama candidacy because of his polished and effective rhetoric. But Obama does not offer the changes I have been waiting for, or the ones the public needs. A great speaker does not necessarily have the courage or intent to fight for deep political reforms.
Our nation’s Founders did not create the United States of America just with smiles and slick rhetoric; they were bold, risk-taking revolutionaries fighting tyranny. Obama has not defined our domestic tyranny and told us how he will try to abolish it. Obama is no dissident or revolutionary. The change he mostly seeks is moving from senator to president. Not what I have been waiting for.
There is no evidence in Obama’s brief political career that he is a champion for deep political reforms to transfer power from the plutocrats to the people. To the contrary, the more you learn about Obama’s history the more he appears as just another super-ambitious politician making friends, using people and cutting deals to get ahead.
To begin with, I have been waiting for a potential president that speaks out against the over-powerful two-party system that sucks up money from all countless corporate and other special interests. I have never heard a word from Obama to indicate he understands the many harmful effects of the two-party plutocracy and the need to open up our political system to a much wider spectrum of beliefs and strategies. Instead, Obama cleverly talks about bipartisanship just as many other Democrats and Republicans have, because that maintains the two-party status quo.
If Obama believed in opening up the political system he would, for example, advocate opening up televised presidential debates to third party candidates and removing the many obstacles the two parties have built to limit ballot access to third party and independent candidates. He would also openly call for replacing the Electoral College with the popular vote for president.
If Obama truly wanted to get rid of big, corrupting money from corporate and other special interests, then he should be advocating a constitutional amendment that would remove all private money from political campaigns and change the US system to totally publicly financed campaigns. Only a constitutional amendment can accomplish this. Campaign financing reforms by Congress are a distraction and next to useless.
And if Obama really supported universal health care, then he would have concluded as nearly all experts have that the nation needs a single payer insurance system that puts an end to the rape of the public by the insurance and pharmaceutical industries.
Change? Absolutely. But real systemic, root changes that reform and transform the current system by changing the power structure that both major parties have nourished over many decades. What is so clear to millions of people highly skeptical of the Obama-as-political-messiah fiction is that he has not earned the presidency through diverse political and leadership accomplishments.
Sure, none of the other candidates are any better than Obama - not Hillary Clinton, not John McCain. More worthy candidates based on experience and authenticity succumbed to many bizarre forces and media disinterest. It is too late to enlighten ardent Obamatons, but millions of voters will justify voting for Obama as the lesser evil candidate. That proves how bankrupt our political system really is. Now is the time to reject the two-party plutocracy and vote for third party and independent candidates, such as Ralph Nader . Yes we can! Voters that define themselves as independents should assert their independence by rejecting candidates from both major parties.
With a longer view of history, there really is something worse than John McCain becoming president. It is once again upholding the periodic shift of power between the two major parties that stabilizes their tyranny. Just as the Bush administration has built demand for change so too would a McBush presidency. Maybe then in 2012 a true, trustworthy and proven agent of change would have a shot at the presidency. However, electing Obama will set back things back. He will only disappoint us and drain all the pent up demand for change by delivering, at most, some cosmetic actions. Just like his recent decision to wear a flag lapel pin.
The right question is not whether this African American can win the general election, it is SHOULD he be president?
After a few years as president, millions of people would realize that Obama is not the political salvation people have been waiting for. Of course, he would then focus on getting a second term, with more seductive smiles, empty platitudes and false promises. Why not? It worked the first time.
[Contact Joel S. Hirschhorn through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.]
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Comments :
An affluent semi-democracy
is a very stable system, in terms of keeping the masses complacent. Add into that a phenomenal capacity for spectacle (Just saw Iron Man, myself) and you have a system that is very very stable.
Getting enough people pissed off enough to force through serious change is damn hard.
I came. I saw. I posted.
Veni, Vidi, Bitchy.
Also,
I'm of the opinion that neither McCain or Obama are qualified to be President. Here's why:
Not withstanding that McCain's really too old at this point to even think of being in office, he's far too right-wing for my tastes, and too war-like for comfort. Add his ungovernable temper in and it also makes him too much of a loose cannon to be trusted at the switch, if one gets the drift, and even more likely to do something unpredictably dangerous.
Obama, on the other hand--well, OK, his positions are closer to mine with respect to Iraq (getting out now), and other things, but there's something about his personality and the way he comes across that rubs me wrong; his charisma is totally false, imo, and he's a phony through and through. Also, I don't think he'll be any more of a unifier than G. W. Bush, Hillary Clinton, or John McCain. In fact, I forsee that even with an Obama Presidency, this country will be as divided as it ever was, with the sort of good guy vs. bad guy mentality that has been all too prevalent for the past 40 years or so in presidential and other elections. As much as I dislike John McCain, and the fact that Hillary Clinton has behaved like a character out of "heaven-knows-where" , especially for the past several weeks, Obama, imho, is not the knight in shining armor that many people believe that he is, and, to assume that 2, 3. or 4 hundred years of racism and oppression will be dissipated in one shining moment if Obama becomes POTUS, imho, is a big, big mistake.
Also, suppose Obama gets the nomination and, eventually becomes POTUS, he visits Boston and ventures into some of those tough, white workingclass ethnic neighborhoods ( i. e. Southie, Charlestown, etc.), what does anybody think might happen to him? Will he also cater to extremist special interest groups on both the Right and the Left? Will great old classics, such as WSS and many other greaties become obsolete? I hope not.
Oh, I wish there were better choices. Too bad Russ Feingold, Gore and Edwards aren't in the running. It's also too bad about the untimely, horrible death of Paul Wellstone, who won the respect of both Liberals and Conservatives alike.
well,
Good.
What??!?
Exactly what do you mean by this:?
Just curious.
The less agreement there is,
the less harm they can do.
Nothing is better than something stupid.
While you may not like my position, I'm sure you can see the benefit on the damage-control end of things.
Nobody has to agree on things.
However, people shouldn't be in a situation where they venture onto one another's "turf" only at the risk of limb and life, if one gets the drift.
that's how elections work
someone wins and everyone else loses.
the system is inherently divisive. it does not seek consensus.
"You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made a man." --Frederick Douglas
All the more reason to not rely on it so much....
People try to force consensus far more often than is really needed.
"fit to be president"
no one is fit to be president.
i'd only trust a saint with that type of power
"You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made a man." --Frederick Douglas
There is indeed a wisdom to "limited government"....
that still has a hard time keeping traction in the human spirit. After all, man since the classical period has still lived far, far longer under despotism and absolute rule than without them.
The the logic of the Enlightenment took centuries to produce the first governments that truly tried to implement its spirit and it may still take longer before Man truly embraces it without the age-old need to be ruled.
RATM
"Roll Right, Roll Call, now we're alright, now we're all calm"
In our society, people are rewarded for pretending to be certain about things they're clearly not certain about. -- Sam Harris,
If Obama truly wanted to get
I assume the system wouldn't just hand out money to anyone that tried to run, they would need a certain number of signatures that the Big 2 would try their damndest to invalidate those of anyone on the fringes of their side. Money would be needed to get the signatures and run a campaign to keep similar political opponents off of the list. That system just may end up being a change in direction, but a very small one.
In our society, people are rewarded for pretending to be certain about things they're clearly not certain about. -- Sam Harris,
What I find funny about about a lot of stuff
written by Joel is what a statusquopropper he really is.
An obvious consequence
That's the consequence of having ballot access determined by politicians.
For some reason people get really grumpy about the possibility that the ballot would be flooded with jokers if there weren't large filing fees and massive amounts of signatures to run as a minor party or independent.
The UK has sane ballot access laws and there are some jokers here and there, but no one votes for the Monster Raving Loony Party anyway. I fail to see the problem.
In Ohio, you only need 50 signatures to run for a major party nomination of US House of Representatives (only 25 for a minor party, but Ohio has no qualifying minor parties). Indies need 1% of the last vote cast in that district for Governor, which, by my calculations would be 2131 if I wanted to challenge Marcy Kaptur in 2010, which I probably won't. What governmental objective is served by such a large discrepancy between indies and major parties? The only one I can think of is trying to funnel all political activity through the "Big 2" as you say.
I never broke the law; I am the law! --
George W. BushJudge DreddI'm listening to...
A Certain Shade of Green
I had to get that esoteric subject header in this particular blog...
If every 3rd party could easily get a name on the ballot; then the Ohio Workers and Socialist Party would get 33% of the vote, come to power, get some art school dropout lackey as head of the executive that would declare emergency, take more power and try to solve some questions.
In our society, people are rewarded for pretending to be certain about things they're clearly not certain about. -- Sam Harris,
not for the President
The president has almost no legal authority over these practices. If we haven't developed a strong movement in favor of these reforms (public and legislative) then why should we expect the Prez to say anything about it?
Obama has taken strong stands on transparency--which is fundamentally important and something the president can reform on his own.
"You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made a man." --Frederick Douglas
They can still make a difference
The debates are run by a private corporation that is run by the "Big 2". Obama or McCain, whose record on election reform and transparency is reasonably good, can tell the CPD they want open debates or, imagine this, withdraw from the CPD-sponsored "debates" and allow the League of Women Voters to sponsor actual debates again.
Neither of them really want this because they'd have to allow Nader, Barr, McKinney, et al. on stage with them. McCain would have to defend both flanks as would Obama. It's a lot easier to win an election when you can take an entire voting bloc for granted because of a two-way race. Talk of transparency and campaign reform is supported by the major parties to the extent it helps them win elections. No principled stands be found here outside a few true believers like Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich.
Otherwise, yes, a President doesn't make legislation, so his views on such matters are of lesser importance.
I never broke the law; I am the law! --
George W. BushJudge DreddI'm listening to...