DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION--THE PANTS SUIT DEPARTS, BUT THE SILLINESS LINGERS ON
It’s silly-time at the Democratic Convention in Denver. That’s largely what political
conventions are all about, but as the nation sinks further into chaos,
silliness seems just a bit more—silly.
(Washington
Post Many Clinton Supporters Say Speech Didn't Heal Divisions DENVER,
Aug. 26) Hillary Rodham Clinton's most loyal delegates came to the Pepsi Center
on Tuesday night looking for direction. They listened, rapt, to a 20-minute
speech that many proclaimed the best she had ever delivered, hoping her words
could somehow unwind a year of tension in the Democratic Party. But when
Clinton stepped off the stage and the standing ovation faded into silence, many
of her supporters were left with a sobering realization: Even a tremendous
speech couldn't erase their frustrations.
Rapt, were they? Still frustrated, are they?
It might possibly be that they have misunderstood
what politics, political conventions and the democratic process is all about.
They may have thought a woman in the presidency was more important than doing
the more difficult work of re-dedicating the nation to its Constitution.
There
was Jerry Straughan, a professor from California, who listened from his seat in
the rafters and shook his head at what he considered the speech's
predictability. "It's a tactic," he said. "Who knows what she
really thinks? With all the missteps that have taken place, this is the only
thing she could do. So, yes, I'm still bitter."
Bitter about what, Jerry? Bitter about a catastrophic,
unending and unfunded war; possibly about Guantanamo or abu Ghraib? Does your
bitterness stop at Hillary losing out in a nationally contended primary
campaign, or is there enough left over for torture, the retirement of
dissenting generals and flag officers, kangaroo courts, waterboarding and the
relentlessness of civilian spying?
Possibly, tactics are what will save the republic.
There
was JoAnn Enos, from Minnesota, who digested Clinton's resounding endorsement
of Barack Obama and decided that she, too, will move on and get behind him.
"I'll vote for [Obama] in the roll call," she said, "because
that's what Hillary wants."
What Hillary wants. That’s your criteria, JoAnn?
What Hillary wants has displaced in your mind the need to revive by
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation an entire country? Mouth to mouth, e-mail to
e-mail, door to door, friend to friend and living room to living room, America’s
abandonment of the Geneva Convention needs to be spoken of. George Bush’s
replacement of military and civil police by Blackwater thugs ought to register
as prioritized criteria, along with extraordinary rendition.
Whether or not it’s what Hillary wants, you might ask over a small Obama fund-raiser in
your backyard, if tax relief to the wealthy really makes sense while sticking
the nation with a $10 trillion debt. Is the Bush push to privatization of
essential government services important? Does the abandonment by presidential decree
of environmental laws strike a chord? Does illegal legislation by agency appointment
and the equally illegal and excessive use of signing statements come into play?
Or is it all about Hillary?
"She
hit it right out of the ballpark," said Terie Norelli, New Hampshire's
House speaker. "I've never been prouder of a Democrat than I was
tonight." Norelli said the speech made her want to work hard for Obama.
"She said it better than I ever could have: Everything I worked for and
that she worked for would be at risk if we do anything less."
Agreed, Terie. It was a remarkable speech. But as
seems to be the mission of the Clintons, she did her share of damage, dangling
her name and intentions until way past the last moment, building personal drama
at the cost of unity.
For his part, Bill just can’t get over a world-class case
of petulancy. We have forgiven you Bill, for dragging your wife and the
presidency through the embarrassment of stains on dresses. Can’t you, for God’s
sake, forgive us our choice of someone other than Hillary for president?
Go find Vaclav Havel and Nelson Mandella. Sit down
and have a cup of decaf. Perhaps the strongest voice and the most articulate
campaigner in the Democratic party, you have so damaged Barack Obama that you
can’t even redeem your singular credentials by campaigning for him. Shame on you.
But
Clinton's performance fell far short of the panacea the Democratic Party had
desperately hoped for, delegates said. Some worried that, after Clinton's
public withdrawal, more voters might defect for Republican John McCain or
simply stay home.
"I'm
not going to vote for Obama. I'm not going to vote for McCain, either,"
said Blanche Darley, 65, a Texas delegate for Clinton. Darley wore a button
saying "Obamination Scares the Hell Out of Me."
"We
love her, but it's our vote if we don't trust him or don't like him," said
Darley, who was a superdelegate for Bill Clinton in the 1990s.
Well Blanche, it certainly is your vote. But it’s your country as well and it has never been
in more trouble. Your distrust of Barack
Obama (however you define that) apparently trumps your distrust of a politicized
Justice Department, overrides Bush’s and
McCain’s extortion of state and city police departments and gives you faith
that fencing in our once free and open country under the guise of terrorist
threat is a good idea.
Not liking him
allows the enactment of a disastrous and unconstitutional Preemptive War Doctrine,
answerable solely to the president. Did you even know that, Blanche? Or were
you blinded by the yellow pants suits and the hope of a woman president? Voting
down unprecedented secrecy in government is a more important cut of cloth. Privatizing
(for profit) huge portions of the nation’s military is the true Obamination.
Just what is it that frightens you about Barack?
Weeping,
Dawn Yingling, a 44-year-old single mother from Indianapolis, said that the
speech was "fabulous" but that she still isn't going to work for the
Obama campaign. "She was fabulous, nothing less than I expected. It's hard
to sit here and think about she would have accomplished. We're not stupid --
we're not going to vote for John McCain," she said. But she'll limit her
campaigning to a House candidate. "It will take a Congress as well as a
president. That's what I can do and be true to who I am."
True to who
you are?
C’mon Dawn, wipe your eyes, put aside your petty
grievances and think for once in your life about something that transcends who you are. Does who you are, celebrate
the waste, theft and failure to account for hundreds of billions in ‘war’
spending? Do you stand proudly for abandonment of foreign policy in favor of
unilateral decisions that re-ignite the useless, wasteful and disproven
strategies of cold war? The replacement of America’s tradition of political
argument, with sloganeering and demagoguery, is part of why Hillary lost in
flashes of anger and hubris.
It seemed a particularly resonant moment Tuesday
night, which marked both Women's Equality Day and the 88th anniversary of
women's suffrage.
Listen up. It’s not about women.
This election and the next several to come are about saving the nation from self-destruction. If the women of the Democratic Party can’t get that through their emotionally charged adoration of Hillary, they will have contributed to the loss. They ought to go out and buy a woman's book, The End of America by Naomi Wolf and learn something about what they have at stake. Then get busy and save it.
When
asked what kind of nation the founders had given us, Benjamin Franklin famously
said,
“a
republic, if you can keep it.”
That question was asked of Franklin by a woman.
__________________________________________________
Media comment;
- New York Times-Clinton Delivers Emphatic Plea for Unity
- Fox News-(Bill) Clinton’s ‘Candidate X’ Analogy Stirs Questions About His Obama Support
- Christian Science Monitor-Clinton speech moves Democrats toward unity, but hasn’t clinched it
- Guardian-UK-US election: Hillary Clinton calls on supporters to rally behind Obama
- CNN-iReporters laud Clinton speech as a grand slammer
We are not a fearful nation, nor (if we reject
Michael Chertoff’s continuing effort to scare us to death) will we become one.
That said, we are certainly and willingly Balkanizing ourselves, dividing a previously United States
into a rag-tag and very unAmerican obsession with what are essentially ghosts
under the bed.
Derby Line has peacefully coexisted somehow with its
American-Canadian divisions and friendships since 1791. The War of 1812 with
Britain caused hardly a ripple of dissatisfaction among American and Canadian
neighbors who shared church, the watching of kids and celebration of inter-marriages. The U.S.
invaded Canada in that ill-begotten war, but apparently not at Derby Line.
Washington, D.C. burned (partially) to the ground, but the New England area
kept up a brisk trade with Canada throughout.
It’s not an accident that the line runs down the floor of the
library, bisecting it’s reading-room.
Well, the stirring up of hatreds is an initial and
necessary step toward fascism. Too strong a word? That’s because you and I and
most Americans and Canadians have been used to hearing it applied to Hitler’s
Germany or Italy’s Mussolini. Calm yourself for a moment before writing me a
hot reply about the necessity of
protecting our cities. Look up fascism. The definition is: (noun) a political theory advocating an
authoritarian hierarchical government (as opposed to democracy or liberalism).
Fits pretty well.
I would submit that we only live in a different
world if we elect to live in one. To allow 19 terrorists in hijacked aircraft
to change our very form of government and constitutionally protected civil freedoms
of movement and protection from unwarranted inquiry is to have already
abandoned the game to the enemy.
The nations of the world, who once looked our way with
hope and envy, now see us as disturbers of the peace. Disturbing the peace (the unsettling of proper order in a public
space through one's actions) is an American misdemeanor that is about to become
(if we continue to let it) a felony against the civilized world.
Bush and Chertoff? Cheney and Addington? Rumsfeld
and Gonzales? Are these the statesmen to whom we offer up our Founder’s
sacrifice? These rank politicians risk nothing of personal
wealth and power. Washington, Jefferson and their peers risked the very real probability that they would be tried for
treason and hanged, their fortunes confiscated. Not possibility--probability.
No Fernando, actually it’s your being there at all that is devastating to the country. You have
already been wrong a number of times, wrong to intervene in small border
villages, wrong to cut the streets of that village in half, wrong to disturb
the peace along the longest unmilitarized border in the world, wrong to institutionalize
what should be low-tech police work.
Confusing the means and the ends. Sounds right. Ability to do outrunning the reason to do. That, when you sit down,
shut off the TV and put your feet up, feels right as well. Guided missiles and
misguided men. Bingo, Martin. And for that and the other truths of your
illuminated life, they assassinated you.
As may be apparent from the title, I am going to
make comparisons to the early years of Hitler Germany, when he demanded and took
various powers by entirely legal and democratic methods. Hitler ended up a
dictator, but he was enabled to that ultimate goal by a population
terrified by an economic maelstrom and the ever growing lawlessness across Germany.
The Holocaust has taken Nazi Germany as ‘off the
table’ of political discussion as Nancy Pelosi’s unilateral removal of
impeachment and perhaps for similar reasons; sensitivity. It’s just too
divisive, says Nancy, as though we were frightened children needing to hide our
faces in her skirt. Never again, say the Israelis, as 800,000 Rwandans are
massacred and Stalin kills (by some estimates) 25 million of his own people,
Mao another 35 million and the carnage goes on, uncompared.
Comparison? We are denied comparison as well. Nazi,
has been made yet another N-word; unspeakable in polite society and therefore far more dangerous
to our civil rights and the lessons history has to teach. Author Aldous Huxley cautioned
us that "Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored"
With Germanic precision, Bush’s Department of
Homeland Security has put the nation’s police departments on the
intravenous-drip of federal money. Did you ever suspect that one day America
would be called a Homeland. Did you ever in your most Orwellian dream believe
that Americans would stand for that? Not only stand for it, but wave the flag? 
Bush, while still president
(and, in his own mind, still able to preside by decree) will absolutely protect
Cheney, Addington, Rumsfeld, Rice and whatever smaller fish threaten to fall into the nets of American
justice.
America has already been scared half to
death in preparation, but Blackwater stands ready to ‘assist’ local police,
should there be any ‘outbreaks of terrorist activity.’ New Orleans was the prep event.
Allowed
to target
Along comes Walter Pincus, an able enough Washington
Post staff writer to disabuse us of any intention by incumbent George Bush to
release his death-grip on America’s substitution for preemption over diplomacy.
If you thought (or hoped) his eye was on getting back to his cats and favorite
pillow down on the ranch, you never counted on Dick Cheney, or Cheney’s attack
dog, David Addington.
Ah yes, and our man Foster has been quoted elsewhere
as saying "National defense with
maximum precision and minimum unintended damage should be an attractive
challenge for scientists seeking to improve the human condition.” Dr. Strangelove rides again.
Promising a 'new direction for America,' Pelosi flim-flammed us into giving her the keys to the Congress. Her obscure, misunderstood and unconstitutionally ‘off
the table’ argument for impeachment and against this kind of clap-trap
weaponization, is that this president is on his way out. "Oh, he'll be gone in a few months, what’s
the point?" The point is preserving our republic as a nation of laws. What
we give or allow this president, we give or allow all presidents to come, by precedent.
The claim that in critical situations, this newest
weapon of choice in the Pandora Box "would
eliminate the dilemma of having to choose between responding to a sudden threat
either by using nuclear weapons or by not responding at all," is bogus
on its face. It tempts presidents to respond by poll (something they do entirely
too much already), promotes reckless and ill-advised presidential shots from
the hip to juice their numbers and discourages the hard, slogging, necessary work of diplomacy.
This administration in particular, but perhaps all
modern administrations, have apparently thrown diplomacy (and the Department of
State that administers it) into the dustbin of history. I argue that such successive
presidential policy has pretty much destroyed American influence on the
international stage. It has been recently claimed that we have more members of
military bands than total employees in the State Department.
We don't need a quicker
way to strike, we need less tendency
to strike and a calmer, more resolute method by which to negotiate. In a
properly run government (let alone an administration) the situation in Georgia
would never have been allowed to fester. GWB found himself surprised by what
everyone else saw coming, but had no mechanism to prevent. Echoes of 9-11 and
Condi Rice thrown to another lion.
Ten Arab speakers. Can you believe it? We have plunged
ourselves into the darkness and expected, demanded, smashed all the furniture seeking illumination. The Middle East is in
flames and America has ten people who can speak Arabic in their diplomatic service and probably fewer
qualified in Farsi (the language of Iran).
Boeing?
Louis Rene Beres is, in my opinion, a wild-eyed and
war-mongering Jew, who shoots off his mouth incessantly on behalf of his unyielding
opinion that Iran is about to erase Israel from the face of the earth. He bases
that (apparently) solely on the statements of Iran’s current president, a
wing-nut by the name of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Wing-nut presidents are not the exclusive province
of Iranians. We happen to have one ourselves, who has single-handedly frightened
and estranged a larger portion of the world than Iran by at least a power of
ten. Home to one of the world's oldest continuous major civilizations, with
historical and urban settlements dating back to 4000 BC (Wikipedia), what Iran
has not done is attack, preemptively or otherwise, another nation. Would that
Israel could say the same.
Sorry ‘bout that Louie, I know you’re disappointed.
Your definition of ‘the best of all
possible worlds’ no doubt comes closer to that of the former director of
Mossad. You neglect to mention that Amit held that esteemed position for a mere
five years (63-68) and that was forty years ago. Eighty-seven now, Amit was a
member of Haganah, a terrorist organization in its own right.
A Haganah specialty was the Special Night Squads. Now there’s
a name that ought to chill your blood. According to Israeli
military historian Martin van Creveld their training included "... how to kill without compunction,
how to interrogate prisoners by shooting every tenth man to make the rest talk;
and how to deter future terrorists by pushing the heads of captured ones into
pools of oil and then freeing them to tell the story." This guy is one
of your ‘authoritative figures?’ Amit’s
precursor to waterboarding—oilboarding.
SAVAK--Shah of Iran--Mossad increasingly
active in Amit’s 60s directorship--coincidence after coincidence. Meir Amit maybe have a few old scores to
settle from those days or does he, as one of several authoritative sources have (in this case) clean hands?
That’s a bit melodramatic, Louie. If ever there was a nation that stood on
other nations’ legs, it is modern Israel. This America that you would so
quickly engulf in nuclear war, this nation that you would so easily throw away
in your petulant, foot-stamping tantrum, has done more to sustain Israel than
any other nation on earth. Stand alone. That’s
a childish statement on the face of it.
Here we go again, reprising the old cold-war
language of strangleholds and us against them communist-capitalist comparisons.
Except for the fact that they no longer (if indeed they ever did) hold water.
Iron grips and who is bully to whom are a matter of definition. Steven Pearlstein
seems not to feel that the illegal and vilified hounding of Iraq into a
destroyed sovereignty is the result of anything other than Iraq's thirst for
democracy satisfying itself at the well (or possibly wellhead) of American ideals.
Well Steve, certainly no offense taken when, shortly after the boat ride and fishing in
Kennebunkport, George Bush moved to isolate and limit Russia’s energy
interests.
Ouch. Steven, you are my most admired economic
writer, but the references here sound as though they came directly out of the
administration media-machinery. It's becoming more apparent every day that Bush and Cheney
encouraged Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili to lean out over the abyss, whispering in his ear that they wouldn't let go of his hand. And, like countless U.S. promises to countless dissident groups, we were not
there when they got nudged from behind.
C. Boyden Gray can put that in his diplomatic
bonafides when he next represents Bush in Eurasian energy circles. George
Bush's thumb on the scales suddenly seemed very evidently up an embarrassing
part of his anatomy. And there he was, enjoying himself so much in
China--another country he works overtime to alienate.
It's no surprise that John McCain would fall into step and march to the same sad, failed, disproven and ignorant tune.