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and if you do I'll have to start screaming myself about how hard I worked on the campaign, and after the fraud, on the challenge. And I was proud that Boxer and the rest of them heard us enough to do what they did on 1/6. I guess these days I'm as happy as any of us that anything happend at all. But when I read something that slaps me up beside the head with the whole ugly truth, to the point that all I can say is, very softly, "He's right"; it's time to spread it around.
This is from www.conceptualguerilla.com
Monday, January 10, 2005
BAD POLITICAL THEATER
At the end of the last post here -- which you can find underneath this one -- I said that I would be posting something about the electoral vote challenge. Then I watched some of the proceedings on C-SPAN, and promptly asked myself, "why bother?" Why did I ask that? Well, let's consider the position of the Democrats challenging the electoral vote from Ohio.
Mind you, they weren't claiming that the reported outcome from Ohio was wrong. They weren't claiming that Ohio's electoral votes were "stolen" in a fraudulent election. They were claiming that there were "problems" in Ohio that made no difference to the outcome of the election. Apparently, this challenge was based on some abstract principle -- a principle I agree with, but which has little traction with your average American -- that Ohio's electoral votes should be thrown out because some small portion of the electorate was disenfranchised by some combination of means, that were characterized as mostly "bureaucratic bungling" rather than a systematic effort to rig the election. There were lots of speeches about the "sanctity of the right to vote," all of which were purely academic, since the challengers didn't claim any change in the outcome. Presumably, some level of bureaucratic incompetence at running an election -- is a standard of "zero error" even feasible in the best of circumstances? -- requires that the entire slate of electors be disqualified, thus nullifying the millions more votes that were actually cast and fairly counted.
I wouldn't vote to sustain the challenge on that basis -- and I'm no friend of George W. Bush or his hatchet man Kenneth Blackwell.
The whole thing was pitched as a "whine-in" about "fixing problems" with the election system. It was packaged as a complaint about "problems" that didn't make any difference -- thus guaranteeing, since it didn't make any difference, that nobody in Peoria would give a shit. The opportunity to build any groundswell of support for reforming the election system -- including ridding ourselves of "black box voting," not to mention odious vote suppression efforts -- was completely missed. Nobody gave a shit before the challenge, and nobody gives a shit now. The media had its cameras pointed at both houses of Congress. Unfortunately there was nothing to see. Weak gestures about abstract principles don't make good television.
Meanwhile, somebody has suggested that I thank Senator Boxer for making the whole spectacle, such as it was, possible. Anytime someone stands up to be counted, however tentative the effort, I suppose that's a good idea. But if I had been Senator Boxer, given the terms of the challenge, I believe I would have taken a pass. The challenge accomplished exactly nothing, because it was set up to accomplish exactly nothing. Convincing those of us in the American dissident community that there were "problems" counts for exactly nothing. After all, we already knew that. The question is who else they convinced, and the answer is "Nobody."
Here is the simple case that should have been made, but wasn't. This wasn't bureaucratic incompetence. The Republicans used a variety of tactics, from intimidation of some voters, to inadequate equipment in Democratic polling places, to partisan based "challenges" to the credentials of tens of thousands of registered voters, to purges of voting lists, to illegal access and possible tampering with voting equipment, to suppress Democratic votes sufficient to ALTER THE OUTCOME OF THE ELECTION. That's why they did it. Whatever hard-on Republicans might get from the theoretical denial of some Democrat's right to vote, the results are what they care most about. They got the results they wanted.
And of course, the success of these various efforts at changing the outcome of the election was the point of the challenge in Congress. The challengers just didn't want to say that out loud. Instead, they hoped to frame their protest as some obscure civics lesson in "the sanctity of vote -- not that it made any difference, doncha know." They hoped the facts would make the stronger case -- all by their little selves. I can almost hear them. "Jeez, do we have to draw you a picture???"
Yes, you do. Sorry folks. Ordinary people don't watch C-SPAN -- and don't understand the significance of what they are seeing half the time, anyway. The corporate media has little interest in exposing massive vote suppression and/or outright vote stealing. Presenting them with a "low profile" challenge, does nothing but make it easy for them to sweep the whole thing under the rug -- which is exactly what they have done from the beginning. In other words, if you want to make some noise, well you have to make some FUCKING NOISE.
You have to take some risks. The Democrats in Congress have nothing to lose. The Republicans have treated them, and will continue to treat them, like the barely tolerated "traitors" the Republicans claim that they are. Remember, the Democrats in Congress are the "Washington Generals." They get paid to lose to the Globetrotters. They're the masked villains you see on professional wrestling. The crowd is supposed to hate them -- so the heroes look even better. Meanwhile, they're advisers, "legislative directors" and other professional staffers keep doing their inane political calculus, telling Democrats in Congress about the sentiments of the increasing ignorant, increasingly bigoted, and increasingly mean electorate. Their advice is predictable and uniform across the board. Don't piss off the cretans.
Oh no, my political-science-major-who-got-a-job-on-the-hill-because-your-uncle-raised-a-pile-of-cash-for-your-first-boss professional. Don't ever doubt that public opinion is written in stone, and the right-wing drift of that opinion is an immutable force of nature like the tides. We couldn't possibly expect Democrats in congress to be LEADERS, who actually influence public opinion. They strictly follow public opinion. They don't create it. Never mind that the Republicans created the right-wing shift in opinion by working day and night for forty years to accomplish just that. And they didn't do a very good a job, either. The majority of the electorate favors the Democratic position on taxes, the deficit, the environment, healthcare, education, jobs, the economy, and the quagmire in Iraq. They favor the Republicans on "terra" -- which John Ashcroft says isn't a problem anymore -- and homo's. Oh wait, most Americans favor some form of "civil unions."
The Republicans took a grossly unpopular agenda -- eliminate social security, medicare, the minimum wage, environmental protection, labor unions, and create "cheap labor paradise" -- and parlayed that turd of ideology into majority status. Meanwhile, the Congressional Democrats can't take the majority position and fend them off. Presumably they are all hoping that public opinion will move back to the left, all by itself, and then they will be able to jump in front of the parade and pretend like they're leading it. In fact, public opinion is to the left - miles to the left -- of the Republican corporate fascists -- but the Congressional Democrats can't capitalize on that simple fact.
There are two kinds of people in Washington, those who create political reality, and those who play the game in a reality created by somebody else. The whole mindset of the Democrats in Congress -- as well exemplified by the miserable shadow of an electoral vote challenge a handful of them staged -- is that they just can't possibly stand against the Republican onslaught of empty symbols and values blather. They can't possibly take public opinion majorities on the issues that matter, and turn them into anything that even resembles political power.
Here is what I want to know. It's very simple. Who are these people in Congress who call themselves "Democrats?" Who are their strategists and tacticians, and how did these miserable failures ever get to be regarded as "professionals?" How did they get into positions of leadership, and what the hell are they still doing there? When are we going to see some Democrats who take strong, unmistakable positions, that MSNBC has to report -- even if it doesn't want to? When are we going to see some Democrats who appear as guests on Chris Matthews, and call him on the carpet for the corporate shill that he is? When are we going to see a Democratic leadership that not only opposes Republican policy initiatives, but opposes their entire cheap-labor ideology? That ideology is actually unpopular. You think we might persuade a few of you to expose it for what it is, and call the Republicans to account for it?
In other words, when can we expect Democrats in Congress, and other positions of leadership, to start acting like the leaders of a principled opposition? When are they are going to take some risks? When are they going to stop following public opinion on "terra" and "homo's," and start leading public opinion on taxes, the deficit, the environment, jobs, healthcare, education, the quagmire in Iraq -- oh, and stolen fucking elections, while we're at it. They have plenty of "political capital." They need to stop pissing it away.
And if they're not going to serve as tough and smart opponents of a ruthless regime, when are we going to get leaders who will?
Tomorrow, I'll be taking up Social Security "reform."
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