The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

What the Debt Limit Crisis Should Have Taught You

This is not primarily about the Tea Party

It is about what rich donors want.  The Tea Party does not even have the amount of muscle progressives do.  Progressives can bring tens of thousands of people out, the Tea Party can rarely even get above 1,000.  They are a convenient excuse to do what the Beltway and the oligarchs already want to do.

Where are you going to go?

Both Dems and Republicans are onside with cutting Social Security and Medicare. They are only third rails if there is someone else to vote for.

The deals being offered will cause a second downleg of the Depression and a worse one

We’re in a Depression.  This is fact.  Anyone who doesn’t call it that is gutless, stupid or uninformed.  This will make it worse, not just for the US, but for the entire developed world.

Representatives work for the people who pay them

That isn’t really you.  They don’t become multi-millionaires on their salaries, you know.  It’s their donors, the people who hire their wives and children, the people who fund their campaigns, the people who give them good jobs when they leave government.  If you want Reps and Senators to work for you, you must pay them better, you must fund their campaigns (and sharply limit outside funding) and you must make it illegal for them to EVER make more money in a year than their government salary (index it to an average of the median wage, the minimum wage, and CPI).  You should do what Canada used to do and give them a good pension after 6 years.  You DON’T want them worrying about their next job, or what they’ll do if they’ll lose.

Point being, they don’t work for you.

This is a representative plutocracy

I believe Stirling Newberry, in the early 90s, pointed this out first.  Politicians are paid by people other than you.  You are the product.  Think of this as the Facebook rule, if you aren’t paying for something, then you are the product.  The rich pay politicians to rangle you.  The amount of salary and public funding most Reps get is trivial compared to how much money they get from donors, even during their time in elected office, let alone after they leave.  You are the product, not the customer, of DC politicians.  They do not represent you, and you should not expect your interests to be looked after except as an afterthought.  When the oligarchs all agree that something needs to be done (like cut entitlements), it will be done, no matter how unpopular it is.

This “Crisis” is what Obama wanted

Again, if he didn’t, he would have raised the debt ceiling in the lame duck.  Nancy Pelosi was always very good at getting those sort of basic housekeeping bills through. It would have passed.  Period.  Obama wanted to cut SS and Medicare, and he needed a “crisis” in order to do it.  He also needed a Republican House, which he had, because his policies during 2009 and 2010 didn’t fix the economy.

You should have been working on nothing but primarying Obama since the day after the midterms

If you don’t understand why, I can’t help you.

There is no war but class war

Break the rich, or they will finish institutionalizing aristocracy.  Period.

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118 Comments

  1. John Manning

    Another depressing post. Jesus i hope your not right but from everything you have written we are Fucked.

  2. Tom Hickey

    Yup. And anyone who did not see this coming during the 2008 campaign was either blind and deaf, or not paying close attention.

  3. anon2525

    Nothing is written in stone. If angry mobs show up at congressional representatives’ appearance and demand that they reverse these actions, laws that have been passed can be overturned. Waiting for elections and primaries is too long and won’t do any good regardless of the outcome. They have made representative democracy a farce. Demanding change now is what direct democracy looks like.

  4. “a depression”?

    talk about gutless.

    worse than “the great depression,” bubba.

    sack up and call it what it is, welsh

  5. Adrian

    If the American people were fighting back, would we know about it?

    Progressives did more in Wisconsin to oppose the “austerity for everyone one but the rich” program, than the teapartiers did on everything else.

    Maybe we should leave the propaganda to the media, and progressives should help the people to make decisions in their own interest at the grassroots level.
    Just because you’re not on the evening news, does not mean you didn’t succeed.

  6. Shoes4Industry

    This is nothing less than slow motion genocide on the elderly, retirees, union workers, baby boomers and the poor. The Right wants them dead and buried and off the books ASAP. The “Super Congress” is nothing more than cover so no one party’s fingerprints are on the murder weapon.

    The end game is a landed aristocracy and a sub-class of “citizens” that will serve their master’s immediate needs. There’s no longer a need for a middle class, labor class or even consumer class in America. Those people/jobs can all be outsourced overseas and kept at arms length at a much more profitable level. The “income gap” here will grow until America is no longer recognizable. It was a nice experiment while it lasted. R.I.P.

  7. The Facebook rule: if you are not paying for it, you are the product. This is the key to understanding media. You are not the consumer. Advertisers pay for your eyeballs.

  8. Bruce Wilder

    With all due respect, the call to “primary” Obama has always been misplaced, based on a mis-reading of the institutional possibilities. The “Dean Scream” pretty much showed anyone paying attention that that door had been shut — welded shut. There is no alternative candidate credible enough to threaten either Obama’s control of the party’s apparatus, or his mindshare among Democratic identifiers (to use the language of brand management, which seems most appropriate to the case). And, corporate news Media being what it is, there’s no possibility of a candidate emerging.

    What liberals and progressives will have to do is a much tougher challenge, requiring a great deal more political courage (or despair, which may be the same thing in these circumstances), though much less organization (which is a good thing, since there is so little organization). They are going to have defeat Obama in the general election. I know that means letting the Republican get elected. Seems risky, until you fully absorb who and what Obama is.

  9. I’m pretty much in full agreement here. This crisis was created as a cover to attack entitlements. Obama and the rating agencies are playing their roles to help create it. No matter what, interest rates will spike on treasuries hence ensuring that the financial oligarchs get their rents. Before doing that, they’ve got to gut entitlements so there’s more room for them. Having us paying for interest, paying for war and having folks lend their bodies for war is the game plan at this point. What we have here is nothing short of a coup occurring right before our eyes. There’s simply no other way to characterize it.

  10. At least Obama’s lost a lot of people over this latest fiasco. Every day fewer people can delude themselves about who he is and what he represents. Right now I’d be surprised if he won re-election. Maybe, once his ship sinks for good, someone will see their way clear to run for president representing real change.

  11. Well, this sure lays out the whole sordid picture quite succinctly.

  12. anon2525

    Fortune:

    1) Bad – It was “unfortunate” that the unemployment insurance was scheduled to expire after the election last year and it was “unfortunate” that the tax cuts were due to expire at the same time. This “forced” obama and the democrats to do what the republs wanted. They didn’t want to, they “had” to.

    2) Bad – It was “unfortunate” that the gov’t. didn’t have to default in May, but will “run out of money” in August, just before every elected officeholder in the fed. gov’t is scheduled to go on vacation.

    3) Good – It is “fortunate” that the gov’t. has found a “solution” to the problem of “running out of money” that a) doesn’t affect them personally (unlike that nasty financial crisis in 2008), and b) has been found just in time for them to leave on vacation.

  13. art_anacrusis

    REPRESENTATIVES WORK FOR THE PEOPLE WHO PAY THEM

    WOW, that concept might have completely changed my view of politics. So how do we actually change this?

  14. Ghostwheel

    From the AP:

    ‘House Speaker John Boehner telephoned Obama at mid-evening to say the agreement had been struck, then immediately began pitching the deal to his fractious rank and file.

    ‘”It isn’t the greatest deal in the world, but it shows how much we’ve changed the terms of the debate in this town,” he said on a conference call, according to GOP officials. He added the agreement was “all spending cuts. The White House bid to raise taxes has been shut down.”‘

    So Boehner and Obama both got what they wanted.

    Boehner can claim a “victory” over Obama (or at least, over the image of Obama he wants people to buy into), and Obama gets what he really wants: a chance to skewer what’s left of our pathetically inadequate social safety net and further reduce domestic spending.

    How long will the depression be drawn out after these cuts go through?

    Never mind. The market is secure for a little while longer. Wouldn’t want our investment class to take any kind of hit, God forbid.

    So now, the Big Question: will the American people come to realize Obama does not represent “hope and change”, and come to revile him, or can they be deceived indefinitely?

  15. guest

    “Representatives work for the people who pay them

    That isn’t really you. They don’t become multi-millionaires on their salaries, you know. It’s their donors, the people who hire their wives and children, the people who fund their campaigns, the people who give them good jobs when they leave government. If you want Reps and Senators to work for you, you must pay them better, you must fund their campaigns (and sharply limit outside funding) and you must make it illegal for them to EVER make more money in a year than their government salary (index it to an average of the median wage, the minimum wage, and CPI). You should do what Canada used to do and give them a good pension after 6 years. You DON’T want them worrying about their next job, or what they’ll do if they’ll lose.”
    _________________________________
    I agree with most of the list except this. I would suggest doubling or tripling the number of congressmen and making them more representative through various means.

    As for the pay, I think they make enough and their retirement is overly generous, if anything. I wouldn’t cut the pay or retirement. I would just reduce it dollar for dollar for every dollar of income (earned or unearned) they receive from other sources. That goes for retirement too. Reduce their retirement pay and benefits dollar for dollar. If they make more on the outside in a year than they would get from pay or retirement, start reducing their future benefits dollar for dollar. And if they get caught cheating, they forfeit all benefits forever. Same for the judiciary and cabinet members.

    And no private meetings with lobbyists, much less the lavish travel and entertainment they receive. Lobbying only in DC or their home districts, in chambers open to the public.

  16. tBoy

    Senators and Congress-peeps need to be chosen randomly. Those convicted of violent crimes, child, animal, or elderly abuse not eligible.

    That would insure these august bodies have the national percentage of pathological narcissists as opposed to the current 100%.

  17. StewartM

    Agree with everything said.

    The small bit of good news from the latest polling. Obama’s approval rating for his handling of economic issues was down to *31 %* even before this disaster was announced. His approval rating among African-Americans was down to 50 %.

    That’s *before* this disaster.

    I’m hoping the Republicans impeach him anyway. We shouldn’t lift a finger to help the SOB.

    -StewartM

  18. StewartM

    Oops, *31 %* among self-described *liberals*.

    -StewartM

  19. “If you aren’t paying for something, then you are the product. ”

    Hey, this website is free!

  20. StewartM

    Tboy:

    Senators and Congress-peeps need to be chosen randomly.

    I always wondered if our governance would improve if we simply *drafted* Congress. For one thing, the proportion of businessmen and lawyers would decrease.

    -StewartM

  21. jcapan

    What Bruce said upthread–if our goal is to defeat Obama, define him as other than liberal, then mobilize a 3rd party threat.

    Not even sure a muscular primary threat would cause him to pander to the base. And even if it did, when it inevitably failed he’d be back in the center, rolling back more of the new deal.

    Give him the Nader treatment, deny his legacy, and begin the uber-arduous task of building an alternative to the duop-s.

    PS, great farkin post

  22. Cloud

    “If you aren’t paying for something, then you are the product. ”

    Hey, this website is free!

    OH CRAP

  23. Ian Welsh

    lol, it’s true! White Slavery!

  24. Roberto

    Love the post, except for the idea to primary Obama. It’s not a horrible idea. But its a bad one.

    If you agree with Ian that the left must take Obama down and be seen to take him down, which I do, then the easiest way to do that is with an independent or 3rd party challenge in the general election.

    A primary challenge to Obama is highly likely to fail, just on the grounds that Obama will have MASSIVE amounts of cash on hand to destroy the person.

    On the other hand, if we challenge Obama in the general, we are highly likely to succeed. All we need to do is siphon a few percentage points of the public away from Obama, and he’s done. He is finished. As a bonus, if our theoretical candidate does really well, and gets to around 15 or 20% of the vote… then we will have just legitimized the idea that independent/3rd party candidates are not just spoiler candidates but deserve a national platform considering the vast support behind them. We will have dealt a major blow not just to the two-party system, but to the very concept of parties.

  25. tboy,
    I believe government officials chosen by a ”jury duty” system is called Demarchy.

    Notorious, “At least Obama’s lost a lot of people over this latest fiasco. Every day fewer people can delude themselves about who he is and what he represents. Right now I’d be surprised if he won re-election. Maybe, once his ship sinks for good, someone will see their way clear to run for president representing real change. “

    If an idea can be conceived, it can be co-opted. Just as Barry O. co-opted traditional liberal politics and the Kochs, et al co-opted the John Birch society types for their own corporatist ends, surely gutsy outsiderism can surely be ”branded” and co-opted. Maybe BHO will get re-elected and in 2016 the Libertarian party will see an unexpected influx of cash from big donors for a “new and different” kind of libertarian, and the media will gush over how he doesn’t scare middle-class centrist voters like Ron Paul did, in the same way that they fawned over BHO’s un-Jesse Jackson-ness.

  26. Seconding Adrian’s comment. Get out into the streets, call our so-called leaders to account, get into their faces.

    The loyalist, willfully ignorant Democrats-at-any-cost-no-matter-what tribalist morons will still refuse to see what’s right in front of them. Ignore them. They are hopeless. They’re letting themselves be led to the slaughter, all the while proclaiming how they can’t help it, there’s nothing they can do, it’s all somebody else’s fault (it’s always somebody else’s fault), Obama is really a good guy, blah blah blah. Ignore them. Ignore the corporate media.

    Roll up your sleeves. Yell. Refuse to be silent. And demand change.

    http://october2011.org

  27. carolyn wexler

    We can break the capatilists and show them our clout. One thing we can do is boycott one business after another until they take notice that we are not going to put up with their sponsorship of screwing us. What we need is some organization and will. Instead of complaining and whining, let’s prioritize businesses that contribute to conservative causes. This would require some research from me, but maybe some of you already know. We have to organize and stay focused on just this one thing. We have targets for January, Feb., March, etc……. Then we show them our clout. We stop whining and complaining. We have to attack the money and then the politicians will follow. We don’t have choices at the polls. But we do have choices in our shopping carts.

  28. Carolyn, good point, and no social/political movement has ever succeeded without economic boycotts bolstering people’s demands. I would only take issue with:

    “let’s prioritize businesses that contribute to conservative causes.”

    Not sure which businesses those would be, other than all of them, since they support Dems and Repubs in equal measure. What’s a “conservative cause”? Asking a serious question here.

  29. “A primary challenge to Obama is highly likely to fail, just on the grounds that Obama will have MASSIVE amounts of cash on hand to destroy the person.”

    Yes, but if he has to use most of that just to get his own party’s nomination, that would hurt him in the general election.

    “All we need to do is siphon a few percentage points of the public away from Obama, and he’s done.”

    Can’t we do both? If enough people just stayed home in November, we could possibly ensure his defeat. A primary could lead up to that.

  30. Michael

    “Yes, but if he has to use most of that just to get his own party’s nomination, that would hurt him in the general election.”

    But in that case if we’re aiming to hurt him in the general election wouldn’t it be better just to run a third party candidate and compete against him directly, you know cut out the middle man of the democratic party so to speak. Then again this might be the result of different approaches towards the democratic party. If your trying to save the democrats and want to send a message that obama doesn’t rerrsent the values of the party primarying him might be a good way to go about that. If on the other hand you think the democratic party is hopelessly corrupted and that obama’s performance is actually representative of what the party leadership wants and who it serves then I would say running a third party is the way to go. It’ll help distinguish the left from the democrats.

  31. The American left has neither the understanding of electoral politics nor the level of organization required to deliberately effect a primary challenge has any effect on the overall dynamic. The American left cannot engineer the kind of loss for Obama that may teach future electoral candidates a lesson—they will learn the opposite lesson. This was the same before Obama’s election and remains the same now no matter what Obama does. This is not some inherent quality of the left. It as a choice. Most of the left simply refuses to engage with what actually happens during an election and why people vote for what they vote.

    None of what has transpired is very surprising. Y’all will continue to blame everything on media ownership or something or other making it impossible to win elections. In which case, one is helpless within the political system, and there was never any point in saying anything about it.

  32. Sent to me yesterday (by someone whose permission I didn’t get, so not printing his name):

    . . . The worst enemy of the LEFT is the liberal class, far more debilitating than is the RIGHT. Liberals are defined by their lack of principles. Their public policy positions are defined by what is imagined to be “politically possible,” not by what is just. Liberals abandon universal health care because it’s “not politically feasible.” Liberals make my stomach turn.

  33. StewartM

    Liberals are defined by their lack of principles. Their public policy positions are defined by what is imagined to be “politically possible,” not by what is just.

    There’s a lot of truth to that.

    It’s a sad state of affairs when it’s only the Right that says “Hell No!!” and makes their principles stick.

    And, as a coworker tells me, the Right doesn’t fear the Left.

    Despise us? Yes.

    Hate us? Yes.

    Want to destroy us? Yes.

    But fear us? No.

    And why should they? We don’t retaliate in any way whatsoever–politically, economically, let alone the threat of violence and discord. In the current mess, a default hurts them and their big backers just as much as it hurts everyday Americans. A default is not good, but it was the only thing in the mix that was truly “shared sacrifice”. This deal isn’t shared sacrifice at all.

    Liberals have honed whining to a fine art. Even now, the Bernie Sanders and Dennis Kuciniches will angrily shake their fists at the raw deal that Obama made and make impassioned speeches. But whenever their vote is really needed, Obama gets it; it’s all useless show. Sanders alone could have committed to real filibusters instead of those “filibernies” that are just for show and not substance. While the Tea Party caucus of 60 members makes its voice heard and is a force to be reckoned with, the Progressive caucus of 83 members is useless. They are useless because they never say “F-you!” to Obama and the DNC Dems, and aren’t willing to make any stand on principle. The Tea Partiers are.

    So when are we going to start fighting back?

    -StewartM

  34. “Sent to me yesterday (by someone whose permission I didn’t get, so not printing his name)”

    Can I agree with much of what that someone said, while laughing at them not letting you identify them even though they hate people who won’t stand up for what they believe in?

    “So when are we going to start fighting back?”

    Do what you can. Convince one person to abandon Obama. Then maybe they’ll convince a person, and so on. He is losing supporters in droves, enough to drive his approval rating downward. It’s actually getting easier to apply heat.

  35. StewartM

    Lisa Simeone:

    “let’s prioritize businesses that contribute to conservative causes.”

    Not sure which businesses those would be, other than all of them, since they support Dems and Repubs in equal measure.

    And more to the point–many businesses who we’d like to boycott we effectively can’t, because these businesses don’t sell directly to the end-use customer. How does one selectively boycott Koch Oil? Oil is used in everything from the manufacture of polymers to agriculture. Anywhere you turn, you could be handing money over to them.

    -StewartM

  36. By the way, Pat is my real name!

  37. Speaking of fighting back, might not be a bad idea to call your Congressman and tell him/her to reject Obama’s deal.

  38. Can I agree with much of what that someone said, while laughing at them not letting you identify them even though they hate people who won’t stand up for what they believe in?

    Pat, it’s not that he won’t let me, I just never asked. It’s my personal policy not to forward emails without permission. I saved this snippet from his message because I thought it was a good encapsulation. I’m sure he’d be happy to have his name associated with it, but at this point it seems like water under the bridge. The point is what it says.

    Also, I’ve been trying for over a year to get friends/colleagues to see what Obama really is, likewise have been pestering my Congressional reps to do the right thing, on many issues. The tribalists don’t want to hear it, even today, after this disaster, and only one of my 3 Congresspeople gives a shit.

    When Bush was in office, I used to say that what it would take for his supporters to go against him would be for him to go up in a plane and personally bomb a few American cities — but even that wouldn’t be enough — he’d have to be videotaped doing it — but even then, his supporters would claim the videotapes were rigged — on and on. I now feel the same way about Obama supporters. They are just as stubborn and just as willfully ignorant as the Tea Partiers they love to deride.

  39. Progressives can bring tens of thousands of people out, the Tea Party can rarely even get above 1,000.

    By the way, the number of people you can bring out to a rally is not evidence of anything. Either way these are still minute fractions of the population.

  40. StewartM

    Notorious P. A. T.

    Speaking of fighting back, might not be a bad idea to call your Congressman and tell him/her to reject Obama’s deal.

    Done.

    -StewartM

  41. Mandos, well, they were evidence in the ’60s. Yes, I know we’re living in different times. I know. But if people just sit on their asses and accept whatever crumbs are thrown their way, nothing will ever change. There are many ways to protest, not just one.

  42. Ian Welsh

    You really specialize in straw men Mandos. Enjoy your time in the “let them eat cake” camp.

  43. Ken Hoop

    Jonathan Versen

    The Koch Brothers did not coopt “John Birch Society types.” Birchers had a comparatively sophisticated conspiracy theory having to do with the threat of monolithic International Communist Conspiracy and an axis of New York/Washingtonian fellow travellers (which among other things was disproven by the post Vietnam War when Soviet-Chinese proxies engaged in large scale “in-fighting.”)

    Tea partiers are unsophisticated newbies by comparison.

  44. Cloud

    So when are we going to start fighting back?

    I’m intrigued by commenter Simeone’s http://october2011.org

    I feel like I need to do something. Going to this would derail my last year of university. So I have to decide if such a thing as this is, or which thing, is the right place to take a stand.

    I’m wary of organizations such as this not being radical enough. The phrase “demand change” (i.e., from Congress) and pledging to not be violent, no matter what, raises red flags with me. I don’t think that can ever work.

    You don’t demand that Congress make new policy; that is not who they are. You inform Congress that the people are exercising their right to abolish them and instituting a new res publica.

    We need a million people to occupy Washington and announce that we intend to have a revolution, that our action is justified by the same principle as in Jefferson’s Declaration — and that we will not cast the first stone, but we will not willingly submit to the cops clearing us out, either.

    You cannot have a “nonviolent”, radical change without implying that there will be physical resistance.

  45. Ian offers a perfect summary of What Is. The answer is to stop putting so much faith and hope and desire for Salvation in the political/electoral system and its candidates, officers, and its outcome, ’cause it isn’t there. Never was.

    It’s a harsh lesson.

  46. You cannot have a “nonviolent”, radical change without implying that there will be physical resistance.

    Cloud, I’m on the Steering Committee. We’re all about civil resistance. We expect we’ll be arrested and spend time in jail. But we are committed 100% to non-violence. Sorry, I don’t buy that revolution means violence. Baloney. MLK and Gandhi, among others, proved the power of non-violence.

    We welcome everyone who’s fed up with the shit that’s being shoveled at us in this country, but we don’t welcome anyone who wants to throw punches. (Our overlords are so much stronger than we could ever be anyway, it’s laughable that people think violence could somehow be successful. What’re you gonna do when the SWAT teams and riot gear and sonic weapons and heat waves and, now, even drones come out? Throw a few rocks and Molotov cocktails? Hunker down in a building and fire a few rounds? Come on.)

    The October2011 Coalition is full of radicals. And full of people who’ve spent their lives organizing, and bucking the system. We aren’t marching and then packing up and going home. We’re staying. This will be an occupation.

    We know that not everyone can risk arrest. Not everyone has to. There are many important jobs to be done on the outside, as it were.

    And I can’t promise 1 million people, though I wish I could. Nor can I dictate who can and cannot afford to risk a job, especially in these times, or classes at school. I can tell you that we are serious and we are seriously organizing.

  47. Ian Welsh

    Sorry folks, violent revolution is now as close to a certainty as anything is in this life. “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable.” JFK.

  48. Cloud

    Lisa, thanks for replying.

    I guess we have basically the same disagreements that were had here: https://www.ianwelsh.net/strategies-for-resistance-and-change/comment-page-1/#comments

    Don’t get me wrong, I think the October2011 thing needs to happen.

    But I guess, personally, the reasons to resist arrest are more compelling to me than the reasons not to. If I’d been in the room where Andrew Meyer was pinned down and tasered, the moral part of me hopes I’d have had the physical courage to jump on the cops doing it.

    Also, what Ian said. Asymmetrical warfare, if it comes to that, is a real thing.

  49. StewartM

    Ian Welsh:

    Sorry folks, violent revolution is now as close to a certainty as anything is in this life. “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable.” JFK.

    I rather liked the longer version of your reply. 😉

    But I regretfully agree. Non-violence depends on appealing to your master’s empathy, and capitalism breeds a ruling class selected for sociopathy.

    And as for voting them out? Not only is there the money and media disadvantages the left already suffers from, already I wonder that as things worsen, the more Republicans will disenfranchise the down-and-out to keep their electoral advantage. Maybe not being able to pay your credit card bill or mortgage might become a felony and disqualify you from voting.

    I have no idea how bad “bad” will get.

    StewartM

  50. Cloud

    Hm, looks like Ian chose to edit his last expansive comment down to that single JFK thing. Too bad. Fortunately the full text was saved in my browser’s cache.

  51. StewartM

    Delete the previous, I hate when I forget to properly blockquote:

    Ian Welsh

    Sorry folks, violent revolution is now as close to a certainty as anything is in this life. “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable.” JFK.

    I rather liked the longer version of your reply. 😉

    But I regretfully agree. Non-violence depends on appealing to your master’s empathy, and capitalism breeds a ruling class selected for sociopathy.

    And as for voting them out? Not only is there the money and media disadvantages the left already suffers from, already I wonder that as things worsen, the more Republicans will disenfranchise the down-and-out to keep their electoral advantage. Maybe not being able to pay your credit card bill or mortgage might become a felony and disqualify you from voting.

    I have no idea how bad “bad” will get.

    StewartM

  52. Non-violence depends on appealing to your master’s empathy

    Respectfully disagree. In the strongest possible terms.

    We aren’t naive. We know we can’t appeal to some people’s humanity or sense of decency. The people who got clubbed and firehosed and beaten up during the civil rights movement knew they weren’t appealing to their abusers’ sense of decency. That’s not what was going on.

    The rest of the world was watching. And those people were outraged. Those people started demanding change. Those people insisted that the beatings stop. Those people had their humanity and sense of decency challenged. There were plenty of people who would’ve loved to go on beating, from then until kingdom come. But they were stopped. They were forced to change.

    Put aside my antipathy to violence for a minute, and answer the questions I posed above. I’m genuinely interested in your answers. I find it amazing that anyone is seriously advocating violence. Why? What’s the point? What kind of actions, what kind of “asymmetric warfare,” do you believe would achieve anything? And what exactly do you think it would achieve?

  53. “MLK and Gandhi, among others, proved the power of non-violence.”

    Since violence inevitably devolves into a mire of mounting unintended consequences (and therefore is reliably un-intelligent), I certainly can’t recommend it.

    As for MLK and Gandhi – both in my personal “most-admired” list, what they proved was the power of mass persuasion. Which non-violence serves very well… with an honest press that will both report the message to, and acknowledge its receipt by. the public.

    Alas, honest press gone.

  54. Chris

    Just a drive by comment, don’t expect much.

    The moments of history one refers to by citing MLK and Gandhi as some kinds of gods amongst men, furthers emboldens Welsh point that all we have here is class war. MLK and Gandhi were voices, amongst thousands – not CEOs leading a flock. Titans of their industry. Producers of a commodity that we desperately want. It’s the interest of the class that they embody that are to be looked at, to truly serve the interest of the exploited class. If we deify individuals, we’ll never achieve the humanity MLK or Gandhi fought for, shoulder to shoulder, hand in hand, with thousands of others. Do not look to them alone, look to the organizers who gave them a voice, down to the handyman who erected the stage they spoke from. If we keep deifying people we’ll keep ending up with Obama’s.

    Finally, I have to say I fundamentally disagree that anything MLK or Gandhi “achieved” (even though they didn’t achieve anything – they class as a whole did) was as a result of their persuasiveness. You cannot have the success of the Civil Rights movement without the violence that went with it. There was violence. Lots of it. And there were threats too. The Black Panther party was by no means a group of unarmed hippies. Same with the push to expel the British from India. Gandhi was one man, surrounded in a civil war, with blood shed a plenty. The reason MLK and Gandhi are now touted as sages amongst the rabble by those in power, is because they:
    A. Most represent and able to most be manipulated into the CEO figure these people expect to be worshiped.
    B. They were the smaller end of threats to the establishment.

    Don’t believe me? What happened when MLK became a vocal anti-war socialist. He lost his microphone, and that role in history is mostly lost in a memory hole.

  55. Ah, I see Lisa. Just trying to make a little joke to make myself feel better.

    “I now feel the same way about Obama supporters. They are just as stubborn and just as willfully ignorant as the Tea Partiers they love to deride.”

    Amen to that. How many times–just in the past three days–has someone I know said “what can Obama do? he has to deal with the Republicans” so I carefully outline a half-dozen legal steps Obama could take to gain leverage in the debt ceiling fight. Five minutes later, it’s “what can Obama do? he has to deal with the Republicans.”

    None so blind as those who refuse to see, and so on.

    “with an honest press that will both report the message to, and acknowledge its receipt by. the public.”

    Oooh, no the “media is enemy #1” thing again. If you pack whites-only lunch counters with black protesters, so that the place can either serve them or go out of business, it’s not long before the “whites only” thing gets jettisoned, media be damned.

  56. Chris

    Liberals love the individual.
    MLK was the, in social Darwinian terms – most fit – amongst the rabble.
    Believing that crap, is fundamentally accepting the wrong class side in class warfare. Which is fought verbally, with ink, and with blood. Sometime that blood is a denial of a pre existing condition. Sometimes it’s something more violent…But class antagonisms are a law of State-Capitalism.

    Let’s all dust off our copies of Das Kapital!

  57. StewartM

    Lisa Simeone:

    The rest of the world was watching. And those people were outraged. Those people started demanding change. Those people insisted that the beatings stop. Those people had their humanity and sense of decency challenged. There were plenty of people who would’ve loved to go on beating, from then until kingdom come. But they were stopped. They were forced to change.

    Yes–but as you say, it wasn’t white southerners doing the beatings by and large who were doing the outraged bit. It was the rest of the country. The rest of the country was horrified and willing to use pass laws and to use force to get those white southerners to stop. And no, not all white southerners were OK with what was happening but the Klan not only terrorized blacks, it could also terrorize whites (i.e., desegregate your business and it could end up torched one night. Some southerners silently welcomed desegregation as it gave them an “out” for doing what they already wanted to do but were afraid to do.)

    Likewise, in India, it was the British in Britain who were horrified. Sad to say, a healthy dose of distance and disinterest mightily aids empathy. You see it time and again—everyone else could see that Dreyfus was innocent, but not the French at that time. Heck, everyone else could see that the election in 2000 was stolen, but not us.

    I’m a southerner, and the history of the US South is a microcosm of the nation as a whole. It took violence and force to end slavery. It took force to end Jim Crow. I see no way that either would end unless an outside power came in and forced the issue. Someways I wonder if we’re like Weimar Germany–our political dynamic is so hopelessly titled right that it took the Allied occupation to deconstruct the entire government, to put the criminals on trial, and then rebuild the state from scratch from the democratic elements that were native and always present, but never could manage to get power. It seems that hopeless.

    And yes, violence can result in a new boss as bad as the old boss. I admit it up front (In fact, that’s my explanation of why the American revolution turned out better than the French and Russian–we weren’t plunged into a period of continued war after its success). But it’s hard to see any other way that will work. I don’t see just showing up and protesting effective unless it gets so bad that people no longer have jobs or school to go back to (or maybe a home, for that matter) and have no else to go. And it will take masses of them. Right now, our oligarchs don’t care about 10 % unemployment. What’s stopping them at 20 %, as long as the banksters are happy?

    -StewartM

  58. Chris, no one’s deifying MLK or Gandhi. Just pointing out that they existed, they fought, and yes, they — and their millions of compatriots — did accomplish something.

    Of course other people in those movements were violent. Of course. That’s not the road I want to take. If you do, or anyone else here does, that’s your business. Just don’t come to the October action with that shit. We’ll have our hands full enough just dealing with the govt provocateurs who’ll be doing that. We don’t need ostensible allies doing the same thing (thanks for playing into their hands, by the way — our overlords, who are obviously monitoring our communications, as you well know, just love to see people touting violence as a solution; gives them another excuse to crack our skulls).

    And for the umpteenth time, I do now and have always advocated economic pressure. Money talks. Always has and always will. And talks a fuck of a lot louder than violence, especially in this country.

  59. Chris

    I’m not categorically saying violence is the answer, I’m merely saying, serious fundamental change will require both October style action, along with some of the other sorts of tactics. Keeping in mind that the very reason the October path of non-violence is necessary is because anything else is going to be met with exponentially worse violence. In the process of being scared of the states violent arm, you accept violence as a variable in the struggle for change.

    The idea that financial pressure is a tactic that actually works amongst the working class is a neo-liberal, bourgeoisie, market myth, designed to make the consumer feel he/she makes a difference in the grand scheme of market domination.

    Welsh already went over this. The poor and downtrodden can never afford a candidate that represents them, anymore than they can afford to stop this-or-that-company from being exploitative. Corporations are exploitative by design. Let’s stop using their memes are solutions.

  60. “Going to this would derail my last year of university.”

    Maybe you could have a corresponding march or discussion at your school or something. I know, it’s easy to tell someone else what they should do.

  61. “Don’t believe me? What happened when MLK became a vocal anti-war socialist.”

    He was assassinated. Which doesn’t persuade me that he was more harmless than is generally thought.

  62. Chris

    He’s harmless if you deify him. If the leader is shot and the people are left flaccid, the strategy was never very compelling to begin with.

    But he was assassinated when representing a different cause. He didn’t win civil rights for the black community, he was just one of many thousands that won it in common struggle. The struggle to end exploitation, of which he was assassinated over, is of course, no where not a consummated battle. He’s a causality. Let’s keep going.

  63. Roberto permalink

    August 1, 2011

    Love the post, except for the idea to primary Obama. It’s not a horrible idea. But its a bad one.

    If you agree with Ian that the left must take Obama down and be seen to take him down, which I do, then the easiest way to do that is with an independent or 3rd party challenge in the general election.

    A primary challenge to Obama is highly likely to fail, just on the grounds that Obama will have MASSIVE amounts of cash on hand to destroy the person.

    On the other hand, if we challenge Obama in the general, we are highly likely to succeed.

    Yup, I’ve been saying this for three years. The time is ripe for a third-party challenge. If we could all unite behind some lefty who’d agree to run as an “I,” we’d have a great chance at defeating Obama.

    Of course, it would have to be someone who 1) could actually win, and 2) was insane enough to actually want the job after the clusterfuckiness of the past 10 years.

    Anyone have any suggestions?

  64. StewartM

    Just don’t come to the October action with that shit. We’ll have our hands full enough just dealing with the govt provocateurs who’ll be doing that. We don’t need ostensible allies doing the same thing (thanks for playing into their hands, by the way — our overlords, who are obviously monitoring our communications, as you well know, just love to see people touting violence as a solution; gives them another excuse to crack our skulls).

    I concur: only a government provocateur would do try to turn the 10/12 rally violent. Even someone who considers violence as a legitimate option wouldn’t want to do that.

    I am not thrilled at the prospect of things turning violent. I don’t think anyone sane is. But I also believe that showing up and protesting and getting a few hundred people arrested is going to get anything more now than it’s accomplished of late: a “ho-hum” from the media at large and certainly not cause the oligarchs to lose any sleep. I wish it were otherwise, but if they really cared about us they’d not be doing what they’re doing.

    By contrast, non-leftists who are pissed at the current situation (and there’s a more than a few) are not at all bashful about talking about getting out their guns. Maybe you think that’s immature talk and stuff, and so much hot air, and I would largely agree. But even if only 1:10000 becomes serious that’s potentially deep doo-doo for those in charge. They may not notice a million people protesting in Washington 10/12, but if a banker or two gets ‘offed’ they will notice that in a heartbeat.

    If you make it work–more power to you. I’d be the first to tell you that you were right, and I was wrong. But I just think it will lead to more of the same impassioned speeches, speeches like those we’re from progressives today, about the debt ceiling bill, about how outraged they are and how awful this bill is–that is, until they either vote for it or make sure it has the votes to pass before they will chance to vote against it.

    StewartM

  65. anon2525

    Speaking of fighting back, might not be a bad idea to call your Congressman and tell him/her to reject Obama’s deal.

    It might not be a bad idea. Unless it means that you’re not going to show up at your congress member’s appearances in your district and tell him/her to reverse the legislation this year. If you’re going to decide that “well, I made my phone call–that’s that!”, then it is a bad idea.

    Elections do not work. Electoral politics is meaningless. The two parties have “gamed” that system. And, for a lot of people, not demanding that Congress reverse this is going to have significant consequences for them. You could end up out of work, out of your dwelling, and without medical care that you need. And, although I wish the Oct2011 group great success, I don’t expect marches to Wash. D.C. to have any significant effect. The people in congress need to be told to represent our interests. Told directly. To their faces. Forcefully. Loudly. Repeatedly. By large numbers of people that they are refusing to represent. Start by ruining their five-week paid summer vacation, if you can. You know, the one they voted for themselves.

  66. anon2525

    So, now that the house has passed it, where’s everyone going on their paid five-week vacation?

  67. Well, we plan to shut stuff down. That’s why we’re starting on October 6th, a Thursday, a weekday, a work day. We plan to get in people’s faces, including Congressional reps.

    I’ll be curious to see the reactions of all those Americans who applauded the Egyptians, who applauded the Greeks, who applauded the Syrians, who applauded the Spaniards, all those who drank toasts to them, when they come across a traffic jam in the middle of Washington, D.C. caused by people demanding to be heard. My guess is that many of those erstwhile citizens and patriots and exalters of the body politic will suddenly be in a different frame of mind. That they won’t like being discommoded and inconvenienced — convenience being the No. 1 American value these days.

    The rallying cry of this country once was “Give me liberty or give me death!” Now it’s “Don’t inconvenience me!”

  68. “if a banker or two gets ‘offed’ they will notice that in a heartbeat.”

    They’ll notice alright–and respond by listening to more of our phone conversations, groping people at more checkpoints, criminalizing more forms of speech.

    Jesus, if you really want to kill someone so bad, join the Marine Corps.

  69. You really specialize in straw men Mandos. Enjoy your time in the “let them eat cake” camp.

    Nothing has changed. The “primary Obama” call has no more value now than it did back then. I think I understand what you think it will accomplish. It just has no likely positive outcome, and lots of negative ones. I wish I were wrong and something like that had a prayer of having any beneficial side-effect. In your eagerness to discount the Tea Party phenomenon, you also ignore the real effects that grassroots American culture has on electoral and even policy outcomes.

    The Marie Antoinette reference is beneath you. The wannabe “post-Democratic” left indulges in narcissistic vanity projects, and you’re accusing *me* of suggesting that “they” eat cake?

  70. Self

    Feingold. What’s taking so long? Check the the record and get back to me if you find one more impressive for the progressive side of things.

  71. Let’s make this clear: it ain’t just the rich. Contrary to what many of you would like to believe, this actually comes from the American public itself. Yes, indeed, this debt ceiling debacle itself. “Identity” politics matters.

    Fortunately, I am blowing this joint shortly, so yeah, “let them eat cake”, except that it affects the entire planet and my new digs are even less stable.

  72. @Self – I’d vote for him in one-tenth of a second, especially if he’d run as an “I” to repudiate the two-party two-step. Anyone is better than ObamaRomna.

    Is he crazy enough to want the job, though? I wonder. Plus, he is neither Christian, nor married, which usually means two strikes against him. In this case, though, I think the usual rules might not apply.

  73. Notorious Pat:

    “if a banker or two gets ‘offed’ they will notice that in a heartbeat.”
    They’ll notice alright–and respond by listening to more of our phone conversations, groping people at more checkpoints, criminalizing more forms of speech.
    Jesus, if you really want to kill someone so bad, join the Marine Corps.

    Exactly.

    Mandos:

    Let’s make this clear: it ain’t just the rich. Contrary to what many of you would like to believe, this actually comes from the American public itself. Yes, indeed, this debt ceiling debacle itself. “Identity” politics matters.

    Can’t argue with that.

  74. anon2525

    Let’s make this clear: it ain’t just the rich.

    While making this clear, don’t forget to include the clarity enhancing fact that without the rich, this doesn’t happen.

  75. Celsius 233

    Okay, it passed; no surprise there!
    Now what? The people have spoken!
    Judging by the street (not K-Street), we the people have everything just right.
    Carry on?

  76. Ken Hoop,

    I describe the tea party folks as “John Birch society types” to mean they are mistrustful of the Democratic party and liberal government and they think Obama and his ilk are trying to make the US into a socialist state, which of course is amusingly misguided. I see this as a similarity, you apparently don’t.

    Of course what they have in common with team democrat types is they mostly believe in the 2 party system (their occasional protestations to the contrary notwithstanding), and they think there are meaningful differences between the Ds and Rs.

  77. guest

    Besides primarying Obama and a third party, there is another idea that might be better, depending on your part of the country. If you live in Texas, say even supposedly liberal Austin which is partly represented by Blue Doggett who just betrayed 2 decades of my voting for him, you can vote in the Republican primaries. That’s what they did to us (and a big reason why Clinton got nominated back in ’92). Since the Dems don’t give a fuck about us and won’t listen to us, why not fuck with the Republican primaries? Vote for the least insane or the most insane or whatever. It’s time to start fighting them with their own weapons.

  78. anon2525: Certainly. There is a segment of the rich who act as civilization-hackers, finding exploits—but these are often found in the latent and not-so-latent tendencies of the public at large, unique to that society. It’s a chicken-and-egg problem: it’s not possible to up and declare one prior to the other.

  79. StewartM

    Notorious P.A.T

    They’ll notice alright–and respond by listening to more of our phone conversations, groping people at more checkpoints, criminalizing more forms of speech.

    They’re doing that anyway. And they’re going to do more of it.

    I’m sorry, but at the risk of getting Godwin’s law invoked at me, I still am unconvinced by the argument that you can stop the Hitlers of the world (and that’s essentially the type of people we’re up against) by organizing sit-ins and letter-writing campaigns. Heck, our own history rather strongly suggests that without a awful civil war we wouldn’t have ended slavery.

    I admire MLK and Gandhi as much as anyone else, but what they accomplished requires a) a sympathetic press who reports rather than covers up or distorts the facts, and; b) making an appeal to an authority greater than the perpetrators committing the abuses. Now, if any of you can convince me that all this stuff will get the U. N. to send peacekeeping forces to the US to kick the bastards out, then you have a better argument.

    -StewartM

  80. StewartM

    Lisa Simeone:

    I’ll be curious to see the reactions of all those Americans who applauded the Egyptians, who applauded the Greeks, who applauded the Syrians, who applauded the Spaniards, all those who drank toasts to them, when they come across a traffic jam in the middle of Washington, D.C. caused by people demanding to be heard.

    That’s because revolutions, close-up and in-person, even when peaceful, are not something most people want to experience. They are at the very least unsettling, even in the best of circumstances, and often dangerous.

    And of course that’s even more true of violence and war, which is just another form of resistance. I don’t say what I’ve said lightly. Even just wars and resistance are awful experiences. The innocent get killed, maimed, or impoverished. Often irreplaceable bits of humankind’s cultural and/or scientific history get destroyed. It’s not something anyone who is sane relishes.

    BUT–if you always say “never”, then you become like Obama in the debt ceiling debate (assuming that Obama didn’t really want to surrender anyway, and just wanted to pretend that the Republicans “made him do it”, which is also likely). In that debate Obama defined the worst possible outcome as being a government default. Because of this, the Republicans knew that they could essentially roll him, that he would blink at their demands and they would win. Likewise, Neville Chamberlain defined the worst possible outcome as a war with Germany–so he got rolled at Munich.

    -StewartM

  81. StewartM

    Gawd, again:

    Lisa Simeone:

    I’ll be curious to see the reactions of all those Americans who applauded the Egyptians, who applauded the Greeks, who applauded the Syrians, who applauded the Spaniards, all those who drank toasts to them, when they come across a traffic jam in the middle of Washington, D.C. caused by people demanding to be heard.

    That’s because revolutions, close-up and in-person, even when peaceful, are not something most people want to experience. They are at the very least unsettling, even in the best of circumstances, and often dangerous.

    And of course that’s even more true of violence and war, which is just another form of resistance. I don’t say what I’ve said lightly. Even just wars and resistance are awful experiences. The innocent get killed, maimed, or impoverished. Often irreplaceable bits of humankind’s cultural and/or scientific history get destroyed. It’s not something anyone who is sane relishes.

    BUT–if you always say “never”, then you become like Obama in the debt ceiling debate (assuming that Obama didn’t really want to surrender anyway, and just wanted to pretend that the Republicans “made him do it”, which is also likely). In that debate Obama defined the worst possible outcome as being a government default. Because of this, the Republicans knew that they could essentially roll him, that he would blink at their demands and they would win. Likewise, Neville Chamberlain defined the worst possible outcome as a war with Germany–so he got rolled at Munich.

    -StewartM

  82. There were 54 members of Congress who signed a letter to Congresswoman Pelosi opposing cuts to Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid, and then voted against a bill to allow such cuts. Forty-one of them were in the so-called Progressive Caucus. In a close vote we’d probably have lost three quarters of them. A few others didn’t vote, and four more were not permitted to vote because they’re just given the pretense of representing imperial territories.

    But a bunch of death-dealing lowlifes took a public position against the destruction of what’s left of our public programs and then voted for that destruction. I’m talking about Congress members John Garamendi, Frederica Wilson, Hank Johnson, Mazie Hirono, Bobby Rush, Luis Gutierrez, Danny Davis, Stephen Lynch, William Lacy Clay, Chaka Fattah, Mark Critz, Shelia Jackson-Lee, Lloyd Doggett, and Eddie Bernice Johnson.

    . . . These and hundreds of other blood-soaked invertebrates just can’t wait to demolish our country. They can’t sit on their hands until the Bush-Obama tax cuts expire. They have to wreck everything right away. It’s urgent. It’s their perverse moral duty.

    Let’s face it: the system is completely broken. It always does wrong, every time, no exceptions. We want the rich taxed. Congress cuts their taxes. We want the wars ended. Obama keeps them going and launches a few more. We want our weakest-in-the-wealthy-world safety net strengthened, so instead it’s shredded. Every time. Without fail. This is not a matter of chance. It’s a matter of legalized bribery, corporate media, gerrymandered districts, restricted ballot access, unverifiable voting machines, defunded schools, and poisonous habits of thought, primary among them the notion of giving one’s loyalty to a political party.

    -David Swanson

    http://warisacrime.org/content/whom-do-we-now-turn

  83. Notorious P.A.T.

    “They’re doing that anyway. And they’re going to do more of it.”

    I suggest you familiarize yourself with recent American history. Then you will see how foolish is the idea that acts of terrorism will create a more open and democratic America.

    “Heck, our own history rather strongly suggests that without a awful civil war we wouldn’t have ended slavery.”

    Do you know how the British ended their slave system?

  84. Notorious P.A.T.

    “I still am unconvinced by the argument that you can stop the Hitlers of the world (and that’s essentially the type of people we’re up against) by organizing sit-ins and letter-writing campaigns. ”

    Yeah, let’s use mass violence to prevent a return of the Third Reich. To stop another Hitler appearing, we should march through the streets in squads hurting people. We could pick one night and go to a bunch of buildings and break all their windows. To really make a strong point I say we wear matching shirts–how about brown?

    I think you mean well, but think this through.

    And we aren’t facing a new Hitler. He was a military tyrant who used military force to conquer other countries. The enemies we face today are substantially different, with substantially different strategies.

  85. anon2525

    Let’s face it: the system is completely broken. It always does wrong, every time, no exceptions. We want the rich taxed. Congress cuts their taxes. We want the wars ended. Obama keeps them going and launches a few more….

    Agreed. The “system” of democratic representation is broken. The next election or the one after that is not going to fix it. People need to show up at the congress members’ public appearances in their districts and demand that those members do what we want (or even protest outside their houses). Until this happens, they will respond to the pressures in Wash. D.C. because there is no pressure inside their districts.

  86. ks

    StewartM,

    “I admire MLK and Gandhi as much as anyone else, but what they accomplished requires a) a sympathetic press who reports rather than covers up or distorts the facts, and; b) making an appeal to an authority greater than the perpetrators committing the abuses. Now, if any of you can convince me that all this stuff will get the U. N. to send peacekeeping forces to the US to kick the bastards out, then you have a better argument.”

    I somewhat agree with one big caveat. What they accomplished requires a will, persistence and discipline several orders of magnitude than what apparently exists today. As I said when this sort of came up before, how many people who nostalgically invoke MLK would face getting arrested, beaten, water hosed, bitten by police dogs, spit on, cursed, etc. every day and then still practice non-violent protest every day?

    Right, I thought so.

    Unfortunately, modern non-violence protest has largely become a media event. They are mostly one day marches, protests, traffic jams, sit-ins where the media dutifully reports on it and the “counter-protesters” and then moves on to the Casey Anythony trial. The Powers That Be have that down pat. They either dump you into “free speech zones” and walk right by or around you or deny your permit and dare you to get arrested.

    Nonviolence can work but it has to be pathologically persistent and ruthlessly targetted. For example, it might feel good to yell at the home of a hedge fund manager but why not “sit-in” at the stock exchange or protest “rain, sleet or snow” in front of their corporate offices on Park Ave or downtown? How about what used to be called “wildcat strikes”…coal miners one day, auto workers the next, strawberry pickers the next, bus drivers the next….or have the Teamsters “slow walk” their cargo. Instead of trying to clown Murdoch with letter writing campaigns to congresscritters, why not target….no not Fox…no not the NY Post…the advertisers of the WSJ?

    It might make great theatre to get in Paul Ryan’s face but why not run somebody against him? One of the few things they actually fear is “being primaried”? It doesn’t really matter if you lose, just run somebody again and again and again. Anyway, those are my thoughts.

  87. StewartM

    Notorious P.A.T

    Yeah, let’s use mass violence to prevent a return of the Third Reich. To stop another Hitler appearing, we should march through the streets in squads hurting people

    Pat–are you familiar with the actual rise of Nazism? Did you know that one of the charges that has been labeled against the SPD, the German Social Democratic party which was the chief opponent of the Nazis and their related rightist/conservative allies, and the party which was the chief defender of the Weimar Republic, was its passivity? The fact that they didn’t fight back? As one historian wrote about the SPD’s demise, instead of taking to the streets after Hitler became chancellor and passed the Enabling Laws in one of their last directives before being dissolved they exhorted their clerks not to make bookkeeping errors. The SPD died with a whimper.

    The case of the SPD is also instructive to us because the Nazi propaganda against them echoes what today’s conservatives say about progressives. Nazis in one breath might claim that “the Reds” (as they often called the Social Democrats) were a bunch of wild-eyed radicals, and in the next breath mock them as weenies and a bunch of “tired old men” (they were trade unionists). The Nazis held the SPD in contempt just like the Right holds us in contempt today. They despised them but they did not fear them.

    The same dynamic is at work today. And why should the Right fear us? We don’t give them any reason. I might add the worst possible situation for any group to find itself in is to be despised but not feared. Nor no matter how reasonable and accommodating and non-threatening we are they’re still going to despise us and they’re still going to do things like continue to clamp down civil liberties. The modern-day clamping down on freedom in America started with Reagan, long before there was a “war on terror” or 9/11.

    I wish this were a comforting message, it’s not. I also like to add that I’m temperamentally not the type of person for this task. I’m way too empathetic. But I also recognize what seems to a lesson taught from history.

    -StewartM

  88. StewartM

    ks

    I somewhat agree with one big caveat. What they accomplished requires a will, persistence and discipline several orders of magnitude than what apparently exists today. As I said when this sort of came up before, how many people who nostalgically invoke MLK would face getting arrested, beaten, water hosed, bitten by police dogs, spit on, cursed, etc. every day and then still practice non-violent protest every day?

    You want to know who amazes me, even more than MLK? She’s a personal hero of mine.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_B._Wells

    Why? Because in MLK’s day, there was hope. Yes, there were great difficulties, I don’t want to minimize those, but because the Federal government was getting hesitantly involved in Civil Rights, people saw a chance. There seemed their might be a reward for all the travails they underwent, if not personally, for those still living.

    But in Ida B. Well’s day? To reformers of her era, the cause of Civil Rights must have seemed hopeless. Civil rights was going backwards; it was quite literally better to have been a African-American in 1880 than it was to be one in 1920. Yet she persevered nonetheless.

    I am awe-struck in admiration for her for that.

    -StewartM

  89. Algae

    Hullabaloo seems to be clamping down hard on commenters in the wake of this debacle. Any thoughts on where one might go to find a replacement should H’loo reinvent itself into another Balloon Juice? (Had a look at The Confluence already, but the two blogs seem to have gone into lockdown simultaneously.)

  90. Ian Welsh

    Anyone discussing the question of violence vs. non-violence needs to read up on the history of the union movement. If you want to be hard core about your non-violence, remember to disown them.

  91. ks

    StewartM,

    Indeed. The other day, I was thinking of another great woman, Mother Jones, who was active around that same time, when I saw some spineless union leaders on TV misrepresenting their members.

    Btw, to your earlier point about the Right despising us but not fearing us because we “won’t fight back” per se, it’s worse than that. Consider this small but telling point, what passes for the Left here, has been so owned since Reagan, that a lot of us changed from calling ourselves liberals to progressives simply because the Right propagandized, or demonized, the term. They even controlled how too many of us refer to ourselves and, importantly, how we are referred to broadly. It’s no wonder they despise and don’t fear us but the sad thing is that when we truly fight back (see Ida Wells, Mother Jones, etc.), we often win important battles.

  92. ks, all good points in your earlier comment about wildcat strikes, targeting advertisers, etc. We’re working on those.

    And again, we’re not showing up, marching around for a while, and going home. We’re staying. We know we risk being arrested, and jailed, for — how long? A few hours? Overnight? A few days, to prevent our going back and re-occupying the same place we were occupying before? I don’t know.

    Will the police beat us? They did in Egypt, Greece, Spain, on and on, they did to G8 and G20 protesters. Will they use their beloved new weapons, the sonic one and the heat one? I don’t know.

  93. anon2525

    Anyone discussing the question of violence vs. non-violence needs to read up on the history of the union movement.

    It will certainly come to that if we get to the point of food riots. Unemployment insurance has not (yet) been extended–that’s going to effect some people severely, even while more and more exhaust their 99 weeks. What about food stamps? Nader, as I have cited repeatedly, has said that the breaking point for many people is going to arrive in October, as programs expire.

    Now that the bill has been passed, people are getting to see what it is that was decided. In the short run, this congress has done what most congresses do: put off the decisions about what to cut on some future congress and schedule the largest cuts to come in the future after the next election. This new law is not written in stone, and we have seen congresses&presidents panic in the past when the unemployment rate goes up. As states, cities, towns, and counties cut programs and employees and as companies (Cisco, Borders, etc.) start cutting staff, the herd of employed will begin getting spooked once again by the possibility that it will be for them that the unemployment carnivores are coming. This has been known to cause stampedes that run over parties of tea drinkers.

  94. ks

    Lisa,

    Ah, I knew you were made of sterner stuff. : ) To your second question, the answer is yes eventually. If you start to be effective, you can pretty much expect to get beat or gassed or tased or something similar at some point. That’s where the test of non-violence is going to come. When others confront you with violence, can you maintain a non-violent stance? Over and over and over again? Unfortuantely, you won’t really know until that moment comes.

  95. anon2525

    It is remarkable how alike the situation in Europe is to the situation in the u.s.:

    Europe’s Wake-up Call

    Europe is currently establishing a debate zone for all the economic and social issues no longer discussed by the political parties because these areas have gone beyond their control. Inter-party competition now concentrates on social matters: the burqa, the legalisation of cannabis, radar on motorways, the angry gestures or foul language of a reckless politician or intoxicated artist. This confirms a trend already noticeable 20 years ago: real political power is shifting to areas where democracy carries no weight, until the day when indignation finally boils over. Which is where we are.

    But indignation is powerless without some understanding of the mechanisms that caused it. We know the alternatives – reject the monetarist, deflationist policies that deepen the crisis, cancel part of the debt if not all of it, take over the banks, get finance under control, reverse globalisation and recover the hundreds of billions of euros the state has lost by tax cuts that favour the wealthy (?70bn in France in the past ten years, more than $1 trillion in the US, especially for the top 1% of income earners).

    And they are responding by marching on the European “capital”, Brussels, for non-violent protests:

    Spain: “Indignant” Demonstrators Marching to Brussels to Protest Effects of Crisis

  96. ks, since I already know from the get-go that I’m weaker — far weaker — than my potential attackers, I know the answer.

  97. groo

    so what is the point?

    This is some good-cop–bad-cop Kabuki, where the good cop finally compromises in the shootout with the bad cop, ultimately doing his job.

    The good cop finally is found to be a hired gun of the bad cop.

    Is’nt this what Arthur Silber and Chris Floyd were telling for quite some time?

    I intend to donate 100 Euros (!) to Arthur, who was the first to find out, AND because he seems to be in very bad shape.

    So please join me!

    All things considered, my Metaphor in an earlier posting, that even a healthy fish (e.g. a theoretically good-mannered Obama) cannot exist in poisoned waters longer than ANY fish -as healthy as he may be-, still has some significance.

    So what is the point?

    It is pondering, which sort of metaphor is applicable to this dire situation.

    a) Poisoned water: WHO does the poisoning? How to decontaminate?

    b) Bad system? How to change it?

    c) Bad choice? Just elect a better president and everything is good?

    Obviously the last ‘theory’, of how things work is dead-wrong.

    I do not suggest that the other two narratives are correct.

    There are surely others.

    But which is the FUNCTIONALLY adequate narrative?

    It need not be the CORRECT one in the epistemic sense.

    If a psychopath in Power is recognized as a psychopath, it actually does not matter whether he is a genetically disposed one, or a merely FUNCTIONAL one.

    Just make a list of all the attributes of psychopathic dispositions/behaviors –as Joel Bakan did in “The Corporation”, and there you are.

    On the other hand it is quite important, what makes the psychopath one in the first place.

    Depending on the diagnosis, the ‘therapy’ must be quite different.

    You cannot cure the narcissist by changing the color of his lipstick.

  98. StewartM

    Lisa Simeone:

    This new law is not written in stone, and we have seen congresses&presidents panic in the past when the unemployment rate goes up.

    Indeed, that’s what’s different now. As far back as Reagan or Bush I, when unemployment went up, even at levels less than now, governments panicked. Now they shrug and pretend they’re helpless else the big bad bond vigilantes will come and get them.

    It goes back to the unprecedented power of the oligarchs today after 30 years of Reaganomics and concentrated wealth. It’s why, as Ian has said, the first step Obama should have taken would have been to clean out the banks and force a lot of very rich people to suddenly become a lot less rich. That is not only economic justice, it not only frees up government resources that could and should be used to rebuild the economy the right way, but it also politically means that the Chamber of Commerce and a lot of right-wing front organizations have a LOT less cash to use to buy politicians. What the bailouts meant is that not only were the rich kept rich with *our money*, they then were able to use *our money* against us.

    And they’ll wreck the world economy again. Again they’ll demand bailouts coming from everyone else. The politicos having been bought will be eager to give it to them. This will recur until something gives. It has too.

    And that’s not going to be pretty.

    StewartM

  99. StewartM

    Lisa Simeone:

    And again, we’re not showing up, marching around for a while, and going home. We’re staying. We know we risk being arrested, and jailed, for — how long? A few hours? Overnight? A few days, to prevent our going back and re-occupying the same place we were occupying before? I don’t know.

    You’ll be Fox News “terrorists” then. 😉

    I just hope you don’t get a MacArthur reception (though that could mean the end of Obama like it helped to end Hoover).

    The Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s, according to a former co-worker that was part of it, used children in its marches. Not only to defuse any backlash (or make the backlash more horrific) but also that many of retaliations against adults–say, threatening them with the loss of a job–don’t work against kids. People who couldn’t risk attendance for one reason or another got a pass.

    Of course–the natural attendees for your event are the unemployed. There are 14 million of them, people with lots of free time and who can’t be threatened with being fired. But even staying put, even camped out, requires some money and some income, which many of them don’t have.

    Do you have plans to try to mobilize these? I suppose you do.

    -StewartM

  100. groo

    referring to Ians point

    ‘This is a representative plutocracy’

    This is an apt label, of course, and equally applies to all western democracies with a different lipstick on.

    The worst of the bad is the US, by a wide margin.

    The heart of the darkness, so to say.

    The spillover is approx 80-20, or at best 70-30 from the heart to the periphery.

    e.g. the memes: ‘reduce social security spending’ is spilled out all over the western world. Or the cut-spending-meme, the small-government meme, and all this neofeudal bullshit.
    And this is all coming from a tiny 0.1% US elite, with a little help from their international alliances from London, Singapore, Moscow, Frankfurt, Zürich, Tokio, Shanghai.

    This is an international cabal.

    The surface structure is this cabal, with a phony president at the ‘top’ , but the poisoned water is the ubiquitious set of beliefs in the western world, which makes all this nonsense possible in the first place.

    The system works on all levels, the most devastating of all being the poisoned waters.

    It is like global warming, or the acidification of the oceans.
    In a funny reflection, nature shows us our follies on all those levels.

    Maybe the funniest of all is the polar bear, on top of the food chain, whom the ‘elite’ should choose as their heraldic animal.

  101. Morocco Bama

    It really doesn’t matter whether you’re non-violent, or not, it won’t change the very real fact that there will be violence. I agree with Ian, it’s inevitable, but it won’t come from the “Left” because there is no “Left.” It will be misdirected by the very forces that created the environment for it to manifest, and since it’s not part of a coordinated effort from the ground up by a substantial cross-section of “ordinary” citizens, it will be, once again, the innocents who will suffer the most.

    A bunch of Latte-Drinking, Volvo-driving “Liberals” are about to get their non-violent, acquiescing incrementalism stuffed down their throats and up their asses because they don’t realize that they’re Lee Harvey Oswald in this equation. If you don’t think you’re Lee Harvey, then get the hell out of the Schoolbook Depository…….NOW!

  102. Celsius 233

    The machine continues forward unabated; it will continue unabated. Nobody is acting/thinking outside of the box. The militarized police forces have the weaponry to passively disburse crowds and to the outside observer it will appear the mobs (if there are any) are disbursing voluntarily.
    The bulk of the American people are not going to support anti-government demonstrations as they did during the Viet Nam War; too anxious, too broke, too dispirited, too depressed, and too confused and brutalized by the unrelenting bullshit from the MSM and they’re own government.
    The daily dishing of real violence, directly aimed at the American people has done its job.
    With all of the tools available today (Internet, social media, imagination), there are ways to fight and organize.
    Outside of the box; go after banks, news media, local governments, all proven (anti-people) major corporations; starve the bastards by boycotting their services and products at all levels.
    Don’t broadcast this; keep it underground and let them discover the boycott by your actions; not useless verbiage and online, impotent, bitching.
    This last capitulation is the coup de grace. It’s not yet apparent if it was a fatal shot, but IMO it was…

  103. Celsius 233

    …brutalized by the unrelenting bullshit from the MSM and they’re own government.
    Should be their, sorry.

  104. StewartM

    Morocco Bama:

    A bunch of Latte-Drinking, Volvo-driving “Liberals” are about to get their non-violent, acquiescing incrementalism stuffed down their throats and up their asses because they don’t realize that they’re Lee Harvey Oswald in this equation. If you don’t think you’re Lee Harvey, then get the hell out of the Schoolbook Depository…….NOW!

    Great metaphor. My compliments. 🙂

    -StewartM

  105. Morocco Bama

    As I’ve mentioned, and admonished those who do, I don’t follow the blow by blow, as a general rule, but I happened upon this because everywhere there is a TV these days:

    http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/house-passes-debt-ceiling-bill-gabrielle-giffords-votes/story?id=14208579

    This is better than Professional Wrestling…..seriously. I have to continue to pinch myself to make sure I’m not in a Matrix Nightmare.

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ft4u_wwf-wrestlemania-ix-undertaker-vs-g_fun

  106. soullite

    Anyone who fails to understand that getting your enemy to overreact to attacks against their elite by cracking down on their own middle, working and under classes aren’t really smart enough to argue against violent revolution. They don’t even understand it.

  107. anon2525

    Here is the nytimes economic reporter David Leonhardt on Colbert’s program discussing the rating companies’ rating of u.s. debt, accepting the framing that the u.s. deficit is the problem that needs to be solved by cutting spending in order to get to a balanced budget. He also accepted the framing (un-contradicted by Colbert) that Medicare is one of the sources of the budget imbalance, instead of the medical-services industry, that “big cuts to Social Security” are needed “or we get downgraded,” that the rating companies are credible and without a conflict of interest, and that balancing the fed. gov’t.’s budget at this time is an economically sensible course of action. In short, he (and Colbert) accepts obama’s public framing of the problem and its solution. (He also accepts that the Tea Party won and Obama lost, but he’s the nytimes economics reporter, not a political reporter. And he accepts that transparency in gov’t. is not a requirement–closed rooms let the “elite” solve our problems for us and hand the solution down to us from on high. “Democracy” is just a slogan for the rubes.)

    http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/393728/august-02-2011/saving-america-s-credit-rating—david-leonhardt

    From the choices “gutless”, “stupid”, or “uninformed”, my guess is that Leonhardt is mis-educated. I wonder if he’s ever read or heard a word that Dean Baker or James Galbraith has written or said. And the writings of his paper’s Paul Krugman appear not to have penetrated his brain at all.

    Also from Leonhardt: “We’re the country everyone wants to move to.” Anyone want to contradict that one? 🙂

  108. BlizzardOfOz

    @anon, not buying it. You don’t in good conscience bail out criminal Wall Street assholes with $15 trillion, extend $4 trillion of tax cuts to billionaires, then cut working Americans’ pensions which they paid for out of their own paychecks. Even a gutless, stupid, uninformed moron can see that.

  109. anon2525

    Even a gutless, stupid, uninformed moron can see that.

    And yet Colbert doesn’t challenge him on any of the framing. Are they both corrupted? (Of course, Colbert is a performer, but he makes his points through satire. Here, he simply accepted the explanation.)

    Why does it matter? Because people need to be outraged about what is being done to them. You can’t be outraged if you think that it is a force of nature or that it is appropriate. And Leonhardt gives me (and I’m guessing many viewers) the impression that he thinks it is appropriate. And this could cause many people to stop thinking and accept what he says: Social Security needs to be cut, Medicare needs to be cut, the fed. gov’t’s budget needs to be balanced.

    Here’s Keith Olbermann expressing some appropriate outrage about what has just transpired:

    the four hypocrisies

  110. anon2525

    That link to Olbermann appears to be poorly constructed. Here’s another attempt: four hypocrises

  111. Celsius 233

    anon2525 PERMALINK
    August 4, 2011

    Why does it matter? Because people need to be outraged about what is being done to them. You can’t be outraged if you think that it is a force of nature or that it is appropriate.

    =====================================

    I’m beginning to understand the rampant apathy on the part of the people; The Shock Doctrine!

    Naomi Klein’s book is the complete blue-print for the last decade especially here in the U.S.
    The financial collapse had to be constructed so these last measures could be implemented on the witless, clueless, gutless, thoughtless, individuals we/they call the people.
    And damned if it didn’t work!
    Even with her book as a best seller (how many here read it?) the shock doctrine was pulled off right under every-bodies nose.
    I’m well over 1/2 way through the book and it’s all there. Hell, it’s a primer on how to pull it off.
    And those bastards did just that…

  112. Morocco Bama

    Ah, the brilliance that is Colbert and Stewart. Sheer brilliance. They alone, have managed to instill that apathy of which you speak. Liberals can tune into them every night for their “Daily News” and laugh at the Tea Party, Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck, as the so-called “Liberal” leadership plays them for the fools they are.

    Yesterday, they trotted out the poor, unfortunate gobshite, Gabby Giffords, tomorrow……Midget Tossing is on the docket. The Show That Never Ends.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbr8qNMgCR4

  113. Morocco Bama

    (how many here read it?)

    I did…..well over a year ago, maybe two. Yes, it’s the blueprint. Creating realities from thin air…….very thinning air.

    http://www.helium.com/items/1965918-keeling-curve-co2-and-loss-of-atmospheric-oxygen

  114. anon2525

    I’m beginning to understand the rampant apathy on the part of the people; The Shock Doctrine!

    Part of the reason for the apathy is pointed out by Colbert in that interview, above, namely, that congress has not yet specified which programs are going to be cut. As he points out, the Central Committee of the Communist Party “Super” Congress is intended to allow congress not to be held responsible for the decisions about what is to be cut. Until those cuts are specified, many people who will be effected by them will not pay attention. And the plan is to put the cuts off until after the election. Of course, the economy is having some say about what congress will be able to put off.

  115. anon2525

    I’m beginning to understand the rampant apathy on the part of the people; The Shock Doctrine!

    We can see Pelosi responding–yet again–to the shock doctrine in this article: How Pelosi voted

    (The author of the article is a nominal liberal, David Corn, writing for a liberal publication, Mother Jones, so we ought to be able to presume that the article is not being written with the backing of the TBTF banks.)

    In the article, Pelosi is given credit for “saving” Boehner’s and Obama’s ass, and for saving the economy. Why Because she didn’t “signal” to the Democrats in the House to vote against the bill, which in turn signaled to the “sophisticated” members to vote for it:

    Pelosi didn’t have to send any signal. Her Democrats, she says, are a “sophisticated” group, and they could see that without Democratic support the bill would fail.”

    Even though Pelosi “opposed” the bill, she and half of the House Democrats voted for it ostensibly because of the “lesser evil” argument or, equivalently, the “greater good” argument:

    Default, she notes, “would have been terrible,” and blame for it would have landed at the doorsteps of Obama and the Republicans.

    So to prevent default, Pelosi held her nose and halfheartedly encouraged fellow Democrats to vote for legislation that she insists will “deter economic growth.”

    If you are telling yourself that you are “sophisticated” and that you are acting in the “greater good,” then you can support anything. Added to that was the excuse that there was “no time” to bargain for any alternative (no mention of the start of congress’s summer vacation):

    In a routine situation, if the House speaker were to bring a bill to the floor and only obtain 174 votes of his or her own party, he or she would pull the legislation and then talk to the other side, which would expect concessions or sweeteners in return for the votes necessary to assemble a majority. In this case, Pelosi maintains, there was no time for further bargaining.

    This argument is the same combination of reasons used to get votes for the medical-services industry protection act of 2010 and the TARP vote of 2008. Until we manage to tell them “No!” and “Hell, no!”, they are going to use this again and again.

    Who would the default threat hurt? Possibly many people, but most importantly to rich people, it would have hurt rich people. Like Pelosi. She will tell us all day long that this conflict of interest did not affect her vote, and she will “believe” it (see Upton Sinclair). But if she was paid the median wage in the u.s. ($26,200 in 2009) and was threatened with losing Social Security and Medicare and her job and her dwelling, then she would have found a reason to vote against this bill, despite all of her “sophistication.”

    The straightforward reason that they could have found to vote against it was that they were not going to give in to the default threat (it is not a “debt ceiling crisis”–it was a threat), and that they were going to put it on obama’s doorstep for him to respond by declaring that the debt ceiling law is unconstitutional. Of course, if they did that, then the shock doctrine would have been defanged.

  116. Morocco Bama

    Here’s a documentary that puts the likes of Colbert and Stewart to shame. It doesn’t make me laugh, it doesn’t make me apathetic…it makes me ANGRY…..very ANGRY. That’s what it should do, because you have to get ANGRY about this in order to get off your Keesters and do something about it.

    If you treat it like a game, then you’re playing the game….and it’s a rigged game where you lose. Play it and analyze it ad nauseam, and in perpetuity, at your own peril.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdVODFombco&feature=player_embedded

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