Oppose
Barack Obama? How Dare Thee!!
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
DIGG THIS
Increasingly,
antiwar voters I talk with admit they are starting to get a little
disgusted with the antics of Barack Obama, that great agent of change.
It wasn't too long ago that these same folks were overly optimistic
Obama would deliver on his varied promises, beckoning a new era
of Washington politics, an end to the war in Iraq, and a new, peace
driven foreign policy. Nonetheless, they all plan on voting for
the Democrat regardless of how dismayed they have become with him
and his campaign.
Of course,
this isn't the lofty hope their candidate has been talking about.
After eight long years of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, it's been
a logical reaction, one that the Obama camp has done its best to
exploit. But as Obama shows his constituents that he is far from
an antiwar candidate, the less likely he is to walk away with an
electoral victory come November, and the more doubtful it is that
he will make any real progress in the Middle East if elected.
It's a pretty
straightforward equation: pro-war Democrats don't have a great track
record of winning national elections. Voters want straightforward,
common-sense approaches to handling the problems our country faces
today, not posturing and political maneuvering for the sake of manipulation.
For what it's
worth, John McCain shoots straight. He supports more war and doesn't
know much about economics. Voters know exactly what they are getting
if they punch the card for the old Arizona senator.
That's not
the case with Obama, who says he wants an end to the war, but has
voted for its continuation and will leave troops and private mercenaries
in the country to deal with the so-called insurgents – even threatening
to shift U.S. forces to Afghanistan and Iran, where he's promised
to bully our enemies into submission.
Obama says
he supports our civil liberties but voted to reaffirm the Patriot
Act and FISA. He says he will expand the Pentagon budget, and on
Israel, he promises to do whatever it takes to protect the country
from "terrorists," paying little to no attention to the plight of
Palestinians and their suffering in Gaza.
I would call
all of these postures a huge betrayal. But they aren't. Obama has
never been anti-intervention. He's another centrist Democrat who
has done his best to appease all sides of the political spectrum;
giving the corporate wing the hard evidence they need to trust he'll
protect their interests, and the left-wing rhetoric and political
bravado to ensure they won't flee from the stifling confines of
the Democratic Party.
Nevertheless,
many Obama supporters know his pitfalls well, and no matter how
disastrous they may seem, they'll still vote for him. As respected
columnist Norman Solomon recently claimed:
"To some,
who evidently see voting as an act of moral witness rather than
pragmatic choice (even in a general election), forces such as corporate
power or militarism are binary – like a toggle switch – either totally
on or totally off. This outlook says: either we reject entirely
or we're complicit...Such analysis tends to see Obama as just a
little bit slower on the march to the same disasters that John McCain
would lead us to. That analysis takes a long view – but fails to
see the profound importance of the crossroads right in front of
us, where either Obama or McCain will be propelled into the White
House."
Solomon, who
served as an Obama delegate at the convention in Denver and sits
on the board of Progressive Democrats of America, has an agenda:
to usher Barack Obama into the White House because he sees John
McCain as leading our country closer to the sacrificial ledge.
"Save the Country
(read Empire), Vote Democrat" has become a common refrain among
a certain segment of the antiwar movement, one that echoes through
progressive and even radical circles every four years like clockwork.
Go ahead and acknowledge their faults, they sing from on high, just
don't you dare ditch the Democrats come Election Day, for the rapture
will ensue.
Like
others of his stature, Solomon has, in the past, dished out scare
tactics in an attempt to threaten peace activists into voting against
their own interests, an approach not too unlike the Republicans
who consistently undermine the concerns and needs of their base.
Barack Obama
will not address the bloodshed in Iraq because he knows quite well
he'll have this segment of the voting block shored up, no matter
how militaristic he may turn. If one follows the Solomon line of
logic, we will all just have to wait until Obama's inauguration
to pester him to end the "War on Terror." If you do it
now, they assert, it will only embolden John McCain.
Such
a political philosophy (bigotry) is void of historic truths. One
need look no further than Clintontime to grasp the amount of abuse
the Democrats are allowed to commit because they are not Republicans.
It's the political version of the battered wife syndrome. Once Democrats
are elected, and things don't change, advocates against militaristic
government are still silent.
And
Clinton's legacy is a long, ugly list of betrayal indeed: the Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act, the Iraq Liberation Act, increased
deaths in Bosnia, support for deadly UN sanctions on Iraq, and much
more.
So don't fear
standing up and voting for what you believe in, no matter how fringe
or foolish you are made out to be by others who claim to know better
than you. Our democracy is in peril and war rages on. Voting on
the likelihood of perceived gains in the short-term is not only
erroneous; it is without a true understanding of what it is going
to take to bring a true halt to US imperialism.
October
2, 2008
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is co-editor of Dissident Voice and author of Left
Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush (Common Courage
Press, 2005), and along with Jeffrey St. Clair, the editor of the
new book Red
State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the Heartland,
published by AK Press in July 2008.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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