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Today's
Stories
December
10, 2007
Uri Avnery
How They Stole the Bomb From Us
Debbie
Nathan
The Perils of Journalism and Child Porn
December
8 / 9, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
The Coup Against Bush and Cheney
Brenda
Norrell
Seize the Land, Chain the Peace Activists
Saul
Landau
The Ruins of Empire
R.
F. Blader
A Rape in Every Drink?
Ray
McGovern
Spinning Iran's Centrifuges
Allan
Nairn
Imposed Hunger in Gaza, the Army in
Indonesia
Linn Washington, Jr
Spotlight on Death Row
Paul
Craig Roberts
When Will Bush Come Clean?
December
7, 2007
Sean Penn
Piano Wire Puppeteers
Arthur Versluis
Mining Water in the Desert
M.
G. Piety
Racism and the American Psyche: Some
Thoughts on Race and Intelligence
Pam
Martens
Banksters Gone Wild
Alan
Farago
Will the Free Market Kill Suburbia?
Sprawl and the Credit Crisis
Allan Nairn
It Takes (Out) a Village
Col.
Dan Smith
Bush, Iran and the Politics of Doomsday
Alice
Slater
The Iran Opening
Robert
Weissman
The Story of Stuff
Website
of the Day
Something About
Mitt
December 6, 2007
Al Giordano
Hillary Clinton and the Politics
of Character Assassination
Kathy Kelly
Traveling Light
Russell Mokhiber
The Black Hillary
Farzana Versey
Aftershocks from the Demolition of
the Babri Mosque
Marwan Bishara
Nuclear Fallout
Neta Golan
A Generous Offer? The Aix Group and
the Palestinians
Paul Krassner
Mitt Romney = Hypocrisy
December
5, 2007
Mike Whitney
Why the CFR Hates Putin
Sharon
Smith
The Anti-War Enablers: Tom Hayden and the Dead
End Democrats
James
Petras
Venezuela in the Aftermath
Ron
Jacobs
The Iran Charade
Dave
Zirin
Kicking a Dead Man: the Sliming of Sean Taylor
John
V. Whitbeck
Two States or One? Time to Choose
Peter
Zinn
Covered in New Orleans
Niranjan
Ramakrishnan
Impeach Pelosi Instead
Alan
Farago
The Credit Bomb Detonates in Florida
Heather
Gray
US Meddling in Australian Politics
Website
of the Day
A Donner Summit Night Before Xmas
December
4, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
Jackboot State Stubs Its Toe in Ann Arbor
Andy
Worthington
Guantánamo and the Supreme Court
Paul
Craig Roberts
The Lies at the End of the American Dream
Ray
McGovern
No-Nuke Iran
Winslow
T. Wheeler
Admiral Mullen and the Defense Budget: When White Elephants are
Too Small
Allan
Nairn
The Regime Still Stands in Burma, Where "the People Just Want
Food"
Russell
Mokhiber
The USA v. Al Arian
Nikolas
Kozloff
As Chávez Falters: Raising the Stakes for the South American
Left
John
V. Walsh
Peace Movement Paralyzed
Ghada
Ageel
Will Peace Cost Me My Home?
Stephen
Soldz
The Facts be Damned!: Psychologists' President Defends Psychologist
Involvement in Interrogations
Website
of the Day
Hands Off the People of Iran
December
3, 2007
Tariq
Ali
Venezuela After the Referendum
Bill
Quigley
New Orleans: Bulldozers for the Poor, Tax Credits
for Developers
Eric
Walberg
The Bible and Middle East History
Uri
Avnery
After Annapolis
Marjorie
Cohn
Operation Iraqi Freedom Exposed
Dave
Lindorff
Vengeance Isn't Sweet
Stephen
Fleischman
Homeless in Paradise
Martha
Rosenberg
Perp Walks for the Mink Clad on Chicago's Mag Mile
Website
of the Day
So Just Lead!
December
1 / 2, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
Emblems of the Bush Age: Adrift in a Sea of
Booze
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Bear Minimum: the Grizzly and the Future
of the Rocky Mountain West
Mike
Whitney
"Iraq Doesn't Exist Anymore": an Interview with Nir Rosen
Shemon
Salam
A Visit From the FBI
Roger
Burbach
The Battle in Bolivia
Benjamin
Dangl
New Politics in Old Bolivia
Brian
M. Downing
The Quiet on the Middle Eastern Front: How Much Credit Goes to the
Surge?
Greg
Moses
Night of the Living Redneck: a Texas Horror Story
Sonja
Karkar
The "Never-Never" Peace Conference
Saul
Landau
Ethics and Evil in South Boston
Margaret
Kimberley
Black America Left Behind
John
Ross
What are the Prospects for a New Mexican Revolution?
Reza
Fiyouzat
Exit on the Left: When Che's Children Visited Iran
Judith
Scherr
Berkeley Turns Right for the Holidays
Lance
Olsen
Of Forests and Finance: Logging for the Wealthy
Christopher
Brauchli
Mr. Bush and the Despots
Robert
Fantina
Iraq as U.S. Colony
Dan
Bacher
Fish Triage on Prospect Island
Michael
Donnelly
Remembering How to be Human: John Trudell and the Music of Urgency
Website
of the Weekend
Appalachian Voices
November
30, 2007
Peter
Stone Brown
The Re-Packaging of Bob Dylan
Wajahat
Ali
The Volatile Mistress: an Interview with Javed Jabbar, Pakistan's
Former Minister of Information
Allan
Nairn
Cold-Blooded Celebrity: Thomas L. Friedman and the Bali Bombers
Alan
Farago
The Sorrows of Suburbia: Politics, Sprawl and the Housing Crash
John
Ross
The Death of Latin America's First Revolution
Corporate
Crime Reporter
America's Corporate Crime Capitals
Lucia
Alvarez
Diego Gonzalez
Argentina's Political Future
James
Rothenberg
The Iraqi Miracle
Website
of the Day
Bio-Bling?
November
29, 2007
R.
F. Blader
The Most Dangerous Kind of Bribe
Ismael
Hossein-Zadeh
Distorting Fascism to Demonize Iran
Stephen
Soldz
War on the Couch: Fear, Aggression and Empire
Sheldon
Richman
Iraq 3.0
George
Wuerthner
Forest Fires, Lies and Chainsaws
Felice
Pace
Did All Things Considered Self-Censor on Annapolis?
Col.
Dan Smith
The Meaning of Annapolis
Harvey
Wasserman
Terror Target Nukes
Nikolas
Kozloff
Primetime Hate Debate: Lou Dobbs, Immigration and Campaign '08
Paul
Krassner
Huffington Post Bloggers Go On Strike!
Dave
Lindorff
News Not Fit to Print: US Coup Planned for Venezuela?
CP
News Service
The One State Declaration
Website
of the Day
A Native View of Yellowstone Bison Slaughter
November
28, 2007
James
Petras
CIA Destabilization Memo Surfaces on Venezuela
Jeff
Halper
Annapolis: When the Roadmap is a One Way Street
Pam
Martens
Crashing Citigroup
Peter
Morici
Economy in Crisis: Avoiding a Recession
Mohammed
Khatib
Separate and Unequal in Palestine
Helen
Redmond
The Horror and the Hope: Health Care in America
William
S. Lind
In the Fox's Lair: Quiet Before a New Iraq Storm?
Ben
Tripp
We, the People: a Trope for All Seasons
Liaquat
Ali Khan
Pakistan: First, Restore the Constitution and Reinstate the Judges
Jeff
Berg
Holbrooke Says Bush Won't Attack Iran
Website
of the Day
The Lies of Joe Klein
November
27, 2007
Joe
DeRaymond
On the Road to the Torture School
Paul
Craig Roberts
Meet the Only Two Candidates Worse Than Bush and Cheney: Hillary
and Rudy
Marjorie
Cohn
Remembering Victor Rabinowitz
Mike
Whitney
A Dollar the Size of a Postage Stamp
Ron
Jacobs
The Myths of Military Progress
Col.
Dan Smith
The Pentagon's "People System" Still Doesn't Work
Ralph
Nader
Family Learning
Karim
Makdisi
Annapolis and the Unholy Alliance: the View from Beirut
Christopher
Ketcham
Memo to Hollywood Writers: Strike Until You Drop
Ronan
Bennett
Martin Amis Does a Coulter
Website
of the Day
Celebrating the Uncensored Media
| December
10, 2007
What
Can It Do?
Is
There a Left Here Left?
By JOANN
WYPIJEWSKI
"Given
the growing opposition to the Iraq war and rising inequality, why
hasn't the Left done better at organizing around these key issues,
and what needs to be improved in order to do so? Making people aware
of how bad things are is clearly necessary, but it is not sufficient
for building something new. The real question of course is: Now
what? And in particular: How to strategically build power for the
long-term.”
The
preceding paragraph was from a somewhat irritable note from a member
of the audience at a meeting on October 15, hosted by the Political
Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts
Amherst. The meeting featured myself and Alexander Cockburn, addressing
the theme, “Is there a Left left?”
'Why hasn't the Left done better at organizing around these key
issues?' The question presupposes there is a coherent force in the
country that can be called by that name, “the Left”.
I don't think there is, in the sense of any potent organized force,
let alone mass movement or even mini-movement that is challenging
the fundamental terms of the system and is equal to the moment.
And this -- the disequilibrium of movement to moment -- I think,
is the cause for so much despondency (secret and not-so-secret)
among American leftists, who certainly are alive even if some identifiable
political and ideological home with a clear project, "The Left",
is not. There are many reasons for this, many of thm obvious ones,
like the long-term effect of the imploding of the Soviet Union;
the long-term effect of a reigning ideology in the West that 'there
is no alternative'; the demobilizing effect of Clintonism on vast
sectors of progressive America, disorganization; disarray of the
black community as a result of repression / criminalization, deindustrialization
and split-level economic conditions (economic catastrophe for part
of the community, McMansions for another part); the continuing long
slide of organized labor; a generalized sense of insecurity (economic
and personal) that lends itself more to caution than to daring,
and so on.
I
don't think there is any magic formula, any set of approaches, to
'fix' this, and it would have been presumptuous or dishonest or
both to say there was. Why, for instance, is the antiwar movement
basically nowhere on campuses? I don't know, and the people on campuses
I've spoken to don't have good answers either, but it's up to them
to answer that. They were disappointed when the war wasn't stopped
before it started after the Feb. 15, 2003, worldwide demonstrations.
They were disappointed when it wasn't stopped after that, and after
a few more marches. They were disappointed and demoralized when
Bush was re-elected. They can never get more than 15 people for
a meeting and 5 are pushing a sectarian agenda, 5 want to talk only
about Palestine and 5 can't get past identity politics.
This
last, admittedly, I've only heard from Columbia students, but the
point is the institutionalized leadership of UFPJ and ANSWER isn't
being challenged by a younger generation pushing itself to the lead.
And that institutionalized leadership is exhausted. Friends who
work for UFPJ every day as volunteers say privately, "It's
hopeless." Work goes on, the demos get planned, people do their
vigils. The only force with any juice, it seems to me, are the military
families, the counter-recruiters, the antiwar vets. I don't believe
some tactical adjustment will change this -- ditching "Support
the Troops", ditching big demonstrations, embracing the Moratorium
idea of doing one small thing every day on the same month in the
same place, ditching UFPJ, ditching any engagement at all with electoral
politics, throwing all effort into electoral politics, waving the
flag of the Mahdi Army or whatever faction one wants to choose of
the Iraqi resistance. All of those tactics have been proposed by
various people. We can discuss till we're blue in the face the various
merits or demerits of such ideas, but I think it's foolhardy to
think any one or combination of them is going to invigorate the
antiwar movement into an edgy potent force.
The
antiwar movement is in a weird position: it's job is not to sway
public opinion, since a majority of Americans agree with it; but
nothing changes, so people are demoralized. They're not illogical
in their demoralization. And there is neither the wild courage nor
the organization to throw a spanner in the works, to disrupt the
war machine -- not from labor (though some unionists on the West
Coast and internationally are trying to see what they might put
together toward this end), not from the campuses, and only so far
among the soldiers. The latter are the most promising, but are nowhere
close to the situation of mass mutiny of drafted armies past. At
this point it looks as if the war will end when the Iraqis punish
the US beyond endurance or the generals mutiny or both, but I don't
think we should have illusions that that will be a glorious day
for the Left.
I
don't think either mere cheerleading -- we need the will! we need
the courage! another world IS possible! -- is much of a solution
to anything. There are world historical forces afoot here, and one
of the jobs of anyone who considers herself on the left is to try
to understand them. I don't think the Left in the heady days of
empire really thought too much about the privileges and distortions
being children of the empire conferred on it, except to say, in
some quarters, We don't want any part of it! But opting out only
goes so far, and is delusional even if understandable. Now that
the empire is exhausted at the top -- and we could disagree about
that, but I think the signs are more indicative of fundamental weakness
than of strength even if the US can still kill everyone in the world
many times over and still 'afford' billions of dollars a day doing
that in one way or another -- radicals are feeling what it means
to be part of the general decline. How do we deal with it? That's
not an idle question, or one that has an obvious answer. There was
a certain amount of chauvinism attached to the American Left in
the sixties, a sense of being at the center of the political universe
even if people did make their trips to Hanoi or Ghana or Paris.
And
part of that was even justified, because America at the time could
be said to be "swinging", to quote Andy Kopkind from 1967.
It's not swinging now, but at the same time it's awfully narrow
to have to think of 'the Left' as something that's bounded by national
borders. And if we look beyond our borders, there is clearly a Left,
in the sense of powerful movements or currents challenging the fundamental
terms of the world economic system.
So
if one asks, Is there a Left left? the answer is clearly yes, but
not necessarily within our borders. So then how do we engage with
that? What does solidarity and internationalism, as opposed to rad-tourism,
demand today? What can we learn from those who have set out a task
of developing "socialism for the 21st century" or autonomy
and freedom from the neoliberal chokehold? And how can we support
those efforts, while not abandoning organizing at home that might
not rattle the world, at least not this minute, but is still necessary
if one has any sense of politics as being a long march?
In
Bolivia you have massed organizations of peasants, workers, farmers,
indigenous people in Bolivia toppling two governments, facing bullets
and suffering casualties to do so, asserting in the most powerful
way claims against the force of privatization, deregulation, immiseration,
etc. In Mexico You have the Zapatistas arising from seemingly nowhere
on the eve of NAFTA's implementation saying No, everything is not
finished; it is still possible to put up a fundamental fight --
and changing Mexican politics. These are not movements that can
just be 'imitated'. Nor are they -- either in Bolivia or Mexico
or Ecuador or Venezuela or Argentina or Cuba or Brazil – movements
that are perfectly realized, without contradictions, without setbacks,
weaknesses, disappointments ahead. Most of all they are not to be
romanticized. But Latin America, I believe, where the center of
political energy has shifted. It is where what Eqbal Ahmad called
"the logic of daring" is at work. And it is the original
homeland of millions of people now in this country whose movements
and organizing here may be uneven, may not conform strictly to some
notion of the Left but do bear attention and support from the rest
of us. Certainly in the realm of labor, organizing by immigrants
is where most of the action is. I think one can with justice say
that the immigrant rights marches of May 1, 2006, were the closest
thing to a general strike that the US has seen in a long time, to
take the most obvious example. Now that movement is fractured too,
and has its contradictions, and has come under severe repression.
That
there has been no wider Left in the US to defend immigrants, to
articulate the rights of people not only to move across borders
(mobility of labor) but also to stay in their homelands and survive
-- and to link the international experience with the domestic experience
of dispossession on any number of fronts (the most glaring being
Katrina) -- indicates that there is a task at hand considerably
more robust than blogging in the fight for a world fit to live in.
There
are people and groups chipping away at a piece of this here and
there, but I'm certain they don't think it will be realized off
a breezy checklist of 'things to do'.There's a pretty major hurdle,
and that, as I see it, is how to counter the dominant reality of
our lives, which is that capitalism is increasingly organizing society
for alienation.
When
you talk to old labor strategists they often make the point that
labor organizing follows corporate organizing, and the way a job
organizes crews or teams or distribution systems or whatever helps
point a direction for how labor can most effectively organize. (Because
those crews or whatever already work together, trust each other,
rely on each other, are sometimes intimate socially.) So on one
level we could say capitalism organizes production globally, so
labor needs to organize globally, though that presents a tougher
set of problems from the organization of one workplace; plus not
all work is globalized, But if you think about capitalism as a system
that implicates us beyond a particular job, then its global organization
is something that affects us all, because it is a worldwide system
of lowered living standards, increasing insecurity, deregulation,
evisceration of the social contract/social safety net, privatization
and dispossession. So one question that arises is, How do societies,
at a minimum, put capitalism back on a leash? Because it's unleashed
now and that fact makes almost every action for a more just or equitable
society impossible. So that's a major question. What the strategy
is for doing that, in real terms, with real people on the ground,
I don't know. But that curls back to the other problem mentioned
at the beginning of this paragraph. If you think about how disconnected
people are -- from their co-workers (the rise of consultancies,
independent contract work, telecommuting, call centers, temp work,
personal service work), from their neighbors, this is a pretty profound
problem. And you can extend that out, to alienation within a workplace
via two-tier union contracts, temporary vs permanent employees,
domestic vs native-born employees; within a community, witness the
crazy obsession with homosexuals in the black community, the crazy
persistent racism in the white community, the crazy bugaboo of undocumented
immigrants across many communities, including those of documented
immigrants. A lot of this is not new, obviously, but the disorganization
of so much of society feels new (and I'm talking over the past maybe
15 years). Sometimes I think that at a minimum we ought to be encouraging
people to join -- anything. The PTA, the Kiwanis Club, the local
pathetic chapter of the NAACP, the local tenants group, the freelancers
union, the local Democratic club or libertarian club, whatever,
just to start remembering how to think together. And even if it
prompted people to see what they don't want to be part of, maybe
it would encourage them to create something that they do. This sounds
pretty lame, I know. But the situation is pretty lame, or so it
seems. The whole reason the church has been so effective in politics,
I think, is because it's one of the last stands in society where
people aren't alienated: they meet every week, share a set of ideas
and values, engage in something that is practical and enchanted
at the same time. And what does the left have? Virtual communities,
virtual organizing, virtual communication. I don't think it's all
that helpful. You can get a hundred thousand people to a demo, or
to sign a letter or call their Congress people or donate to some
candidate or cause (send money for an ad in the NYTimes!), but they're
pretty much alone.
So,
it seems to me the first step has to involve a reorganization of
society, people getting together. I work with a housing group in
New York. We do a lot of great work, organizing in private and public
housing. But it's a lot harder than it was in the 70s. The neighborhood
has changed, people are less solidaristic, the economic structure
of buildings makes them less solidaristic, since obviously the last
rent controlled tenant and next to last rent stabilized tenant have
nothing in common with the high-flying market-rate tenants, and
in public housing there's so much pressure and so much bad blood
and people are so tired just trying to live. And our organization
gets so tired just trying to survive, get the grants, etc. So it's
like rolling the rock up the hill. I have a little hope that the
public housing work could gather more steam. There's a summit of
groups doing this kind of work around the country coming up in January,
hoping to figure out how everyone's disjointed work could be strengthened
and combined, and trying, maybe, to think about it all in larger
terms re public resources, public good, some reinvigorated social
contract. Baby steps.
JoAnn
Wypijewski can be reached at jwyp@earthlink.net
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