We
were all lied to. We're used to it. If Westmoreland's
body counts and Watergate and Iran Contra and
the Savings and Loan and the first Gulf War didn't
teach some of us, then I guess some of us were
never meant to learn. The fact is that some of
us bought it, and some of us didn't. It's a big,
glaring, important distinction, one that, without
indulging hyperbole, divides the whole of history
and places us on one side or the other.
This
is not parlor politics or polite, gentlemanly
disagreements with our colleagues "from the other
side of the aisle." It's a long, older struggle:
call it revolution and counterrevolution, progress
and reaction--whatever you choose. But those of
us who froze our asses off while being herded
like cattle along 3rd Avenue in Manhattan a year
ago were not "misled." We, and the ten million
who marched with us the world over last February
15, we refused to be misled--indeed refused to
be led at all by the liars and their sycophants
who packaged and sold this war. The world, it
can be safely said, from the overwhelming hostility
now aimed at the US, was not misled. History itself
was not misled, only sidetracked by a power whose
bloated military "strength" defies all need or
rational excuse.
The
world is waiting, too, to see on which side of
history post-Bush America will decide to right
itself. Will it abandon its insane military buildup,
and actively disengage from its designs of global
domination? The question weighs heavily on the
futures of our children. For it does seem, despite
its tenacious hold on power and it almost limitless
resources, the Bush administration is despised
not only by most of the world, but also by most
of the same electorate that never gave it any
mandate in the first place. All this talk of "electability,"
as if it were some scientific postulate that could
actually hold some concrete meaning, all this
talk merely inflates defeatism. Bush the mighty
cannot be slain! Why not? He's a criminal and
a liar, who in any decent society would have been
removed from office long ago.
The
question is, what will replace the Bush junta?
It is a sweeping question, one which, given the
pummeling the world has taken at its hand these
past few years, should be a grand one. Akin to
the rebuilding of Europe, say, or the end of the
cold war. There was a similar opportunity then,
when we talked of the "Peace Dividend." But it
was handled by men with small minds and greedy
palms, and the New World Order busied itself instead
with more wars, and the global dominion of a tiny
handful of gigantic corporations roaming the globe,
looking for every last pocket of opportunity to
wring for cash.
Now
we face a similar choice, and I suggest we should
entrust it to a government whose vision is as
broad as the epoch requires. John Kerry, alas,
does not fit the bill, despite his meteoric rise
to frontrunner status since the Iowa caucus. I
do not dislike him; have voted for him against
republicans when it seemed the wise thing to do,
and I imagine I could do so again if the alternative
were an extension of the Bush Destruction Machine.
But I do not want him to be my president, and
until I have no other choice, I will oppose his
climb to the top of the anti-Bush heap. A translator
friend from Brazil, who has chided me for focusing
narrowly on the US elections recently, had this
to say: "Šthe world doesn't want to know how or
if the president will be elected. What the world
wants to know is how Bush or Not-Bush will affect
their lives. Think about that!"
See--it
is not, unfortunately, just about Republicans
vs. Democrats. Both parties have been complicit
in the enormous bloating of the military industrial
complex about which that famous Republican, General/President
Eisenhower, so sternly warned us before leaving
office. When push comes to shove, we need people
in government who ignore expediency and do that
which, in their hearts and in their intellect,
they know to be right. This is rendered all the
more important by the disintegration of independent
thought in the US, the consolidation of corporate
media, the immense pressure and resources controlled
by the right wing in this country.
There
is an inner clock, one that keeps time despite
the seeming sway of history and the drums of war.
Some people have it, and most do not. I fault
Kerry in this regard. I am not bashing him, so
please spare me the hate mail--I am not capable
of throwing the election by pointing out obvious
flaws. Senator Kerry and the Democratic establishment
may well do so by over looking them, however.
With
regard to the Iraq war, I am quite sure that I
will never forget, nor can I forgive, a vote in
favor of the War Resolution. It is not just about
pride or my frozen ass, but a deeper truth about
leadership and trust. If indeed Kerry was duped,
then he missed something most of the world did
not, and is not fit to lead at such an important
moment in history. The excuse that such a vote
could be based on secret information to which
the world was not privy is scarier still, as it
enshrines a penchant for secret government and
renders meaningless the very concept of rule by
the people. Not that I favor any particular rationale
for supporting a decision which resulted in the
loss of tens of thousands of lives and the shredding
of any remaining vestige of international cooperation--but
I think scariest of all would be if he knew it
to be wrong, but voted for it anyway, out of a
willingness to play the game, to be a good soldier.
This,
I have come to believe, is the most likely case,
and it settles too well with a few other instances
where conviction succumbs to expediency. Much
has been made of Kerry's status as both a war
hero and a war protester. The incongruity is not
for nothing--they do seem to be opposite in many
ways. And on closer inspection, the dissonance
becomes apparent. Shortly after Kerry's Iraq vote,
Brian Willson, former supporter and fellow Vietnam
Vet wrote a stinging "Open
Letter to John Kerry," which is as poignant
as it is sad. Willson Writes:
"The
first hint of a bit of disconnect in your style
was when during your first Senate campaign you
denied returning your war medals, with a thousand
other veterans, in protest of the war during Dewey
Canyon III. That was a bit of a shock, since for
most veterans who returned their medals in that
emotional ceremony on Friday, April 23, 1971,
it was a very proud and healing moment. Your 1984
campaign response: You had returned the medals
of a WWII acquaintance at his direction. All those
13 years everyone thought you had had the courage
and leadership to return medals that to veterans
who returned them represented medals of dishonor
drenched in the blood of innocent Vietnamese who
did not deserve to die for a lie, any more than
our fellow US Americans.. I guess you knew then
that you were to be running for office."
Then,
more recently, beyond the painful chapter that
was Vietnam, comes the issue of gay marriage.
I'm not gay (though not, to quote Jerry Seinfeld,
"that there's anything wrong with that.") I am,
however, in an interracial marriage, and the issue
has a personal resonance for me. There are those
in this country who are still not ready for interracial
marriage. My own marriage would be invalid, and
indeed illegal, had not earlier leaders decided
that my civil rights need not wait until a majority
was "ready" to recognize them.
No
one is "pushing gay marriage," except, perhaps,
for those couples who are ready to make that commitment
to each other. A true leader does not allow the
issue to framed by the right in this way. The
courts have not been hijacked by "activist judges"
(except for the type that installed the Jackass-in-Chief
in the Oval Office). Jurists are simply moving
toward an inevitable historic moment: a civil
right enjoyed by one group cannot be denied to
another, no matter how uncomfortable it makes
anybody. Leaders who "seek the center" on issues
of right and wrong for electoral advantage are
not agents of change.
We
do not recognize religious marriage in this country,
and every pastor, priest, rabbi or justice of
the peace must sign a civil license acting in
the capacity of a state official. This is exactly
why this issue sits at the nexus of the struggle
to overcome reactionary forces in the US. The
correct framing of the issue is right before our
eyes: the right wing knows that it must pursue
the idea--think of this for a moment--of a constitutional
amendment to ban the extension of this right to
a certain group. This is an outrageous concept,
and should be met head on. Most people in the
US now have family, friends, acquaintances, or
workmates who are gay; speaking of "ready," I
do not think Americans are ready to change the
Law of the Land to pursue a bigoted witch hunt
that would make Anita Bryant proud.
Kerry's
so-called "doghunters" have been concerned chiefly
with covering his right flank, always assuming
that his left was immune to attack. But these
stands represent a pandering to the right, which
will be equally damning in a time where such pandering
is not only unpalatable, but unnecessary as well..
To return to the interracial analogy, there's
nothing to warm the heart of a recalcitrant old
white racist more than the brown face of a mixed
grandchild. I have a similar bellweather: when
Homer Simpson can ponder on prime time television
whether his gay kiss or a kiss from his wife "is
the best kiss I've had all day," I'm betting that
America is not ready to put the genie back in
the bottle--or the closet, as it were.
In
fact, I think Americans are ready for much more
than we are given credit for. The experience of
the past few years has truly shaken people's consciousness.
Broad sections of people are increasingly wary
of a distortionist, toadying press; increasingly
demanding of true health care reform, and not
just a further bloating of the insurocracy. Even
some polls have shown that large majorities back
key elements of a progressive agenda. In an irony
that must make the candidate scream, one caucus
in Washington ratified all ten points of Dennis
Kucinich's platform, while giving two thirds of
their delegates to other candidates. The world
is full of cautious, blow-dried, Ken-doll politicians
with their finger in the wind. Caution and timidity
will predictably yield what they have thus far:
a suffocating stalemate fought on the right wing's
turf--and lost, often as not--where two halves
of a giant party wrangle over middle class white
votes. What we need is the steely determination
in the face of power that makes real change possible.
We will get that through an election which electrifies
a movement and sweeps republicans out of power
with a broad vision for real change.
©
2004 Daniel Patrick Welch.
Topplebush.com
Posted: February 20, 2004
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