I'd like to make it clear to the people who run the Democratic Party that I will not support Hillary Clinton for president.
Enough. Enough triangulation, calculation and equivocation. Enough clever straddling, enough not offending anyone. This is not a Dick Morris election.
Sen. Clinton is apparently incapable of taking a clear stand on the war inIraq, and that alone is enough to disqualify her. Her failure to speak outon Terri Schiavo, not to mention that gross pandering on flag-burning, are just contemptible little dodges.
The recent death of Gene McCarthy reminded me of a lesson I spent a long, long time unlearning, so now I have to re-learn it. It's about political courage and heroes, and when a country is desperate for leadership. There are times when regular politics will not do, and this is one of those times. There are times a country is so tired of bull that only the truth can provide relief. If no one in conventional-wisdom politics has the courage to speak up and say what needs to be said, then you go out and find some obscure junior senator from Minnesota with the guts to do it. In 1968, Gene McCarthy wasthe little boy who said out loud, "Look, the emperor isn't wearing anyclothes." Bobby Kennedy -- rough, tough Bobby Kennedy -- didn't do it. Just this quiet man trained by Benedictines who liked to quote poetry.
What kind of courage does it take, for mercy's sake?
The majority of theAmerican people (55 percent) think the war in Iraq is a mistake and that we should get out.
The majority (65 percent) of the American people want single-payer health care and are willing to pay more taxes to get it.
The majority (86 percent) of the American people favor raising the minimum wage.
The majority of the American people (60 percent) favor repealingBush's tax cuts, or at least those that go only to the rich.
The majority(66 percent) wants to reduce the deficit not by cutting domestic spending,but by reducing Pentagon spending or raising taxes.
The majority (77 percent) thinks we should do "whatever it takes" to protect the environment.
The majority (87 percent) thinks big oil companiesare gouging consumers and would support a windfall profits tax.
That is the center, you fools. WHO ARE YOU AFRAID OF?
I listen to people like Rahm Emanuel superciliously explaining elementary politics to us clueless naifs outside the Beltway ("First, you have to win elections"). Can't you even read the damn polls?
Here's a prize example by someone named Barry Casselman, who writes, "There is an invisible civil war in the Democratic Party, and it is between those who are attempting to satisfy the defeatist and pacifist left base of the party and those who are attempting to prepare the party for successful elections in 2006 and 2008." This supposedly pits Howard Dean, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, emboldenedby "a string of bad news from the Middle East ... into calling for premature retreat from Iraq," versus those pragmatic folk like Steny Hoyer, Rahm Emmanuel, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Joe Lieberman.
Oh come on, people -- get a grip on the concept of leadership. Look at this war -- from the lies that led us into it, to the lies they continue to dump on us daily. You sit there in Washington so frightened of the big, bad Republican machine you have no idea what people are thinking. I'm telling you right now, Tom DeLay is going to lose in his district. If Democrats in Washington haven't got enough sense to OWN the issue of political reform, I give up on them entirely.
Do it all, go long, go for public campaign financing for Congress. I'm serious as a stroke about this -- that is the only reform that will work,and you know it, as well as everyone else who's ever studied this. Do all the goo-goo stuff everybody has made fun of all these years: embracere districting reform, electoral reform, House rules changes, the whole package.
Put up, or shut up. Own this issue, or let Jack Abramoff politics continue to run your town. Bush, Cheney and Co. will continue to play the patriotic bully card just as long as you let them.
I've said it before: War brings out the patriotic bullies. In World War I, they went around kicking dachshunds on the grounds that dachshunds were "German dogs." They did not, however, go around kicking German shepherds. The MINUTE someone impugns your patriotism for opposing this war, turn on them like a snarling dog and explain what loving your country really means. That, or you could just piss on them elegantly, as Rep. John Murtha did. Or eviscerate them with wit (look up Mark Twain on the war in the Philippines). Or point out the latest in the endless "string of bad news." Do not sit there cowering and pretending the only way to win is as Republican-lite. If the Washington-based party can't get up and fight,we'll find someone who can.
4 comments:
Molly Ivins is a national treasure. I have spoken to her on the phone a few times. She calls people she's talking to on the phone, "darlin' "
BTW I hear that Hillary spoke to a bunch of Jewish people at the Anti-Defamation League. She said the Congress was run like a concentration camp. (Not my joke, I heard it on an NPR Saturday show.)
I wouldn't vote for her if she was the best damn politican to ever live. 32 consecutive years of either a Clinton or Bush working as Pres/V.P. is too War of the Roses for my democratic likings.
I've got to break the habit of doing this. Sorry again.
In the late Walter Karp's Liberty Under Siege he writes about how Jimmy Carter's Presidency, who in Karp's opinion was the most democratically elected President in a long, long time, was crippled not by Republicans, but by his own party who shot down almost all of the reforms and such that Carter had intended to implement. Among them was the public financing of campaigns.
Then, after Carter is beaten down into a pulp and is replaced by Reagan, these same Democrats do the opposite for Reagan.
Karp referred to this bi-partisan opposition to democracy perjoratively as Oligarchy and Reaction.
How many times have you heard some pundit, ev en liberals talk about how bad Jimmy Carter was? It's like some memorized litany.
I was working in Washington DC, both on and off Capitol Hill during his Presidency, and I can't recall any Democratic administration that was less supported by Democratic legislators than his. The talk was always filled with suspicions of his motives.
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