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US Elections: Just Like the Movies
by Ramzy Baroud The United States political process bears an uncanny resemblance to mainstream filmmaking. Elections and speeches are scripted to the letter, politicians put on a tirelessly rehearsed act, catering endlessly to the whims of the target audience.
A successful Hollywood filmmaker can't afford to risk raising issues in a way that don't immediately reflect audience sympathies. Good politicians vying for votes are similar in that they speak according to the already existing expectations -- and prejudices -- of the voting public.
Rarely do candidates stand behind a podium without amending or
overriding their personal beliefs in return for generating applause.
You would hardly hear, for example, of a US presidential candidate
getting booed by an audience.
Candidates do not bring fresh
principals to the table, but instead shape their views based on what
national and local polls tell them matters to the voting public. And
what matters is largely manipulated by the media and the state. Their
combined scare tactics convinced most Americans of outright falsehoods,
such as Saddam's ties to 9/11, his stockpiles of WMDs, the "liberation"
of women in Afghanistan, and so forth.
In a healthy democracy,
the media is expected to represent the interests of the people -- all
the people, while the government serves as a conduit to carry and
defend these interests without violating the constitution. But in the
age of evangelical fanatics, lobby groups, international corporations
and lucrative Iraq contracts, democracy itself can be placed on hold.
Indeed,
maintaining the image of a democracy while violating its genuine
principles has consumed the efforts of successive US administrations.
No other administration, however, has compromised the interest of the
American people and flouted the constitution as much as the brazen Bush
administration. No wonder Republicans were squarely defeated in the
Congressional elections of 2006. Americans clearly voted for change,
but change in a system so skilfully corrupt doesn't come easy. The way
in which Democrats supported the recent spending bill for 2008, their
vacillating stance on Iraq, and their downright hawkish stance on Iran
say volumes about their contribution to maintaining the status quo.
Democrats
are also bound by the rules of the game. They need the money, media
coverage and lobbyists. Currently there are 35,000 registered federal
lobbyists representing all sorts of special interests, including
foreign powers such as Israel, whose collaborative role in the Iraq
fiasco is too blatant to overlook.
Barack Obama, who does
indeed have little experience of understanding how the system works
still possesses a talent for pleasing the crowd. Thus his initial
assertion that lobbyists "won't work in my White House". Then, possibly
after being told by his campaign managers that special interests are
more influential than the rest of the country, he tweaked his vow
slightly whereby lobbyists "are not going to dominate my White House."
Although his pledge changed its substance almost entirely, he was able
to receive victory in Iowa.
For now, analysts can extract
temporary comfort from the prevailing interpretation of the Iowa
caucuses' results. Obama was elected by the Democratic caucuses with 37
per cent because he was the only nominee that managed to present a
truly new message -- that he and only he can advocate real "change". As
for former Arkansas governor, Republican Mike Huckabee, he was the best
possible candidate to represent the Republican voters' conservative
concerns. The former Baptist pastor is the rising star of the Christian
evangelicals who boast 40 million followers, all tied by an outrageous
message of doomsday.
Rev Stan Moody of the Christian Policy
Institute, writes, "Huckabee is a Rapturist" in reference to the
mid-19th Century interpretation of biblical text which culminated in
1909 as the Scofield Desk Reference Bible. This envisions -- and not
metaphorically -- a Greater Israel as a precondition to the return of
Christ, who, with the true Christians, will defeat Satanic forces,
convert 144,000 Jews and exterminate the rest. It has no Harry Potter
twists, but it puts Hollywood horror movies to shame. The actual
concern is that this group has cultivated an alliance with the Israeli
government since the late 1970s and is a major powerbroker in US
foreign policy in the Middle East.
In her article, which
appeared in The Jerusalem Post on 3 January, Hilary Leila Krieger
reported from Iowa that Huckabee "has also been staunchly supportive of
Israel, writing in Foreign Affairs that, 'I will not waver in standing
by our ally Israel.' It is a country he has visited several times,
leading groups there as well as taking his family."
According
to the same article, "Huckabee has drawn on his experience in the Holy
Land in making his pitch to voters, which has especially resonated with
evangelicals."
With the notable exceptions of Republican Ron
Paul and Democrat Dennis Kucinich, most visible presidential candidates
were eager to compromise the interest of their country to guarantee
that of Israel's.
Clinton and Obama exemplify this. The Jewish
Telegraphic Agency (JTA) wrote, "Obama has always enjoyed strong Jewish
support since entering state politics in Illinois in 1996, although
some in the pro-Israel establishment are wary of his calls to negotiate
with rogue states such as Syria and Iran." JTA, of course, nonchalantly
substitute the word 'Zionist' for 'Jewish', but that's another story.
While
supporting Israel, right or wrong, is business as usual for US
politicians, Huckabee's advent -- described as the "second coming" of
Ronald Reagan by a producer at an Iowa TV station, is the truly
alarming trend. He cannot simply be dismissed as a lunatic
Armageddonist who thinks that he can win an election; he actually
captured the Republican endorsement in Iowa.
Huckabee knows well
how to carry the momentum to the next destination -- he needs to keep
up the religious fervour, as narrow-minded and irrational as it may be.
We are told that this is what voters are expecting. To win, like a good
filmmaker, Huckabee must deliver.
Life can indeed resemble the
movies, but in the case of US elections the movie has become so
familiar and predictable that it's no longer even entertaining.
-Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers
and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).