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Lets Stifle the Happy Talk
by Ernest Partridge
Happy days are here again!
The GOP is in disarray. The factions of this improbable alliance of religious fundamentalists, neo-con war hawks, and market absolutists have discovered, with the emergence of their presumptive nominee, John McCain, that they have little in common. James Dobson, leader of the fundamentalist Focus on the Family, has announced that rather than vote for McCain, he will not vote at all.
Ann Coulter says that she might even support Hillary Clinton. Meanwhile, the Democratic base remains solid as party loyalists tell pollsters that they would be quite happy with either Clinton or Obama. And in the primaries so far, seventy percent more Democrats have voted than Republicans. Moreover, the Democratic party is enjoying a substantial funding advantage over the Republicans. Among liberal pundits and talk show hosts, there is a sense of inevitable Democratic triumph in the coming election.
The man that once did sell the lions skin while
the beast lived, was killed with hunting him.
- Shakespeare: King Henry V.
All this optimism is built upon a foundation of demonstrably
false assumptions, revealed in the rhetoric of the campaign
assumptions of which Democratic party officials and Democratic voters
might be readily disabused if they bothered to soberly reflect upon the
most recent presidential elections and upon evidence that is plainly
before them.
However, because these Democrats and progressives
apparently prefer their blissful ignorance, they will likely be smiling
all the way to a crushing disappointment in November.
These are the fatal assumptions:
- Those who wish to vote for the Democratic candidate will be able to do so.
- The votes cast for the Democratic candidate will all be counted, and counted correctly.
- Media coverage of the campaigns will be transparent and unbiased.
- When informed of the issues, the people will vote according to their convictions and interests.
- The Republicans will play by the rules and will gracefully accept the peoples decision.
These
assumptions were false in 2000 and 2004, and demonstrably so. And they
are false today. Yet the Democrats and their supporters by and large
conduct their campaigns in the unsupported belief that this time the
contest will be open and fair.
Even though the falsehood of
these assumptions has been obvious and unequivocal, the failure to face
and deal with them cost the Democrats the past two presidential
elections. Unless the party wakes up and acts decisively, it might well
cost the Democrats the next election For, as Dr. Phil correctly
instructs us, you can not change what you do not acknowledge.
Disenfranchisement.
Its no secret: the GOP is engaged in a massive effort to keep
traditionally Democratic voters from the polls. Under the guise of
preventing unqualified felons from voting in Florida in 2000, tens of
thousands of qualified voters were barred from voting enough to
deprive Al Gore of a margin of victory sufficiently large that even the
felonious five Supremes could not overturn it. More recently, eight US
attorneys were fired by Alberto Gonzales for insufficient diligence in
keeping Democrats from the voting booths, leaving one to wonder just
what the remaining eighty-eight have been up to. There have been
widespread reports during the current primaries of voters discovering
that they have been de-registered. Greg Palast has charged that
several million Democratic votes might be lost in the next election to
GOP caging efforts: organized, if illegal, mailings to likely
Democratic households, designed to remove qualified voters from
registration rolls.
Election Fraud. There is abundant
evidence that the 2000 and 2004 elections were stolen. I havent the
space here to review that evidence, but for those still unconvinced,
see Mark Crispin Millers Fooled Again, which lists numerous additional
publications that make the case. (My essays about election fraud may be
found here). Suffice to say that most of the votes cast in the two
previous presidential elections, and to be cast in the next, are
entered into DRE (direct recording electronic) machines, which are
manufactured and programmed by private companies with strong GOP
associations, which utilize secret software, and which have with no
independent means of verification. Statistical, anecdotal and
circumstantial evidence of fraud has failed to interest the mainstream
corporate media, which has placed an almost total embargo on reporting,
much less investigating, this evidence. More astonishing, however, is
the lack of concern for this problem shown by the Democratic party. If
the partys indifference persists, the GOP will be given a virtual
invitation to steal the next election. Once again, the Republican will,
not need to a majority of ballots to win. Tallies of 45% should
suffice, as Diebolds and ES&Ss black-box voting and compiling
machines take care of the rest.
The Media Problem. The myth
of liberal media bias is perpetuated through repetition without the
benefit of evidence. In other words, the Big Lie. In fact, the media
has served as a faithful stenographer of Bush and Cheney lies and GOP
propaganda. Recall the unanimous media praise for Colin Powells
disgraceful presentation before the UN Security Council in February,
2003, and the fact that for a long time thereafter, a majority of the
public believed that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass
destruction, that he was an ally of al Qaeda, and that he was involved
in the 9/11 attacks. They could only have acquired these false beliefs
through the mainstream media. The corporate media caricatured Al Gore
as a serial liar. It transformed John Kerry from an authentic war hero
to an unscrupulous self-promoter, while it elevated George Bush from a
deserter to a Churchillian Commander in Chief. Equally significant is
what was missing from the media: Bushs terrified immobility in that
Florida schoolroom on 9/11, Bushs military record, GOP efforts at
disenfranchisement and election fraud, the Downing Street memos, Sibel
Edmonds accusations, the trial and conviction of Don Siegelman, and
much, much, more. At the same time, dissent within the media was dealt
with brutally. Witness the fate of Phil Donahue, Bill Maher, Ashleigh
Banfield and Dan Rather. While we can only imagine the post-convention
treatment in store for Hillary Clinton or Barack Hussein Obama, we may
be confident that it will be brutal. Are the Democrats prepared for
this? How do they propose to deal with it?
The salience of
issues. Once again, the polls show that regarding such issues as
fiscal responsibility, economic justice, health care, education, civil
liberties, and even national defense, the public is solidly on the side
of the Democrats. But the same was true in 1984, when Ronald Reagan
trounced Walter Mondale, and again in 2000, when George Bush scored
points against Al Gore on something called likeability. Once again,
the issues are solidly on the side of the Democrats. But they will be
seriously mistaken if they believe that this will suffice to deliver
the election to them. Republican campaign managers have proven
themselves to be masters at selling the product. They know how to
locate and push the subliminal buttons and to project the winning
imagery.
Fair Play. Americans have prided themselves upon
the orderly transfer of power that follows the defeat of one party by
another in a national election. This time, things could be very
different, for the stakes are enormously greater. During the
Bush/Cheney regime, the pubic treasury has been looted, corruption has
been rampant, public records have been destroyed, acts of Congress have
been ignored and violated in effect, the Bush/Cheney regime has been
less a government than an ongoing crime wave. If a Democrat gains
control of the White House, he or she will also control the Justice
Department. Those ninety-six Republican US attorneys, who have
investigated and indicted seven Democrats to each Republican, will all
be replaced by appointees of the new administration.
It is possible,
though not certain, that suppressed information will be excavated, for
example regarding the Plame case and Sibel Edmunds accusations.
Criminal investigations will proceed, followed by indictments, trials
and convictions. Corporate foxes will be expelled from the regulatory
hen-houses, as the federal agencies resume their statutory work of
protecting the public from private, corporate greed. In short, the
ill-gotten wealth, and the very freedom, of many highly situated
individuals may be in jeopardy. The Democratic party and its candidate
should expect extraordinary efforts to protect this wealth and legal
immunity, which means to prevent a Democratic victory in November. If,
in the face of all this, the Democrats anticipate an ordinary contest,
fairly fought by the rules, they are heading for a spectacular fall.
A Winning Strategy
If
the Democrats acknowledge and then reject these fatal assumptions,
and thus face and deal creatively with the hard realities of the
campaign before them, then they may stand a chance of winning. (For
much more about a winning Democratic strategy, see my "An Ominous
Complacency").
Pressure the media. Because the US corporate
media, unlike Pravda and Izvestia in the Soviet Union, consists of
for-profit enterprises that must answer to their stockholders, they are
sensitive to public pressures. And much of that public is at last
beginning to realize that the mainstream media is no longer a
dependable source of information, or worse, is a dispenser of
official propaganda. Thus right-wing talk radio is losing its clout
and even the New York Times has taken a hit for its ill-advised
addition of William Kristol to its OpEd page. If a sizeable portion of
citizens vote against media bias by withholding their purchases and
subscriptions, the media might be bent toward reform. Equal time for
progressives is not required. Just a responsible reporting of the
facts will nicely suffice. In the meantime, alternative media, the
internet in particular, must be supported and utilized.
Monitor
the election. Democrats must insist, while there is still time, that
DRE machines be replaced with paper ballots. Where DREs are locked
into place, the Democratic party must support exit polling and poll
watching. Finally, to counteract caging, the party must encourage
voters to check out their registrations before election day, and then
after election day the party must demand that all provisional ballots
be counted.
Define and Frame the Contest. The Democrats must
at last wise up and realize that they have been playing by the GOP
rules and speaking the GOP language. It is a prescription for failure,
for those who make the rules win the game. The Democrats must take
control of the language of the campaign. Thus, as once again, the
Republicans attempt to define the contest as conservative vs.
liberal, the Democrats must insist that they are the fiscal
conservatives, and that, as conservatives, they stand for the
restoration of the Constitution and the rule of law. Conversely, Bush,
Cheney, and their lackeys in Congress are not conservatives, they are
regressives, who have abolished constitutional guarantees and have
endeavored to take the US economy back to the nineteenth century and
the robber barons. So the Democrats should call the GOP what it is:
regressive. Furthermore, there is no war on terror terror is a
method, not a national adversary. There is no Iraq war it is an
occupation. Values encompass more than beds and bottles, or God, guns
and gays. They also include authentic compassion, toleration, economic
justice, civil liberties, peacemaking, and honorable dealings with
foreign powers. The primary theme of the Democratic campaign, and of
the Democratic administration that follows, must the restoration of the
Constitution and the rule of law, and a fair distribution of the
national wealth.
Take off the gloves. This time, the
Democrats must, like the Republicans in 2000 and 2004, be tough and
relentless in their campaign. But unlike the Republicans, the Democrats
must be scrupulously honest. The facts of the past eight years are
stark and ugly, so there is no need to embellish them. The themes must
be simple and they must be repeated. Two-thirds of the American public
want the US out of Iraq, ASAP. Repeat, over and over, McCains
intention to remain in Iraq for one-hundred years. The public wants no
war with Iran. Repeat video clips of McCain singing bomb, bomb, bomb,
Iran. The GOP wants the public to forget about Bush. Show McCain
hugging Bush. Repeat and repeat and repeat, just as, a decade ago, the
corporate media repeated, thousands of times over, the video clip of
Bill Clinton hugging Monica at the rope line.
Pick a winner.
A recent Washington Post poll reported that if the election were held
today, McCain would defeat Hillary Clinton by three percentage points,
but that Obama would defeat McCain by the same three points. Lets face
it: Hillary Clinton is the GOPs favorite Democrat because she is the
most vulnerable. The MSM effectively disposed of the Democrats
strongest candidate, John Edwards. That leaves the young, energetic and
eloquent Barack Obama. Not my first choice, but nonetheless a good
choice. Hillary Clinton seeks a restoration; Barack Obama promises
(albeit vaguely) a new direction. The public, I believe, prefers to
look forward rather than backward, and Obama, in his campaigning, is
establishing a charismatic connection with a broad public that is
totally out of reach of the bland and tired John McCain.
And
finally, raise Hell! The public outrage over the Bush/Cheney criminal
regime, the demand to throw the scoundrels out of office and into
federal prison, the clamor for substantive political and economic
reform, the enthusiastic and unified support behind the Democratic
candidate must reach a decibel level that even the corporate media can
not ignore a glorious and uproarious outpouring of public sentiment
that the Republican/corporate establishment dare not and will not
frustrate.
Whoever wins the Democratic nomination, Hillary
Clinton or Barack Obama, a brutal campaign must follow. If Obama is the
nominee, he will be the underdog for each and all of the reasons
enumerated above: a rigged elections machinery, a hostile media, and a
ruthless opposing party. If he is nominated, expect to hear his middle
name, Hussein, endlessly. Expect to hear Osama, I mean Obama,
Expect to be told that he is a secret Muslim, that he attended a
madrassa, and numerous additional lies still to be invented.
This
is no time for complacency and optimism. From now on, through the
Denver convention and all the way to November 4, the Democrats must run
hard and run scared, as if they were the underdogs.
Because they are.
Copyright 2008 by Ernest Partridge
Ernest Partridge, Co-Editor
The Crisis Papers.
February 12, 2008
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