-Caveat Lector-

The Election That Refused to Die
BY MICHAEL VENTURA

December 8, 2000

Since Election Day developments here and abroad have both raised the stakes
and highlighted what the stakes really are:

*    On November 28, the Supreme Court declared that the city of
Indianapolis violated the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against
unreasonable searches -- that is, searches not based on reasonable suspicion
of "individual wrongdoing." Indianapolis had set up "drug-interdiction
checkpoints," randomly stopping cars so that police dogs could sniff for
drugs; the ACLU challenged their right to do this. The case was being
watched avidly by police departments around the nation in the hopes that
they, too, could set up such generalized warrantless searches. Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor, by no stretch a liberal alarmist, wrote the majority
opinion that struck down the Indianapolis practice: "Without drawing the
line [at such searches] ... the Fourth Amendment would do little to prevent
such intrusions from becoming a routine part of American life." The decision
was 6-3. The dissenting judges were Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and
Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas -- often cited by George W. Bush
as his favorites. If two more such appointees had been on the Court (as they
are likely to be in a W. administration), this kind of police intrusion
would have become, in O'Connor's words, "routine" in America. This ain't kid
stuff. This is your right to due process. (Knowing this, would you still
vote for Nader?)

*    Venezuela has become one of our major oil suppliers. Its president,
Hugo Chavez, has assumed nearly total power and has forged and/or
strengthened ties with Cuba, Libya, Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. As he's
done this, by some strange coincidence the Clinton Administration has
decided to send massive "drug-fighting" military aid to neighboring
Colombia, giving us a military presence on Venezuela's border. In the last
week, Colombia recalled its Venezuelan envoy because a spokeswoman for a
left-wing guerrilla group was invited to speak to the Venezuelan Congress.
Venezuela then recalled its envoy from Colombia, as President Chavez called
the Colombian government "a rancid oligarchy that does not understand
peace." Recently, Venezuela protested an American warship's intrusion into
its waters, allegedly chasing drug smugglers. All the ingredients of
conflict are in place. And W. is naming all the Gulf War's architects to his
cabinet; one of that war's chief strategists, Dick Cheney, would be W.'s
vice-president. Good morning, Vietnam.

*    India's (dubious?) peace overtures regarding the disputed province of
Kashmir on the India-Pakistan border were rejected on the day of the
Venezuelan-Colombian flap. Pakistan sides with Kashmir. China sides with
Pakistan. India and Pakistan are now, through the inattention of both the
Bush Sr. and Clinton administrations, nuclear powers, albeit without the
technology for efficient safeguards. This is the black hole of American
foreign policy. Can a severely weakened presidency deal with it?

*    Also in India: On November 20, tens of thousands of workers rioted in
New Delhi, protesting a court order to close down roughly 90,000 small
factories that employ a million people. New Delhi is one of the most nastily
polluted cities in the world, and the courts were acting against the worst
polluters. This situation highlights the most important environmental
question outside our borders, an issue the affluent Nader/Green purists all
but ignore: How do we stop pollution and planet rape in the Third World,
when many millions of subsistence-level workers side with the polluters --
especially when Third World governments are unable to enforce environmental
regulations in the face of workers willing to riot for their jobs? It is
unlikely that the industrialized West would donate or even loan the hundreds
of billions of dollars necessary to create alternatives for both the
industries and the workers; and, even if they did, in oligarchical countries
without much effective law, it is unlikely that such money would be used as
we'd wish. Can such a massive dilemma be dealt with at all, even if the West
had the will and the resources? Not with a stale-mated U.S. Congress and a
beleaguered presidency, and not with a president like George W., who is
still skeptical about the seriousness of global warming.

*    Also on November 20: The European Union, with the support of both
American-leaning England and America-wary France, agreed to establish a
military force of 60,000 that would act independently of NATO -- i.e.,
independently of any American influence or chain of command, since the U.S.
dominates NATO. "One of the most sensitive issues," The New York Times
reported, "is the relationship with the incoming administration in
Washington." The Clinton-Gore administration has been cautiously sympathetic
to this move for European independence, proceeding gingerly and relying on
commerce to be the deciding factor in the Euro-American relationship; it is
difficult to imagine a Bush-Cheney administration, with Colin Powell as
Secretary of State, as being anything but hostile to these developments. (An
aside: Madeleine Albright has been the most inept, hapless Secretary of
State in the history of the office, but the upside of her incompetence is
that at least she has had little influence and has done little harm.)
European leaders are reported to be salivating at America's political
crisis, expecting to use this window of opportunity to assert themselves
against a weakened, hobbled American government.

*    The Mideast has swirled out of control, and a lame-duck Clinton-Gore
administration has been helpless to influence the situation. On November 23,
Israel threatened to sever "field-level security links" -- the
nuts-and-bolts communications system by which all levels of both sides at
least retained access to each other. On November 24, Russian President
Vladimir V. Putin stepped into the vacuum, got both sides to agree to
maintain the links, and negotiated a call between Yasir Arafat and Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Putin has supported the European Union's military
independence of NATO, and has forged close ties with the important leaders
of Europe -- they clearly prefer him to Clinton, Gore, or W. With meager
economic and military means at his disposal, Putin has yet managed to run
diplomatic rings around America for more than a year. What does this portend
for a weakened American presidency?

*    On November 25, at the Hague, talks toward a worldwide environmental
treaty hopelessly broke down. Purists preferred no treaty to a flawed treaty
-- not taking into consideration that any treaty would at least put the
issues unavoidably on the agenda of a new American administration. (America
being, by far, the world's largest generator of greenhouse gases, this is no
small consideration.) Said a Dr. Michael Grubb, of London: "When something
like this is killed, it is killed by an alliance of those who want too much
with those who don't want anything." Environmental purists wanted a stronger
treaty, the corporations wanted no treaty, and together they killed the
possibility of any treaty. Now the American government has no legal
obligation to deal with these issues on a worldwide scale, and a new
administration can put it off indefinitely with scant international pressure
to contend with.

*    On November 24, there was an effective national strike in Argentina,
involving millions of workers; they were protesting austerity measures. In
addition: Most of the continent of Africa continues its free-fall into the
abyss; Indonesia, the world's fourth-largest country, is in near-chaos,
virtually ungovernable; and Mexico, our neighbor to the south and our
biggest trading partner, openly admits that it can no longer trust its
police force -- the rule of law in Mexico exists mainly on paper now, not in
practice. In other words: Europe, Asia, the Mideast, and Latin America are
boiling over simultaneously with enormous, perhaps overwhelming foreign
policy challenges that the United States is unequipped to deal with.
American influence is being eclipsed and/or simply ignored.

*    Lastly, and most tellingly, the NASDAQ and Dow Jones have lost hundreds
of billions of dollars in value since Election Day. This situation has
merely been exacerbated by the election crisis; its roots go far deeper. Dig
it: The Boom is over. And consider: Americans have been acrimonious,
vicious, and divided, during "good" times. Imagine how we'll behave during
the insecurities of recession.

Any one of these situations would have made for banner headlines in a normal
month; but the headlines have all been about W. and Gore, so even most
thinking Americans remain unaware of the conjunction of crises that have
reached, or are near, the boiling point. As killjoys and die-hards have been
reminding us, the new millennium mathematically begins one moment after
midnight on January 1, 2001. Even Shakespeare could not have written it more
tellingly: The collapse of the American political process in Election Year
2000 is both an event in itself and a world-class metaphor: The American
Century is over.

No matter who becomes the president-elect, America will not be able to deal
from strength with this storm of a world. We will deal, if we deal at all,
from weakness, and in desperation to prove ourselves and to hold on to what
we have. It won't work. It never has. Empires don't fall, they crumble.
During the second debate, George W. Bush said, "A great nation should be
humble." Expect to be humbled.

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