How Do You Take Your Poison?
By Chris Hedges
We will all swallow our cup of 
corporate poison. We can take it from nurse Romney, who will tell us not to 
whine and play the victim, or we can take it from nurse Obama, who 
will assure us that this hurts him even more than it hurts us, but one 
way or another the corporate hemlock will be shoved down our throats. 
The choice before us is how it will be administered. Corporate power, no matter 
who is running the ward after January 2013, is poised to carry 
out U.S. history’s most savage assault against the poor and the working 
class, not to mention the Earth’s ecosystem. And no one in power, no 
matter what the bedside manner, has any intention or ability to stop it.
If you insist on participating in the 
cash-drenched charade of a two-party democratic election at least be 
clear about what you are doing. You are, by playing your assigned role 
as the Democratic or Republican voter in this political theater, giving 
legitimacy to a corporate agenda that means your own impoverishment and 
disempowerment. All the things that stand between us and utter 
destitution—Medicaid, food stamps, Pell grants, Head Start, Social 
Security, public education, federal grants-in-aid to America’s states 
and cities, the Women, Infants, and Children nutrition program (WIC), 
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and home-delivered meals for 
seniors—are about to be shredded by the corporate state. Our corporate 
oligarchs are harvesting the nation, grabbing as much as they can, as 
fast as they can, in the inevitable descent. 
We will be assaulted this January when 
automatic spending reductions, referred to as “the fiscal cliff,” begin 
to dismantle and defund some of our most important government programs. 
Mitt Romney will not stop it. Barack Obama will not stop it.
And while Romney has been, courtesy of the 
magazine Mother Jones, exposed as a shallow hypocrite, Obama is in a 
class by himself. There is hardly a campaign promise from 2008 that 
Obama has not broken. This list includes his pledges to support the 
public option in health care, close Guantanamo, raise the minimum wage, 
regulate Wall Street, support labor unions in their struggles with 
employers, reform the Patriot Act, negotiate an equitable peace between 
the Israelis and the Palestinians, curb our imperial expansion in the 
Middle East, stop torture, protect reproductive rights, carry out a 
comprehensive immigration reform, cut the deficit by half, create 5 
million new energy jobs and halt home foreclosures. Obama, campaigning 
in South Carolina in 2007, said that as president he would fight for the right 
of collective bargaining. “I’d put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself, I’ll 
… walk on that picket line with you as president of the 
United States of America,” he said. But when he got his chance to put on those 
“comfortable pair of shoes” during labor disputes in Madison, 
Wis., and Chicago he turned his back on working men and women.
Obama, while promising to defend Social 
Security, also says he stands behind the planned cuts outlined by his 
deficit commission, headed by Morgan Stanley board member Erskine Bowles and 
former Sen. Alan Simpson, a Wyoming Republican. The Bowles-Simpson 
plan calls for cutting 0.3 percentage points from the annual 
cost-of-living adjustment in the Social Security program. The annual 
reduction would slowly accumulate. After a decade it would mean a 3 
percent cut. After two decades it would mean a 6 percent cut. The 
retirement age would be raised to 69. And those on Social Security who 
continued to work and made more than $40,000 a year would be penalized 
with further reductions. Obama’s payroll tax cuts have, at the same 
time, served to undermine the solvency of Social Security, making it an 
easier target for the finance corporations that seek to destroy the 
program and privatize the funds.But that is just the start. Cities and states 
are frantically staving 
off collapse. They cannot pay for most pension plans and are borrowing 
at higher and higher interest rates to keep themselves afloat. The 
country’s 19,000 municipalities face steadily declining or stagnant 
property tax revenues, along with spiraling costs. Annual pension 
payments for state and local plans more than doubled to 15.7 percent of 
payrolls in 2011 from 6.4 percent a decade ago, according to a study by 
the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. And local governments, 
which made some $50 billion in pension 
contributions in 2010, face unfunded pension liabilities of $3 trillion 
and unfunded health benefit liabilities of more than $1 trillion, 
according to The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government. State and local 
government spending fell at a rate of 2.1 percent in 
the second quarter of this year, according to the Commerce Department. 
It was the 11th consecutive quarterly reduction in expenditures. And in 
the past year alone local governments cut 66,000 jobs, mostly those of 
teachers and other school employees, reported The Wall Street Journal, 
which accumulated this list of grim statistics. 
The costs of our most basic needs, from 
food to education to health care, are at the same time being pushed 
upward with no control or regulation. Tuition and fees at four-year 
colleges climbed 300 percent between 1990 and 2011, fueling the college 
loan crisis that has left graduates, most of them underemployed or 
unemployed, with more than $1 trillion in debt. Health care costs over 
the same period have risen 150 percent. Food prices have climbed 10 
percent since June, according to the World Bank. There are now 46.7 
million U.S. citizens, and one in three children, who depend on food 
stamps. The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency under Obama 
has, meanwhile, expelled 1.5 million immigrants, a number that dwarfs 
deportations carried out by his Republican predecessor. And while we are being 
fleeced, the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve Bank has 
since 2008 doled out $16 trillion to national and global financial 
institutions and corporations.
Fiscal implosion is only a matter of time. 
And the corporate state is preparing. Obama’s assault on civil liberties has 
outpaced that of George W. Bush. The refusal to restore habeas 
corpus, the use of the Authorization to Use Military Force Act to 
justify the assassination of U.S. citizens, the passing of the FISA 
Amendments Act to monitor and eavesdrop on tens of millions of citizens 
without a warrant, the employment of the Espionage Act six times to 
threaten whistle-blowers inside the government with prison time, and the 
administration’s recent emergency appeal of U.S. District Judge 
Katherine Forrest’s permanent injunction of Section 1021(b)(2) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act give you a hint of the shackles the 
Democrats, as well as the Republicans, intend to place on all those who 
contemplate dissent.
But perhaps the most egregious assault will be carried out by the fossil fuel 
industry. Obama, who presided over 
the repudiation of the Kyoto Accords and has done nothing to halt the 
emission of greenhouse gases, reversed 20 years of federal policy when 
he permitted the expansion of fracking and offshore drilling. And this 
acquiescence to big oil and big coal, 
no doubt useful in bringing in campaign funds, spells disaster for the 
planet. He has authorized drilling in federally protected lands, along 
the East Coast, Alaska and four miles off Florida’s Atlantic beaches. 
Candidate Obama in 2008 stood on the Florida coastline and vowed never 
to permit drilling there. 
You get the point. Obama is not in charge. 
Romney would not be in charge. Politicians are the public face of 
corporate power. They are corporate employees. Their personal 
narratives, their promises, their rhetoric and their idiosyncrasies are 
meaningless. And that, perhaps, is why the cost of the two presidential 
campaigns is estimated to reach an obscene $2.5 billion. The corporate 
state does not produce a product that is different. It produces brands 
that are different. And brands cost a lot of money to sell. You can dismiss 
those of us who will in protest vote for a third-party 
candidate and invest our time and energy in acts of civil disobedience. 
You can pride yourself on being practical. You can swallow the false 
argument of the lesser of two evils. But ask yourself, once this 
nightmare starts kicking in, who the real sucker is.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/how_do_you_take_your_poison_20120924//

NOTE:  Lately I have been getting mail from someone who advocates boycotting 
the election entirely.  While I share the deep frustration and anger at the 
American system that my interlocutor feels, I have yet to read how boycotting 
the election will get us from Point A to Point B.  How will boycotting the 
election cause ANY kind of significant change?  The only thing that I think it 
will do is leave the election to people who bother to get out to vote, and in 
fact, I think one of the reasons that "voter apathy" is so high in this 
country, and has been for a long time, is that voters HAVE, in fact, been 
boycotting the elections, and it has gotten us NOWHERE.  

When I see people who could have voted get out in the street and take down the 
government the way the Russians tried to in 1905, or succeeded in 1917, maybe I 
will change my mind, but I really don't think that's going to happen. This is 
not like many Third World countries where a sizable fraction of the population 
is concentrated in one large urban center, Egypt, for instance.  Anybody who 
has studied urban geography understands that.  We are too dispersed, even with 
the internet, for a "revolution" to occur as the result of boycotting the 
election, so the only viable option is the creation of Third Parties.
Just my opinion,
Hajja Romi/"Blue"

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to