It is better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for
what you don't want and get it.
Eugene V. Debs
Read more at
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/e/eugene_v_debs.html#yu3dGTteRtLyt0CH.99

The pressure Debs and the Socialist Movement put on the Democrats and
Republicans 100 years ago, got us the social structure the Corporate
Parties have been trying to quietly dismantle ever since. If they hadn't
given us what we wanted no one would have voted for them again as there
was an available option to the Corporate parties, and we got what we voted
for on occasion, unlike in my lifetime.

Yes, both the Democratic and Republican parties at formation stated they
were to support 'American' Businesses, but all funding for them now, is
from International Businesses.

Scott

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

What's wrong with lesser evilism?

Those who advocate a vote for the "lesser evil" hope to defeat the
"greater evil" of the right wing--but they enable the Democrats to shift
further right themselves.

SocialistWorker.org
October 24, 2012

DOES BARACK Obama deserve your vote? That's the question people on the
left should be asking as Election Day approaches.

When you consider Obama's record after four years in office--a
multi-trillion-dollar bailout of Wall Street, the continuing "war on
terror," more civil liberties shredded, the Employee Free Choice Act
abandoned, deportations on the rise, a deepening assault on public
schools--the answer has to be no. The list of broken promises and betrayed
hopes goes on and on, outweighing anything that could be described as
progress.

But this isn't the question being asked by most liberal and even radical
voices. Instead, the question is: What will stop Romney and the
Republicans? The Nation magazine didn't mince words in its urgent
directive to "Re-elect the president":

A victory for Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan in November would validate the
reactionary extremists who have captured the Republican Party...It would
strike a devastating blow to progressive values and movements, locking us
in rear-guard actions on a range of issues--from the rights of women,
minorities, immigrants and LGBT people to the preservation of social
insurance programs and a progressive tax structure.

Millions of people are sickened and scared by the thought of a Romney/Ryan
victory in November. It doesn't take many minutes of listening to Romney
or Ryan--and especially their fellow Republicans, who are even less
careful with their reactionary ranting--to understand these fears.

But behind the calls to vote for the "lesser evil" in order to stop the
"greater evil" are some beliefs that have been proven wrong by history.

One of them is the idea that voting for the Democrat does stop the
"greater evil." Yet anyone who supported Obama in 2008 believing that a
former law professor would at least end the Bush administration's assault
on the Constitution will have a hard time explaining what's "lesser" about
the evils the White House continues to perpetrate in the name of "homeland
security."

Another is the notion that progressives have an easier time winning their
goals with a Democrat in the White House. Actually, four years of Obama
has proven the opposite--working people haven't seen anything close to the
change they expected with his victory four years ago.

Generally speaking, Obama and the Democrats are the lesser evil in this
election--on most issues, though not all. But leaving it there lets the
Democrats off the hook. If the question is limited to picking which evil
is lesser, then the Democrats can take their supporters to the left for
granted--and shift more and more to the right in search of support from
the political center or worse.

As the late historian Howard Zinn famously said, what matters most isn't
who is sitting in the White House, but who is sitting in. If working
people and social movements aren't mobilized and struggling from below,
then mainstream politics will be shaped by the pressure from above--by the
demands and priorities of the ruling class.

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

THERE ARE two main thrusts to the lesser-evilism argument as it appears in
places like the Nation. One is an exhortation to focus on the Democrats'
"accomplishments," no matter how rare, modest or token they may be. The
second is a call to "think of our movements" and how much harder it would
be to achieve success with a Republican in the White House.

So what about those "accomplishments"? Obama has met some longstanding
demands on certain issues--signing the Lily Ledbetter Act on pay equity
for women, for example; dismantling the Pentagon's anti-gay "don't ask,
don't tell" policy; issuing an executive order to temporarily implement
the proposed DREAM Act providing a path to legal status for some
undocumented immigrant youth.

These are positive steps. But it isn't being dismissive of them to make a
few critical points.

First of all, Obama is running for reelection on the basis of some issues
where he has done nothing at all--where he has, in fact, advanced the
assault on working people.

Thus, the Nation says a Romney victory would lock the left into
"rear-guard actions" on issues like "the preservation of social insurance
programs"--that is, the Social Security retirement program and Medicare
health insurance for the elderly.

Only Obama explicitly offered historic cutbacks in the Social Security and
Medicare programs during the 2011 debt ceiling debate. His position on
Social Security is so close to the "greater-evil" Republican agenda that
he often doesn't claim a difference. In the first presidential debate, for
example, when asked about Social Security, Obama said, "You know, I
suspect that on Social Security, we've got a somewhat similar position."

As for the issues where Obama can claim "accomplishments," there are other
problems. For one thing, Obama moved achingly slowly on LGBT rights. By
the time "don't ask, don't tell" was finally overturned, an overwhelming
majority of the public as a whole, including Republicans, opposed it.

Plus, the "accomplishments" should be judged against Obama's lack of
action and outright betrayals on related issues. The Nation credits young
immigrant activists fighting for the DREAM Act with "persuading the White
House that a political directive halting deportations of young,
undocumented immigrants was both good policy and good politics."

But the same administration carried out more deportations of undocumented
immigrants than its Republican predecessors--meaning the parents of those
same DREAM activists have faced a more dangerous and fear-filled life
under Obama.

What's more, it should be remembered that Obama had to be pushed every
step of the way to follow through on any promises at all. Obama's
"evolution" to support for marriage equality is a prime example of how
protest and activism--galvanized by the passage of Proposition 8 in
California four years ago--put pressure on a Democrat who showed no signs
of moving when he took office.

That's why his liberal supporters' focus on "what Obama has accomplished"
gives credit where it isn't due.

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

MANY LIBERALS and progressives--including the Nation's editorial
writers--acknowledge that Obama has been a disappointment on a number of
questions. But they say we should still vote for him because our movements
will be in a better position to accomplish our goals with Democrats in
control of the White House and Congress.

Once again, this requires a selective memory about Obama's record. On some
issues, Obama has delivered nothing at all. Like the Employee Free Choice
Act that would have made it easier for workers to join unions--it was
abandoned by the Democrats before it even came to a vote.

Obama and the Democrats took office in 2009 with control of the White
House and the biggest majorities in both houses of Congress in a
generation--and they did nothing at all on the most important legislative
priority for the labor movement. So why is that our movements are better
off with a Democrat in the White House?

The problem is that many liberal and progressive voices have stayed silent
in the face of Democratic outrages.

If George W. Bush had carried out the extra-judicial assassination of a
U.S. citizen (like Anwar al-Awlaki, killed in a drone aircraft strike
ordered by Obama) or signed legislation allowing indefinite detention
without trial of U.S. citizens (like the National Defense Authorization
Act), he would have been met with bitter protest. But the liberal
establishment stayed silent as Obama put civil liberties through the
shredder.

This is a classic pattern for liberalism when Democrats are in the White
House. In a 2003 article for SocialistWorker.org, Elizabeth Schulte
documented the case of Bill Clinton:

After 12 years of Ronald Reagan and George Bush Sr., the expectations of
activists were raised by the prospects of having a Democrat in office.
Clinton promised health care reform, protection of women's right to
abortion and more rights for gays and lesbians.

But rather than create a better climate for activists concerned about
these issues, under the Clinton administration, activism was all but
suspended--always with the excuse that the Democrat in the White House
needed more time to carry out his promises...

Clinton took the opportunity to shift further to the right. He let the
Freedom of Choice Act die on the vine. And he accepted the rotten "don't
ask, don't tell" compromise for gays in the military and signed off on the
bigoted Defense of Marriage Act. Clinton knew that he could move to the
right because he wouldn't lose support on his left...

The victory of welfare "reform" is the best example of this process.
Clinton's punitive 1996 welfare law was far worse than anything his
Republican predecessors had tried--forcing millions of recipients into
dead-end, low-wage jobs in the interest of poor people taking "personal
responsibility" for their lives.

The Clinton administration, not Republicans, managed to shred the idea
that the U.S. government was responsible for the welfare of the poor. And
no liberal organizations lifted a finger. "If Ronald Reagan was doing
this, they'd be dragging poor kids up to the White House in wheelchairs to
oppose this," said an unnamed Clinton aide in 1994.

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

WHAT THE Nation and others advocating a vote for the lesser evil never
consider is how their stance--undertaken in the hopes of defeating the
right wing--enables the Democrats' shift further and further toward the
right, because party leaders know they can take progressive voices for
granted.

Alternative views aren't tolerated by the "party of the people." On the
contrary, the Democrats typically save their nastiest venom not for
Republicans, but for anyone who criticizes them from the left.

The one-time chief enforcer of the Obama White House, Rahm Emanuel, now
the iron-fisted mayor of Chicago, seems to especially relish denouncing
progressives who criticize the Democrats. His latest public pronouncement
is that Obama was always a "war president"--and so anyone who believed he
would end U.S. wars, close Guantánamo and protect civil liberties has
only themselves to blame for their disillusionment.

Most base supporters of the Democratic Party despise Emanuel--or would
despise him if they knew who he is. But Rahm's calculated insults reveal
something about the perverse logic of "lesser evilism" that is accepted
much more widely. Since the candidates of the Republicans and Democrats
are deemed the only acceptable choices, anyone who stands outside the
incredibly narrow spectrum of views is seen as the greater threat.

We need to learn the lesson that the Democrats aren't on our side--that in
the U.S. electoral system, both Democrats and Republicans are committed to
the interests of big business.

The problem isn't that the Democrats are too timid to fight. As left-wing
writer Doug Henwood pointed out in a response to some of the Nation's
election commentary:

"Another recurrent feature of the ["lesser evilism"] genre: a lament over
the Democrats' lack of spine, which is often treated as a curable
condition. But in fact, the invertebrate status is a symptom of the
party's fundamental contradiction: it's a party of business that has to
pretend for electoral reasons that it's not. Related to that, it's getting
harder to say what the party's core beliefs are. Republicans have a
coherent philosophy--loopy and often terrifying, yes, but coherent--which
they use to fire up an impassioned base. The Democrats can't risk getting
their base too excited, lest it scare their funders."

The result, as Guardian columnist Glenn Greenwald pointed out, is that
mainstream politics is restricted to incredibly narrow limits:

" Most of what matters in American political life is nowhere to be found
in its national election debates...[B]y emphasizing the few issues on
which there is real disagreement between the parties, the election process
ends up sustaining the appearance that there is far more difference
between the two parties, and far more choice for citizens, than is really
offered by America's political system."

There are real differences between Obama and Romney. But those who want to
see social change have to see that the two candidates and their parties
agree about much more than they disagree about.

The politics of "lesser evilism" preached by the liberal establishment
accepts the shift of the entire political debate to the right, because
supporting the lesser evil requires muting the criticisms of activists and
the left--ultimately, tailoring our movements and struggles to the needs
of the Democrats, rather than demanding that the Democrats live up to the
promises they make to win votes, or face the consequences.

As the U.S. socialist Hal Draper wrote, in an article about the 1964
presidential election, "[It] is the question which is a disaster, not the
answer. In setups where the choice is between one capitalist politician
and another, the defeat comes in accepting the limitation to this choice."


http://socialistworker.org/2012/10/24/whats-wrong-with-lesser-evilism




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

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