To the Evil Idiot Democrat Voters: 

 

Did anyone notice that today Obama and the Democrats are ramping up the war
in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan with the help of most of the U.S. Senate,
including most of the Republican senators? So we’re spending yet another
$106 billion dollars during a depression to bomb Middle Eastern villages and
kill more innocent people, destroy more infrastructure, pollute more
ecology, pay more billions on no-bid contracts to big war-machine
corporations, and fund more economic exploitation through the International
Monetary Fund?? And Obama, Pelosi, Reid and the Democrats were supposed to
be the “compassionate” “progressive” “social welfare” “liberals” who were
going to end the war and restore honesty, transparency and ethics to
Washington??? Hey, everyone who voted for Obama and the Democrats, I hope
you’re proud of yourselves for getting totally duped and fooled by these
Wall Street-bankrolled Democrat liars. You’re frikkin’ idiots to have fallen
for this yet one more time. The Democrats are even more disgusting and
reprehensible than the Republicans, which is easy. The two major parties,
the Democrats, and of course, the Republicans also, are simply PURE EVIL.
There’s no other conclusion one can reach. Pure sociopathy, blood thirst,
and psychotic greed. I made a point *not* to vote and thus legitimize and
endorse this evil government and this farce of an electoral system, and I
feel great that I didn’t. --NL

 

 

Shame: The ‘Antiwar’ Democrats Who Sold Out

by Jeremy Scahill, June 18, 2009 

 

http://original.antiwar.com/scahill/2009/06/17/shame-the-antiwar-democrats-w
ho-sold-out/  

 

In a vote that should go down in recent histories as a day of shame for the
Democrats, on Tuesday the House voted to approve another $106 billion
dollars for the bloody wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (and increasingly
Pakistan). To put a fine point on the interconnection of the iron fist of
U.S. militarism and the hidden hand of free market neoliberal economics, the
bill <http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-h2346/show>  included a massive
initiative to give the International Monetary Fund billions more in U.S.
taxpayer funds.

What once Democrats could argue was "Bush’s war," they now officially own.
In fact, only five Republicans voted for the supplemental (though
overwhelmingly not on the issue of the war funding). Ron Paul, who made
clear he was voting against the war, was a notable exception.

This vote has revealed a sobering statistic for the anti-war movement in
this country and brought to the surface a broader issue that should give
die-hard partisan Democrats who purport to be anti-war reason for serious
pause about the actual state of their party. Only 30 Democrats voted against
the war funding when it mattered. And these 30 did so in the face of
significant threats to their political future from the White House and House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. That means that only 30 out of 256 Democrats are
willing to stand up to the war and the current president presiding over it.
Their names are listed below; I would encourage people to call them and
thank them for standing up and voting no when it counted.

Two other Democrats, not expected to vote against the war funding, joined
the anti-war Democrats. Brad Sherman and Pete Stark brought the total number
of Democratic votes against the supplemental to 32.

Now, there are many Democrats who consistently vote for war funding,
including Nancy Pelosi, but not many of them have such little shame that
they dare characterize themselves as anti-war. Remember, 221 voted Tuesday
in favor of the war funding. But for those who campaign as anti-war and
signed pledges not to continue funding war and then vote for billions more
for wars they claim to oppose, Tuesday should be remembered as a day of
shame and cowardice. Here are the Democrats who voted against war funding
when it didn’t count and yes (on Tuesday) when it did–and when refusing to
do so might have affected them personally: Yvette Clarke, Steve Cohen, Jim
Cooper, Jerry Costello, Barney Frank, Luis Gutierrez, Jay Inslee, Steve
Kagen, Edward Markey, Doris Matsui, Jim McDermott, George Miller, Grace
Napolitano, Richard Neal (MA), James Oberstar, Jan Schakowsky, Mike
Thompson, Edolphus Towns, Nydia Velázquez, and Anthony Weiner. These
legislators should be called and asked why they voted for war funding they
claimed to oppose last month.

Tuesday’s vote came after an intense campaign by progressive bloggers
<http://campaignsilo.firedoglake.com/> , activists
<http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/>  and anti-war Congressmembers Dennis
Kucinich, Lynn Woolsey and Jim McGovern to get the 39 Democrats needed to
block war funding to vote against it. This was made possible due to a
roller-coaster-like series of events in the weeks and days preceding the
vote.

The White House and the Democratic Congressional Leadership played a very
dirty game in their effort to ram through the funding. In the crosshairs of
the big guns at the White House and on Capitol Hill were anti-war
legislators (particularly freshmen), and the movement to hold those
responsible for torture accountable.

In funding the wars post-Bush, the Obama White House has been able to rely
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123923540395603311.html>  on strong GOP
support to marginalize the anti-war Democrats who pledged back in 2007 to
vote against continued funding (as 51 Democrats did in May when the
supplemental was first voted on). But the White House ran into trouble on
this bill because of Republican opposition to some of the provisions added
to the bill (primarily the IMF funding) and one removed (the
Graham-Lieberman amendment that would have blocked the release of prisoner
abuse photos). This created a situation where the White House and pro-war
Democrats actually need a fair number of anti-war Democrats (whose votes
seldom matter this much) to switch sides and vote with them. That is why
this battle was so important for the anti-war movement.

Many Democrats (who may not have necessarily been against the supplemental)
were up in arms when the Graham-Lieberman provision (which the White House
"actively
<http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/06/01/photos/index.html> "
supported) was on the table. Facing warnings that it could derail the
funding package, the White House stepped in, deploying
<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/jun2009/warf-j15.shtml>  Rahm Emanuel to
the Hill to convince legislators to drop the amendment, while at the same
time pledging that Obama would use his authority to continue to fight the
release of more photos:

Emanuel "rushed" to Capitol Hill and prevailed upon Senate Democrats to
remove the torture photo measure in exchange for an explicit White House
promise that it would use all means at its disposal to block the photos’
release. Obama also issued a letter to Congress assuring it he would support
separate legislation to suppress the photos, if necessary, and imploring it
to speed passage of the war-spending bill. The rider would "unnecessarily
complicate the essential objective of supporting the troops," Obama wrote.

In other words, Obama took a position that amounted to providing political
cover to Democrats to support the war funding, while pledging to implement,
through other means, the very policy they supposedly found objectionable.

>From the jump, the White House and Democratic Leadership had the gloves off
in the fight. Consider this
<http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=cqmidday-000003142525>  report
from last week:

Rep. Lynn Woolsey of California, a leader of the antiwar Democrats, said the
White House is threatening to withdraw support from freshmen who oppose the
bill, saying "you’ll never hear from us again."

She said the House leadership also is targeting the freshmen.

"It’s really hard for the freshmen," she said. "Nancy’s pretty powerful."

Jane Hamsher, meanwhile, reported
<http://campaignsilo.firedoglake.com/2009/06/15/updated-supplemental-whip-co
unt-we-have-36-of-the-39-votes-we-need/>  on Monday that it appeared Emanuel
was "cutting deals with Republicans to go easy on them in the 2010 elections
in exchange for votes." In the end, the White House got five Republicans to
vote for the funding, including New York Republican John McHugh, the man
President Obama nominated two weeks ago to be Army secretary. A "senior
Republican source" according
<http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/16/house-republicans-pledge-solid-o
pposition-war-spending/>  to FOX News "suggested McHugh could be creating a
conflict of interest by voting on military-related legislation while his
Army secretary nomination is pending before the Senate."

What repelled the Republicans from a vote to fund the war was hardly a
sudden conversion to pacifism (in fact, their position was hypocritical
<http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0609/23817.html> ). It was largely
when the White House and Congressional Democratic leadership added a
provision to the bill that will extend up to $100 billion in credits to the
International Monetary Fund. This sent many Republicans to the microphones
to denounce the funding as a "global bailout" and will undoubtedly be used
as a campaign issue in 2010 to attack the Democrats who voted for the
spending bill. For its part, the Democratic leadership, in trying to win
Democratic support, portrayed the IMF funding as a progressive
<http://www.mcclatchydc.com/washington/story/69677.html>  policy:

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is trying to paint the IMF provision
as a "very important national security initiative." The IMF, she said, "can
be a force for alleviating the fury of despair among people, poor people
throughout the world."

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s office put out a position paper
<http://campaignsilo.firedoglake.com/2009/06/16/hoyer-whipping-republicans-5
0-republicans-to-vote-yes/>  that declared the IMF funding "is key to making
us more secure," adding that the money will ensure that the "IMF has the
ability to play its central role in resolving and preventing the spread of
international economic and financial crises." The paper also provided a
litany of comments from prominent Republicans praising the IMF, including
from the Bretton Woods Committee (Henry Kissinger, Condoleezza Rice, Henry
Paulson, Robert Rubin, James A. Baker, Nicholas F. Brady, Colin Powell, Paul
A. Volcker, Paul H. O’Neill, etc.). Also, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush,
Newt Gingrich and, of course, George W. Bush.

If there was a real opposition party in Congress, all of this would have
provided yet more reasons to vote against the bill.

It is a pathetic symbol of just how bankrupt the Congressional Democratic
leadership is when it comes to U.S. foreign policy that Pelosi, Hoyer et al
are trying to use funding for the IMF to convince other Democrats to support
war funding. The IMF has been a destabilizing force in many countries across
the globe through its austerity measures and structural adjustment schemes.
Remember, it was the policies of the IMF and its cohorts at the World Bank
and World Trade Organizations that sparked global uprisings in the 1990s.

To support the IMF funding scam, the Center for American Progress, which has
passionately
<http://rebelreports.com/post/92716430/obamas-neoliberals-selling-his-afghan
-war-one-report>  supported Obama’s escalation of the war in Afghanistan,
released a position paper
<http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/06/imf_bailout.html>  this week
called, "Bailing Out the Bailer-Outer: Five Reasons Congress Should Agree to
Fund the IMF."

Thankfully, at least a handful of Democrats seemed to understand the
atrocious role the IMF has played and tried (unsuccessfully) to impose rules
<http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press/ca35_waters/imfletter.html>  on the
funding that would have confronted the IMF’s austerity measures by requiring
that "the funds allocated by Congress for global stimulus are used for
stimulatory, and not contractionary, purposes."

In urging their colleagues to oppose the war funding and the IMF funding,
Kucinich and California’s Bob Filner sent a Dear Colleague letter, which
stated: "The IMF has a long history of placing economic conditions on
countries receiving loans that have actually damaged, rather than
stimulated, those economies, and its policies have not changed enough to
warrant support." They charged that the IMF funding "would be used to bail
out private European banks with U.S. taxpayer money." In addition to the
military and IMF funding, the bill also provides
<http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/43635>  $10.4 billion for the State
Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and
$7.7 billion for "Pandemic Flu Response."

Under the leadership of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, the
Democratic-controlled Congress has been a house of war. Unfortunately, it is
not a house where the war is one of noble Democrats fighting for peace,
freedom and democracy against the evil, belligerent Republicans as they
advocate and implement policies of preemptive war, torture and the violation
of civil liberties. Instead, it is a house void of substantive opposition to
the ever-expanding war begun under Bush and escalating under Obama. 

Tuesday’s vote was another one of those moments in Congress where heroes are
made, like the day when Sen. Russ Feingold stood alone as the sole Senator
to vote against the USA Patriot Act. To paraphrase Bush, it was one of those
days when we truly discover who is for war and who is against it. 

Below are the Democrats who stood against Obama’s expanding war the day
their votes mattered (See where your Representative stood here
<http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2009/roll348.xml> ):

Tammy Baldwin, Michael Capuano, John Conyers, Lloyd Doggett, Donna Edwards,
Keith Ellison, Sam Farr, Bob Filner, Alan Grayson, Raul Grijalva, Michael
Honda, Marcy Kaptur, Dennis Kucinich, Barbara Lee, Zoe Lofgren, Eric Massa,
Jim McGovern, Michael Michaud, Donald Payne, Chellie Pingree, Jared Polis,
Jose Serrano, Carol Shea-Porter, Jackie Speier, John Tierney, Nikki Tsongas,
Maxine Waters, Diane Watson, Peter Welch, and Lynn Woolsey.

 

Reprinted with permission from AlterNet <http://www.alternet.org> .

 



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