On 7/20/2011 9:46 AM, Jim Devine wrote:
> Michael Perelman wrote:
>> A few months ago, I posted my impression that the president whom Obama most 
>> followed was Cleveland.
>
> Obama doesn't seem as bad as Cleveland. But the comparison is hard to
> make because they operate(d) in different historical contexts.

I agree with Michael. Obama is every bit as bad, probably worse. 
Here's a useful reminder:


http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/if_mccain_had_won_20110715/

If McCain Had Won
By Fred Branfman

Democrats were united on one issue in the 2008 presidential 
election: the absolute disaster that a John McCain victory would 
have produced. And they were right. McCain as president would 
clearly have produced a long string of catastrophes: He would 
probably have approved a failed troop surge in Afghanistan, 
engaged in worldwide extrajudicial assassination, destabilized 
nuclear-armed Pakistan, failed to bring Israel’s Benjamin 
Netanyahu to the negotiating table, expanded prosecution of 
whistle-blowers, sought to expand executive branch power, failed 
to close Guantanamo, failed to act on climate change, pushed both 
nuclear energy and opened new areas to domestic oil drilling, 
failed to reform the financial sector enough to prevent another 
financial catastrophe, supported an extension of the Bush tax cuts 
for the rich, presided over a growing divide between rich and 
poor, and failed to lower the jobless rate.

Nothing reveals the true state of American politics today more, 
however, than the fact that Democratic President Barack Obama has 
undertaken all of these actions and, even more significantly, left 
the Democratic Party far weaker than it would have been had McCain 
been elected. Few issues are more important than seeing behind the 
screen of a myth-making mass media, and understanding what this 
demonstrates about how power in America really works—and what 
needs to be done to change it.

First and foremost, McCain would have undoubtedly selected as 
treasury secretary an individual nominated by Wall Street—which 
has a stranglehold on the economy due to its enjoying 30 to 40 
percent of all corporate profits. If he didn’t select Tim 
Geithner, a reliable servant of financial interests whose 
nomination might have allowed McCain to trumpet his “maverick” 
credentials, whoever he did select would clearly have also moved 
to bail out the financial institutions and allow them to water 
down needed financial reforms.

Ditto for the head of his National Economic Council. Although 
appointing Larry Summers might have been a bit of a stretch, 
despite his yeoman work in destroying financial regulation—thus 
enriching his old boss Robert Rubin and helping cause the Crash of 
2008—McCain could easily have found a Jack Kemp-like Republican 
“supply-sider” who would have duplicated Summers’ signal 
achievement of expanding the deficit to the highest level since 
1950 (though perhaps with a slightly higher percentage of tax cuts 
than the Obama stimulus). The economy would have continued to 
sputter along, with growth rates and joblessness levels little 
different from today’s, and possibly even worse.

But McCain’s election would have produced a major political 
difference: It would have increased Democratic clout in the House 
and Senate. First off, there would have been no tea party, no 
“don’t raise the debt limit unless we gut the poor,” no “death 
panel” myth, no “Obama Youth” nonsense. Although there would have 
been plenty of criticism from the likes of Rush Limbaugh, the fact 
would have remained that McCain, a Republican, Caucasian war hero 
would never have excited the tea party animus as did the 
“Secret-Muslim Kenyan-Born Big-Government Fascist White-Hating 
Antichrist” Obama. Glenn Beck would have remained a crazed 
nonentity and been dropped far sooner by Fox News than he was. And 
Vice President Sarah Palin, despised by both McCain and his tough 
White House staff, would have been deprived of any real power and 
likely tightly muzzled against criticizing McCain’s relatively 
centrist (compared to her positions) policies.

Voters would almost certainly have increased Democratic control of 
the House and Senate in 2010, since the Republicans would have 
been seen as responsible for the weak U.S. economy. Democrats 
might even have achieved the long-desired 60 percent majority 
needed to kill the filibuster in one or both houses.

Democratic control of the House and Senate fostered by disastrous 
Republican policies would have severely limited McCain’s ability 
(as occurred with George W. Bush) to weaken Social Security, 
Medicare, Medicaid, unemployment insurance and other programs that 
aid those most in need. (Yes, domestic spending might have been 
cut less if McCain had won.)

And had McCain proposed “health insurance reform,” because health 
insurers saw a golden opportunity to increase their customer base 
and profits while retaining their control, the Democrats would at 
least have passed a “public option” as their price for support. 
And possible Health and Human Services Secretary Newt 
Gingrich—placed in that position in a clever move to keep him away 
from economic or foreign policy—might have even accelerated needed 
improvements in computerizing patient records and other high-tech 
measures needed to cut health care costs, actions that he touted 
in his book on the subject.

In foreign and military policy, McCain would surely have approved 
Gen. David Petraeus’ “Afghanistan surge,” possibly increasing the 
number of U.S. troops there by 40,000 instead of 33,500. But Gen. 
Stanley McChrystal would probably have remained at the helm in 
Afghanistan, since he and his aides would never have disparaged 
McCain to Rolling Stone. McChrystal might have continued a 
“counterinsurgency” strategy, observing relatively strict rules of 
engagement, unlike his successor, Petraeus, who tore up those 
rules and has instead unleashed a brutal cycle of “counterterror” 
violence in southern Afghanistan. (Yes, far fewer Afghan civilians 
might have died had McCain won.)

McCain, like Obama, would probably have destabilized nuclear-armed 
Pakistan and strengthened militant forces there by expanding drone 
strikes and pushing the Pakistani military to launch disastrous 
offensives into tribal areas. And he would have given as much 
support as has Obama to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s 
opposition to a peace deal because he believes that present 
policies of strangling Gaza, annexing East Jerusalem, expanding 
West Bank settlements and walling off Palestinians are succeeding. 
(It is possible, however, that a McCain secretary of state might 
not have incited violence against unarmed American citizens—as did 
Hillary Clinton when she stated that Israelis, who killed nine 
unarmed members of the 2010 Gaza flotilla, “have the right to 
defend themselves” against letter-carrying 2011 Gaza flotilla 
members.)

While McCain would have wanted to keep 100,000 U.S. troops in 
Afghanistan until 2014, he might have been forced to reduce their 
numbers as much as has Obama. For McCain would have faced a 
strengthened and emboldened Democratic Congress, which might have 
seen electoral gold in responding to polls indicating the public 
had turned against the Afghanistan War—as well as a far stronger 
peace movement united against Republicans instead of divided as it 
now is between the desires for peace and seeing an Obama win in 2012.

Most significantly, if McCain had won, not only would Democrats be 
looking at a Democratic landslide in the 2012 presidential race, 
but the newly elected Democratic president in 2013 might enjoy 
both a 60 percent or higher majority in both houses and a clear 
public understanding that it was Republican policies that had sunk 
the economy. He or she might thus be far better positioned to 
enact substantive reforms than was Obama in 2008, or will Obama 
even if he is re-elected in 2012.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt took office in March 1933 after a 
42-month Depression blamed entirely on the Republicans. Although 
he had campaigned as a moderate, objective conditions both 
convinced him of the need for fundamental change—creating a safety 
net including Social Security, strict financial regulation, 
programs to create jobs, etc.—and gave him the congressional 
pluralities he needed to achieve them. A Democratic president 
taking office in 2013 after 12 years of disastrous Republican 
economic misrule might well have been likewise pushed and enabled 
by objective events to create substantive change.

Furious debate rages among Obama’s Democratic critics today on why 
he has largely governed on the big issues as John McCain would 
have done. Some believe he retains his principles but has been 
forced to compromise by political realities. Others are convinced 
he was a manipulative politico who lacked any real convictions in 
the first place.

But there is a far more likely—and disturbing—possibility. Based 
on those who knew him and his books, there is little reason to 
doubt that the pre-presidential Obama was a college professor-type 
who shared the belief system of his liberalish set: that ending 
climate change and reducing nuclear weapons were worthy goals, 
that it was important to “reset” U.S. policy toward the Muslim 
world, that torture and assassination were bad things, that 
Canadian-style single-payer health insurance made sense, that 
whistle-blowing and freedom of the press should be protected, 
Congress should have a say in whether the executive puts the 
nation into war, and that government should support community 
development and empowering poor communities.

Upon taking office, however, Obama—whatever his belief system at 
that point—found that he was unable to accomplish these goals for 
one basic reason: The president of the United States is far less 
powerful than media myth portrays. Domestic power really is in the 
hands of economic elites and their lobbyists, and foreign policy 
really is controlled by U.S. executive branch national security 
managers and a “military-industrial complex.” If a president 
supports their interests, as did Bush in invading Iraq, he or she 
can do a lot of damage. But, absent a crisis, a president who 
opposes these elites—as Obama discovered when he tried in the fall 
of 2009 to get the military to offer him an alternative to an 
Afghanistan troop surge—is relatively powerless.

Whether a Ronald Reagan expanding government and running large 
deficits in the 1980s despite his stated belief that government 
was the problem, or a Bill Clinton imposing a neoliberal regime 
impoverishing hundreds of millions in the Third World in the 1990s 
despite his rhetorical support for helping the poor, anyone who 
becomes president has little choice but to serve the institutional 
interests of a profoundly amoral and violent executive branch and 
the corporations behind them.

The U.S. executive branch functions to promote its version of U.S. 
economic and geopolitical interests abroad—including engaging in 
massive violence which has killed, wounded or made homeless more 
than 21 million people in Indochina and Iraq combined. And it 
functions at home to maximize the interests of the corporations 
and individuals who fund political campaigns—today supported by a 
U.S. Supreme Court whose politicized decision to expand 
corporations’ control over elections has made a mockery of the 
very notion of “checks and balances.” The executive branch’s power 
extends to the mass media, most of whose journalists are dependent 
on executive information leaks and paychecks from increasingly 
concentrated media corporations. They thus serve executive power 
far more than they challenge it.

No one more demonstrates what happens to a human being who joins 
the executive branch than Hillary Clinton, a former peace movement 
supporter whose 1969 Wellesley commencement address stated that 
“our prevailing, acquisitive, and competitive corporate life is 
not the way of life for us. We’re searching for more immediate, 
ecstatic and penetrating modes of living”; praised “a lot of the 
New Left [that] harkens back to a lot of the old virtues”; and 
decried “the hollow men of anger and bitterness, the bountiful 
ladies of righteous degradation, all must be left to a bygone 
age.” Clinton the individual served on the board of the Children’s 
Defense Fund, promoted helping the poor at home and Third World 
women abroad and at one point was even often compared to Eleanor 
Roosevelt.

Although her transformation began once she decided to try to 
become president, it became most visible after she joined the 
executive branch as secretary of state. The former peace advocate 
has now become a major advocate for war-making, a scourge of 
whistle-blowers and a facilitator of Israeli violence.

But while rich and powerful elites have always ruled in America, 
their power has periodically been successfully challenged at times 
of national crisis: the Civil War, the Progressive era, the 
Depression. America is clearly headed for such a moment in the 
coming decade, as its economy continues to decline due to a 
parasitic Wall Street, mounting debt, strong economic competitors, 
overspending on the military, waste in the private health care 
sector and elites declaring class war against a majority of Americans.

Naomi Klein has written penetratingly of “Disaster Capitalism,” 
which occurs when financial and corporate elites benefit from the 
economic crises they cause. But the reverse has also often proved 
true: a kind of “Disaster Progressivism” often occurs when 
self-interested elites cause so much suffering that policies 
favoring democracy and the majority become possible.

The United States will clearly face such a crisis in the coming 
decade. It is understandable that many Americans will want to 
focus on re-electing Obama in 2012. Although Democrats and the 
country would have been better off if McCain had won in 2008, this 
is not necessarily true if a Republican wins in 2012—especially if 
the GOP nominates Sarah Palin or Michele Bachmann.

But however important the 2012 election, far more energy needs to 
be devoted to building mass organizations that challenge elite 
power and develop the kinds of policies—including massive 
investment in a “clean energy economic revolution,” a carbon tax 
and other tough measures to stave off climate change, regulating 
and breaking up the financial sector, cost-effective entitlements 
like single-payer health insurance, and public financing of 
primary and general elections—which alone can save America and its 
democracy in the painful decade to come.

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