Glenn Greenwald wrote:

> As I wrote back in April when progressive pundits in D.C. were so
> deeply baffled by Obama's supposed "tactical mistake" in not
> insisting on a clean debt ceiling increase, Obama's so-called "bad
> negotiating" or "weakness" is actually "shrewd negotiation"
> because he's getting what he actually wants (which, shockingly, is
> not always the same as what he publicly says he wants).

Arguing, one way or another, about Obama's actual motivations misses
the point, I think.  Regardless of Obama's intentions, his presidency
is already a tragic episode in U.S. and world history.

All analogies are faulty, but the best I can think of right now is
that of Russia's provisional government in March 1917, after the czar
was bumped out of power, leaving a big mess for Kerensky's government
to deal with.  With Russia being bled by the war, landless peasants
aggravated by debts, and the specter of famine in cities and country,
Russia needed the urgent and forceful use of power to extricate itself
from the situation.  Kerensky, a pathetic figure without the fortitude
to take any decisive action, always tiptoeing around the powers that
be, squandered his chance in petty political maneuvering, allowing the
monarchists to regroup (and Kornilov, their leader, to conspire
overtly against the government and the emerging Soviet threat).
Kerensky was only bold and aggressive against those on his left flank.
 Effective political paralysis in the face of catastrophic social
inertia of the kind (paralysis not by reference to the intentions of
leaders, but by reference to actual social needs) always leads to
greater suffering and upheaval than it vainly tries to avoid.

Prominent Bolshevik leaders (leave alone the rest of the left) were
lulled by the impasse.  Perhaps the news from the war front will
improve.  Perhaps we'll get lucky and the monarchists will accept
their fate and abandon their plots.  Lenin, a man not so different
from the rest of us, saw the writing on the wall and escaped to
Finland -- just to barely avoid capture and an almost certain
assassination.  Exiled in Finland, Lenin prepared his return,
campaigning to persuade his Bolshevik comrades -- incapable of
visualizing themselves in power -- to take decisive action and preempt
the "catastrophe that threatens us."

We are not in Lenin's position.  The organizations of the U.S. left
are in no way tested and ready like the Bolshevik party was in the
fall of 1917.  (And please note that this is mutatis mutandis!)  But,
in many ways, we are in a better position than the Bolsheviks were
back then, and we certainly can do much more than we think -- and do
more we must.   Although we are not facing tragedy on the scale
afflicting Russia at the time, economic dislocation, unemployment,
poverty, and mass suffering are at intolerable levels and on the rise.
 We are involved in three bloody wars, none of which is getting
better.

I can imagine some writers arguing heatedly at the time that Kerensky
was not a pathetic figure, that he was decisive and clear-minded,
because he was advancing his own agenda, even if at the expense of the
mass of Russia's working people.  As if that mattered.  Who the hell
cared what Kerensky truly wanted in his heart of hearts?  The fact of
the matter was that Kerensky's actions did not measure up to what
Russia, as a society avoiding disintegration in the summer and fall of
1917, truly needed -- peace, bread, and land.  More importantly, it
was precisely the chasm between the social needs as felt by the
Russian people and the pitiful inaction of the Kerensky government, a
chasm that exhausted their tolerance and forced them to take matters
in their own hands, that propelled the October insurrection.

I am absolutely convinced that voting for Obama, and calling people to
vote for Obama, was the right thing to do in 2008.  It wasn't -- I
argued then -- about Obama personally, but about disenfranchised
sectors of the working people --  Blacks and Hispanics, the youth, in
the U.S. and abroad -- who, as anybody with eyes could see, felt the
fervent need to have a Black man in the White House, and got deeply
vested in the campaign.  It wasn't about a self-infatuated individual
making it big time, but about groups of people crushed by social order
who needed to expand the scope of what they deemed possible.  Even
Fidel Castro, from a distance, could tell what Obama represented.  The
left can suck its own thumb, basking at the purity of its radical
goals, or view itself as a political instrument of concrete working
people in motion.  It is not the business of the left to foster the
illusions and prejudices of working people.  On the contrary, the left
is in the business of helping people dispel those illusions and
overcome those prejudices.  But *how to do it* is of the essence.
Mechanically, there's little difference between rape and consensual
romantic sex.  Yet, humanly, they are two polar opposites.  The
*process* of helping people dispel their illusions requires, not
righteous detachment and admonishment, but respectful engagement with
them, helping them achieve and sharpen *their* goals is the starting
point; not because their goals are the ultimate goals we can envision,
but because their goals are *theirs*.  The opposite of alienation is
appropriation.  For working people at the bottom, overcoming
alienation -- without which no human liberation whatsoever will be
possible -- means making the world out there *their* world.

This morning, as I often do, I was thinking about what made the Cuban
revolution stick against all odds, about what makes Fidel such an
effective leader.  I thought of how he treats people.  A few weeks
ago, the man -- a man who many thought to be terminally ill --
probably saved Hugo Chávez's life for the second time!  The first
time, he personally directed the diplomatic isolation of the coup in
2002, preventing Chávez's assassination, and then assisting in the
organization of his release by the presidential guard.  Second, early
in June, by noticing Chávez's illness and persuading him to undergo a
medical examination that detected a potentially deadly tumor in his
belly.  This way of treating people is not something that Fidel limits
to people of Chávez's official stature.  I will illustrate this with a
personal anecdote: Back in 1983 or 1984 (I can't remember now exactly
when this happened), as the Caribbean sea threatened to swallow those
of us living on the northern low edges of Havana City (a phenomenon
the Cubans called "ras de mar" -- a tidal penetration that flooded
several blocks adjacent to the Havana Malecón), I saw at an arm's
distance, the man himself, directing our rescue, asking questions and
issuing orders, comforting children and elders, physically pulling
people out of basements and shuttling them on boats to safe places.
Vast material damages, but not one single human casualty!  Unthinkable
in any other Latin American country.  Unthinkable in Louisiana under
Bush.  The message he and his Communist Party sent to us was loud and
clear -- "We've got your back.  We'll spare no effort to protect your
lives.  Your needs are our needs."

Obama is the anti-Fidel.  The needs of Wall Street, the needs of the
establishment, the needs of the military-industrial complex are his
needs.  Our needs, the needs of working people, are alien to him.
Those of us who supported and celebrated his ascent to the White House
have good reasons to be disappointed and angry.  He escalated the war
in Afghanistan (it doesn't matter if, during his campaign, he said
he'd escalate that war).  *His* economic choices are devastating the
lives of working people.  I wouldn't change my 2008 vote if I could.
But, that is past now.  Given the chance, Obama refused to grow as a
leader and do what the times demanded from him.  He will join Kerensky
in some fitting niche of Dante's inferno.  We must draw the right
lessons from our experience and fight.
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