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News Flash: Obama Tells Lies

by Paul StreetPaulStreetObamaCowboyHat

The author has kept a scrupulous record of untruths, half-truths and evolving reconstructions of truth from Barack Obama's mouth, over the years - and there's always a fresh supply to chronicle. It's hard - truly hard - to woo Black and progressive voters while plotting a wholly different agenda with captains of industry and finance and military expansionists. However, Obama's many transgressions against truth don't set him apart. "The American narrow-spectrum corporate-crafted presidential election extravaganza is not about truth-telling - it's about corporate-managed deception."

News Flash: Obama Tells Lies

PaulStreetObamaStrutby Paul Street

This article originally appeared in Znet.

U.S. politicians lie. They lie a lot.

Oh, you knew that.

But try this one: Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama is no special exception to the rule. Beneath all his claims to represent a "new kind of politics," one based on honesty and transparency, he lies too.  He does it a lot.

This is less well known.

The latest example is Obama's decision to choose winning over his word on public campaign financing in the general election.

Just the other day Obama coldly contradicted his earlier promise to go with money from the U.S. presidential public financing system and to accept accompanying spending limits if his Republican opponent did the same. He admitted that he will rely solely on private financing in the general election, making him the first presidential candidate to do so since the public system was set up after Watergate. 

"Obama is disproportionately funded by people from the top 1 percent of Americans."

There is no mystery about why: the opportunity to financially bury John McCain is irresistible to Obama, who did not imagine that he was going to set obscene new campaign fundraising records, fueled largely by the likes of Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase. Obama has raised $265 million - a new record, at this stage - so far, nearly three times as much as John McCain ($97).

When Obama offered his populist-sounding public-financing pledge last year, the reactionary Republican arch-militarist McCain said he would abide by the limits and accept public money. 

McCain is in fact going to go with taxpayer funds, agreeing to accept spending limits. There will no such limits for Obama.

Obama's defiance of his previous oath was announced in a creepy video to supporters in which he praised ordinary Americans for "fueling" his candidacy with donations of "five dollars, ten dollars, twenty dollars, whatever you can afford." He said, "Let's build the first general election campaign that's truly funded by the American people." 

Too bad the system he's rejecting is funded by taxpayers who give $3 to the presidential election fund when they file their taxes. 

Too bad Obama is disproportionately funded by people from the top 1 percent of Americans, who own nearly 40 percent of the nation's wealth ands who account for more than 80 percent of campaign contributions above $250. Through April of 2008, the Campaign Finance Institute reports, Obama received more than $89 million in contributions of $1000 or more, just $8 million less than McCain's total take ($97.3 million)[1].

According to the Center for Responsive Politics Obama's top contributors include Goldman Sachs (#1 at $571,000), UBSAG (#3 at $365,000), JP Morgan Chase (#4 at $362,000), Citigroup (#5 at $358,000), Lehman Bros. (#7 at 4319,000), Google (#8 at $318,000), multinational corporate law firm Sidley Austin LLP (#10 at $294,000)and nuclear energy powerhouse Exelon (#15 at $236,000}[2].

Obama's campaign finance comments are pretty damn disingenuous: not exactly the "straight shooter" talk he claims to represent. 

But it's hardly the first Obama deception to date - not by a long shot. Here (below) are some of the bigger examples of stark dishonesty I've discovered in the process of writing a book on the Obama phenomenon and U.S. political culture. 

"Nuclear Legislation I've Passed": False Posturing

During the pivotal Iowa campaign, Obama sought to burnish his populist "tinge" by telling a misleading story about his response to an Exelon nuclear accident that outraged Illinois residents in late 2005 and early 2006.  On December 1 of 2005, Exelon admitted that it had discovered radioactive by-products of nuclear power in monitoring wells at its Braidwood plant, located in central Illinois. Citizen concerns deepened when radioactive tritium was discovered in a home drinking well near the plant and Exelon revealed that this substance came from millions of gallons of water that had leaked from the plant over many years. Exelon had not been required to report the leaks since the radioactive discharges had not reached the level of what the Nuclear Regulatory Commission called "an emergency."

Last November, Obama told a campaign crowd in Iowa that he had introduced a U.S. Senate bill that required nuclear plant owners to notify local and state authorities immediately when even small leaks had occurred.  The bill, he told Iowa voters, was "the only nuclear legislation that I've passed.  I just did that last year," Obama claimed, eliciting "murmurs of approval" [3]. 

But, as the New York Times reported in a front-page story two days before Super Tuesday, the truth of what happened after the Braidwood leak was very different than Obama's self-serving version.  "While he initially fought to advance" a bill very much like what he claimed to have "passed," Times reporter Mike McIntire noted, "Mr. Obama eventually rewrote it to reflect changes sought by Senate Republicans, Exelon, and nuclear regulators.  Those revisions propelled the bill through a crucial committee.  But contrary to Mr. Obama's comments in Iowa, it ultimately died amid parliamentary wrangling in the full Senate despite the removal of language mandating prompt reporting. Instead, the bill simply offered guidance to regulators, whom it charged with addressing the issue of unreported links." As McIntire suggested, this ignominious legislative aftermath contradicted Obama's campaign claim and followed in natural accord with the following facts [4]:

* Obama had received at least $227,000 in campaign cash from Exelon since 2003.

* "Exelon's support for Mr. Obama far exceeds its support for any other presidential candidate."

* Exelon executives met repeatedly with Obama's staff to discuss Obama's ultimately diluted and aborted bill.      

* Obama's chief political strategist David Axlerod had worked as a consultant to Exelon since 2002.

Maytag and Galesburg: "Fundraising, Rhetoric Collide"

In Obama's stump speech during the long campaign leading up to the Iowa Democratic presidential caucus, the Maytag workers of Galesburg, Illinois played a central role. Obama repeatedly told the story of how their jobs had been shipped to Mexico. "It is a ready applause line, for the Illinois presidential hopeful," Chicago Tribune reporter Bob Secter noted four days before the Super Tuesday Primaries, "one that he has been reciting almost verbatim since he was a candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2004, when appliance giant Maytag was in the process of shutting a refrigerator plant [in Galesburg], putting 1,600 people out of work." Obama was trying to steal John Edwards' laborite thunder in Iowa by inveighing against mean-spirited corporations who used trade pacts to replace highly paid union workers with cheaper labor abroad 

Despite Obama's claims of deep concern for Galesburg's proletarian victims, however, Maytag union members told Secter that Obama had done remarkably little to save the Galesburg workers' jobs.  Those workers belonged to the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, whose president noted that "Obama's support for Maytag workers was more show than substance."

"Maytag union members said Obama had done remarkably little to save the Galesburg workers' jobs."

Maytag employees and former employees were particularly rankled by Obama's inaction because he possessed a special relationship with a leading Maytag decision-maker. Between 2003 and 2008, Obama received tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the family of Lester Crown, one of Maytag's directors and largest investors. The Crowns and employees of their family-managed holding company (Henry Crown Investments) gave at least $195,000 to Obama's senate and presidential campaigns between 2003 and 2008. According to Crown, however, Obama never once raised the fate of Maytag's Galesburg workers with him. 

"The high profile treatment given the Maytag situation" by Obama, Secter noted, "is a reminder of the often awkward intersection of the populist rhetoric, complex issues, and the financial realities of presidential campaigning." It stood in ironic relation to Obama's repeated criticism of his Democratic presidential rivals for "straying from their own populist images," as when he hit Hillary Clinton for serving many years ago on the board of the anti-labor Wal Mart Company [5]. 

Pseudo-Populist "Campaign Rhetoric" on NAFTA and "Trade"

When addressing working-class audiences in the primary campaign, Obama recurrently boasted of his purported opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) - widely and rightly blamed for massive job and wage losses by organized labor and working class voters but deemed a boon to the U.S. economy by the corporate interests that provided campaign dollars for his campaign.  "I don't think NAFTA has been good for Americans, and I never have," Obama claimed before the Ohio Democratic primary, where "trade" and NAFTA emerged as leading campaign issues [6].

The reality of his record on the corporate-neoliberal "investor rights" bill [7] was considerably less populist than that comment suggested.  During his 2004 Senate campaign, he argued for "more deals such as NAFTA," claimed that one of his primary opponent's call for higher, job-protecting tariffs would "spark a trade war," and spoke repeatedly of the "enormous benefits" that "accrued to his state from NAFTA"[8].

In late February of 2008, New York Times business writer David Leaonhardt noted that both Obama and Senator Clinton had been "straddling NAFTA and trade issues."  After quoting an Obama speech telling Youngstown, Ohio workers they'd seen "job after job disappear because of bad trade deals like NAFTA," Leaonhardt noted that "none of" Obama's trade agenda was "particularly radical.  Neither candidate calls for a repeal of NAFTA, or anything close to it.  Both instead want to tinker with the bureaucratic innards of the agreement... It's a bit of an odd situation," Leaonhardt added. "They call the country's trade policy a disaster, and yet their plan starts with, um, cracking down on Mexican pollution" [9].

"During his 2004 Senate campaign, Obama argued for ‘more deals such as NAFTA.'"

Matt Gonzales noted around the same time that Obama had dropped the populist ball when given an opportunity to protect workers from unfair trade agreements. Obama cast the deciding vote against an amendment to a 2005 Commerce Appropriations bill that would have "prohibited US trade negotiators from weakening US laws that provide safeguards from unfair foreign trade practices." The amendment would have been "a vital tool to combat the outsourcing of jobs to foreign workers" [10].

Obama's ambiguous position on "trade" received some especially unwelcome attention in the week before the Ohio and Texas primaries of early March 2008. That's when his campaign was hit by the revelation that a top Obama staff member had made a revealing comment to Michael Wilson, the Canadian Ambassador to the United States. As the Canadian Television network (CTV) reported on February 27, 2008, the Obama staffer told Wilson to disregard Obama's populace-pleasing political language on NAFTA and "trade."  That language was geared toward winning working-class votes in Ohio and should not be taken as a serious threat to the corporate globalizatization agenda U.S. and Canadian elites share, the Obama aid wanted the Canadian government to know.  According to CTV News, "Barack Obama has ratcheted up his attacks on NAFTA, but a senior member of his campaign team told a Canadian official not to take his criticisms seriously, CTV News has learned... The staff member reassured Wilson that the criticism would only be campaign rhetoric and should not be taken at face value" [11].  

Subsequent inquiry determined that the "staff member" was none other than Obama's top economic adviser, University of Chicago economist Austan Goolsbee, who also happened to be the chief economist of the regressive corporate-sponsored Democratic Leadership Council (DLC)[12].

527 Hypocrisy

Late in the Iowa Caucus campaign, Obama criticized John Edwards for serving the same "Washington special interests" that Edwards claimed to oppose because Edwards received support from independent labor-based groups ("527s") affiliated with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) [13].  Obama knew very well (a) that Edwards had spoken against large corporate interests, not labor and (b) that capital, not labor, exercises dominant influence over the federal government. He also turned around and started taking money from the same exact groups prior to the Nevada Caucus. It was all very disingenuous, to say the least. 

Wal-Mart Con

Especially when speaking before labor audiences, primary candidate Obama has made a point of slamming Wal-Mart for its notorious low-wage and worker-abusing practices. "I don't shop there," he said during the primary campaign. Great, but Obama has appointed as his economic policy director Jason Furman - a corporate-neoliberal economist (from the conservative "Hamilton Group") who has defended the Wal-Mart as a blessing for poor Americans [14].  Obama also gave his endorsement in the spring of 2007 to the pro-Wal-Mart Alderman Dorothy Tillman, who joined Chicago Mayor Richard Daley in opposing a city council resolution that would have required Wal-Mart and other big-box retailers to pay workers a livable wage in the city of Chicago. Despite Obama's endorsement, Tillman was defeated by Pat Dowell, who supported the "big box" ordinance, which was vetoed by Obama's close ally Daley - the business-friendly "mayor for life" with whom Obama shares his chief media consultant (David Axelrod) [14A].

"I believe you care"

Speaking to Wall Street leaders at NASDAQ's headquarters in the late summer of 2007, Obama told financial elites that "I believe all of you are as open and willing to listen as anyone else in America. I believe you care about this country and the future we are leaving to the next generation. I believe your work to be a part of building a stronger, more vibrant, and more just America. I think the problem is that no one has asked you to play a part in the project of American renewal" [15].    

These were strange beliefs to (claim to) hold in light of the actual historical pattern of business behavior that naturally results from purpose and structure of the system of private profit.  An endless army of nonprofit charities and social service-providers, citizens, environmental and community activists, trade union negotiators, and policymakers has spent decades asking (often enough begging) the "American" corporate and financial capitalist over-class to contribute to the domestic social good.  The positive results are generally marginal and fleeting as the "business community" works with structurally super-empowered effectiveness to distribute wealth and power ever more upward and to serve the needs of private investors and capital accumulation over and above any considerations of social and environmental health and the common good at home or abroad. Holding no special allegiance to the American people in an age of corporate globalization, the economic elite is more than willing to significantly abandon the domestic U.S. society and its workers and communities to serve the ultimate business purpose: enhancing its bottom line [16].

Obama, no slouch in the brains department, knows all this very well.  That means that his NASDAQ comment was a lie.

"Not fundamentally different"

In his campaign book The Audacity of Hope (2006), Obama tried to demonstrate his distance from black Americans who "angrily" denounce American racism and to curry favor with white middle class voters (many of whom want to think that racism and hence legitimate black anger is a "thing of the past") by claiming that "What ails working- and middle-class blacks is not fundamentally different from what ails their white counterparts" [17]. I am quite certain that he knew this statement to be thoroughly false in a nation where persistent, many-sided institutional racism continues to inflict wildly disproportionate poverty and misery on the black community [18]. A former community organizer, lawyer, and state legislator on the South Side of Chicago, Obama is too smart and too acquainted with basic social facts of U.S. life to believe his statement in Audacity. That would make his statement a lie.

To "protect" Jeremiah Wright

Last February, Obama revoked his then pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright's scheduled statement of a public prayer before Obama's official announcement of his candidacy for the White House, in Springfield, Illinois. A preacher known for fiery sermons against American racism, poverty, and imperialism, Wright was Obama's avowed spiritual mentor - his personal agent of religious conversion on the South Side of Chicago in the middle 1980s.

Last April, Obama told New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor that he was "only shielding his pastor from the spotlight" when he booted Wright from the stage [19]. In July, Obama told Newsweek reporters Darren Briscoe and Richard Wolffe that he "may have been over-protective" toward Wright [20]. 

"Obama had acted to protect his campaign when he asked Wright to stand down."

But anybody with any political common sense knew very well that Obama had acted to protect his campaign when he asked Wright to stand down. Kantor said as much when she wrote that "Mr. Wright's assertions of widespread white racism and his scorching remarks about American government have drawn criticism, and prompted the senator to cancel his delivery of the invocation when he formally announced his candidacy in February."

"So they got together and Barack Obama was born"

But the Rev. Wright story was just a little white lie compared to the big black fib Obama told in Selma, Alabama in early March of 2007. Trying to sound authentically African-American during a speech memorializing the forty-second anniversary of the 1965 Voting Rights March at the Pettis Bridge in Selma, Obama claimed that his black (Kenyan) father and white (Kansan) mother married and conceived the future corporate-sponsored BaRockstar because of the great Civil Rights struggles fought in Selma and Birmingham, Alabama. "There was something stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma, Alabama," Obama intoned, "because some folks were willing to march across a bridge. So they [his parents] got together and Barack Obama Jr. was born." 

"So don't tell me I don't have a claim on Selma, Alabama," Obama said. "Don't tell me I'm not coming home to Selma, Alabama. I'm here because somebody marched. I'm here because you all sacrificed for me" [21]. 

Never mind that Barack Obama Jr. was born in 1961, two years before the famous campaign to desegregate Birmingham, three years before the Civil Rights Act, and four years before the famous Selma march!

It's true that Obama's multicultural conception came four years after the Montgomery Bus Boycott, but his parents "getting together" across racial didn't have much to do with the Civil Rights Movement.  It was more likely a reflection of the fact that his home state of Hawaii was relatively "tolerant" on racial questions - a distant geographic and cultural cry from the racially segregated U.S. South to which Obama absurdly tried to claim strong biographical connection.

McCain, Iraq, The System...

I won't go here into the deep and dark deception involved in Obama's "fairy tale" (as Bill Clinton rightly said) claim to have opposed the occupation of Iraq "from the beginning" - a topic I have addressed at some length in an earlier ZNet essay titled "The Audacity of Deception: Barack Obama and the Manufacture of Progressive Illusion and in my forthcoming (August 2008) book Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics. You can find many more sources and examples in that volume (order at www.paradigmpublishers.com/Books/BookDetail.aspx?productID=186987)

Don't get me wrong. For what it's worth, John McCain is a chronic liar and Olympic-level flip-flopper in his own right - on tax cuts, offshore drilling, lobbyists, immigration reform, and more. He also happens to represent an extremist and dangerous right-wing agenda that progressive voters should resist by voting "for" Obama in contested states. There's more than "a dime's worth of difference" between the two candidates, not because the centrist Democratic contender is progressive (he's corporate-neoliberal and imperial) but because the Republican standard-bearer and party is so dangerously far right.  Once, again,as in 2004, this isn't "Coke" (the Democrats) v. "Pepsi" (the Republicans): it's corporate-neoliberal Coke versus arch-authoritarian and messianic-militaristic Crack [22].

"There's more than ‘a dime's worth of difference' between the two candidates."

I also think that most of Obama's lies sadly make perfect sense from the perspective of a campaign that is "in it to win it." The American narrow-spectrum corporate-crafted presidential election extravaganza is not about truth-telling - it's about corporate-managed deception. This goes back a long way; it's not new. Anybody who wants U.S. politicians to stop lying should support the following reforms [23]:

* Take private money out of public elections through the full mandatory equal and public financing of federal campaigns

* Introduce proportional representation in the election of state and congressional representatives.

* Provide extra public resources and public access - a form of political party affirmative action - for third, fourth, and fifth parties that have been discriminated against in the past.

* Introduce a parliamentary system whereby the chief executive is selected by and ultimately subordinated to the representative branch of government.

* If a presidential system remains, introduce "instant run off" voting - a mechanism permitting third and fourth parities to avoid functioning as "spoilers" by requiring that winners must receive at least 50 percent of the total vote. Let all voters mark their second and third favorite choices, hold an instant run off between the top candidates until one candidate secures at least 50 percent plus one.

* Permit "fusion" voting, whereby voters are free to support a major party candidate in the name of their own favorite third (or fourth, etc.) party.

* Mandate free media advertisements for all candidates.

* Remove candidate debates from private media corporations and hand them over to publicly funded, publicly elected, and publicly overseen citizen committees.

* Activate antitrust laws to break up the current corporate media oligopoly and distribute political news and information across a broader and more diverse range of print and media outlets.

* Require media campaign coverage to spend a designated relevant and disproportionate amount of time on policy and ideological differences between and among candidates and parties.

* Sharply restrict corporate lobbying.

* Restrict the right of corporations to draft laws governing their industries.

* Make it illegal to use shareholder funds for political reasons.

* Forbid former high-level politicians from becoming business lobbyists for ten years or more.

* Forbid current or former high-level corporate officers from sitting on commissions with regulatory power over their industries.

* Make it illegal for corporations to try to influence their employees' votes.

* Repeal "investor rights" clauses in trade agreements, which let foreign and multinational corporations sue a national government for passing environmental, safety (job and consumer), labor, and/or anti-discrimination laws.

* Prohibit the granting of subsidies to companies who do not contribute to social and ecological health.

* Institute penalties for companies that extort concessions from workers, communities, and governments by threatening to leave a city, county, state or country.

* Significantly expand public media and provide significant new public subsidies and other resources for alternative and grassroots citizen's media.

Introducing many of the top reforms suggested above, it should be acknowledged, would almost certainly require a Constitutional Amendment. However they are pursued and implemented, these are meaningful changes that should be consistently advanced by progressives. All of them are consistent with Obama's recurrent call for Americans to act to change not just policies but also the very process and nature of U.S. politics itself.

Veteran radical historian Paul Street (paulstreet99@yahoo.com) is the author of Empire and Inequality: America and the World Since 9/11 (Boulder, CO: Paradigm), Segregated Schools: Educational Apartheid in the Post-Civil Rights Era (New York: Routledge, 2005); Racial Oppression in the Global Metropolis (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007); and Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics (forthcoming in summer of 2008). 

NOTES

1. Read at www.cfinst.org/pr/prRelease.aspx?ReleaseID=191].

2. Read at www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?cycle=2008&cid=N000096380.

3. Mike McIntire, "Nuclear Leaks and Response Tested Obama," New York Times, 3 February, 2008, section 1, p. 1.

4. McIntire, "Nuclear Leaks."

5. Bob Secter, "Obama's Fundraising, Rhetoric Collide," Chicago Tribune, February 2008, sec.1, p.7.

6. Public Broadcasting System, PBP News Hour, "Free Trade Agreement is Issue for Ohio Voters" (March 3, 2008), read at http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/features/us/jan-june08/nafta_3-03.html

7. For a useful and powerful analysis of NAFTA, see Jeff Faux, The Global Class War: How America's Bipartisan Elite Lost Our Future and What It Will Take to Win it Back (New York: Wiley, 2006),pp. 9-37, 45-47, 126-54..

8. Associated Press, February 28, 2008.

9. David Leonhardt, "The Politics of Trade in Ohio," New York Times, 27 February, 2008.

10. Matt Gonzales, "The Obama Craze: Count Me Out," BeyondChron: San Francisco's Online Daily (February 28 2008) read online at www.beyondchron.org/articles/index.php?itemid=5413#more.

11. CTV.ca News Staff, "Obama Staffer Gave Warning of NAFTA Rhetoric," www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080227/dems_nafta_080227/...

12. Doug Henwood, "Would You like Change With That?" Left Business Observer, No. 117 (March 2008). From here on, I dispense with sources and people are referred to my forthcoming (due out in August) book Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics (Paradigm Publishers).

13. Paul Krugman, "State of the Unions," New York Times, December 24, 2007.

14. Josh Gerstein, "Wal-Mart Defender to Direct Obama's Economic Policy," New York Sun (June 10, 2008).

14A. For details, see Paul Street, "Obama's Forgotten Wal-Mart Endorsement," ZNet (August 28, 2007).

15. Barack Obama, "Our Common Stake in America's Prosperity," New York, New York (September 17, 2007). 

16.  An excellent account is Faux, The Global Class War.

17. Barack Obama, The Audacity of Hope (New York: 2006), p. 247.

18. For an investigation of this in Obama's own metropolitan backyard, see Paul Street, Racial Oppression in the Global Metropolis: A Living Black Chicago History (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007).

19. Jodi Kantor, "A Candidate, His Minister and the Search for Faith," New York Times, 30 April 2007, p. A1.

20. Richard Wolffe and Darren Briscoe, "Across the Divide: Barack Obama's Road to Racial Reconstruction," Newsweek (July 16, 2007).

21. Barack Obama, "Selma Voting Rights Commemoration," Selma, Alabama, March 4, 2007. read at www.barackobama.com

22. "Kerry is Coke, Bush is Crack," ZNet Magazine (March 24, 2004), available online at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=33&ItemID=5204.

23. Much of what follows comes from Charles Derber, Hidden Power: What You Need to Know to Save Our Democracy (San Francisco, CA: 2005)

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More Lies

Let's not forget the stupid lies about there being more black men in prison than in school. Why hasn't any of his enablers in the media corrected him on that? Roland Martin? Donna Brazille? Cmon, ya'll should know better!

S

Roland Martin and Donna Brazile are Obama's biggest enablers.
I think they're on the payroll, paid to clean up, spin and apologize for any and all lies, gaffes and mistakes he makes.
That's why they're on tv so often.
It's all they do.

Roland

Speaking of Roland Martin. He looked terrible last night debating Tony Perkins on CNN. He was ranting and raving trying to protect Obama, while Perkins just sat there and said what he had to say.

All he does is protect Obama. Every black person on CNN protects and spins for Obama. The rest of America must think that every black person is a shill for Obama. And you know what? They're right. He's going to get 90-95% support from people that he's never going to bother trying to help other than telling them that they're no good fathers, and that they're all in jail.

SINGLE ISSUE GROUPS

Support and fund single issue groups that threaten organizational and financial support to primary challengers and third party candidates.

Ignore the gag order on Iowa Caucus attack ads.

Vote for Cynthia McKinney or Ralph Nader.

Agree. Roland Martin and Donna Brazile are the biggest apologist

When Obama gave that deplorable, race-baiting Father's Day Speech, Roland Martin was Obama's main cheerleader on CNN, praising this fool for spreading such vicious, detrimental stereotypes about black men and black families in general. But Martin and Brazile aren't the only two; there's Bob Herbert from The New York Times; Cynthia Tucker; John Ridley; Harold Ford, Jr.; Eugene Robinson (who isn't as bad as the others, nevertheless, is too timid and safe with his criticism); Michael Eric Dyson -- hell, even far right conservatives such as Amy Holmes and Michelle Bernard praise Obama's so-called "tough love" message to black folks. It's as if the media hires these people as representation of the general black consensus of this brother. It's enough to make one sick.

Now they have Joan Walsh from Solon and Bob Herbert from The New York Times on Hardball to trash Ralph Nader's HONEST and TRUTHFUL analysis of Barack Obama's race-neutral campaign. Whenever someone criticizes Lord Obama, his critics are quickly dismissed as "divisive" and "too old" to understand current America. The only opposing opinion of Obama that's accepted in our media when it's from shuck-and-jive black conservatives like Shelby Steele, Thomas Sowell and Jesse Lee Peterson. There is NEVER a black critic from the left invited on any of these mainstream media shows to critique Barack Obama. The only ones they can find are those like Michael Eric Dyson and Cornel West, two of Obama's biggest apologists. It just shows how strategically they place people in these positions to pimp Obama to the public. Oh, and forget BET. The so-called Black Entertainment Television is as much in the tank for Obama as the rest of the media outlets. That softball interview that was conducted by Cousin Jeff last year was pathetic.

Black folks are always complaining about being taken for granted, but it's no one's fault but ourselves when we allow it to happen time and time again.

Recollections and reflections

I was taken aback at first by Dyson's participation in the Obama trip, but academia has this way of slowly but surely eating away at radical sensibibilities.

I have caught Bob Herbert speaking in the most naive and reprehensible terms imaginable about: the reasons behind the invasion of Iraq; the supposed greatness of Cold War liberals like JFK and RFK and even Harry Truman; and the need for America to always win its wars.

Here's a quote from Cornel West in 1990 that would seem to apply to the Obama phenomenon:

“Social motion and movements in America,” West wrote, “tend to be neither rooted in nor sustained by campaigns for electoral office, no matter how charismatic the leader...Despite the symbolic and cathartic electoral victories of liberal women and people of color, all remain thoroughly shackled by corporate priorities in the economy and in debt-ridden administrations. Under such conditions, the plight of the ill-fed, ill-clad, and ill-housed tends to get worse." Source: Cornel West, “The Role of Law in Progressive Politics” [1990], in David Kairys, ed., The Politics of Law: A Progressive Critique (New York: Basic, 1998), pp. 712-713.

Interesting how well that might be said to apply to 2008.

This Father's Day fiasco reminds me of my days working in research at the old bourgeois Chicago Urban League (CUL). One morning (first school day in 2002 or 2003 - can't recall exact year) then state senator Obama (already picking out his spot on Mount Rushmore)was brought down to join James W. Compton ($250,000 a year [plus limousine and driver] CEO of the CUL) and Arne Duncan (Harvard undergraduate degree white boy CEO of Chicago Public Schools and University of Chicago Lab School grad) to lecture poor black parents (a few of whom were brought in to appear with Obama/Duncan/Compton before television cameras) on their need to step up to the plate and take their children to the wonderful under-funded and under-equipped public schools. 3rd ward alderman Dorothy Tillman got up and spent 2 or 3 minutes lambasting Obama, saying he had no business lecturing anybody on going to public schools when he was a graduate of elite private schools including Harvard Law and lived over in bourgeois Hyde Park and was sending his own children to to the UC's Lab School ($40 k per year byt half price for UC professors/ex-professor like BO no doubt) --- not even the good public Ray School on 57th. Tillman noted that she put all her kids through actual public schools in the black community.

Meanwhile the Daley machine continued to advance a regressive neoliberal school privatization agenda BO plays along with (quietly, but its there: he loves charters and says he'd consider vouchers if and when research says he can).

Obama later endorsed Tillman (against the SEIU-backed candidate in the Third Ward - Pat Dowell) in accord with Master Daley's wishes partly because Dorothy was on the "right" (corporate and Daley) side on the Wal-Mart big box (living wage) issue. (Dowell, who won, was on the labor side).

A little later the wonderfully foul-mouthed (no joke) Michelle Obama got placed on the board of directors of "Tree House Foods," a de facto Wal-Mart subsidiary. She got that gig when B.O.became a Senator in the Holy Roman (I mean American) Empire. It was the standard thing: go 2 or 3 times into a room and look at some corporate balance sheets and mumble something (try not to call people "motherfuckers" and the like) and collect $40-$50,000. Compton padded his salary (which did not include the limo and driver he was granted and which drove him quickly out of the ghetto every day while more black kids slipped into deep poverty) with numerous corporate board memberships at firms whose CEOs sat on the Urban League board.

Obama was an Urban Leaguer. I had to invite him to speak (in his insufferable deeply conservative professorial way: "one one hand.".."on the other hand"...then steer right down the middle in the classic mode of corporate liberalism) at at least one big event.

One of his early and continuing campaign finance investor kingpins is top Chicago Urban Leaguer John Rogers, the Princetonian head of Arial Capital and son/grandson/great-great grandson of astonishing black bourgeois wealth going back to the late 19th century. In alliance with the broader white-ruled corporate community, these sorts of folks have shredded the CUL's last remaining organic ties to serving poor folks and have turned the agency into a full blown neoliberal arm in the heart of the historical ghetto. Got to get the 2016 Olympics into the global metropolis - that's the ticket.

A Paul Street-Barack Obama Accommodation?

I've read much of Paul Street's commentary on Barack Obama (including the above article when it was still a blog entry on Znet). Much of his coverage has been informative, and has done much to give one pause for thought about this man. So it was a little disappointing (or puzzling) to see Mr. Street do something of an about-face on the Obama question and engage in the greatest of American political flim-flamery: the lesser of two evils game. For someone of his critical eye to assert, at this stage of the game, that "there's more than a dime's worth" of difference between McCain and Obama, and, thus, "progressives" should throw their support to the latter makes one wonder if he hasn't come to some kind of accommodation with the Obama camp. Even in his own reporting, Mr. Street pretty much paints Obama as the poster child of the ultra-conservative and corporatist Democratic Leadership Council (DLC). And witnessing Obama's recent pandering to AIPAC, the Cuban nationals in Miami, his public pronouncements on Iran, his actions as a Senator with respect to Iraq, his "private" positions on NAFTA (reassuring the Canadians they're not to take his campaign rhetoric on NAFTA seriously), his healthcare "solution", and on and on, it's almost mind-boggling how a so-called "progressive" could suddenly assert that this man - whose position on the political spectrum no one can locate because he apparently does not have one - still represents a distinction from McCain. If anything, Obama has been going to great lengths to "out con" the neocons, "out wrong" the right wing, "out insane" McCain. If Mr. Street really thinks there is more than a dime's worth of difference between the two presumptive nominees, nothing he has written about Obama to date (including this article) would support that. I had given Mr. Street much more credit than that, to openly promote the "lesser of two evils" theme. In fact, Mr. Street has quite eloquently critiqued the dynamic that has made this theme the principal feature of our egregious socio-political system. As for me, I'm not buying the "more than a dime's worth of difference" proposition. It's even a little disturbing to see someone of Paul Street's independence and credentials even pushing it. Of course, the flip-side of that kind of reasoning is: better to go with the devil you know. In that case, given the opaqueness of Obama as a politician, as a public servant, as a personality, the polls would slant in favor of his much better known and measureable opponents. But, in my view, to subscribe to either of these fallacies (lesser of two evils v. the devil you know) is to perpetuate a cynical, dysfunctional political system that I'm sure Mr. Street finds as disturbing as I and the handful of other thoughtful (but perhaps disillusioned) "citizens" still left in this "country" do - a system that can only maintain as long as we're willing to be its suckers. That's why, after all his raging against the machine, and his dissection of Obama, Mr. Street's endorsement (as "left-handed" as it may be) is suspect to me...

Mr. Street and Carl Rove Right Wing Conspirators

As puppets and puppies of hard core so-called conservatives, no wonder when you write fabricated stories and lies on Sen. Obama. Everybody knows that it is a sign of frustration and gelousy on your part. Keep barking!

And there are more

There were more lies about Rev. Wright. Anyone who listens to Rev. Wright's sermons--even lets say about 5 of them--will know that he ALWAYS concludes with good news or hope. When Obama said otherwise in his race speech, he was intentionally untruthful. Also, Rev. Wright is a renowned intellectual and scholar with 4 earned degrees, 8 honorary degrees, speaks at least 5 languages, has written 4 books, is a highly sought after speaker, developed a dynamic model ministry, devoted almost his entire adult life to uplifting his community, humbly serves God, etc. and in that same speech, Obama painted Wright as nothing more then a crazy old uncle, thereby subjecting him and Trinity United Church to endless slander, libel and ridicule. More lies....

Some people just don't listen

People like Lopez for instance. Lopez Obama kisses up to wall street. Obama wants war with Iran. Obama loves the war in Afghanistan. Obama called black men "boys" on father's day. Obama slanders Castro and Chavez while backing Uribe. Obama says all these things constantly and when he gets called on it by actual progressives you think that the progressive voice is actually a conservative one because you did not listen to what Obama said in the first place. Enough of the great half white hope. This guy is just another empty suit. No different from Hilary Clinton, her husband or Gore or Kerry.

Response

LTJ I honestly don't care all that much what folks do ballot-wise but in my opinion based on careful consideration I consider the GOP proto-fascists to a degree that matters: it's Coke v. Crack, not v. Pepsi. I know these people and the danger they pose is not to be taken lightly. Coke will rot your teeth, no doubt about it.

Voting takes about what 3-4 minutes...you can mark Obama, you can mark Cynthia, you can mark Ralph..yout can vote Trotskyist...You can sit it out. Whatever, voting is not the primary task, especially under the conditions of the current dominant system of corporate-managed pseudo-democracy.

Presidential elections are not the sum total of politics - not even close. It's mainly about what you do before and after and across the ridiculous corporate-crafted election extravaganzas -- the absurd candidate-centered spectacles they stage each 4 years. The more urgent and relevant tasks are about building alternative centers of power and constructing an actually democratic and responsive political cuture.

Progressive Left folks truly should cease and desist from ripping on eachother on how best to respond to the absurdly limited options. It's not clear how best to respond electorally, but it is clear that we have more important and difficult tasks (besides the ballot game) on a daily basis with regard to the building of revolutionary social movements - something very different than expanding a corporate-managed "electorate."

When I lived in Illinois I voted third party...always. It made me feel good for about 10 seconds and that was it. I'd vote third party for sure if I was in a "safe" state. I'd get my 11 seconds of joy out of it.

Iowa's a contested state and that's a somewhat different dynamic.

The quadrennial intra-leftist bloodletting over how to best respond to a completely messed up corporate-crafted narrow spectrum winner-take-all plutocratic show democracy is dysfunctional. I do not judge fellow leftists' authenticity in regard to how they determine how to best respond --- tactically speaking --- to the masters' electoral game.

I want third fourth and fifth parties but it is clear as day what happens to them under current conditions. There's a dysfunctional electoral fetishism on the Left too.

And it's not 100 percent I'll mark for B.O.. I note that the man advances a new outrage (electronic spying, a Wal Mart apologist as his economic policy director, banning Muslim women from behind him in Detroit, the Jerusalem comment....and so on and so on)on a daily basis. None of this changes my opinion on Coke v. Crack but it may make it physically impossible for me to actually mark a ballot for him. He's just incredibly awful.

I think it's pretty pathetic that election cycle after election cycle, we get a choice between lukewarm death and the bogeyman. I'm not going to split hairs with people who really have to vote for Obama this year, but I'm not going to vote for Obama, either. I've almost always voted third party, with a couple of lapses with Dukakis and Clinton in 1988 and Clinton in 1992, but I'm thinking for the first time ever of not voting at all. After all the mayhem this country has put the middle east through this last eight years, and with all the glibness that Obama displays in his support for Israel every time he gets the chance, I think it would make me physically ill to vote for yet another Zionist apologist this year, black, white or whatever. After 40 years of watching this national charade get worse and worse, culminating in this year's spectacle- which is one of the most culty and emotionally manipulative of any I can remember since the early Reagan years- cycle after weary cycle, I'm ready to throw in the towel on "liberal" reformers. If these people were going to back off the death machinery, they'd have never allowed it to travel this far. I'm sick to death of voting for a candidate just because he isn't the other candidate. I haven't come all this way, all this time, just to rubber stamp people who are going to cut my throat.

I'm with you Hureaux!

It is way past time to stop voting for the lesser of two evils. Keep doing so and nothing will change if the parties know voters will bitch a little but still goose step to the voting booth regardless of what puppet is chosen for them to elect by party power cliques and their corporate masters.

I stopped voting this way in 2000. When I bother to vote at all, I chose third party candidates whenever possible and am extremely selective with votes for Dems or Repubs in local and state races. If no third party candidate or write-in ballot exists for the presidential elections, I leave the space blank. I refuse to participate in the charade dressed up as democracy.

As for the sheep and kool aid drinkers who would say I am wasting my vote on people like Nader, I say bugger off. I am excercising my constitutional right to vote (or not vote) for the candidate I chose, not the one they want me to chose.

Same goes for their whine about third party candidates like Nader being spoilers. Nader and every other candidate has as much right to participate in the democratic process of running for office as anyone from the plutocracies, er, the Democratic and Republican parties.

Before and after those two minutes in the voting booth

What you do or don't for two minutes in November under their managed democracy is secondary.

Noam Chomsky said this in October 2004:

"The U.S. presidential race, impassioned almost to the point of hysteria, hardly represents healthy democratic impulses."

"Americans are encouraged to vote, but not to participate more meaningfully in the political arena. Essentially the election is yet another method of marginalizing the population. A huge propaganda campaign is mounted to get people to focus on these personalized quadrennial extravaganzas and to think, 'That’s politics.' But it isn’t. It’s only a small part of politics. .."

"The urgent task for those who want to shift policy in progressive direction – often in close conformity to majority opinion – is to grow and become strong enough so that that they can’t be ignored by centers of power. Forces for change that have come up from the grass roots and shaken the society to its foundations include the labor movement, the civil rights movement, the peace movement, the women’s movement and others, cultivated by steady, dedicated work at all levels, everyday, not just once every four years…"

"So in the election, sensible choices have to be made. But they are secondary to serious political action. The main task is to create a genuinely responsive democratic culture, and that effort goes on before and after electoral extravaganzas, whatever their outcome."

(Chomsky, Interventions [2007]

One can bemoan the failure of Obama, Hillary, John Edwards and other leading Democrats to speak honestly and forcefully in accord with the U.S. populace’s demand for a rapid end to the occupation of Iraq. The simple harsh and cold fact of the matter is that the U.S. antiwar movement has not developed the capacity to hold Democratic or other elected officials’ feet to the fire in ways that the party and those officials have to respect in accord with their top priorities of getting elected, re-elected, and staying in office. Peace activists lack structures and active constituencies strong enough to make Democrats accountable from below. They lack the power and the organized “rebellion from below” to compel leading politicians to reconsider commitment and captivity to the powerful entrenched interests and broader culture of imperial militarism.

Building progressive power and capacity beneath and beyond the election cycles is a more worthy endeavor than joining an election campaign (as I did in 2007) or picketing the offices of particularly egregious elected Democratic war supporters.

Adolph Reed had some instructive reflections somewhat along these lines last fall, in a piece called "Sitting This One Out."

Vote Obama, sit it out, vote Cynthia, vote Nader, vote for a Trot, vote for your own self (since "we are the ones we've been waiting for" as imperial Obama says)....whatever: it doesn't matter all that much. Truly. It isn't about voting. The very presidential elections themselves are a method of marginalization. I see this all the time with "progressives" in Iowa City elsewhere: they're not doing anything about real issues on a day to day basis in part they're all caught up in the "election madness." And Obama is a Godsend of election madness diversion to the power elite.

My sense is the GOP is dangerous enough to block but I do not condemn anyone for not being able to do that and like I said, Obama is making it very tough to pull it off. Every day with him it's a new level of nauseating reactionary behavior.

I may just sit it out ala Reed since even the left third party "choice" tends to advance the managed democracy's electoral fetishism

NEWS Flash

News Flash! He's a politician. Of course he tells lies. You lie to the government, you get jail-time. When the government lies to you, what happens to them? Nothing!

My feelings in a nutshell, Beverly. People have been telling me for as long as I can remember that I'm just voting for the republican by voting for a third party, and the only two ballots I've ever felt I wasted was when I voted for "democrat" Dukakis and "democrat" Clinton in those two election years, knowing full well they were sending the same signals Obama is sending right now. This year, however, I'm just not discussing this stuff with the true believers of the Obama fold. If I'm wrong, I guess I'll just have to be wrong.

And yes, Paul, the development of independent politics at the grassroots level is what's key. Unfortunately, electoral fetishism has dominated the discussion for so long now- and indeed, has done such a good job of completely denigrating any effort made by progressives to establish independent politics- that we're a long way out of paddock, much less through the gate. Like a lot of other people, I suspended judgement on Mr. Obama, especially when I heard of people like Grace Lee Boggs lending him critical support. But since the close of the primary season, he's been true to DLC and "democratic" party form. I suppose most of my blathering here is frustration with the fact that I suspended judgement against my better thinking, and here I sit, maybe a little disillusioned, I don't know.

Robama no way

Robama had to dis his longtime friend to make it in the run up of this distraction process. If the time, money and energy people are giving to Robama, was given to deal with local issues, we would be way ahead and there would be no need to deal with Robama one way or the other.
Robama is on the path to disappoint a lot of folks. Perhaps this is his mission, to make sure that the young voters become so disilusioned that they don't want ever to dab in politics.
Once inpower and 4 years later, he can say: mission accomplished! Just like Bush did.

unbelievable

you're doing exactly what old man Mccain wants you to. do you want another old white man in office that badly?

UNBELIEVABLE

Boojie blacks want the black community to continue to be taken for granted by half-white men and the two-party system.

?

Dru Scott... White man? Why do you have to make an issue about skin color? Sounds like you have some issues.

LL... What would make you happy?

From Early On/Dr. Reed in 1996

I felt the left nausea over Obama literally at the beginning of the nationwide BO phenomenon: see www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/8128 for a hastily constructed and almost instantaneuous assault on his reactionary and imperialist 2004 Keynote Address. I got 153 congragulatory e-mails from leftists on this one - no lie. I imagine at least 67% of those correspondents will be voting for Obama.

Here's a much earlier assessment (1996!) from Adolph Reed, Jr.:

“In Chicago, for instance, we’ve gotten a foretaste of the new breed of foundation-hatched black communitarian voices; one of them, a smooth Harvard lawyer with impeccable do-good credentials and vacuous-to-repressive neoliberal politics, has won a state senate seat on a base mainly in the liberal foundation and development worlds. His fundamentally bootstrap line was softened by a patina of the rhetoric of authentic community, talk about meeting in kitchens, small-scale solutions to social problems, and the predictable elevation of process over program — the point where identity politics converges with old-fashioned middle-class reform in favoring form over substance. I suspect that his ilk is the wave of the future in U.S. black politics, as in Haiti and wherever else the International Monetary Fund has sway.”

I said 1996.

That's from a Village Voice essay reproduced in Reed's 2001 book Class Notes
http://www.thenewpress.com/index.php?option=com_title&task=view_title&me...

In it to win it

The author said it right himself: Obama wants to win. So if becoming the first black president of the United States of America means he has to do all of the things listed above and 1000 more, than he will do them.

Who was it who said "by any means necessary?"

How many valiant but losing campaigns do Black people need before we decide that we want to win too? And once again, the author said it best when he said that the difference between Obama and McCain is not some simple Coke v Pepsi paradigm. So while come next January, the White House will not be the new home of the spiritual offspring of Shirley Chisholm and Jesse Jackson, we will be that one small step closer to seeing Dr. King's dream of that Beloved Community made real.

WINNING IS EVERYTHING

Booker T. Obama is going to change once in office........not! Anyone who understands politics knows that politricks doesn't end on election day. Besides: Carter, Dukakis, Gore, and Kerry lost, because their politics were too far to the right.

LL, Too far to the right?

What do you mean too far to the right?

I love Obama's windfall tax proposal for the oil companies. When the government starts taking profit out of their pockets, who do you think is going to make up for it? Us, that's who. It is going to be passed-on to the individuals who need their product.

Just like the increase in the minimum wage has been passed on to the consumer. The corporations passed-on the increased cost of unskilled labor. Eventually, when everything settles out, the cost of living will be at a higher level and in turn negate the government mandated raise.

Now, when it comes down to all the government intitlement programs, how much are you willing to pay for these? Contrary to popular belief, it is not the government money that they spend. It is our money, yours and mine. Money that they require us to pay them and they divvy out.

So, how much are you willing to pay out every pay check?

SO, HOW MANY NEW CASES OF BLACK LUNG DISEASE ARE YOU WILLING TO

I just love Booker T. Obama's goals for liquid coal expansion. That is so left wing of him............not!