RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Print

Intro: "It is urgently important to prevent a Republican administration under Romney/Ryan from taking office in January 2013."

Long-time anti-war activist and hero of the Pentagon Papers, Daniel Ellsberg. (photo: Mark Constantini/SFChronicle)
Long-time anti-war activist and hero of the Pentagon Papers, Daniel Ellsberg. (photo: Mark Constantini/SFChronicle)


Defeat Romney, Without Illusions About Obama

By Daniel Ellsberg, Reader Supported News

18 October 12

 

t is urgently important to prevent a Republican administration under Romney/Ryan from taking office in January 2013.

The election is now just weeks away, and I want to urge those whose values are generally in line with mine -- progressives, especially activists -- to make this goal one of your priorities during this period.

An activist colleague recently said to me: "I hear you're supporting Obama."

I was startled, and took offense. "Supporting Obama? Me?!"

"I lose no opportunity publicly," I told him angrily, to identify Obama as a tool of Wall Street, a man who's decriminalized torture and is still complicit in it, a drone assassin, someone who's launched an unconstitutional war, supports kidnapping and indefinite detention without trial, and has prosecuted more whistleblowers like myself than all previous presidents put together. "Would you call that support?"

My friend said, "But on Democracy Now you urged people in swing states to vote for him! How could you say that? I don't live in a swing state, but I will not and could not vote for Obama under any circumstances."

My answer was: a Romney/Ryan administration would be no better -- no different -- on any of the serious offenses I just mentioned or anything else, and it would be much worse, even catastrophically worse, on a number of other important issues: attacking Iran, Supreme Court appointments, the economy, women's reproductive rights, health coverage, safety net, climate change, green energy, the environment.

I told him: "I don't 'support Obama.' I oppose the current Republican Party. This is not a contest between Barack Obama and a progressive candidate. The voters in a handful or a dozen close-fought swing states are going to determine whether Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan are going to wield great political power for four, maybe eight years, or not."

As Noam Chomsky said recently, "The Republican organization today is extremely dangerous, not just to this country, but to the world. It's worth expending some effort to prevent their rise to power, without sowing illusions about the Democratic alternatives."

Following that logic, he's said to an interviewer what my friend heard me say to Amy Goodman: "If I were a person in a swing state, I'd vote against Romney/Ryan, which means voting for Obama because there is no other choice."

The election is at this moment a toss-up. That means this is one of the uncommon occasions when we progressives -- a small minority of the electorate -- could actually have a significant influence on the outcome of a national election, swinging it one way or the other.

The only way for progressives and Democrats to block Romney from office, at this date, is to persuade enough people in swing states to vote for Obama: not stay home, or vote for someone else. And that has to include, in those states, progressives and disillusioned liberals who are at this moment inclined not to vote at all or to vote for a third-party candidate (because like me they've been not just disappointed but disgusted and enraged by much of what Obama has done in the last four years and will probably keep doing).

They have to be persuaded to vote, and to vote in a battleground state for Obama not anyone else, despite the terrible flaws of the less-bad candidate, the incumbent. That's not easy. As I see it, that's precisely the "effort" Noam is referring to as worth expending right now to prevent the Republicans' rise to power. And it will take progressives -- some of you reading this, I hope -- to make that effort of persuasion effectively.

It will take someone these disheartened progressives and liberals will listen to. Someone manifestly without illusions about the Democrats, someone who sees what they see when they look at the president these days: but who can also see through candidates Romney or Ryan on the split-screen, and keep their real, disastrous policies in focus.

It's true that the differences between the major parties are not nearly as large as they and their candidates claim, let alone what we would want. It's even fair to use Gore Vidal's metaphor that they form two wings ("two right wings," as some have put it) of a single party, the Property or Plutocracy Party, or as Justin Raimondo says, the War Party.

Still, the political reality is that there are two distinguishable wings, and one is reliably even worse than the other, currently much worse overall. To be in denial or to act in neglect of that reality serves only the possibly imminent, yet presently avoidable, victory of the worse.

The traditional third-party mantra, "There's no significant difference between the major parties" amounts to saying: "The Republicans are no worse, overall." And that's absurd. It constitutes shameless apologetics for the Republicans, however unintended. It's crazily divorced from present reality.

And it's not at all harmless to be propagating that absurd falsehood. It has the effect of encouraging progressives even in battleground states to refrain from voting or to vote in a close election for someone other than Obama, and more importantly, to influence others to act likewise.That's an effect that serves no one but the Republicans, and ultimately the 1 percent.

It's not merely understandable, it's entirely appropriate to be enraged at Barack Obama. As I am. He has often acted outrageously, not merely timidly or "disappointingly." If impeachment were politically imaginable on constitutional grounds, he's earned it (like George W. Bush, and many of his predecessors!) It is entirely human to want to punish him, not to "reward" him with another term or a vote that might be taken to express trust, hope or approval.

But rage is not generally conducive to clear thinking. And it often gets worked out against innocent victims, as would be the case here domestically, if refusals to vote for him resulted in Romney's taking key battleground states that decide the outcome of this election.

To punish Obama in this particular way, on Election Day -- by depriving him of votes in swing states and hence of office in favor of Romney and Ryan -- would punish most of all the poor and marginal in society, and workers and middle class as well: not only in the U.S. but worldwide in terms of the economy (I believe the Republicans could still convert this recession to a Great Depression), the environment and climate change. It could well lead to war with Iran (which Obama has been creditably resisting, against pressure from within his own party). And it would spell, via Supreme Court appointments, the end of Roe v. Wade and of the occasional five to four decisions in favor of the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

The reelection of Barack Obama, in itself, is not going to bring serious progressive change, end militarism and empire, or restore the Constitution and the rule of law. That's for us and the rest of the people to bring about after this election and in the rest of our lives -- through organizing, building movements and agitating.

In the eight to twelve close-fought states -- especially Florida, Ohio, and Virginia, but also Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin -- for any progressive to encourage fellow progressives and others in those states to vote for a third-party candidate is, I would say, to be complicit in facilitating the election of Romney and Ryan, with all its consequences.

To think of that as urging people in swing states to "vote their conscience" is, I believe, dangerously misleading advice. I would say to a progressive that if your conscience tells you on Election Day to vote for someone other than Obama in a battleground state, you need a second opinion. Your conscience is giving you bad counsel.

I often quote a line by Thoreau that had great impact for me: "Cast your whole vote: not a strip of paper merely, but your whole influence." He was referring, in that essay, to civil disobedience, or as he titled it himself, "Resistance to Civil Authority."

It still means that to me. But this is a year when for people who think like me -- and who, unlike me, live in battleground states -- casting a strip of paper is also important. Using your whole influence this month to get others to do that, to best effect, is even more important.

That means for progressives in the next couple of weeks -- in addition to the rallies, demonstrations, petitions, lobbying (largely against policies or prospective policies of President Obama, including austerity budgeting next month), movement-building and civil disobedience that are needed all year round and every year -- using one's voice and one's e-mails and op-eds and social media to encourage citizens in swing states to vote against a Romney victory by voting for the only real alternative, Barack Obama.

Daniel Ellsberg is a former State and Defense Department official who has been arrested for acts of non-violent civil disobedience over eighty times, initially for copying and releasing the top secret Pentagon Papers, for which he faced 115 years in prison. Living in a non-swing state, he does not intend to vote for President Obama.



Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
Email This Page

 

Comments  

We are concerned about a recent drift towards vitriol in the RSN Reader comments section. There is a fine line between moderation and censorship. No one likes a harsh or confrontational forum atmosphere. At the same time everyone wants to be able to express themselves freely. We'll start by encouraging good judgment. If that doesn't work we'll have to ramp up the moderation.

General guidelines: Avoid personal attacks on other forum members; Avoid remarks that are ethnically derogatory; Do not advocate violence, or any illegal activity.

Remember that making the world better begins with responsible action.

- The RSN Team

 
+64 # ReconFire 2016-12-27 14:45
I agree with you Mr. Kiriakou and I'll add that I expect a fight in the states right's arena. I fully expect morally bankrupt Sessions to go after the states that have legalized marijuana.
 
 
+49 # JoanF 2016-12-27 18:46
I agree, too, and am not optimistic about anything good happening in the next four years. Unless we actually have a revolution.
 
 
+44 # reiverpacific 2016-12-27 19:09
Quoting JoanF:
I agree, too, and am not optimistic about anything good happening in the next four years. Unless we actually have a revolution.

And/or a general strike!
 
 
+28 # economagic 2016-12-27 19:58
"And/or a general strike!"

Some people may be familiar with that term but unable to explain just what it means!
 
 
+18 # goodsensecynic 2016-12-27 20:33
It's pretty much what it sounds like. It's a "general" (i.e., everybody) "strike" (i.e. down tools & off the job).

It is, in principle, a mass revolutionary act intended to shut down the country - nominally until certain massive grievances are remedied, preferably with the resignation of the whole government.

To my knowledge, a successful general strike has never occurred (though France came close in 1968).

In the US, there numerous attempts in the late 19th century, but no revolution occurred.

Apart from a 5-day strike in Seattle in Feb., 1919, the only thing close in 20th-century North America happened in Canada (also in 1919). Called the "Winnipeg General Strike" (because it started in Winnipeg, Manitoba) it won some support across the Canadian west, in Ontario and in Montreal.

It was, however, not well enough organized (although the strike committee did take over the government of the City of Winnipeg) and not well enough supported to win.

Today, trade unions are at their weakest point since before the Great Depression. In the US, I doubt if 10% of the labor force is organized. And, without the workers, there's not much of a strike.

A general strike is a tactic familiar to both anarchists and socialists (with predictable differences of intent and method).

Prime writers? Probably Georges Sorel & Rosa Luxemburg. And, of course, there were America's beloved "Wobblies" - the Industrial Workers of the World, still active after all these years!
 
 
+22 # michelle 2016-12-27 21:23
"Today, trade unions are at their weakest point since before the Great Depression. In the US, I doubt if 10% of the labor force is organized. And, without the workers, there's not much of a strike."

True enough. Until we recognize our power is our labor and refusal to purchase goods we will not win. The following is from IWW organizer Joseph Ettor:

"If the workers of the world want to win all they have to do is recognize their own solidarity. They have nothing to do but fold their arms and the world will stop. The workers are more powerful with their hands in their pockets than all the property of capitalists..."

It takes great organization and without unions I am not sure we can achieve a general strike but that is what it will take. Half of America went with trump and I can't help but wonder when and if they will figure out what is happening. I don't hold out much hope without solidarity.

I started my own strike the day he was elected. If I don't need something to absolutely survive, I don't buy it. Remember the Boston bombing and the lockdown that followed. The shelter in place was lifted, not when the culprits were caught, but when the people in power realized a couple of days without spending cost business over $300,000,000.

Need I remind anyone George W Bush told people to go out and shop after 911. Use the money you save to hit 'em twice by paying off debt. Resist anyway you can.
 
 
+8 # MD426 2016-12-28 06:39
I agree that purchasing power is as important a tool as labor these days. Boycotts of specific products and businesses or a general boycott could be a very effective measure. Boycotts can be organized across all kinds of societal lines, age, gender, retired, working, ethnicity, and so on. Choosing the time and specifics is all important .. and then getting the word out.
 
 
+11 # savagem13 2016-12-28 10:09
Yes, timing is important. Organized at a point when many Trump voters are beginning to realize that he's not actually going to work in their favor.
 
 
+28 # Femihumanist 2016-12-27 19:15
I don't foresee anything good coming of it either. The only hope, though, if he's a REAL law and order guy, is that maybe we'll get Drumpass arrested and convicted on one of his high-end violations
 
 
+8 # MD426 2016-12-28 06:43
It would have to be something he can't buy his way out of which is his custom. His latest buyout $25 mil for Trump University to avoid a felony and racketeering conviction. He believes he can buy his way out of anything and everything.
 
 
+24 # grandlakeguy 2016-12-27 19:31
And as we all wince with horror at what will be happening please NEVER forget...
The Trump Presidency is brought to you by the dishonesty of Hillary Clinton and the DNC!

We could have had Bernie!
 
 
+3 # tgemberl 2016-12-27 20:05
You can't pass up an opportunity to criticize Hillary, who got 2.8 million more votes than Trump. There's no way you could have any responsibility for Sessions taking office.
 
 
+6 # Eljefe 2016-12-27 22:09
DNC--a wholly owned subsidiary.
 
 
-3 # Tigre1 2016-12-28 11:40
More whores' hit from 'mud on the bank'.

Go on, you phoney, call your local FBI office...no, no, not to turn yourself in!

to explain all the real and true proof you have AGAINST the woman you love to hate, (but never met) HRC. You're not just lying again, are you?
Do you hate OTHER WOMEN TOO?

Go on, call the FBI. They're on YOUR side, you know. Go ahead, turn ME in if you want. They used to know ME pretty good in the local office.
 
 
-2 # Kiwikid 2016-12-28 21:03
Good on you Tigre1. glg really has his needle caught in the same record's groove, and seems either unable or unwilling to jump to the next track.
 
 
-1 # Diane_Wilkinson_Trefethen_aka_tref 2016-12-29 15:48
 
 
+20 # wrknight 2016-12-27 19:56
Yes, but - 25 of the states have Republican legislatures AND governors. And Republicans control both houses in 32 states' legislatures, 17 of which have veto proof majorities.

Add to that Republicans have never been "soft" on crime; and with penal colonies being one of the two largest growth industries in the U.S.(the other being the police, security & surveillance industry), Republicans can support their business buddies with more privatized prisons.

Never forget, fighting crime, administering justice and operating prisons are big, profitable businesses in the U.S. So the more laws you make, the more laws get broken and the more people you can prosecute and imprison and the more profit there is for the criminal-justic e industry.
 
 
+8 # MD426 2016-12-28 06:46
You've hit the nail right on the head. Reform has little to do with justice and much to do with profit
 
 
+6 # tr4302@gmail.com 2016-12-27 20:13
grandlakeguy 2016-12-27 19:31
And as we all wince with horror at what will be happening please NEVER forget...
The Trump Presidency is brought to you by the dishonesty of Hillary Clinton and the DNC!

We could have had Bernie!

Amen!!
 
 
-7 # carytucker 2016-12-27 20:25
Quoting tr4302@gmail.com:
grandlakeguy 2016-12-27 19:31
And as we all wince with horror at what will be happening please NEVER forget...
The Trump Presidency is brought to you by the dishonesty of Hillary Clinton and the DNC!

We could have had Bernie!

Amen!!

Yes, if only arithmetic could be suspended to allow Sen Sanders to accept the nomination with 4 million fewer votes than Sec'y Clinton. And the appeal of a Socialist Jew would have stilled the Republican smear machine. This frantic insistence that HRC voters actually voted for Trump is dishonest, delusional, or both. Lose the fairy dust and find some place to oppose Mr Trump.
 
 
-9 # ericlipps 2016-12-27 20:33
Of course, you know what Glug and the others like him will say: that Hillary DID'T win by 4 millions votes but LOST BIG-TIME to Sanders and only won by STEALING the nomination with the help of the Demonic National Conspiracy. (On second thought, no: I don't think they have enough imagination to come up with that name for the DNC.)
 
 
+2 # librarian1984 2016-12-29 00:09
Apparently there is something to what George Lakoff says. eric, by Jove, I think you've got it!
 
 
+15 # Caliban 2016-12-27 20:48
Bernie would have been a wonderful president, and I wish more folks had realized that earlier in 2016.

But trying to use Bernie's unsuccessful campaign to insult Hillary Clinton insults Bernie more than it does the intended object of scorn.

The primaries are over , and so is the 2016 presidential election. It's time to start living in the present -- maybe by persuading Senator Sanders to give it another try in 2020.
 
 
+4 # joejamchicago 2016-12-28 05:01
If the nation survives the next four year of chaos and if elections take place in 2020, the Democratic candidate will win in a landslide. The question is: will her or she represent the people or Wall Street?
 
 
0 # savagem13 2016-12-28 10:12
If it is a Democratic candidate, they will represent Wall Street. Both parties must die.
 
 
+11 # Carol R 2016-12-28 05:44
 
 
-6 # Tigre1 2016-12-28 11:51
What a STUPID title for an article. YOU must know that his 'headline clipper' cut that one out and put it in the scrapbook. NOT THE ARTICLE. HE CAN'T read that well. And his daughter or whoever is current grabmeat cocktail won't want to read it to him, either.
We're IN one of THOSE...you know, when you go to a strange door because your car broke down in the rain with you and your girlfriend, and a hunchback named Sessions opens the door and wants you to step inside...bwahah a...
 
 
+1 # Tigre1 2016-12-28 11:46
Dear Carol R...yup. WE have already seen that 'stupid is what stupid does'...and his followers elected him...supposedly.

Now he gets to make so many of us hurt more than we wanted or needed to.

Let's just keep on keeping track of who and what class of people he improves the lives of...a few years after somebody unnecessarily dies in those families, the ugly ones may wake up. They won't get any smarter, but they might have learned more...
 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN