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FOCUS | City of Portland vs. The Houseless Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 03 October 2013 12:13

Gibson writes: "The activist community in Portland refuses to use the term 'homeless,' preferring that allies use the term 'houseless' instead. While America has roughly 633,000 people considered houseless, 293,000 of them are houseless as a family. Oregon has the largest percentage of long-term houseless people of any state in America."

Gibson writes:
Gibson writes: "Houselessness has been on the rise in America since the Great Recession of 2008, when the slow job market and millions of new foreclosures pushed millions of Americans into the streets." (photo: Change the World)


City of Portland vs. The Houseless

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

03 October 13

 

t was dark out and I didn't know exactly where I was going, but the sound of drums and bells rang loudly enough under the Hawthorne Bridge near downtown Portland for me to get there by sound alone. The six- to eight-month rainy season had begun just a few days ago, but the rain calmed down enough for the Sunday night drum circle to draw out around 20 participants. One man allowed me to sit in on a few rhythms with a six-piece drum set he made out of three buckets of varying sizes, a set of roto toms, and duct tape to strap the entire assembly to a cart. Some of the drummers had lengthy facial hair and were clad in dirty clothes with trash bags taped to their shoes to keep the rain out. Other drummers were younger people with newer clothes and layered haircuts. You've got both homeless and non-homeless people here," said a man who introduced himself only as Dominic, who had been dancing in the middle of the drum circle just minutes ago. "Portland's street dwellers are a very tight-knit community, and they all stick together. I'd invite almost any of these people over to my house for dinner and a place to sleep."

"You've got both homeless and non-homeless people here," said a man who introduced himself only as Dominic, who had been dancing in the middle of the drum circle just minutes ago. "Portland's street dwellers are a very tight-knit community, and they all stick together. I'd invite almost any of these people over to my house for dinner and a place to sleep."

The activist community in Portland refuses to use the term "homeless," preferring that allies use the term "houseless" instead. While America has roughly 633,000 people considered houseless, 293,000 of them are houseless as a family. Oregon has the largest percentage of long-term houseless people of any state in America. And there are currently 6 vacant buildings for every 1 houseless person in the entire country. Houselessness has been on the rise in America since the Great Recession of 2008, when the slow job market and millions of new foreclosures pushed millions of Americans into the streets. However, simply seizing these vacant buildings from the banks who own them and converting them into housing for the houseless is complicated. The process has to involve cities, banks, developers and advocates for the houseless all coming together on what to do with which property.

"These people still have a home in Portland, and they're as much a part of our community as we are," said John Langley, co-manager of the Red & Black Café, a worker-owned co-op in the Buckman neighborhood. "They aren't homeless. They just need a house to live in."

The Red and Black Café considers itself a small business allied with the houseless cause in Portland. Langley said the café has been known as a safe haven for the houseless ever since a famous altercation between a journalist named Cornelia Seigneur and a Portland police officer named James Crooker.

"We have a lot of houseless people who sleep under our awning to stay out of the rain, and we let them come in the shop without buying anything," Langley said. "Officer Crooker walked by some of the people in the shop, and at one point it looked like he was being intimidating to a customer, so I politely asked him to leave. He finally did, after he made some snide remarks."

After that altercation, Cornelia Seigneur wrote a column about the experience, which caused a media firestorm, even leading to Fox News picking up the story and putting the Red and Black Café in the national spotlight. Langley said while there were block-long lines of people waiting to patronize the Red & Black Café in the wake of the story, the incident took an emotional toll.

"We had a lot of people sending us death threats, calling us on the phone, saying 'I'm going to kill you,' all for us using our right as an establishment to refuse service to anyone," Langley said. "We had to hold a press conference to counter their framing and defend people's basic right to have a safe space in their own city without being harassed by police."

As an ally to the houseless community, Langley said his business has been targeted twice in the past by vigilante organizations using vocabulary with white supremacist overtones, as have other houseless allies like Sisters of the Road and St. Francis, just around the corner from the Red & Black. The emails Langley sent me come from an organization called "Volunteer Vigilantes Enforcing Victory Against Vagrants," headed up by a man called "Chief M. Freeman" and filled with fascistic messaging about how the Red and Black Café and St. Francis were enabling the houseless by caring for them and tolerating their presence. You can read the emails here.

Lif Bowers, an activist ally of Portland's houseless community, helped organize sit-ins at the mayor's office last year and early this year. Lif said the city has made its priorities clear in how it allocates city money, and with whom police side with in landlord/tenant disputes.

"They cut off all money for free rail systems and funded a new police training center instead," Bowers said. "And the police served as the goons of a landlord who didn't pay his mortgage, instead of a tenant who paid her rent, assisting the landlord in evicting her."

John Langley also recalled an incident from the summer of 2013, when notices were put up all over the neighborhood giving the houseless 72 hours to move their belongings elsewhere or to face arrest. According to Langley, the city came through roughly 11 hours after the notices were given, and people had their things thrown away as they watched.

"The mayor has this whac-a-mole approach of pushing people out," Langley said. "He talks about 'livability' and 'cleaning up our streets,' as if houseless people weren't even human beings."

Dana Haynes, communications director for Mayor Charlie Hales, said he didn't know anything about the threats made by vigilantes, and said stories about putting the houseless' earthly belongings in a dumpster were "false." According to Haynes, Oregon law states that people have the right to sleep on the sidewalks at night, but doesn't allow people to camp or claim one part of the sidewalk as theirs. He said that after four arrests were made on the first day of Mayor Hales' initial "sweep," the houseless community complied with police orders to move.

"We gave people the location of the city facility where they could pick up their belongings within a 30-day period," Haynes said in a phone interview. "Portland police walked the streets with homeless advocates like Clean & Safe and JOIN. The only things we threw away were things that were obviously garbage, like empty bottles and candy wrappers."

To call Clean & Safe and JOIN "homeless advocates" is a bit of a stretch, considering how closely aligned the board members of both organizations are to the local government and the police. Eight of 11 members of JOIN's board are corporate or financial executives, and JOIN Board of Directors Vice President Sara Westbrook is listed as a member of the Portland Police Bureau. The sheer number of business executives, condominium developers, and parking garage owners listed as members of the board on Portland Clean & Safe District's website reads like a sponsors list on the back of a program for a symphony, or an expensive Broadway theatre production, rather than a list of people who work tirelessly to serve the houseless.

In the aftermath of the eviction of Occupy Portland, several activists in the houseless community set up a camp on the edge of Chinatown called "Right to Dream Too," known as "R2D2" colloquially. The location of the camp at 4th and Burnside, in the heart of the downtown business district, was somewhat controversial at first. The camp is surrounded by a wall of doors with murals painted on each one, depicting the struggle of the houseless. At the front gates, I watched an R2D2 volunteer security guard turn someone away in the rain due to a lack of space for the night.

"R2D2 is a place for people to come and get 8 to 12 hours of undisturbed, dry, safe rest," said Ibrahim Mubarak, chairman of R2D2. "We have at least 100 people staying here every day, and have to turn away 20 to 30 people each night."

Mayor Hales' candidacy was supported by much of the city's business community during his fall 2012 election campaign. When he was still a member of the Portland City Council, Hales was the only one who voted against allowing an encampment for Portland's houseless community, arguing it would be detrimental to the downtown business district. As mayor, he drove the houseless away from their original campsite in front of city hall with food carts.

"A lot of the businesses didn't really want us here at first," Mubarak said. "But they got to like us after they saw the violent crime rate went down. We have groups who regularly patrol the surrounding blocks, pick up the trash on the sidewalks, giving resources to people sleeping on the streets, de-escalating conflict between the houseless and the police."

Mubarak is optimistic that the city wants to do the right thing. He said several city council members, like Amanda Fritz, have attended grassroots events hosted by the houseless community and pushed for more subsidized housing. But Mubarak, who has been personally cited several times for sleeping in public at $250 per ticket, still has a few core demands for the city.

"Because we live in the streets, we're criminalized for exercising our basic human rights," Mubarak said. "We need a homeless peoples' bill of rights, where we can be guaranteed things like hygiene centers where we can use the bathroom and clean up, storage space for our belongings, and no tickets for sleeping on the sidewalk."

Both John Langley and Dana Haynes can agree on one thing – life won't improve for the houseless until the overall economy picks up.

"We obviously need more jobs, not just here but everywhere," Haynes said. "We need an increase in shelters of all kinds, for men and for women, and women with children. And we need more low-income housing in general."

"I'm sure that the city is aware that it needs to send a more palatable message than the one Chief Freeman is sending here. My point is that their goals are essentially aligned." Langley said in a follow-up interview. "I think, unfortunately, that in times of economic hardship some people react by attacking poor people."



Carl Gibson, 26, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

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.

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GOP Can't Impeach Obama, Closes Government Instead Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6853"><span class="small">Frank Rich, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Thursday, 03 October 2013 08:55

Rich writes: "The focus on Obamacare as a means to delegitimize a twice-elected president is just the latest pretext after previous pretexts failed, from the president's supposedly fake birth certificate to the 'Fast and Furious' scandal to Benghazi and all the other would-be impeachable offenses investigated by the House's Inspector Clouseau, Representative Darrell Issa of California."

Shutdown is GOP attempt to defeat Obama by any means necessary. (photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)
Shutdown is GOP attempt to defeat Obama by any means necessary. (photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)


GOP Can't Impeach Obama, Closes Government Instead

By Frank Rich, New York Magazine

03 October 13

 

he federal government shut down yesterday after House Republicans refused to pass any budget that didn't defund Obamacare. The president's signature domestic initiative passed by the skin of its teeth in 2010 and survived both a Supreme Court challenge and a national election in 2012. Are you surprised the GOP is staking so much on a fight it has already lost three times?
Not at all. Let's be clear what this is about: the refusal of a defeated political party to accept the legitimacy of the democratic process when it didn't get its way. The focus on Obamacare as a means to delegitimize a twice-elected president is just the latest pretext after previous pretexts failed, from the president's supposedly fake birth certificate to the "Fast and Furious" scandal to Benghazi and all the other would-be impeachable offenses investigated by the House's Inspector Clouseau, Representative Darrell Issa of California. Think of the Obamacare-driven shutdown as parallel to the Monica Lewinsky–driven impeachment of Bill Clinton: a handy - though ultimately backfiring - vehicle for an attempted right-wing coup against a Democratic president. If the GOP's real aim was to get government out of Americans' medical care, it would be resuming its campaign to "reform" (e.g., gradually defund) Medicare, for starters. But you don't hear anything about that anymore now that the party realizes that its base loves Medicare - so much so that tea-partiers carried signs saying "Keep Government Out of My Medicare!" in ignorance of the fact that it is a program of the government they loathe. So Obamacare is the chosen weapon instead. Unfortunately for the Republicans, it is going to detonate in their own caucus.

Texas senator Ted Cruz delivered a 21-hour anti-Obamacare speech last week and reportedly is now issuing marching order to the House GOP's hardline caucus. Is becoming the face of the shutdown a good gamble for Cruz?
Only if he labors under the belief he can be elected president with a group of deep-red states that are guaranteed to go Republican no matter who is on the ticket - and need no independent voters or purple swing states. For contrast, I direct you once again to the shrewdest politician in the GOP's 2016 field, Rand Paul. Though he is second to no one in opposing Obamacare, he stays clear of vilifying Obama and endorsing a government shutdown, has been largely quiet during this whole drama, and has come out in favor of a clean House resolution to keep the government running. He knows Cruz is on a kamikaze mission.

What will end the shutdown?
Not public opinion. New polls show that, despite Americans' divided-to-negative views about Obamacare itself, more than 70 percent of the public opposes the GOP's use of a shutdown as a tactic to defund the law. But the GOP radicals won't be swayed by those numbers. If they didn't care when such Establishment authorities as the Wall Street Journal editorial page, John McCain, and Karl Rove told them repeatedly to cool it, why should they give a damn about voters? (After all, the voters in their own safe, gerrymandered districts do agree with the shutdown tactic.) Realizing that these revolutionaries can't be moved, the conservative Establishment is now hoping that blaming the shutdown on Obama and the Democrats will somehow make the president blink instead. So you see this tactic at play in stunts like John Boehner and Eric Cantor assailing the Democrats for refusing to "negotiate" with their party's bomb-throwers, and the Journal's latest opinion-page jeremiads, which are trying to rebrand the chaos as (depending on the day) "An Obama-Cruz Shutdown" or, more desperately, as "The President's Shutdown." That's not going to work either. Dick Armey, a prominent player in the Newt Gingrich leadership team at the helm of the last shutdown, got it exactly right when he said several years later that he had argued against a shutdown at that time: "Newt's position was presidents get blamed for shutdowns, and he cited Ronald Reagan. My position was Republicans get blamed for shutdowns. I argued that it is counterintuitive to the average American to think that the Democrat wants to shut down the government. They're the advocates of the government. It is perfectly logical to them that Republicans would shut it down, because we're seen as antithetical to government. I said if there's a shutdown, we're going to get the blame."

So, what will change the equation? Paul Ryan got it half-right when he said yesterday that the battle on tap two weeks from now, over the debt limit, will be "the forcing mechanism to bring the two parties together." But the parties won't come together then - the Republicans will have to retreat. The moment the radicals seriously threaten to push America into default and toss our economy and the world's into an uncharted cataclysm, Wall Street, which still writes far more checks for the GOP than the outside right-wing groups supporting the shutdown, will pull the plug on the revolution.

In August, RNC chairman Reince Priebus demanded that NBC and CNN cancel their proposed mini-series and documentary projects on Hillary Clinton. On Monday, both NBC and CNN announced they were scrapping their Clinton projects. Cause and effect?
No. As I wrote back then, Reince Priebus and the various right-wing bloggers who joined with him in assuming that these projects would be valentines to Clinton were idiotic. The NBC mini-series, like the rest of that network's hapless entertainment programming, was provisional at best - an embryonic development deal with only one prominent name attached (the actress Diane Lane) and unlikely to bear fruit (like most development deals). Meanwhile, the CNN documentary had been assigned to Charles Ferguson, the high-powered creator of the toughest film about Wall Street and the financial crisis, the Oscar-winning Inside Job. If Priebus had the Internet savvy to use Google - and it remains unclear what, if any, basic digital know-how resides at the GOP - he would have figured out in a nanosecond that Ferguson was far more likely to be a Clinton critic than hagiographer. And that has proved to be the case. Ferguson's account of why he dropped the CNN assignment is worth reading in full at the Huffington Post. It wasn't pressure from CNN - or the GOP via CNN - that made him quit the film but the full press of Clinton apparatchiks to limit access and create roadblocks as he pursued the story journalistically. It's becoming increasingly clear that the Clinton camp is doing everything possible to snuff out all manner of journalistic investigation in anticipation of a possible 2016 Hillary Clinton presidential campaign. What they don't realize - and you'd think they'd have learned this lesson by now - is that the more they look as if they have embarrassments they want to hide, the harder the press will go looking for them. Their successful derailment of Ferguson's documentary is a pyrrhic victory at best.

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The Work of a Generation Print
Wednesday, 02 October 2013 14:39

Snowden writes: "The surveillance of whole populations, rather than individuals, threatens to be the greatest human rights challenge of our time."

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: Guardian UK)
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: Guardian UK)


The Work of a Generation

By Edward Snowden, Common Dreams

02 October 13

 

SA whistleblower Edward Snowden's words were entered as testimony at the European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee in Brussels on Monday.

Jesselyn Radack of the US Government Accountability Project (GAP) and a former whistleblower and ethics adviser to the US Department of Justice, read Snowden's statement into the record.

Ms. Radack came to prominence after she revealed that the FBI had committed what she said was a breach of ethics in its interrogation of John Walker Lindh, who was captured during the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and dubbed the “American Taliban.”



I thank the European Parliament and the LIBE Committee for taking up the challenge of mass surveillance. The surveillance of whole populations, rather than individuals, threatens to be the greatest human rights challenge of our time. The success of economies in developed nations relies increasingly on their creative output, and if that success is to continue, we must remember that creativity is the product of curiosity, which in turn is the product of privacy.

A culture of secrecy has denied our societies the opportunity to determine the appropriate balance between the human right of privacy and the governmental interest in investigation. These are not decisions that should be made for a people, but only by the people after full, informed, and fearless debate. Yet public debate is not possible without public knowledge, and in my country, the cost for one in my position of returning public knowledge to public hands has been persecution and exile. If we are to enjoy such debates in the future, we cannot rely upon individual sacrifice. We must create better channels for people of conscience to inform not only trusted agents of government, but independent representatives of the public outside of government.

When I began my work, it was with the sole intention of making possible the debate we see occurring here in this body and in many other bodies around the world. Today we see legislative bodies forming new committees, calling for investigations, and proposing new solutions for modern problems. We see emboldened courts that are no longer afraid to consider critical questions of national security. We see brave executives remembering that if a public is prevented from knowing how they are being governed, the necessary result is that they are no longer self-governing. And we see the public reclaiming an equal seat at the table of government. The work of a generation is beginning here, with your hearings, and you have the full measure of my gratitude and support.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_syFFvefh0

 

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This Is Conservative Sabotage Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=27775"><span class="small">Thomas Frank, Salon</span></a>   
Wednesday, 02 October 2013 14:36

Frank writes: "Conservative crusaders have often taken up the question of what to do about government. The utopian dream is to wreck it."

The U.S. Capitol building. (photo: M. Scott Mahaskey/Politico)
The U.S. Capitol building. (photo: M. Scott Mahaskey/Politico)


This Is Conservative Sabotage

By Thomas Frank, Salon

02 October 13

 

Direct assaults on government fail because people want a secure retirement and education. So the right fights dirty

onservative crusaders have often taken up the question of what to do about government. The utopian dream is to wreck it, an impossible goal that is nevertheless the frequent object of conservative reverie. "The mystery of government is not how Washington works," writes the humorist P. J. O'Rourke, "but how to make it stop." There are silver-bullet theories for destroying the state: repeal the amendment that allowed for the income tax; bring back the gold standard and thus break the state's power over money; or - most ingeniously - interpret the eminent domain clause of the Constitution so as to invalidate almost the entire body of government regulation enacted in the twentieth century.

Every now and then conservatives give it a try. "By the time we finish this poker game, there may not be a federal government left, which would suit me just fine," boasted Tom DeLay, the spiritual leader of the Republican Congress elected in 1994. Before long DeLay and his idealistic colleagues had parlayed a budget disagreement with President Clinton into a full-blown government shutdown, which some of them celebrated as a sweet taste of things to come, an overwhelming demonstration of their supreme ideological point. Right-wing Washington chattered gleefully about how the good folks "outside the Beltway" didn't really care about the shutdown, and Texas senator Phil Gramm took to the airwaves to scoff, "have you missed the government?"

Unfortunately, the shutdown of 1996 turned out to be a monumental political blunder that led ultimately to Bill Clinton's reelection. All of the movement's other direct frontal assaults come to the same end, running headlong into the solid brick wall of public sentiment. The brute fact reasserts itself every time: people like the liberal state. They like the prospect of a secure retirement, a guaranteed education for their kids, pure food, clean air, crash-free airplane trips, safe working conditions, and a minimum wage.

Realizing that they will never get to dismantle big government in this direct way is, for some conservatives, cause for despair. For example, Albert Jay Nock's 1935 book, Our Enemy, the State - regarded as a "founding text" of the modern conservative movement - ends by claiming that "simply nothing" can be done to stop the growth of the beast. But then, this man Nock was a born pessimist. He loved to muse about how the majority of mankind were a lesser species and the only beings that mattered were a "remnant" of civilized gentlemen who persisted through this fallen age - a daft idea that he saw fit to assert in the very middle of the 1930s, the so-called proletarian decade.

Nock's unsparing pessimism blinded him to the possibilities of his own material. Read Our Enemy, the State closely enough and it dawns on you that Nock's caustic version of history might well provide the ideological basis for conservative governance. The state, according to Nock, is an instrument for "the economic exploitation of one class by another." He was especially contemptuous of the New Deal, which he described as a "coup d'état" in which the shiftless "masses" rip off the hardworking few and indirectly "loot their own treasury" through such devices as Social Security.

But Nock included virtually every government in his condemnation. All states are built to steal and exploit, including the American state founded in 1776. "Wherever the state is, there is villainy," Nock has taught generations of young conservatives: Governments are instituted among men in order to help one group in society exploit another; governments are then captured by some other class, which sets about exploiting some other group, and so on.

Albert Jay Nock didn't approve of any of this, but that was merely because his cynical nerve failed in the end. If we contemplate this thing with the nihilistic eye of the conservative warrior, the answer to the problem of the state becomes obvious. Since there is no possible moral difference between modes of government, it doesn't matter whether the beast is "big" or "small"; all that matters is who has captured it and whose interests it serves. The object of the political war is not really to shrink the state or shut it down; it is to capture the thing and run it - or run it into the ground - for your constituents' benefit.

And when this bunch has finished their work, what do they tell us then? What do they have to say for themselves after they've lobotomized regulatory agencies, picked pointless fights with the bureaucracy, brought on budgetary crises, and turned over important federal offices to lobbyists, hacks, and cronies?

They say, with a laugh, that the only way to keep them from doing it again is for us to give up. To have a government that tries to redistribute wealth inevitably attracts the gnawing and the blighting of creatures like them. "The problem is that the federal government hands out billions of dollars, and people will lie, cheat, steal, or bribe to get it," Grover Norquist once told a libertarian magazine.

If you have a big cake, and you put it under the sink and then you wonder why the cockroaches are in your kitchen, I don't think any sprays or blocking the holes in the walls are going to get rid of the cockroaches. You've got to throw the cake in the trash so that the cockroaches don't have something to come for.

It's a funny thing, though: I've been eating cake all my life, and I've never had problems with cockroaches. And just as there are millions of other people whose cake-eating experiences are largely cockroach-free, so there are also millions who live under governments run by capable professionals, not hacks bent on wrecking the operation; entire countries where American-style scandals are as rare as sweatshops. But conservatives blocked out this possibility as though it were some kind of schoolboy utopia, some French absinthe dream. For these hardheaded pragmatists it is always one or zero, remember, government or no government. If you didn't like what Norquist's buddies did in Washington, your only alternative was to give up on economic justice altogether, to throw the whole thing in the trash.

Although Norquist made this analogy back in 1997, it was the conservative movement's standard, all-purpose reaction to the scandals of 2005 and 2006. If you don't like corruption, you had to do away with government. Jack Abramoff himself even made the point in a 2006 interview with Vanity Fair: "The only thing that a clever lobbyist cannot manipulate," he said, "is the absence of something to lobby for or fight against."

This is a theory of political venality that is deeply entangled with venality itself. When a free-market theorist says that the answer to corruption is no government and is then seconded by the leading corruptionist of the time, a "free-marketeer" who says that no government is the only way you will stop people like him, we have come very close to a union of theory and practice. Free-market theory, that is, and practices that should have turned the stomach of every believer in democracy. Seen this way, corruption is just another way to attack the liberal state, a sort of street theater in which the right-wing provocateur makes his point about government by demonstration. Give him what he wants, or he'll do it again.

Conservatives have often discussed the vulnerability of their enemy to such acts of sabotage. The most famous example can be found in a 1964 book by the conservative political theorist James Burnham, which diagnosed liberalism as "the ideology of Western suicide." What Burnham meant by this was that liberalism's so-called virtues - its openness and its insistence on equal rights for everyone - were in fact fatal weaknesses.

Either liberalism must extend the freedoms to those who are not themselves liberals and even to those whose deliberate purpose is to destroy the liberal society - in effect, that is, must grant a free hand to its assassins; or liberalism must deny its own principles, restrict the freedoms, and practice discrimination. It is as if the rules of football provided no penalties against those who violated the rules; so that the referee would either have to permit a player (whose real purpose was to break up the game) to slug, kick, gouge and whatever else he felt like doing, or else would have to disregard the rules and throw the unfair player out.

For its very survival, in other words, liberalism depends on fair play by its sworn enemies, making it vulnerable, as Burnham observes, to assassination, hijacking, or sabotage by any party that refuses to play by the rules.

The "suicide" that all of this was meant to describe was the destruction of the democratic West at the hands of communism, a movement in whose ranks Burnham had once marched himself. But after many flagrant decades of unsportsmanlike conduct by conservatives, his theory seems more accurately to describe the strategems of its fans on the American right.

Liberalism has indeed proven vulnerable to the tactics of its swaggering, bullying foes, but to call this suicide is like saying that your window got in the way of my brick, or that your nose smacked my fist. The correct term for the disasters that have disabled the liberal state is vandalism, conducted by a movement that refuses to play by liberalism's rules. It loots the Treasury, dynamites the dam, takes a crowbar to the monument, and throws a wrench into the gears. It slams the locomotive into reverse, tosses something heavy on the throttle, and jumps for it.

Mainstream American political commentary, with its own touching faith in fair play, customarily assumes that the two great political parties do whatever they do as precise mirror images of each other; that if one is guilty of some misstep, the other is also automatically and equally culpable. The idea has a geometric elegance to it, and to journalists this doctrine of symmetry is especially appealing: It is a shortcut to fairness, an easy way to brush off the accusations of bias that plague them. But when applied to the political war that I have described in these pages, it serves to advance our understanding barely at all.

There is no symmetry. Liberalism, as we know it, arose out of a long-ago compromise between left-wing social movements and business interests. It depends utterly on the efficient functioning of certain organs of the state, and it does not call for some kind of all-out war on private industry. Conservatism, on the other hand, speaks not of compromise but of removing its adversaries from the field altogether. While no one dreams of sawing off those branches of the state that protect conservatism's constituents - the military, the police, the legal privileges granted to corporations - conservatives, in their heyday, freely and openly fantasized about doing away with those bits of "big government" that served liberal ends. And while defunding the left remains the north star of the Washington right, no comparable campaign to "defund the right" exists; indeed, it would be difficult to imagine one. Even in the darkest economic times, liberals are hardly likely to crack down on the Fortune 500 with the same resourceful malevolence that business leaders, to choose one example, have used in their war on labor unions.

As I relate all these dreams of vandalism and destruction, I am reminded of the emotional eulogy given in 1983 by Jerry Falwell for Congressman Larry McDonald, the chairman of the John Birch Society, who had died on a Korean airliner that was shot down by the Soviets. McDonald, Falwell declared, was like Samson in the Bible story, killing countless Philistines (in addition to himself) by pushing the pillars out from under their house. In fact, Falwell continued, this was a metaphor for what the entire conservative movement was doing.

Like Samson, some of us are reaching for the pillars. We may not clearly see the way . . . we may be lacking in wisdom . . . but we have the will and the confidence in a God who is sovereign, and cannot fail. . . . Larry McDonald was [like Samson] a victim, a prisoner of a society moving to the left. But he never moved with it. He still was looking for the pillars. And at a certain hour on August 31, 1983 [when McDonald died], he found the pillars, one with his right hand and one with his left.

Let us pass over Falwell's confused suggestion that McDonald's murder was what changed America. What glares out at us here is the preacher's desire to wreck "a society moving to the left" - to knock out its props and pancake the whole arrogant thing, even if it costs conservatives their lives.

In 1983, they were "reaching for the pillars"; twenty-five years later, we are all living with the consequences.

The middle-class America that Falwell and Co. wrecked with such gusto is not going to be easy to rebuild. For one thing, the balance of social power has been so decisively altered since those days that the political landscape itself has been radically transformed. Dramatic economic inequality of the kind conservatism has engineered has inevitably brought political inequality with it. The rich vote at higher rates than others, they contribute greater amounts to candidates, and, should they choose, they are able to afford today's expensive campaigns for public office. They can also subsidize authors, newspaper columnists, academics, magazines, and TV shows; they can fund the careers of friendly politicians and buy off dubious ones; and they can reward right-thinking regulators and bureaucrats when these worthies' stints in government are done. They can launch cable TV networks, buy newspapers, and bankroll think-tank operations charged with making their idiosyncratic personal ideas into the common sense of the millions.

In this sense, conservative Washington is a botch that will keep on working even after its formal demise. It defunded the constituencies of the liberal state while constructing a plutocracy that will stand regardless of who wins the next few elections and that will weight our politics rightward for years.

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The Government Leakers Who Truly Endanger America Will Never Face Prosecution Print
Wednesday, 02 October 2013 14:35

Scheer writes: "To support military adventures and budgets, vast troves of U.S. government secrets are routinely released not by lone dissident whistle-blowers but rather skilled teams of government officials."

(photo: unknown)
(photo: unknown)


The Government Leakers Who Truly Endanger America Will Never Face Prosecution

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig

02 October 13

 

ecrecy is for the convenience of the state. To support military adventures and budgets, vast troves of U.S. government secrets are routinely released not by lone dissident whistle-blowers but rather skilled teams of government officials. They engage in coordinated propaganda campaigns designed to influence public opinion. They leak secrets compulsively to advance careers or justify wars and weapons programs, even when the material is far more threatening to national security than any revealed by Edward Snowden.

Remember the hoary accounts in the first week of August trumpeting a great intelligence coup warranting the closing of nearly two dozen U.S. embassies in anticipation of an al-Qaida attack? Advocates for the surveillance state jumped all over that one to support claims that NSA electronic interceptions revealed by Snowden were necessary, and that his whistle-blowing had weakened the nation's security. Actually, the opposite is true.

The al-Qaida revelation, first reported Aug. 2 by Eric Schmitt in The New York Times, came not from the classified information released by Snowden but rather from leaks deliberately provided by U.S. intelligence officials eager to show that the NSA electronic data-gathering program was necessary. On Sunday, Schmitt co-wrote another Times article, similarly quoting American authorities, conceding that the officially condoned August leaks had caused more damage than any of the leaked information attributed to Snowden.

Continue Reading: The Government Leakers Who Truly Endanger America Will Never Face Prosecution

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