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How Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Could Save Bernie Sanders' Campaign Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51704"><span class="small">Addy Baird, BuzzFeed</span></a>   
Tuesday, 03 December 2019 14:17

Baird writes: "Democrats in Congress are rushing to impeach President Donald Trump by Christmas, setting up a Senate trial that could bleed into 2020's first presidential contests."

Sen. Sanders and Rep. Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
Sen. Sanders and Rep. Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


How Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Could Save Bernie Sanders' Campaign

By Addy Baird, BuzzFeed

03 December 19


If — or when — the impeachment trial heads to the Senate, it will trap presidential candidates in DC. But Bernie Sanders has AOC.

emocrats in Congress are rushing to impeach President Donald Trump by Christmas, setting up a Senate trial that could bleed into 2020’s first presidential contests.

It’s a push that will set up Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to have even more power over her party than the first-year Democrat already has.

If Trump is impeached in the House and the Senate does choose to put him on trial, some of the top Democratic presidential candidates will be stuck in DC for as many as six days a week serving as jurors deciding whether or not Trump should be removed from office. Former president Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial lasted about five weeks, and Senate Republicans, who will control the process at the outset, could choose to keep the trial long to give themselves time to defend the president. That timeline could easily push a trial past both the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 3 and the New Hampshire primary on Feb. 11.

Inevitably, with senators unable to vigorously campaign themselves, the battle of the surrogates will ensue. But no candidate has what Sen. Bernie Sanders has in Ocasio-Cortez.

“She's one of the most talented communicators in American politics,” said Waleed Shahid, a spokesperson for Justice Democrats, a progressive group that helped elect Ocasio-Cortez in 2018. “And your ability to be able to communicate a clear message to voters should never be underestimated…[Ocasio-Cortez] has a message and she’s really clear about it.”

Since endorsing Sanders last month, the 30-year-old member of Congress has already been a hugely successful surrogate, joining the senator at an enormous rally in New York and canvassing for him in Iowa in November.

“You know, it's certainly a consideration,” Ocasio-Cortez recently told BuzzFeed News of campaigning for Sanders if there's a Senate trial. “I haven't made any hard commitments but … I think it's a possibility and it's certainly something that I'm open to.”

Ocasio-Cortez became a national celebrity after toppling former representative Joe Crowley, and her presidential endorsement has been perhaps the most significant of any so far in the 2020 Democratic primary. She holds major sway in the progressive movement as a whole, and she said Sanders inspired her insurgent run for Crowley’s seat.

“I didn't have health care. I wasn't being paid a living wage. And I didn't think that I deserved any of those things,” she said at a rally for Sanders in October. “It wasn't until I heard of a man by the name of Bernie Sanders that I began to question and assert and recognize my inherent value as a human being that deserves health care, housing, education, and a living wage.”

Ocasio-Cortez isn't the only House member who can hold her own crowd in the early primary states: Rep. Ayanna Pressley backed Sen. Elizabeth Warren this fall and has been out campaigning for her in the South. Pressley quickly showed how impactful she can be on the trail — in Atlanta last month, she settled a situation at a Warren event that had been interrupted by a group of mostly black pro–charter school protesters. But Pressley doesn’t have anywhere near the national profile of Ocasio-Cortez, her fellow “Squad” member who has flooded national news since last summer.

The House schedule in January will be a boon for Pressley’s and Ocasio-Cortez’s surrogate work. In all, the chamber is scheduled to be in session only about two weeks of the month, as the current congressional dynamic — with the center of the impeachment probe looming over everything in the House while the Senate quietly does its daily business — will flip, making it a perfect time for House surrogates to take to the trail.

Sanders and Warren both have other high-profile House surrogates who could help boost their campaigns during a Senate trial: Reps. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib endorsed Sanders along with Ocasio-Cortez, and Reps. Deb Haaland and Katie Porter are serving as Warren’s campaign cochairs along with Pressley.

But the other senators still in the presidential race don’t have endorsers with such profiles. Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker have racked up a number of backers, though none as well-known and closely watched as Ocasio-Cortez. Sen. Amy Klobuchar has picked up the endorsements of several members of the Minnesota delegation, and Sen. Michael Bennet has picked up just a single notable endorsement, according to FiveThirtyEight’s endorsement tracker (that of Roy Romer, a former chair of the DNC).

The top candidates who won't have jobs in DC come January — Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg — will still have an advantage if much of their competition winds up stranded in Washington.

Since her election, Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders have been working together on the Hill and on the trail often. Most recently, they introduced what they’re calling “Green New Deal for housing” legislation. (The Sanders campaign declined to comment for this story, declining to speculate about something still only hypothetical.)

“I think one of the benefits of movement politics is that it does give people an opportunity to come together and transcend race, class, religion, etc.,” Ocasio-Cortez told BuzzFeed News. “So I think what's been really fabulous is for people to hear the same political message from really different messengers, I think [it] underscores and underlines the kind of universal truth that we're trying to get at after here, which is the fact that things like health care, education, housing, should be treated as human rights, no matter who you are, where you come from.”

Taking that message on the trail will be hugely helpful for Sanders if he’s unable to campaign, Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat who endorsed Sanders early on, told BuzzFeed News.

“I do think she can play a big role during the Senate trial, going to different states. I think it's an incredible asset for our campaign to have her out there,” he said. “Her story is very inspirational in that way and so I think that that appeals and I think it's a great asset for Bernie. And also, I think the biggest thing it does for Bernie is it shows that he's got clearly people who are going to be representing the party the next 20 to 30 years believing in him, and that’s a big validator.”

Ocasio-Cortez is also a fantastic surrogate for Sanders, Shahid of Justice Democrats told BuzzFeed News, because she talks often about her vision for the Democratic Party, something Sanders, as an independent, doesn’t frequently discuss.

“I want to be the party of the New Deal again. The party of the Civil Rights Act, the one that electrified this nation and fights for all people,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted recently, along with a video of her knocking on doors for Sanders. “For that, many would call us radical. But we aren’t ‘pushing the party left,’ we are bringing the party home.”

“That message is really good for a lot of people who feel strongly about being Democrats,” Shahid said. “I think she does a very good job providing a message about that.”

But no surrogate, however excellent, can ever compare to the candidate themselves, one former campaign manager warned.

“I think surrogates are overplayed, honestly,” said Terry Sullivan, who managed Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign. “There are certain surrogates that mean a lot and they set a message from a media tone, and AOC does that for Bernie Sanders, but from a standpoint of being able to campaign without you, it’s tough.”

It’s especially tough, Sullivan said, in Iowa and New Hampshire, where voters expect to get to know the candidates themselves. Additionally, he said, good surrogates are most effective when they campaign with the candidates themselves. (The most poignant image of Ocasio-Cortez on the trail for Sanders, for example, has been her and Sanders clasping hands with big smiles at the New York rally.)

But as far as surrogates go, Sullivan said he believes Ocasio-Cortez is extremely effective for Sanders.

“What makes AOC such a valuable surrogate is that it strengths Bernie’s message of, ‘Look, I’m the original socialist, all the other cool young socialists love me. It also helps cover for the fact that I’m 800 years old. Young people like me,’” he said. “Those are the surrogates who do help.”

If your candidate has to be off the trail, it’s that sort of surrogate who’s going to be most helpful, but having to stop campaigning for six days a week right before the Iowa caucus is a burden Sullivan said is damn near impossible to overcome.

“Better somebody else than me,” he said with a laugh.

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Moral Injury and America's Endless Conflicts: A Legacy of a New Kind of War Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=52422"><span class="small">Arnold R. Isaacs, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Tuesday, 03 December 2019 14:17

Isaacs writes: "When an announcement of a 'Moral Injury Symposium' turned up in my email, I was a bit startled to see that it came from the U.S. Special Operations Command."

U.S. soldiers in Iraq. (photo: Alex Majoli/Newsweek)
U.S. soldiers in Iraq. (photo: Alex Majoli/Newsweek)


Moral Injury and America's Endless Conflicts: A Legacy of a New Kind of War

By Arnold R. Isaacs, TomDispatch

03 December 19

 


Many men do monstrous things. And some men are very nearly monsters, capable of killing without compunction or remorse. In the everyday civilian world, we generally seek to lock them up. In war, they have a chance to fully flower. And if they serve in militaries that fight serial conflicts where the laws of war are considered mere suggestions, they can be all that they can be.

I investigated such a man once. He fought his way across Asia in the Chinese civil war, the suppression of the Huk rebellion in the Philippines, and the Korean and Vietnam wars. He spent 10 troubled years in the Marines before joining the Army and then was hailed as a super soldier, even as allegations of murder swirled around him.

In March 1968, a member of Sergeant Roy Bumgarner Jr.’s scout team went to military authorities to report multiple murders of Vietnamese civilians. “I’ve got nothing against Sgt. Bumgarner except this mad urge to kill,” Private Arthur Williams told an investigating lieutenant colonel. “I don’t want him to get in trouble, but I can’t know of what is happening and say nothing. More people will be killed.” The Army did nothing.

One morning in early 1969, Bumgarner detained an unarmed Vietnamese irrigation worker and two teenage boys tending ducklings.  Marching them to a secluded spot, he and one of his men opened fire. A military court convicted him of manslaughter, but he served no prison time, remained in Vietnam, and reenlisted approximately six months later. He became one of the last U.S. infantrymen to serve in that war.

By the late 1960s, Bumgarner was said to have a personal body count of more than 1,500. Sometimes, his six-man “wildcat” team logged more kills than the rest of his 500-man battalion. I often wondered how many of those dead were enemies and how many just teenage duck herders and middle-aged farmers. Bumgarner died before I had a chance to ask him. His court-martial transcripts, though, don’t give the impression of a man carrying a heavy psychological burden or regretting anything he had done.

Some men do, however, kill while in government service and pay a psychological price. We now call that “moral injury” and understand (as Homer did in writing about Achilles in the Iliad) that victimizers can also be victims. Today, TomDispatch regular Arnold Isaacs, who covered the Vietnam War for the Baltimore Sun, takes us in a striking fashion to the frontlines of the battle to overcome -- or at least mitigate -- the toll on the consciences of the men and women fighting America’s twenty-first-century wars: a “Moral Injury Symposium.”

If “perpetrating, failing to prevent, or bearing witness to acts that transgress deeply held moral beliefs and expectations” can cause profound psychological damage to soldiers, imagine what Phan Thi Dan, the widow of that irrigation worker, went through when she saw her husband lying on the ground with his head blown off. She stood frozen for a moment, then fainted. On coming to, she tried to attack an American on the scene but was restrained. “When I get flashbacks, that fit of fury still arises in me,” she told me nearly four decades later. No doubt, many Afghans, Iraqis, Somalis, Syrians, Yemenis, and Libyans have had similar experiences at the hands of soldiers. One day, maybe we’ll convene a symposium for them and their psychological injuries, too. Nick Turse



hen an announcement of a "Moral Injury Symposium" turned up in my email, I was a bit startled to see that it came from the U.S. Special Operations Command. That was a surprise because many military professionals have strongly resisted the term "moral injury" and rejected the suggestion that soldiers fighting America's wars could experience moral conflict or feel morally damaged by their service.

Moral injury is not a recognized psychiatric diagnosis. It's not on the Veterans Administration’s list of service-related disabilities. Yet in the decade since the concept began to take root among mental health specialists and others concerned with the emotional lives of active-duty soldiers and military veterans, it has come to be fairly widely regarded as "the signature wound of today's wars," as the editors of War and Moral Injury: A Reader, a remarkable anthology of contemporary and past writings on the subject, have noted.

For those not familiar with the tag, moral injury is related to but not the same as post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, which is a recognized clinical condition. Both involve some of the same symptoms, including depression, insomnia, nightmares, and self-medication via alcohol or drugs, but they arise from different circumstances. PTSD symptoms are a psychological reaction to an experience of life-threatening physical danger or harm. Moral injury is the lasting mental and emotional result of an assault on the conscience -- a memory, as one early formulation put it, of "perpetrating, failing to prevent, or bearing witness to acts that transgress deeply held moral beliefs and expectations."

The idea remains controversial in the military world, but the wars that Americans have fought since 2001 -- involving a very different experience of war fighting from that of past generations -- have made it increasingly difficult for military culture to cling to its old manhood and warrior myths. Many in that military have had to recognize the invisible wounds of moral conflict that soldiers have brought home with them from those battlefields.

That shift was evident at the moral injury symposium, held in early August in a Washington, D.C., hotel. The feelings and experiences I heard about there were not necessarily representative of the climate in the wider military community. The special operations forces, which put on the event, have their own distinctive character, culture, and experiences, and a disproportionate number of the 130 or so attendees were mental-health specialists or chaplains, the two groups that have been most open and attuned to the very idea of moral injury. (A military chaplain in the Special Operations Command, in fact, first had the idea for the symposium.)

Still, the symposium emerged from the same history the rest of the military has lived through: 18 years of uninterrupted violence, of war without end in distant lands, that has killed or wounded some 60,000 Americans and a far greater number of foreign civilians, while displacing millions more and helping drive the worldwide refugee population to successive record-setting levels. Against that backdrop, those two days in Washington proved gripping and thought provoking in their own right. What follows are some of the thoughts they provoked in my mind as I listened or when I later reflected on what I heard.

Something Said, Something Unsaid

In the sessions I attended, virtually every speaker mentioned one relevant fact about our present wars and the soldiers who fight them. But a different relevant fact on the same subject was almost completely missing.

Again and again, participants spoke about the great change in how soldiers experience war. In past generations, for the great majority of service members, war was a one-time event. In the 18 years since 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan, war has become a permanent part of soldiers' lives in a continuing cycle of repeated deployments to battle zones. (And that’s not to mention the even more startling change for those who see combat remotely, sitting in front of screens and firing missiles or dropping bombs from unmanned aircraft flying over targets thousands of miles away.) As nearly all the symposium speakers pointed out, that change in the war-fighting experience has also changed the nature of combat trauma and the military culture's understanding of and attitudes toward it.

Here’s the reality that almost nobody mentioned, though it's closely related: the reason these wars have lasted this long and have become a permanent part of soldiers' lives is that they have not been successful. My notes record only one presentation where that connection was even touched upon, and then only implicitly, not directly.

That single indirect mention came in a discussion group conducted by Air Force Lieutenant Colonel David Blair, the commanding officer of a Florida-based remotely piloted aircraft squadron. He mentioned that his MQ-9 Reaper drone crews increasingly have come to prefer missions in theaters other than Afghanistan. Specifically, he said, they were most positive about strikes against ISIS in Iraq and Syria where they "could see the front lines moving." (That suggests he was referring mainly to the 2016-2017 period when those Reapers were supporting American and Iraqi ground forces recapturing territory that had been under ISIS occupation.) Those missions led to "less trauma" for his operators, he said. At another point, he added that "if it [an engagement] ends well, they look back on their lives differently."

Other than that single remark about his crews preferring missions in other theaters, Blair never made any explicit comparison between Afghanistan and any other conflict zone. However, what he did say sounds like plain common sense. It's logical that when a military operation is relatively successful, it’s easier for soldiers to explain to themselves and live with their own actions. It must help mitigate moral injury symptoms, at the very least, if they can tell themselves that a greater good was accomplished.

Conversely, if you did something that leaves you with doubt or regret but achieved no positive results, that would lead to more painful feelings and less defense against them. So, in one way, it seems odd that, except in those few moments, I didn’t hear anyone make the connection between the lack of victory in America’s wars and the incidence of trauma.

On the other hand, it's not so surprising that such connections were not made more often or more clearly. They would only have reminded the participants of an uncomfortable reality: that America's wars in the present era have, on the whole, fallen far short of producing any greater good that would help justify the moral injury so many soldiers are struggling with, not to mention all the other human damage those wars have caused.

I can't know their inner feelings, but I can guess that it would have been painful for many symposium participants to admit that fact out loud or to let themselves think it at all. Probably it wasn't something the organizers would have liked to hear either or remember when they face troubled soldiers in the months and years to come.

Moral Clarity Versus Moral Injury

Another moment in that same session suggested a different but related link between the nature and circumstances of a military operation and the likelihood of trauma. This one had to do with the moral perception of the operation itself.

Since his crews are not physically at risk when carrying out their missions, Lieutenant Colonel Blair pointed out, the traditional "kill or be killed" formula of the battlefield can't help them explain their war to themselves. Instead, the drone fighter's explanation has to be "kill or someone else will be killed." In turn, that determines not just what they do, but who they feel they are. "Being a protector of others," Blair said, becomes their "core identity."

A couple of quotes in a December 2017 article on an Air Force website show how the missions against ISIS strongly validated that identity -- and, indirectly, suggest why operations in other theaters have not.

The article, which I found after the symposium ended, was a feature about a remotely piloted aircraft unit (not Blair's) that supported the ground operation to recapture Raqqa, the Syrian provincial city that ISIS designated as the capital of its so-called caliphate. One quote is from a squadron commander: "It wasn’t our aircrew just striking ISIS targets. We also were safeguarding and watching over [friendly Syrian troops] as they cleared civilians moving out of the city to safe locations." The article also quoted a sensor operator: "My favorite part of this job is that I’m able to help civilians be safe and I’m able to help liberate whatever city we need to. There’s no better feeling than knowing you can directly impact the battlefield and other people’s lives."

Obviously, when their screens showed them the civilians they were helping, and not just the enemies they were killing, those crewmen found moral clarity, rather than moral conflict, in their experience. From Blair's comments, one can surmise that was true for his crews as well, presumably for similar reasons.

Sadly, it is also pretty obvious that such a sense of clarity has been the exception, not the rule, in the wars Americans have been fighting for nearly two decades. That doesn't automatically mean those wars were not moral, but whatever their moral nature, it would only rarely have shown up on the drone operators' screens -- or in the sightlines of soldiers looking at actual battlegrounds in real space -- as clearly as it did for those airmen remembering their Raqqa missions. (Not that Raqqa raised no moral questions at all. Yes, the fighting there liberated its inhabitants from an exceptionally brutal occupation. But it also destroyed most of their homes, largely in air strikes by U.S. and allied planes that, by one estimate, dropped 20,000 bombs on the city. By the time the campaign was over, Raqqa, like a number of other Syrian and Iraqi cities, was in almost complete ruins.)

A Question, Maybe Farfetched...

I didn't frame it this way when I was at the symposium, but this question later came to mind: Has the U.S. military as an institution, not just its individual service members, morally injured itself over the last 18 years?

This is a military force that never stops declaring it's the best and strongest in the world, but has not successfully concluded a significant war for nearly 30 years or maybe longer. (The first Gulf War of 1990-1991 looked like a great win at the time, but appears like anything but an unequivocally positive accomplishment in retrospect.) It may sound farfetched, but is it unreasonable to wonder if that dissonance, that wide gap between goals and actual accomplishments, might leave a collective sense of sorrow, grief, regret, shame, and alienation? That's the list of feelings that Glenn Orris, a Navy chaplain, displayed on a chart in his symposium presentation and specified as the ones that keep morally injured service members awake at night.

I'm posing this as a question, not offering it as an answer. Certainly, at various moments during the symposium, I had a sense not just of individual but of collective trauma. As an outsider in that world, I can’t and won't venture to evaluate the emotional state of the military as a whole. Still, the question doesn't seem ridiculous.

A New Idea of What Moral Injury Really Is

The final event of the second day -- an unusual closer for a professional or academic conference -- was a reading of Sophocles’ play Ajax, as rewritten by Bryan Doerries. After the reading, Doerries, artistic director for Theater of War, the company that put on the performance, moderated a discussion with a panel of four recent veterans and members of the audience.

Essentially, he attempted to draw out the panelists and the audience on what the play was trying to say and how that 2,500-year-old story of a warrior's depression, madness, and suicide might connect to their own experience. Listening to various responses, I found myself thinking that perhaps the main purpose of his, if not Sophocles's, version was to make the audience think about what war is. What it really is, not the heroic myth humans have made of it from ancient times on. And then I thought, maybe that's what we'd been talking about for the previous two days. Maybe that's what moral injury is: realizing the true nature of war.

Along with that thought came another, one that first occured to me nearly 45 years ago when, as a reporter for the Baltimore Sun, I personally witnessed the disastrous end of the Vietnam War. I've believed ever since that covering war from the losing side gave me a truer knowledge of its nature than I'd have gotten from that or any other war's winning side. Maybe I should say darker, not truer, since I suppose the winners' war is real, too. But whichever word you choose, my experience, I felt, gave me a more unobstructed view of war. I could see it more clearly for what it was precisely because there was no good result to balance against the death and loss and terror and despair. There was no excuse to explain away the human disaster I'd seen and written about for several years, no way to tell myself that the war was necessary or had served any purpose.

That bit of personal history makes me think it's not accidental that our present consciousness of moral injury has come out of wars we didn't win. They haven’t been lost in the same clear-cut way that the war in Vietnam was. They haven't (yet) ended in the kind of catastrophically decisive final act I witnessed there in the spring of 1975 in the weeks that led to Saigon's surrender. But these recent wars haven't accomplished their goals either, or given our soldiers a worthwhile reason for what they've gone through, which is surely a key piece of the moral injury story.

I was a civilian journalist, not a soldier. I went to Vietnam to report, not to fight. I didn't come home with any trauma symptoms. But I have all the feelings that Chaplain Orris listed as identifying markers for moral injury: sorrow, grief, regret, shame, and alienation. Those emotions come from what I learned about war, not from anything I did, and that makes me believe it may not be wrong to think that what we call moral injury might not be just one person's response to particularly troubling events, but a symptom of something larger, of seeing war individually and collectively for what it truly is.

A Last Thought

In closing, I will turn back to the editors of War and Moral Injury. In their introduction, Douglas Pryer, a retired army intelligence officer and Afghanistan and Iraq veteran, and Robert Emmett Meagher, a classicist and professor of humanities at Hampshire College, pointed to an aspect of war that is missing in their anthology, the symposium, and in American culture more broadly:

"We must acknowledge a great gap in this text as in nearly every other on the subject of America's wars and veterans: the deaths and wounds, physical and spiritual, inflicted on the 'others,' our enemies, especially our 'civilian enemies.'"

Pryer and Meagher are right. Such an acknowledgement is almost entirely absent from the national discourse about our wars and their legacy. But without it, no moral wound, whether an individual's or a society's, can truly be healed.



Arnold R. Isaacs, a journalist and TomDispatch regular based in Maryland, covered the final years of the Vietnam War for the Baltimore Sun. He is the author of Without Honor: Defeat in Vietnam and Cambodia, Vietnam Shadows: The War, Its Ghosts, and Its Legacy, and an online report, From Troubled Lands: Listening to Pakistani and Afghan Americans in post-9/11 America. His website is www.arnoldisaacs.net

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel (the second in the Splinterlands series) Frostlands, Beverly Gologorsky's novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt's A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy's In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power and John Dower's The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II.

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RSN: Democrats' Impeachment Plan - Roadmap to Nowhere? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 03 December 2019 12:27

Boardman writes: "Anyone who's been paying attention should get the picture by now. Overall, in subtle and sledgehammer ways, the mass media of the United States - owned and sponsored by corporate giants - are in the midst of a siege against the two progressive Democratic candidates who have a real chance to be elected president in 2020."

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-CA, and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-CA, and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)


Democrats' Impeachment Plan - Roadmap to Nowhere?

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

03 December 19

 

hanksgiving is gone and no thanks were given for the House Democrats’ unfolding plan for a quick, tidy, Christmas-wrapped impeachment package. Why are they doing it like this? What are they thinking? Why not take the fight to the president on all the available grounds? What is the rationale for a rushed process based on a fraction of presidential infractions? Why deliberately give up control of the narrative when you have mountains of evidence on your side?

That’s where the Democrats appear to be taking us. At this point, no one knows how it will turn out, and I long to be wrong in my apprehensions. But there’s not much to work with here. Democratic leaders don’t even explain their thinking publicly. The state of play as this is written seems unchanged from what CNN reported November 21:

Privately, Democrats are anticipating a busy December that will be filed with proceedings before the House Judiciary Committee, including public hearings and a markup, and a likely vote to impeach Trump on the House floor by Christmas Day, according to multiple Democratic sources, which would make him just the third President in history to be impeached.

The American political system needs a good flushing. The Democrats’ plan seems almost designed to avoid any such cleansing. As December begins, there are no articulated impeachable offenses on offer. There is strong testimony and other evidence of the president trying to coerce Ukraine into helping his 2020 campaign. But there is massive avoidance of all the president’s other violations of the Constitution, the law, his oath of office, and the common good. This is not shaping up as a systematic defense of constitutional government so much as a drive-by shouting that can get widely ignored amidst holiday distractions. Worse, this non-plan plan appears to represent a broad consensus of Democratic conventional wisdom.

The multi-talented and insightful New Yorker editor David Remnick provides a curious but hardly unusual example of how hard it can be to maintain the conventional wisdom in the midst of wildly unconventional circumstances. In the online version of his piece titled “The Sober Clarity of the Impeachment Witness” from the November 25 New Yorker, Remnick concludes:

Impeachment is a grave business, and the risks are manifest. But no democracy can overlook evidence of abuse of power, bribery, and obstruction in the hope that an election will set things right.

These hearings and a potential Senate trial will never get to the full range of Donald Trump’s corruptions, be they on Fifth Avenue or Pennsylvania Avenue, in Istanbul, Moscow, or Riyadh. But the focus of Congress is on this particular and outrageous abuse of the public trust, and for now that must suffice.

In these two paragraphs, Remnick first gets it exactly right, then gets it exactly wrong. He is right that no constitutional government like ours can overlook the vast variety of Trumpian abuses and still hope to be a constitutional government with any integrity left. Remnick is also right that House hearings and a Senate trial, as currently contemplated, cannot do justice to the offenses of the past three years. And then he gets it completely wrong with the solemn sophistry of assurance that “for now that must suffice.” He has already argued correctly that it cannot suffice. Claiming that it “must suffice” is tantamount to giving up without a fight.

There is no “must” inherent in the current Congressional rush to evade responsibility for confronting the overwhelming catalog of presidential offenses. We all know there is serious work to be done in a meaningful impeachment process, work that needs serious people to do it. We also know that, so far at least, those people have not emerged. (Remnick must know that, too – the print version title of his piece was “Impeachment Whirlwind.”) This holiday whirlwind of an impeachment is unworthy of a competent society. We’re long past the time when America needed lengthy, serious self-examination if the people are ever going to free themselves from the arbitrary and ruthless control of war-makers, torturers, assassins, oligarchs, and their submissive political lackeys.

David Remnick is one of the more impressive people on the planet, with a long and exemplary body of work. For someone of his capabilities to get this historical moment so wrong is a measure of just how deep the American crisis has become. Concerning the sufficiency of the current rush to impeachment, he is just wrong. With the fate of the nation at stake, he is mindlessly, needlessly wrong. There is, in fact, no hurry whatsoever about bringing articles of impeachment to a vote any time soon – or ever. The constitutional process is there to be used as suits the purpose of national integrity. Sending half-baked, Ukraine-based, partisan-infected impeachment articles to a Senate likely to reject them is a pretty good recipe for maintaining the corrupt American norms of recent decades.

Exercising conventional wisdom is a good way to get conventional results. Limiting the charges against this president is a form of tunnel vision that serves to protect past and future presidents who have or will commit the Trumplike offenses that go unexamined in this process. The current Congressional plan is an elaborate and fundamentally deceitful exercise in thinking inside the box. Whose box is it, where it’s OK to turn impeachment into a farcical failure? It’s not the box of national honor.

Maybe impeachment won’t play out as the Democrats are presently promising. Maybe the weight of reality will change the dynamic. Maybe a courageous House member or several will insist on a comprehensive, principled, open-ended examination of presidential corruption of all sorts, foreign and domestic. Maybe that will keep House committees busy for months, even past the November election. Maybe a Democratic presidential primary race with impeachable offenses for a context will produce a more substantive contest than we’re used to. Maybe such a race would produce a serious candidate actually committed to positive change. Maybe it’s worth the risk of actually following procedures that address the gravity of our shared reality. Maybe we can do better than a hurried, politically-motivated, substance-avoiding crapshoot that offers no serious likelihood of meaningful change. Maybe the American people would respond well to a party that decided to stand for principle and demonstrated the willingness to put the national wellbeing ahead of narrow partisan advantage. Seems worth the risk, but what do I know?



William Boardman has been writing for Reader Supported News since 2012. A collection of his essays – EXCEPTIONAL: American Exceptionalism Takes Its Toll – was published in September 2019 and is available from Yorkland Publishing of Toronto. He is a former Vermont assistant judge.

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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RSN: For Corporate Media, It's 'Anybody but Sanders or Warren' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=48990"><span class="small">Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 03 December 2019 11:54

Solomon writes: "Anyone who's been paying attention should get the picture by now. Overall, in subtle and sledgehammer ways, the mass media of the United States - owned and sponsored by corporate giants - are in the midst of a siege against the two progressive Democratic candidates who have a real chance to be elected president in 2020."

Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren greets Vermont senator Bernie Sanders at a 2017 Our Revolution rally in Boston. (photo: Steven Senne/AP)
Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren greets Vermont senator Bernie Sanders at a 2017 Our Revolution rally in Boston. (photo: Steven Senne/AP)


For Corporate Media, It's 'Anybody but Sanders or Warren'

By Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News

03 December 19

 

nyone who’s been paying attention should get the picture by now. Overall, in subtle and sledgehammer ways, the mass media of the United States — owned and sponsored by corporate giants — are in the midst of a siege against the two progressive Democratic candidates who have a real chance to be elected president in 2020.

Some of the prevalent media bias has taken the form of protracted swoons for numerous “center lane” opponents of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. The recent entry of Michael Bloomberg has further jammed that lane, adding a plutocrat “worth” upwards of $50 billion to a bevy of corporate politicians.

The mainline media are generally quite warm toward so-called “moderates,” without bothering to question what’s so moderate about such positions as bowing to corporate plunder, backing rampant militarism, and refusing to seriously confront the climate emergency.

Critical reporting on debate performances and campaign operations has certainly been common. But the core of the “moderate” agenda routinely gets affirmation from elite journalists who told us in no uncertain terms four years ago that Hillary Clinton was obviously the nominee who could defeat Donald Trump.

This year, Sanders has taken most of the flak from reporters and pundits (often virtually indistinguishable), serving as a kind of “heat shield” for Warren. But as Warren gained ground in polling this fall, the attacks on her escalated — to the point that she now has a corporate media bullseye on her political back.

The disconnect between voters and corporate media is often huge. Meanwhile, with fly-on-the-wall pretenses, media outlets that have powerfully distorted proposals like Medicare for All are now reporting (with thinly veiled satisfaction) that voters are cool to those proposals.

The Washington Post, owned by the world’s richest person, Jeff Bezos, has routinely spun Medicare for All as some sort of government takeover. In a prominent November 30 news story that largely attributed Warren’s recent dip in polls to her positioning on healthcare, the Post matter-of-factly — and falsely — referred to Medicare for All as “government-run healthcare” and “a government-run health plan.”

Such pervasive mass-media reporting smoothed the way for deceptions that have elevated Pete Buttigieg in polls during recent weeks with his deceptive “Medicare for all who want it” slogan. That rhetoric springboards from the false premises that Medicare for All would deprive people of meaningful choice and would somehow reduce coverage.

In late September, with scant media scrutiny, Buttigieg launched an ad campaign against Medicare for All that has continued. Using insurance-industry talking points, he is deliberately confusing the current “choice” of predatory for-profit insurance plans with the genuine full choice of healthcare providers that top-quality Medicare for everyone would offer.

Mainstream media outlets are ill-positioned to refute such distortions since they’re routinely purveying such distortions themselves. Warren’s backtracking step on Medicare for All in mid-November was a tribute to media pressure in tandem with attacks from centrist opponents.

The idea of implementing some form of a substantial “wealth tax” has also been denigrated by many corporate-employed journalists. Countless pundits and political beat reporters have warned that proposals like a wealth tax, from Warren and Sanders, risk dragging Democrats down with voters. The truth is that such proposals are unpopular with the punditocracy and the extremely wealthy — while it’s a very different matter for most voters, who strongly favor a wealth tax.

On the same day this fall, The New York Times and The Washington Post published stories on Democratic elites’ “anxiety” about the presidential election. The Post wrote that Democrats “fret” Warren and Sanders “are too liberal to win a general election.” (With disdain, the article made a matter-of-fact reference to “the push for liberal purity.”) The Times similarly wrote of “persistent questions about Senator Elizabeth Warren’s viability in the general election.” Contrary voices were absent in both news stories.

Assessing those articles, FAIR.org media analyst Julie Hollar pointed out: “The pieces interviewed a number of big donors and centrist party leaders, who fretted about their preferred candidate’s struggles and expressed hope for someone more corporate-friendly than Warren to enter the race and challenge her rise.”

Hollar added: “The thinking of powerful people in the Democratic Party is worth writing about. But it’s crucial not to just take their claims at face value…. What establishment Democrats are really worried about, of course, is their own power in the party, which is threatened by a surging left wing. Don’t look to their establishment media counterparts to report on that transparently.”

Part of the problem is the TV network that many Democrats (mistakenly) trust. MSNBC is becoming notorious for its hostility to Bernie Sanders, often expressed through egregious omission or mathematical fib if not direct antipathy.

Ongoing media analysis is crucial, but even more important is activist pushback against the 24/7 onslaught of corporate-minded propaganda, often couched as common sense and incontrovertible reality. Among the needed counterpunches are these:

  • Support progressive media outlets as they provide independent coverage of the presidential campaign.

  • Widely share, via email forwarding and social media, online pieces that you like. (Hopefully including this one.)

  • Recognize, challenge, and organize against the corporate-media echo chamber that affects so many voters.

You shouldn’t have to be an active supporter of Bernie Sanders (as I am) or of Elizabeth Warren to voice outrage about corporate media biases. What’s at stake includes democracy — the informed consent of the governed — and so much more.

History is unfolding in real time. It’s not a product on the media shelf, to be passively bought and consumed. As Bernie 2020 campaign co-chair Nina Turner says, “All that we love is on the line.”



Norman Solomon is co-founder and national coordinator of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention and is currently a coordinator of the relaunched independent Bernie Delegates Network. Solomon is the author of a dozen books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.

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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Trump Is the Founders' Worst Nightmare Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=52420"><span class="small">Bob Bauer, The New York Times</span></a>   
Tuesday, 03 December 2019 09:23

Bauer writes: "Donald Trump's Republican congressional allies are throwing up different defenses against impeachment and hoping that something may sell."

The White House. (photo: Getty Images)
The White House. (photo: Getty Images)


Trump Is the Founders' Worst Nightmare

By Bob Bauer, The New York Times

03 December 19


Once in the Oval Office, a demagogue can easily stay there.

onald Trump’s Republican congressional allies are throwing up different defenses against impeachment and hoping that something may sell. They say that he didn’t seek a corrupt political bargain with Ukraine, but that if he did, he failed, and the mere attempt is not impeachable. Or that it is not clear that he did it, because the evidence against him is unreliable “hearsay.”

It’s all been very confusing. But the larger story — the crucial constitutional story — is not the incoherence of the president’s defense. It is more that he and his party are exposing limits of impeachment as a response to the presidency of a demagogue.

The founders feared the demagogue, who figures prominently in the Federalist Papers as the politician who, possessing “perverted ambition,” pursues relentless self-aggrandizement “by the confusions of their country.” The last of the papers, Federalist No. 85, linked demagogy to its threat to the constitutional order — to the “despotism” that may be expected from the “victorious demagogue.” This “despotism” is achieved through systematic lying to the public, vilification of the opposition and, as James Fenimore Cooper wrote in an essay on demagogues, a claimed right to disregard “the Constitution and the laws” in pursuing what the demagogue judges to be the “interests of the people.”

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