Obama as stupid as Bush?

Also available in orange where it has really upset the locals. Perhaps that is no bad thing if it shocks them out of their complacent belief that Obama can do no wrong because he is the smartest guy on the planet.

I never thought I would hear myself say this, because I hate unnuanced bland generalised assertions.  There are so many ways in which the Obama administration is a quantum improvement on Bush – think stimulus, healthcare, financial regulation, don’t ask don’t tell, and two reasonable Supreme Court nominations.  But on foreign policy in general, and Israel/Palestine in particular, Obama is proving to be as stupid as Bush:

  1. He has failed to close Guantanamo detention centre or correct the gross violation of human rights it represents.
  2. He has escalated an unwinnable war in Afghanistan
  3. He has legitimised a military coup in Honduras
  4. He has caved in to Netanyahu on illegal settlement expansion several times and has allowed his Vice President to be humiliated on a visit to Israel
  5. He has capitulated to Chinese manipulation of the Dollar Yuan exchange rates despite numerous threats to confront the issue
  6. He has caved in to his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai, having accused him of corruption and falsifying elections – and to to Karzai’s brother, Ahmed Wali, having accused him of being a drug lord
  7. He has been repeatedly snubbed by the President of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has chaired meetings of 31 Latin American and Caribbean countries which excluded the United States, and actually got something constructive done by negotiating a deal with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for Iran to ship 1,200 kilograms of its low-enriched uranium to Turkey. Obama then ignored the deal and proposed tougher sanctions on Iran.

  8. He has done nothing on climate change and was all for expanding deep sea off shore drilling until BP pissed in his back garden.

  9. And now, to cap it all, he has blamed peace activists for getting themselves killed by an illegal act of war and opposed a UN investigation of the war crime.

Is there no end to his grovelling incompetence? Increasingly world leaders, large and small, are learning that Obama is a paper tiger who makes bullying noises, some fine speeches, and then capitulates at the first sign of opposition.

It must be the first time in history that the Nobel Peace prize has been awarded to coward who mistakes collaboration with racists, genocidal maniacs, drug lords, rapacious corporations, fascists and juntas for bipartisan compromise.

Hell, even Bush had more balls – even if he was stupider still. Bush may have been ignorant and wrong, but he had the courage of his convictions. Obama apparently has no courage and no convictions.  It is hard to tell which is the more dangerous combination. </end rant&gt

Weak Tea

Right, even though this rash action by Israel endangers our relationship with Turkey and potentially our troops in Iraq, we should bend over backwards not to alienate Israel.

The situation is difficult for the United States, which has close relations with both countries and is now in the awkward position of crafting a reaction that avoids alienating either side. Both the United States and Israel use Turkish air space for military exercises. The United States supplies the majority of its Iraq effort from a military base in southern Turkey.

I am tired of our country acting like Israel’s poodle.

Turkey’s foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, urged the U.N. Security Council in an emergency session Monday to condemn Israel’s raid on a humanitarian aid flotilla bound for the Gaza Strip and to set up a U.N. inquiry to hold accountable those responsible for it.

“Turkey would like to see that the Security Council strongly reacts and adopts a presidential statement strongly condemning this Israeli act of aggression, demanding an urgent inquiry into the incident and calling for the punishment of all responsible authorities,” he said in an address to the 15-nation council. “I call on this council to step up and do what is expected of it.”

Behind closed doors, U.S. diplomats sought to prevent the council from authorizing a U.N. investigation into the Israeli raid, saying Israel should be given a chance to conduct a credible investigation first.

Here’s a NEWSFLASH for our diplomatic corp. There is no such thing as a credible Israeli investigation. That’s because no one believes a thing they say. But, there’s no example in history where someone killed over a dozen civilians in cold blood and then were told to investigate the crime. The word ‘credible’ doesn’t exist in the same universe as that scenario.

And this next bit is a bit like scolding Martin Luther King Jr. for being ineffective.

The Turkish initiative at the United Nations placed the United States in the difficult position of trying to mediate between two important allies. Alejandro Wolff, the United States’ second-highest ranking ambassador to the United Nations, said the United States is still trying to “ascertain the facts” but that it “regrets the tragic loss of life and injuries.” Wolff said the United States expects “a credible and transparent investigation and strongly urges the Israeli government to investigate the incident fully.”

But Wolff also scolded the members of the humanitarian convoy, saying that their unapproved delivery of aid “by sea is neither appropriate nor responsible, and certainly not effective, under the circumstances.” Wolff said that “non-provocative and non-confrontational” procedures exist for delivering assistance to Gazans.

Contrary to Wolff’s position, I hope people start sending a flotilla a day. You know what’s inappropriate and irresponsible? Blowing up civilians to make a political point. Non-violent direct action is the moral alternative to terrorism. And when Israel kills activists in cold blood who haven’t come near their territorial waters? That’s just murder. Not even the Jim Crow governors gave out those kind of orders.

And our government’s response is to scold the people who died?

This whole relationship has become untenable.

Turkey Kicks It Up a Notch

Well, now Israel has done it. They have actually provoked Turkey to the point that they may start a war over this incident massacre:

Turkey has threatened Israel with unprecedented action after Israeli forces attacked an aid vessel, killing 10 peace activists headed to Gaza.

Israel said 10 people died while those on the ship said at least 15 were killed.

A shocked world has responded with outrage. Turkey recalled its ambassador to Israel and warned of unprecedented and incalculable reprisals.

Two Turkish activists were reported to be among those killed in the flotilla. Ankara warned that further supply vessels will be sent to Gaza, escorted by the Turkish Navy, a development with unpredictable consequences.

Israel has sounded an alert throughout the country fearing rocket attacks by Hezbollah in Lebanon.

If Turkey is promising to send new supplies with naval escort, then we’re headed for an epic showdown between two of Americas closest allies. I don’t think Obama is getting too much rest and relaxation this Memorial Day.

Meanwhile, the Arab League will meet tomorrow and put immense pressure on Egypt to lift their portion of the Gazan blockade. I can’t imagine that Egypt will refuse. In fact, I think Israel has jeopardized their peace agreements with Egypt and Jordan.

All this, and for what? To keep construction materials from the Gazan people? Israel is not behaving in anything resembling a rational manner. They just lost the only friends they had not named America. And who can help them now but Big Daddy? The problem is that Big Daddy has more to consider than Israeli’s deluded interests. We have to worry about our own image and international relationships.

J Street Responds

Just a reminder, because they are constantly needed, that Jewish-American opinion is not whatever AIPAC says it is.

J Street is deeply shocked and saddened by reports that at least 10 civilians have been killed and dozens more wounded (including Israeli soldiers) this morning as Israel intercepted a naval convoy bringing humanitarian supplies and construction materials to the Gaza Strip.

We express our condolences to the families of those killed and we wish the injured a full and speedy recovery. We hope that leaders on all sides will take immediate steps to ensure that this incident does not escalate into a broader round of violence – in Israel, in Gaza, or in the region.

There will undoubtedly be calls in the coming days for a UN investigation into today’s events. A credible, independent commission appointed by the Israeli government should provide the world with a full and complete report into the causes and circumstances surrounding the day’s events and establish responsibility for the violence and bloodshed.

This shocking outcome of an effort to bring humanitarian relief to the people of Gaza is in part a consequence of the ongoing, counterproductive Israeli blockade of Gaza. J Street has been and continues to be opposed to the blockade – believing that there are better ways to ensure Israel’s security and to prevent weapons smuggling than a complete closure of the Gaza Strip.

We do not know yet what the impact of today’s incident will be on the just-restarted peace process, on Israel’s relations with international community, or on the health of Arab-Jewish relations within Israel itself.

We do know, however, that today is one more nail in the coffin for hopes of ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict peacefully and diplomatically and for preserving Israel’s Jewish and democratic character. We urge President Obama and other international and regional leaders to take today’s terrible news as an opportunity to engage even more forcefully in immediate efforts to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

That’s entirely correct. This should serve as a wakeup call for American politicians. The world is completely outraged as you can discover by reading any foreign news outlet. But the moment they have a second to breath, the world will turn that outrage against us. We cannot afford to let this conflict go on with our government flagrantly enabling Israel to commit outrageous and shocking acts. Friends don’t let friends do this to others or to themselves.

Israel Massacres Pro-Palestinian Activists

Here’s how Haaretz tells it:

The left-wing activists on board a flotilla carrying aid to the Gaza Strip tried to lynch the Israel Navy commandos who stormed their Turkish-flagged ship early Monday, Israel Defense Forces sources told Haaretz.

The commandos, who intercepted the Turkish ferry Mavi Marmara after it ignored orders to turn back, said they encountered violent resistance from activists armed with sticks and knives. According to the soldiers, the activists threw one of their comrades from the upper deck to the lower after they boarded.

Activists attacked a commando with iron bars as he descended onto the ship from a helicopter, the army said. The IDF said its rules of engagement allowed troops to open fire in what it called a “life-threatening situation”.

The soldiers said they were forced to open fire after the activists struck one of their comrades in the head and trampled on him. A senior field commander ordered the soldiers then to respond with fire, a decision which the commandos said received full backing the military echelon.

At least 10 people were killed and several more wounded after the Israel Navy troops opened fire on the six-ship flotilla. Unofficial reports put the death toll at between 14 and 20.

I particularly enjoy the story about the peace activists throwing soldiers off the upper decks. That’s very creative. Of course, the entire point of this flotilla is to engage in non-violent direct action, so there is no way in hell that the activists used knives or iron bars or made any other violent moves. The Israelis just slaughtered them.

Update [2010-5-31 13:5:41 by BooMan]: There is some video that suggests there was resistance to Israeli commandos as they landed on at least one of the vessels. However, I don’t know the context of the video. For example, had people already been shot? So, the truth will have to await a thorough investigation. Regardless, the Israelis illegally boarded ships in international waters and killed many civilians.

Audrey Bomse, a spokesperson for the Free Gaza Movement, which is behind the convoy, told the BBC Israel’s actions were disproportionate.

“We were not going to pose any violent resistance. The only resistance that there might be would be passive resistance such as physically blocking the steering room, or blocking the engine room downstairs, so that they couldn’t get taken over. But that was just symbolic resistance.”

She said there was “absolutely no evidence of live fire”.

This is one of the stupidest things that Israel has ever done, and that is saying something.

Don’t Blame BP

Pissed.

I know that’s the first feeling I get looking at the photos of the devastation of the gulf coast. I’m pissed that people were so stupid, so mindlessly greedy, that they were willing to play dice with God’s creation to achieve a higher shareholder dividend. Someone must pay. And that someone shall be BP, the company that made this disaster inevitable. That’s what anger demands: a recipient.

But is it sufficient to lay the blame with BP? Wasn’t Exxon similarly greedy and negligent during the Valdez disaster? And why stop there? Why not look at Union Carbide and Bhopal? Or, to use a more timely example, Goldman Sachs and our financial system? Why are so many corporations so blatantly rogue?

Could it be because the system is designed to reward the rogue corporation over the responsible? More below the fold.
Take a moment to re-examine one of the great progressive bête noires: corporations’ legal equality with humans. Humans have a complex set of requirements for survival: food, clothing, shelter, clean water, clean air. Corporations need none of that, so long as they have human labor and money to feed them. So, of the two groups, which is going to be least inclined to protect the fundamental needs for human survival? Sure, the corporations can’t afford to kill off the humans; but they can’t afford to provide them their needs in abundance, either.

Imagine if BP’s executive management had been perfectly conscientious citizens serious about BP’s obligations to put the environment before the bottom line (an obligation that most Republicans will tell you doesn’t exist, but just stay with me for a second). At some point, some shareholder is going to look at a quarterly report and see that profits, while healthy, weren’t as great as their less-conscientious competitors’.

Do you think that management team survives? I don’t.

So what we have here is a system in which responsible corporate behavior is not only unusual, but practically impossible. The shareholders demand dividends. Executives that fail to put the dividends above all else are summarily fired. This is the way our system is designed to operate. And we’re going to take this out on BP? They’re just playing the game by the rules we’ve made. Right?

An argument can be made, with some justification, that much of the blame here falls on government for being ineffective or even complicit in its role as referee and watchdog. The point is correct, government has been those things. We’d like to think that Democratic governance will change much, most, or even all of that. But the sad fact is that the Republicans are going to have their turns in the White House, too. That is also, at this point, designed into the system, which means that government nonfeasance is essentially designed into the system as well. We can’t rely on government to mitigate the structural incentives that demand that large corporations work the very margins of the law without rest to maximize their profits. The only solution is to remove those incentives.

Another argument can be made that corporations are merely collections of people — that it is people making these irresponsible decisions, and those people should be regarded as moral lepers who would make those same decisions even without the umbrella of corporate shielding of liability protecting them. This argument ignores the lessons of the Milgram Experiment — that people will do unconscionable things to each other when an authority figure assures them that it is quite alright. Groupthink is the human race’s most destructive tendency, just as dangerous in the hands of greedy corporatists as it is in those of megalomaniacal militarists. That we have constructed these monstrous legal entities that feed on money and labor, destroying our environment, economy, and way of life in the process — and given them equal legal footing with us even — explains every outrageous corporate misdeed in the long history of corporate misdeeds. The problem here is systemic. These accidents are not accidents. They are the collateral damage we choose to accept by granting corporations such special place in our society.

I’m not sure yet exactly what kind of reforms to propose. I personally am fond of the idea of abolishing corporations outright, but I also recognize that some legal shielding is necessary to make entrepreneurism feasible. I also think that setting a legal limit on market cap, to prevent megacorporations from even forming, would by itself prevent disasters of the scale of the Deepwater Horizon. I do know that capitalism does best for everyone when we have large numbers of small companies, not the inverse situation we have today, but that’s an economics debate for another day. Still, I would rather be faced with solving the relatively minor misdeeds of smaller companies than the catastrophic disasters that megacorporations routinely leave in their wake. If we can’t eliminate business playing by the margins of the rules, we can at least mitigate the risks inherent in living by such a system.

So, excuse me if I’m not gung ho about boycotting BP. BP is just the symptom. The disease runs far deeper. It’s going to take us years, maybe decades, to cure it… but I think our moral obligation to take on that fight is crystal clear. The time to reign in the corporate plutarchy has come. Without fear of hyperbole, I say that the alternative will be extinction. The law of averages will eventually make that inevitable.

Israeli Commandos Enter Mavi Marmara – Up to 16 Killed [Update]

.
HAARETZ BREAKING NEWS:
Netanyahu cancels Obama meeting in wake of deadly Gaza flotilla clashes

BREAKING NEWS –
Israel attacks Gaza aid fleet

(al-Jazeera) – Israeli forces have attacked a flotilla of aid-carrying ships aiming to break the country’s siege on Gaza.

Up to 16 people were killed and dozens injured when troops stormed the Freedom Flotilla early on Monday, the Israeli Army Radio said. The flotilla was attacked in international waters, 65km off the Gaza coast.

Footage from the flotilla’s lead vessel, the Mavi Marmara, showed armed Israeli soldiers boarding the ship and helicopters flying overhead. Al Jazeera’s Jamal Elshayyal, on board the Mavi Marmara, said Israeli troops had used live ammunition during the operation.

The Israeli Army Radio said soldiers opened fire “after confronting those on board carrying sharp objects”.

Free Gaza Movement, the organisers of the flotilla, however, said the troops opened fire as soon as they stormed the ships. They also said the ships were now being towed to the Israeli town of Haifa, instead of Ashdod to avoid waiting journalists.

Earlier, the Israeli navy had contacted the captain of the Mavi Marmara, asking him to identify himself and say where the ship was headed.

Read more on the Gaza Aid flotilla in shergald’s diary:
LATEST NEWS ON GAZA AID FLOTILLA – 10 peace activists killed

Turkey: 2 killed, 30 wounded in Israeli raid

ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey’s Foreign Ministry says at least 2 people have been killed and more than 30 wounded in an Israeli raid on an aid ship in the Mediterranean (International waters).

The ministry condemned Monday’s raid on the ship carrying pro-Palestinian activists, called it unacceptable and demanded an “urgent explanation” from Israel. It says Israel violated international laws and will suffer consequences.

Reports: Israeli ships attack aid flotilla, 2 dead

No News On Indonesian Volunteers Aboard Mavi Marmara Ship
Turkish vessel Mavi Marmara

Aftermath of Israel’s attack on Gaza flotilla

(al-Jazeera blog) – We’ll be live-blogging the aftermath of this incident throughout the day; keep checking back for international reaction, news from our correspondents on the ground, photos and video.

Update, 8:05am: Turkish media are reporting protests throughout the country, particularly in Istanbul (several of the ships, and many of the activists on board, are Turkish). 300 people tried to storm the Turkish consulate in Istanbul early this morning; a larger protest is planned for 12:30 local time (9:30GMT).

“Massive” security is reported around the Israeli embassy in Ankara, and around the residence of Gaby Levy, the Israeli ambassador.

There are also reports of a small demonstration outside the US consulate in Adana, a city in southern Turkey.

"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."

May 30, 2010: One Trillion Dollars Spent on Wars in Afghanistan & Iraq

On May 30, 2010 at 10:06 a.m.the National Priorities Project /Cost of War counter – designed to count the total money spent for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars – reached the $1 trillion mark.

Meanwhile, a report  recently released by the US-based Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation (CACN),  finds that the United States remains the global leader in defense spending.
In a terrific article full of facts and figures by Yana Kunichoff called “Defense Spending the Top Priority, Critics Fear” of May 30th at Truthout, the author cites figures from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute that shows in 2007 the U.S. spent 4.1% of its Gross National Product on defense. http://www.truthout.org/defense-spending-top-priority-critics-fear59967 That compares with under 2% for Germany and about 3% for Greece (largely bankrupt because of weapons spending). Here’s another mind blowing stat:  the USA spends 44% of the GLOBAL TOTAL for weapons spending according to the Stockholm people!  

What is especially troublesome about all of this is that defense/weapons spending during the Obama administration is up 8% over what is was under Bush.  Recall too that Obama has kept on the entire shrub management over at DOD and, indeed, has promoted many of W’s generals (like McCrystal).

From the Truthout article:

The Department of Defense’s fiscal year 2009 “Active Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country” report  says the U.S. has 1,417,747 troops in more than 138 countries around the world, including the U.S, with 285,773 of them abroad.

…the U.S. budget deficit is $1.27 trillion and accruing interest. According to a graph  in the Washington Post about President Obama’s $3.8 trillion budget proposal for fiscal year 2011, $895 billion is expected to be allocated to defense spending and $730 billion to social security.

Recall that President Obama has set up a deficit reduction committee and packed it with people like Alice Rivlin and Anne Fudge who have called for cuts in social security (and for privatizing it).  At the same time, this supposedly Democratic administration is calling for cuts into the signature FDR program, it has cut zilch from DOD spending.  That’s up, as reported, 8% over Bush’s budgets!  

Maybe since Obama was a community organizer in Chicago it’s fitting to end this diary with a quotation from a Chicago school teacher that begins the Truthout article:

“On the front lines in public schools and places like Chicago where I teach, we are seeing devastating budget cuts,” said Jesse Sharkey, a ninth and twelfth grade social studies teacher at Senn High School in Chicago.

“It’s very apparent when you think about the spending priorities in our country that there seems to always be enough money for military adventures overseas but not enough for our classrooms at home.”

It is sad to see the Democratic Party shifting ever farther to the right, away really from the ideals that made it so successful for so many years.  We should be spending more, not less, on schools, teachers, the elderly, housing and health care. If budget hawks want a budgetary target, why not start with the costly and unnecessary military bases the USA still has in Germany and Japan, 65 years after those countries were vanquished?  

Open Thread

I watched a little French Open today. Getting ready to grill some chicken. Not much going on news-wise. There’s a flotilla headed to Gaza with humanitarian aid. Things could get testy. It looks like the oil geyser will be geysering for another couple of months. What’s on your mind? Have any relatives that were lost in our nation’s wars?

More Attention Then He Deserves

Reading Paul Rosenberg is a bit like reading Hegel. Take for example this excerpt from Hegel’s Phenomenology of Mind.

Immediate certainty does not make the truth its own, for its truth is something universal, whereas certainty wants to deal with the This. Perception, on the other hand, takes what exists for it to be a universal. Universality being its principle in general, its moments immediately distinguished within it are also universal; I is a universal, and the object is a universal. That principle has arisen and come into being for us who are tracing the course of experience; and our process of apprehending what perception is, therefore, is no longer a contingent series of acts of apprehension, as is the case with the apprehension of sense-certainty; it is a logically necessitated process.

You and I have no idea what any of that means because we haven’t read what comes before it and Hegel is using ordinary language in novel ways. In order to decipher his meaning, we first have to learn his terminology. So, it’s no wonder that Jamelle Bouie needs help understanding how Rosenberg can credibly argue the following:

…Barack Obama’s manic embrace of discredited conservative ideas…has helped enormously in extending the hegemonic continuity of [the] Nixon-Reagan Era.

When Rosenberg talks about “conservative ideas,” “hegemonic continuity,” and “the Nixon-Reagan Era,” he’s not referring to what you and I would assume he’s referring to.

He tried vainly to explain himself yesterday, but his central motif (built on his idiosyncratic definition of ‘context’) withered on the vine and petered out…left largely unexplained. So bad, in fact, was his effort, that his very incoherence protects him for direct rebuttal. If we don’t know what he means, we can’t very well explain why he’s wrong. His refusal to abide by the norms of usage began right at the beginning with this Clintonian whopper.

First off, it should be clear that I didn’t actually argue “that Barack Obama has manically embraced ‘discredited conservative ideas’ and ‘helped enormously in extended the hegemonic continuity of [the] Nixon-Reagan Era'” I simply offered that as a characterization.

He goes on to explain that he thought of making an argument to justify his assertion and that he may still someday try to justify his assertion, but he’s not going to do that now. Instead:

…hopefully this post can provide good enough justification for my characterization, so that we can have a more enlightening discussion than has happened so far.

So what follows is not going to be an argument but a ‘justification.’ You see, making a flat assertion that Obama is manically pursuing discredited conservative ideas is not an argument because no effort was put into justifying it. But making an effort to support that assertion is not an argument either. It’s a justification.

The point here isn’t to critique the substance of what Rosenberg has asserted, justified, or argued, but to mock the way in which he does it. For Rosenberg has constructed what I might generously call a philosophical system. It’s as though he studied Kant and Hegel and Schopenhauer, and learned nothing from Nietzsche’s perspectivism:

There are still harmless self-observers who believe that there are “immediate certainties”; for example, “I think,” or as the superstition of Schopenhauer put it, “I will”; as though knowledge here got hold of its object purely and nakedly as “the thing in itself” without any falsification on the part of either the subject or the object. But that “immediate certainty,” as well as “absolute knowledge” and the “thing in itself,” involve a contradictio adjecto. I shall repeat a hundred times; we really ought to free our selves from the seduction of words!

But you ignore that philosophical aside. We’re not in class. The point is that Rosenberg is debating himself. We can choose to learn his particular language and try to grasp his usage. But that’s hard enough with people like Hegel who had something important to say. Rosenberg doesn’t have anything important to say.

As best as I can tell, he wants a wholesale rejection of neoliberalism in all its aspects, and he thinks Obama’s failure to move forcefully in that direction is undermining our opportunity to have a true realignment in this country that puts a permanent end to the era that started with the Democratic crackup in Chicago in 1968. So, it doesn’t matter what progressive improvements Obama achieves. He doesn’t get credit for them because he’s making those improvements in a way that perpetuates the post-1968 era that Rosenberg hoped would end with his election. Now, I’m not saying that there is nothing in that to debate or discuss, if only Rosenberg could discuss anything coherently. But, anyway, I hope I have helped explain for Jamelle Bouie why Rosenberg expresses himself in this strange way and why he makes these odd arguments. He is waging, or attempting to wage anyway, an ideological battle that has absolutely zero interest to the vanguard of Obama’s revolution. Part of that ideological battle, I agree with. Part of it, I sympathize with.

But I have a simple rule of thumb. I look at what can plausibly be forced through the 111th Congress and I judge Obama’s performance by how short of that measure he falls. He has not yet been defeated on any bill he has initiated or endorsed. On the controversial measures, he’s received no more than a few votes above the minimum required. The stimulus passed with 60 votes, as did the health care bill. If Rosenberg were arguing that Obama could have done better, I’d agree with him. But he wants things an order of magnitude better.

That’s the fundamental reason why Obama hit dribblers in the press conference: because neo-liberalism is all about the dribblers. Don’t swing for the fences, it says. Don’t go for single-payer–or even for a robust public option that would lead to single-payer over time–even though it’s what’s needed to dramatically cut the over-priced costs of healthcare “system”. Don’t go for a $1.3 trillion stimulus, even though that’s what the macro-economics tells you is needed to really jolt the economy out of the recession, preserve necessary state and local services and put people back to work sooner, rather than much, much later. Don’t go for a dramatic shift to clean energy, energy efficiency and massive investments in green jobs, even though that’s what the science says is absolutely necessary to avoid a coming climate catastrophe.

Unstated is the possibility that Obama could not get Congress to authorize a $1.3 trillion stimulus package, or a single-payer health care system, or a public option, or a suitable climate bill. Unstated is the fact that Paul Rosenberg couldn’t do it either. Setting aside the public option which at least had a puncher’s chance if the president really fought for it, the other items on Rosenberg’s list don’t pass the laugh-test in Washington, DC. Obama actually has directed tremendous resources towards clean energy, but evidently Rosenberg has something much, much larger in mind. Need I remind you that that the Stimulus Bill passed with 60 votes. As for a single-payer system, no one who watched the 16 month battle to pass health care reform can possibly be under any delusions that single-payer can pass through Congress in this country, or even that the Democrats could hold together enough to credibly make that their opening position. Rosenberg isn’t interested in the Art of the Possible, or in making what gains are available.

In his mind, Obama can’t be a progressive because he operates in a neo-liberal context (with ‘neo-liberal’ meaning something different to Rosenberg than what it means to the rest of us). But, from the point of view of the organizing left, Obama is going about things exactly as a progressive would. That’s because on-the-ground community organizers aren’t waging an ideological battle, but a battle for resources and opportunities. It’s not all or nothing. It’s get what you can and come back and ask for more. The best progressive isn’t the one who excels at the ‘seduction of words’ or who builds the most elaborate philosophical systems for understanding political change, but the one who gets a clinic opened or gets the police to focus on their neighborhood crime problem or who gives the working poor access to health care subsidies.

Down on the street, the rest is just wankery.

[The subject of this post is Paul Rosenberg, and should not be interpreted to reflect on the other authors at OpenLeft]