The shout of the Occupy movement, at least in D.C., has been “End the Wars, Tax the Rich!” in that order and in combination. Over half of federal discretionary spending goes to the war machine. We ought to fix that problem first, and then fix the problem that our overlords aren’t actually paying their fair share of the taxes. My friend Leah Bolger is about to face a possible sentence of months in prison for having taken this message to the Super Committee. Remember them?
But the big, well-funded liberal/progressive groups that are borrowing the language of Occupy and organizing 99% Spring nonviolence trainings are talking about taxing the rich, never mind what the taxes are spent on. I just spoke with someone organizing a bunch of “patriotic millionaires” to come to Washington, D.C., and talk about how they’d like to be taxed more. I suggested that they might also comment on what their money should go to, and I was told that saying more than one simple thing was bad messaging policy.
Really? How about if it rhymes? How do we fix the deficit / End the wars and tax the rich! When we chant that, random people join in marches. Are we sure it’s bad messaging policy? Has that been focus grouped?
The annual Take Back the American Dream conference actually had a panel on war last year. I was on it. But it was far from the focus. Here’s the event’s current “messaging” about its conference this coming summer:
“At this conference, we’ll be tackling some of the most pressing questions we face today:
“How do we compel candidates to embrace a jobs agenda big enough to end our economic crisis?
“How can we stop unlimited corporate campaign cash from buying this election?
“How many progressive champions can we help win in congressional, state and local races?
“How will we take back our democracy—to Take Back the American Dream?”
In fairness there’s nothing there about taxing the rich either. But there’s certainly no mention of military spending or war. Perhaps when the full agenda is announced I’ll be pleasantly surprised , as I was last year.
Another upcoming “progressive” conference has just published its full schedule of panels and workshops. This one is called Netroots Nation. In recent years, I’ve always complained that they had nothing on war. They’ve always responded that I ought to have proposed a panel on the topic. I’ve always pointed out that I did in fact do so. I did so this year as well, just as I did for Left Forum and UNAC and other conferences that said Yes and included them. Among the dozens and dozens of panels announced by Netroots Nation, none focuses on cutting military spending, a fact that never ceases to amaze me, as pinching a bit from the military could pay for everything else progressives want. There are a few panels that touch on war, one of which even mentions the Pentagon budget in passing:
“Decoding Defense: Speaking with Authority on National Security Issues
“It’s an old cliché: The GOP is the ‘national security’ party. But Barack Obama’s foreign and domestic policies are changing that idea. The armed services have played a key role in debates over foreign policy, the budget, gay rights, immigration and civil liberties. Vets transitioning to the homefront have taken the lead in the Occupy movement, the push for clean energy and reforms to education. Speaking with authority on military issues is critical for progressives in the coming year, but it’s also daunting. How do you navigate a Pentagon budget? What’s the difference between a commissioned and noncommissioned officer? Who watchdogs military contractors? What organizations exist to connect progressives and vets? Attendees to this workshop will learn how to ‘speak DOD,’ find and decipher important military info, articulate progressive national security goals in simple statements, rebut conservative talking points and reach out with empathy to veterans who are receptive to progressive ideals.
“Panelists: Bryan Rahija, Adam Weinstein.”
Hmm. The goal here seems to be making the Democratic Party the party of militarism. If that’s not entirely clear from the above description, check out this one for another Netroots Nation panel:
“Intervention, Isolation and the Future of Progressive Security Policy
“The long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, along with the economic crisis at home, have soured many progressives on foreign policy ideals long held dear by liberals: human rights, multilateral interventions, nationbuilding and support for democracy abroad. Recent debates over Libya, the Arab Spring, drones and Israel/Palestine have deepened this split between interventionists and isolationists. So where’s the common ground? What should the next progressive foreign policy look like? Can liberal interventionists distinguish themselves from right-wing neocons? Is Ron Paul onto something with his anti-war stance? From sanctions and special forces to drones and no-fly zones, attendees to this panel will hear a variety of views on humanitarianism, state sovereignty, multilateralism, limited conflicts and domestic war fatigue from the left’s most prominent experts in international affairs.
“Moderator: Adam Weinstein
“Panelist: Tom Perriello”
Tom Perriello, my former representative, is a proponent of humanitarian war and a faith-based believer in “nationbuilding” who works with an organization that is promoting war in Syria. The problem in this panel will not be that our recent and current wars have killed a lot of people or made us less safe or destroyed the environment or stripped our civil liberties or wrecked the economy, but that they have turned us away from the great Liberal Tradition of favoring war making. Solving the Afghanistan Syndrome is not quite the same goal as solving the Military Industrial Complex problem.
Netroots Nation will also have a panel on “Military Sexual Trauma: The Women’s War,” focusing on rape in the military, and a panel on “COINTELPRO 2.0: Surveillance, National Security and Our Eroding Civil Liberties.” The latter looks excellent, and I think the organizers are taking some risk with some of the panelists, namely that they might point to war as the root cause of the outrages under discussion.
Then there is one more panel, one with some potential to address the core problem, but ultimately a determination not to. There is no indication of who the panelists might be, but here is the title and description:
“Iran 2012: Iraq 2003 All Over Again?
“Despite broad opposition from military and security leaders in the United States and internationally, the sponsors of the Iraq War are fear-mongering their way into another costly Middle East conflict. Bush has dropped from the headlines, but the architects of his foreign policy have taken over the shadow cabinets of GOP presidential contenders, the corner offices of think tanks and the halls of Congress. But 2012 is not 2003. A restrained economy, an ascendant model of less-militarized foreign policy and a war-weary public create an opportunity for a responsible policy outcome and a definitive blow to the (neo)conservative death-grip on national security politics. Attendees will hear from experts well-steeped in the trends and decisions behind the war drumbeat both then and now, who will spotlight the web of familiar players, debunk their arguments and discuss strategies for achieving a sounder policy and winning the political debate.”
Now, who are the sponsors of the war on Iraq that are pushing the war on Iran? Are exclusively Republicans creating a new war despite the president inconveniently being a Democrat who constantly talks up the Iranian threat, who forbids the State Department to speak to Iran, who increases weapons sales to Israel, who doubles down on commitments to veto any U.N. accountability for Israel, and who has reportedly promised to arm Israel for an attack on Iran as long as it is delayed until 2013? What is this less-militarized foreign policy? What nation is it in? Surely not ours. Obama has increased military spending, increased military privatization, increased the use of secret agencies for war making, radically expanded the use of drones, openly claimed and used the power to launch wars without even bothering to lie to Congress, seized the power to murder anyone including U.S. citizens and children and U.S. citizen-children, claimed and exercised the power to imprison or spy without charge or justification, expanded governmental secrecy and retaliation against whistleblowers beyond anything Bush ever dreamed, and expanded U.S. military bases abroad. It’s a step forward for Netroots Nation to be opposing Republican wars. It’s just a shame that these folks waited until Obama was waging the wars to launch that now-out-of-place protest.
I’ve been on a number of email threads discussing the complicated question of whether big groups loyal to the Democratic Party are co-opting Occupy. Well, of course, they’re trying to. But much of Occupy has itself been weak on the central problem of the military industrial complex. And individuals who identify themselves with occupy movements or big Democratic groups have all sorts of different outlooks. The co-opting can and does go both ways. Principled activists can educate their neighbors, even at events planned by people who believe that voting for Obama will fix most of our problems. We should never dismiss actual people in the way that we dismiss an ineffective agenda. But in figuring out which events have been planned with useful agendas and which need to be nudged in a better direction, the test should never be merely “Are they trying to drag us into electoral campaigns?” It should also include the question of what is missing. “Tax the rich,” is the very best that the big organizations sometimes offer, and it leaves a whole lot missing.
On March 28th, Oscar Arias, former president of Costa Rica, spoke in Washington, D.C., about his country’s decision to disband its military. In Costa Rica, war is found only in a museum. I know we should never ever ever learn from that 95 percent of humanity that has the misfortune to not be our compatriots. Nonetheless, the results in Costa Rica, often listed as the happiest country on earth, are at least more interesting than the deadly chaos we’ve brought to Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya. Here’s Arias:
“This resulted not only in a healthy, educated, and free society. It resulted in concrete gains for national and regional security. When conflicts and civil wars swept our region in the 1980s, Costa Rica was able to maintain its stability and freedom from violence. What’s more, this enabled my little country to become the platform for the peace accords that gradually ended the unrest in our part of the world. And today, while the terrible consequences of drug trafficking in our region and consumption in the developed world are posing serious challenges to our government, Costa Rica continues to maintain its foothold in the world of peace. Here in the developed world, those achievements might seem distant, or even insignificant. But an oasis of democratic stability in a region that is among the most dangerous in the world, and whose exports of goods and people have a direct effect on its northern neighbors, is valuable indeed.”
Proposing some options for redirecting part of what the United States spends on war preparation, Arias remarked:
“Imagine the impact on security of reducing poverty by half. Imagine the impact on security of universal primary education. Imagine the impact on security of eliminating the digital divide. Imagine the impact on security of drastic reductions in hunger and sickness. These changes would take power from dictators and terrorists in ways that weapons never could.”
Surely some of those things also touch on “ideals long held dear by liberals”? Arias even has a plan that he proposes could be put into practice:
“I have proposed a change: the Costa Rica Consensus. This simple idea uses international financial resources to support developing nations that spend more on environmental protection, education, health care and housing for their people, and less on arms and soldiers. It would change the way international aid is distributed. It would end the ridiculous policies that punish countries when they make good choices, and reward corrupt or misguided governments that create conflict and deprivation. It would make a real difference in some of the most dangerous and conflict-ridden nations on earth. . . .
“. . . Why not allow rich countries to double the impact of their aid dollars by not only addressing human need, but also requiring developing nations to make changes from within, and promoting best practices in socioeconomic development? . . .
Speaking from the standpoint of the victims of humanitarian wars, Arias has a different prescription from Perriello’s:
“. . . We learned the hard way that a shipment of weapons into a developing country is like a virus in a crowded room. It cannot be contained; we do not know whom it will attack; and it can spread in ways we would never have imagined. As I watched what was happening to my region, I realized that the same story was being repeated, time and time again, in developing countries all over the world. It is happening today, in countries such as Libya and Syria, where conventional weapons are being channeled in the service of short-term goals, with no thought for the eventual consequences. As any Central American can tell you, the weapons sold to the Middle East today might end up in anyone’s hands. We cannot foresee their consequences. The only certainty is that we cannot control the outcome.
“That is why I began an effort in 1997, along with other Nobel Peace Laureates, to establish a comprehensive Arms Trade Treaty, which would prohibit the transfer of arms to States, groups or individuals, if sufficient reason exists to believe that those arms will be used to violate human rights or International Law. The destructive power of the 640 million small arms and light weapons that exist in the world, most in the hands of civilians, demands our attention. It is a threat to security that requires no great expenditure to combat. It requires only political will. That is why its path to reality has been such a difficult one. It is scheduled for a vote this July at the United Nations, but the struggle to ensure that that event results in a comprehensive and binding treaty that covers all conventional weapons, munitions and ammunition, faces opposition from the strong and consolidated interests of some of the world’s leading arms exporters – foremost among them, the United States.”
Now there’s an issue we could seize hold of and pressure our government on, if we were independent people speaking to our government as a whole. As fans of one team in a partisan competition, we’re rather disabled. Both teams view weapons as jobs programs and campaign funds, not instruments of death. The fact that these weapons are used for nothing other than murder is left out of our conferences, so we forget to think that we might want to put an end to that.
We can participate in any events we like, but we must eternally emancipate ourselves from mental slavery.



14 Comments

Neo Cons and Neo liberals are Faux Americans who control the evening news from Neo York.
Funny how MSNBC and Fox News are right across the street from each other, Wall St Journal up the block, ABC and New York Times in Times Square 3 blocks away, CBS 8 blocks north, and CNN waaaaay over across the skinny bottom side of Central Park from CBS News.
These guys could and likely do all walk to the Plaza for lunch and strategy sessions. Lotsa matza, lots of chutzpa. Lots of putzes.
I was threatened with arrest for distributing my business cards at last year’s NetRoots Nation here in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak complained that I had not paid for booth space so I was violating the rules of the Minneapolis Convention Center.
In fact, his problem was with what was printed on my business cards; the question:
How is Barack Obama’s Wall Street war economy working for you?
My business card was promoting my blog… what nerve, eh? Distributing business cards promoting a blog at a bloggers’ convention.
These people are Debbie Wasserman Schultz liberals. DWSCH bags.
As much as I admire David Swanson, I cannot let his glorification of Oscar Arias pass without reminding him of the worse than shameful role Arias played as the US puppet-master, duping the deposed gullible Manuel Zelaya into duplicitous talks with the Honduran Golpistas, clearly at the behest of the US government, and selling out democracy in Honduras. I don’t care what lofty sentiments Arias professes. He was an active and willing tool of the US in destroying democracy in Honduras and legitimizing its present repressive regime.
Please send me info on that to david at davidswanson dot org thanks
I believe that Obama liberals bombard us with all the injustices going on in this country for a reason: they flood our psyches with such a litany of wrongs, we lose focus on the on the root of the injustices: the wars. They don’t point out that domestic and foreign policy are inextricably tied. We become confused and feel helpless.
If people would just stop for a minute and focus on the illegality and inhumanity of the politicians’ wars, they would find a focal point. They could address that one thing. However, they say: “Look over there! Another injustice you can’t do anything about!” It wears everyone down.
Citizens of all stripes and political persuasions can come together under the banner of protesting war. That, of course, is the last thing those who wish to make us ineffectual–people like Katrina vanden Heuvel, Van Jones, John Nichols, Josh Marshall, and Marcos Moulitsas–want.
I agree; unity should begin with the need to end these imperialist wars. We don’t even have a united anti-imperialist movement of any kind here in this country even though the United States is the world’s leading imperialist power. If the wars became the major issues this would pretty much spell Obama’s political demise.
In the last 16 years, the AFL-CIO Executive Council has managed to utter just one short sentence in opposition to these dirty wars as if these wars don’t have a direct influence on our lives, our living standards, and the destruction of our own country that results in these wars to occupy and oppress the peoples all over the world.
There seems to be very little understanding that the wealth created by working people is like having this wealth pissed away into our crumbling sewer systems largely built by workers leaning on shovels all day in the WPA when it is wasted on militarism and wars.
The result of this lack of understanding that the struggle for the elusive peace dividends is central to real change is that we get from Obama, with his sock-puppets cheering on, a “Jobs Act” which puts only the coupon-clipping parasitical Wall Street venture/vulture capitalists to “work” figuring out how to pick our bones clean instead of WPA, CCC or a National Public Health Care Program which would employ over ten-million workers providing people with free health care and a National Public Child Care System creating some 3 million new jobs providing working class families with free child care.
For the price of these dirty wars and the even more expensive occupations we could put over twenty-million people to work at real living wage jobs and all these over-paid, muddle-headed, middle class intellectuals don’t understand this. Instead they are telling us we must fear the Republicans and vote for Obama when there is far less than a dime’s bit of difference between Obama and Romney just as there is between Obama and Bush.
The very last thing Obama and the Democrats want us talking about is how these wars and occupations are killing us all— the most important point of what should be bringing us all together.
In my opinion, a big part of the problem results because so many of these people are nothing but foundation flowers— after all, who are these great “philanthropists” funding these foundations which pay their big, fat salaries? Are these “philanthropists” not the very people who reap huge profits from war? And what about all these union pension funds placed under the control of these Wall Street venture/vulture capitalists— the investments are in companies profiting the most from wars.
Look where Obama goes to get his support and funding:
http://news.yahoo.com/obama-voters-face-starkest-contrast-since-johnson-goldwater-233739233–abc-news-politics.html
And who owns “Change.org?” The son of a Raytheon executive, another Obama supporter.
And Van Jones who has learned to milk these foundations for everything he can… check it out. Is there anything in what he says that focuses on the need to end wars and militarism as the way to fund human needs which would create jobs solving the problems of the people? Why is it so difficult for Van Jones or any of these others you mention to formulate things in this way? In fact, they have to exert a tremendous amount of effort to not articulate the problems and solutions in this way. Just look:
http://www.theroot.com/views/van-jones-advisor-outsider
Then there is one you didn’t mention. The “labor leader” who turned heading up a labor council into a multi-million dollar business for her own personal gain, Amy Dean. Do you ever see her talking about the need to turn the labor movement into the mainstay of turning weapons of war into plowshares? Hell no. Look where she gets her funding from; the Century Foundation— just like so many of Obama’s liberal, progressive and left supporters:
http://tcf.org/
All of these foundation-funded flowers will talk about peace but they all know and understand they can’t mobilize a united movement for peace. Why can’t these foundation-flowers mobilize people for peace? Because a united mobilization for peace would have forced Obama from office just as it did Lyndon Johnson.
And check this out. Right on the front page of the Century Foundation’s website is posted an article from what is supposed to be a Communist publication, “The People’s World ,” which has become the left’s biggest Obama booster and a booster of all those you mention while CPUSA membership has dropped from over 20,000 to less than 200 (two-hundred) nationally because of the “leadership’s” support for Wall Street’s warmongering imperialist, Barack Obama.
Check it out— upper right hand corner:
What’s New What’s Popular
TCF Labor Organizing Event Covered in People’s World.
Russia Under Pressure to Get Tougher on Its Ally Syria
Jeffrey Laurenti quoted in Bloomberg.
Rolling the Dice for the Haves and Have Nots
Mark Thoma in the Fiscal Times.
Annan Plan Up Against the Syrian Wall
Jeffrey Laurenti in Blog of the Century.
State of Security: Rethinking Safety and Danger in the 21st Century
TCF Fellow Michael Cohen and AEI’s Mackenzie Eaglen Debate the Status of Safety in the U.S.
Just how much of the “left” is being controlled by these “philanthropists?” After all, you don’t get a united anti-imperialist peace organization without the left, do you?
We have a “united front” of all the foundation flowers but not a united front for peace, social and economic justice— the inseparable “big three” which these muddle-headed middle class intellectuals have been paid so well to separate.
All of this would make for a good front page story for FireDogLake… I wonder why the story isn’t being written?
The Democrats are back at it again where I live, demanding that I vote for their guy because they want to win and stay in power.
More war based upon Democrats in power; they have no problem with that. More corporate exploitation of everyday Americans based upon Democrats in power; they have no problem with that. More fake populism so Democrats can capture the Occupy vote; they have no problem with that.
Liberals and progressives are as much of an enemy of the working class as conservatives.
Excellent diary, highly recommended. The problem of Democratic Party militarism extends beyond the actual hot wars they enable but flows naturally into domestic policies- the perceived need to cut social programs to finance the war machine, the larger and increasingly indistinguishable roles of the military and domestic surveillance/law enforcement to the general fascistic hagiographic worship of armed uniformed authority whether it be the invariable portrayal of soldiers of imperial conquest as “heroes” and then extending that untenable hagiographic status to law enforcement and various spooks, state security forces and prison industrial complex enforcers.
I’m sorry, putting on a uniform does not make anyone a hero, following orders to do asymmetric violence on whomever you are ordered to (generally the poor, people of color, political dissidents and the powerless) is in fact the almost diametric opposite of heroism.
People in uniform should be viewed with well founded suspicion and skepticism, not mindlessly hailed as patriotic heroes. The “liberals” who employ the iconography of vapid flag wrapped authoritarian patriotism are the enemy of the actual left here just as much as the people on the right who do the same.
Thank you so much for all the info. I checked out the Century Foundation’s website, and what a collection of high-paid, essentially worthless liberals it shows. TCF.org even has a page of experts. Seriously, it says “experts” at the top of the page. Theses guys at tnf are the courtiers in King Obama’s Royal Court.
And then the link you pointed to about Obama saying voters face the sharpest contrast since the Goldwater-Johnson election while speaking at a fundraiser hosted by the former CEO of Raytheon. That was grotesque.
Instead of dissecting Obama’s every sentence when he talks about war with Iran, the front page dissects the former candidate Santorum. Instead of intense discussion about this march to war, we are served a heaping helping of anything Republican. Is there a method to the madness? I think so. Come November, those trusting, fence-sitting libs who’ve had their daily dose of LOTE for the past year, will find it unthinkable to vote for someone other than the “War President.” LOTE + War with Iran equals a second term for Obama.
(Pssst…if war is never seriously discussed, it won’t diminish support for Obama, either.).
I should point out that if you further examine The Century Foundation you will find among their “partners” the Council on Foreign Relations.
In 2007, I was blasted by the leaders of this outfit, “Progressives for Obama,” for sending out the essay Obama wrote in the magazine “Foreign Affairs” which is the voice of the Council on Foreign Relations.
All I did was send the complete text of Obama’s own essay to 28,000 liberals, progressives and leftists in this country with just one simple question and no other commentary from me.
I asked:
“Does this sound like it was written by a liberal, progressive or leftist or a reactionary neo-liberal neanderthal working for imperialist Wall Street warmongers?”
I was accused of trying to destroy Obama’s campaign.
These people did not want the American people to read Obama’s real views.
There is a very big eye-opening story here for anyone who wants to research it— preferably one of the “real” journalists who write the FireDogLake Front Page stories because they challenge the qualifications of us lowly citizen/activist/journalists to do the job correctly.
So, what is preventing FireDogLake from doing this important story about The Century Foundation and how it uses foundation grants to control AND derail our movements?
The involvement of The Century Foundation and the derailing of the single-payer universal health care movement is a story in and of itself but the major story lies in how this outfit has been derailing the peace, social and economic justice movement because the purpose of this outfit is to serve Wall Street’s interests.
Jason Rosenbaum was the D Party hack who was editor of Seminal, the predecessor of myFDL. While collecting a paycheck from the DLC front Health Care For America Now, Jason tried his darnedest to convince FDL readers that Obama was on our side, while the public option was being gutted, and Romneycare was serving as Obama’s template the whole time.
http://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonrosenbaum
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