
FAIL (Photo: Jez Page, flickr)
This story originally appeared at TomDispatch.com.
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At the Occupy Wall Street campgrounds in lower Manhattan, you can find just about anything. Like the sign held by a Marine vet wearing a “Don’t Tread on Me” t-shirt (with a “Ban Fracking Now” sticker on one sleeve) and military pants: “2nd time I’ve fought for my country, 1st time I’ve known my enemy.” It could give you chills. And then there were the older women who cornered me on a visit to the encampment. They were noticeable in part because Zuccotti Park is largely a stakeout for the young and in part because they were insistently shoving a petition at me. It was a call to stop fracking — the practice of injecting water and potentially dangerous chemicals into rock formations to release natural gas, which can poison local drinking water. (I signed.)
That vet and those women are living reminders that, along with the Wall-Street-focused economic grievances of the new movement, there are other things “too large to fail” in this country which threaten to bring us all down. If they, too, get swept into this movement, it may truly prove a moment to reckon with. After all, our wars, including the now decade-old one in Afghanistan and the drone-fed global war on terror (as well as the military-industrial-homeland-security profiteers who accompany them) have proven a quagmire of corruption and failure, as well as a drain on the national treasury.
At the same time, big oil’s mad pursuit of every last drop of fossil fuel anywhere in the Americas or on Earth, no matter how dirty or destructive to the environment, threatens — as our last year of rampaging weather may indicate — to destabilize the planet itself and further degrade our lives. In the case of the environment, there is already a kind of “occupy” movement forming, in particular to protest the proposed 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline that is to bring the dirtiest “tough oil” from Canadian tar sands to the Gulf of Mexico. For its construction to begin, however, its “environmental impact” must be assessed by the State Department and then the president must give it the thumbs-up.
As on Wall Street, as in our wars, here, too, corruption is proving almost too deep to fathom. The New York Times recently reported that the State Department assigned the supposedly impartial environmental impact study “to a company with financial ties to the pipeline operator [TransCanada]… At TransCanada’s recommendation, the department hired Cardno Entrix, an environmental contractor based in Houston, even though it had previously worked on projects with TransCanada and describes the pipeline company as a ‘major client’ in its marketing materials.”
You can’t get much seedier than that. Bill McKibben, a TomDispatch regular who recently wrote a Times op-ed on another aspect of administration pipeline corruption, has been at the forefront of the environmental “occupy” movement, and reports on it for TomDispatch. Here’s his latest missive from the front lines. Tom
Obama’s Failing Emails
Where Did the President’s Mojo Go?
By Bill McKibben
For connoisseurs, Barack Obama’s fundraising emails for the 2012 election campaign seem just a tad forlorn — slightly limp reminders of the last time ‘round.
Four years ago at this time, the early adopters among us were just starting to get used to the regular flow of email from the Obama campaign. The missives were actually exciting to get, because they seemed less like appeals for money than a chance to join a movement.
Sometimes they came with inspirational videos from Camp Obama, especially the volunteer training sessions staged by organizing guru Marshall Ganz. Here’s a favorite of mine, where a woman invokes Bobby Kennedy and Cesar Chavez and says that, as the weekend went on, she “felt her heart softening,” her cynicism “melting,” her determination building. I remember that feeling, and I remember clicking time and again to send another $50 off to fund that people-powered mission. (And I recall knocking on a lot of New Hampshire doors, too, with my 14-year-old daughter.)
It’s no wonder, then, that I’m still on the email list. But I haven’t been clicking through this time. Not even when Barack Obama himself asked me to “donate $75 or more today to be automatically entered for a chance to join me for dinner.” Not even when campaign manager Jim Messina pointed out that, though “the president has very little time to spend on anything related to the campaign… this is how he chooses to spend it — having real, substantive conversations with people like you” over the dinner you might just win. (And if you do win, you’ll be put on a plane to “Washington, or Chicago, or wherever he might be that day.”)
*****
Not even when deputy campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon offered to let me “take ownership of this campaign” by donating to it and, as an “added bonus,” possibly find myself “across the table from the president.” Not even when Michelle lowered the entry price from $75 to $25 and offered this bit of reassurance: “Just relax. Barack wants this dinner to be fun, and he really loves getting to know supporters like you.” Not even when, hours before an end-of-September fundraising “deadline,” Barack himself dropped the asking price to three dollars. God, have a little self-respect man! Three dollars?
Here’s the thing I’m starting to think Obama never understood: yes, for most of us the 2008 campaign was partly about him, but it was more about the campaign itself — about the sudden feeling of power that gripped a web-enabled populace, who felt themselves able to really, truly hope. Hope that maybe they’d found a candidate who would escape the tried-and-true money corruption of Washington.
None of us gave $50 hoping for a favor. Quite the opposite. You gave $50 hoping that, for the first time in a long while in American politics, no one would get a favor. And the candidate, it must be said, led us on. His rhetorical flights were dazzling — to environmentalists like me, he promised to “free this nation from the tyranny of oil once and for all,” and pledged that his administration would mark the moment when “the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.”
Once in office, it was inevitable that he’d disappoint us to some degree. In fact, we knew the disappointment would come and braced ourselves for it. After all, our movement was up against the staggering power of vested corporate and financial interests. It’s hard to beat big money. Still, we didn’t mind thinking: Yes, we can. We’ll work hard. We’ve got your back. Let’s go!
What we completely missed was that Obama didn’t want us at his back — that the minute the campaign was over he would cut us adrift, jettison the movement that had brought him to power. Instead of using all those millions of people to force through ambitious health-care proposals or serious climate legislation or [fill in the blank yourself here], he governed as the opposite of a movement candidate.
He clearly had not the slightest interest in keeping that network activated and engaged. Though we had brought him to the party, it was as if he didn’t really want to dance with us. Instead — however painful the image may be — he wanted to dance with Larry Summers. (Fundraising idea: I’d pay $75 to be assured I never had to have dinner with Summers.)
As the months of his administration rolled into years, he only seemed to grow less interested in movements of any sort. Before long, people like Tom Donahue, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, were topping the list of the most frequent visitors to the White House. And that was before this winter when — after they’d been the biggest contributors to GOP congressional candidates — Obama went on bended knee to Chamber headquarters, apologizing that he hadn’t brought a fruitcake along as a gift. (What is it with this guy and food? At any rate, he soon gave them a far better present, hiring former Chamber insider Bill Daley as his chief of staff.)
Now, his popularity tanking, Obama and his advisors talk about “tacking left” for the election. A nice thought, but maybe just a little late.
Increasingly, it seems to me, those of us who were ready to move with him four years ago are deciding to leave normal channels and find new forms of action. Here’s an example: by year’s end the president has said he will make a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry crude oil from the tar sands of northern Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico. The nation’s top climate scientists sent the administration a letter indicating that such a development would be disastrous for the climate. NASA’s James Hansen, the government’s top climate researcher, said heavily tapping tar-sands oil, a particularly “dirty” form of fossil fuel, would mean “game over for the climate.” Ten of the president’s fellow recent Nobel Peace Prize laureates pointed out in a letter that blocking the prospective pipeline would offer him a real leadership moment, a “tremendous opportunity to begin transition away from our dependence on oil, coal, and gas.”
But every indication from this administration suggests that it is prepared to grant the necessary permission for a project that has the enthusiastic backing of the Chamber of Commerce, and in which the Koch Brothers have a “direct and substantial interest.” And not just backing. To use the words of a recent New York Times story, they are willing to “flout the intent of federal law” to get it done. Check this out as well: the State Department, at the recommendation of Keystone XL pipeline builder TransCanada, hired a second company to carry out the environmental review. That company already considered itself a “major client” of TransCanada. This is simply corrupt, potentially the biggest scandal of the Obama years. And here’s the thing: it’s a crime still in progress. Watching the president do nothing to stop it is endlessly depressing.
For many of us, it’s been an overdue wake-up call, a sharp reminder of just who the president was really listening to. In mid-summer, several leaders of the environmental movement, myself included, put out a call for nonviolent civil disobedience at the White House over the upcoming Keystone pipeline decision. And more people — 1,253 in total — showed up to be arrested than at anytime in the last 40 years. (One reason Obama’s emails stink this time around: the guy who used to write many of them, Elijah Zarlin, not only isn’t working for the campaign any more, but got hauled off in a paddy wagon.)
Bare months have past and already that arrest record is being threatened, thank heavens, by the forces of #OccupyWallStreet, a movement that includes plenty more of the kind of people who rallied so enthusiastically behind Obama back in 2008.
Obama had mojo when he knew it wasn’t about him, that it was about change. But when you promise change, you have to deliver. His last best opportunity may come with that Keystone Pipeline decision, which he can make entirely by himself, without our inane Congress being able to get in the way. So on November 6th, exactly one year before the election, we’re planning to circle the White House with people. And the signs we’ll be carrying will simply be quotes from his last campaign — all that stuff about the tyranny of big oil and the healing of the planet.
Our message will be simple: If you didn’t mean it, you shouldn’t have said it. If you did, here’s the chance to prove it. Nix the pipeline.
We don’t want dinner. We want action.
Bill McKibben is an organizer at tarsandsaction.org, a TomDispatch regular, and Schumann Distinguished Scholar at Middlebury College. His most recent book is Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet.
Copyright 2011 Bill McKibben



19 Comments

“We don’t want dinner. We want action. ”
Great line. I guess the corollary is those who pay $38,000 a plate are paying for status quo.
thanks for bringing this to the lake.
“Here’s a favorite of mine, where a woman invokes Bobby Kennedy and Cesar Chavez and says that, as the weekend went on, she ‘felt her heart softening,’ her cynicism ‘melting,’ her determination building. I remember that feeling, and I remember clicking time and again to send another $50 off to fund that people-powered mission.”
Great post. I remember the exact same feeling, and the exact same multiple $50 ‘clicks’.
Now: It’s Anybody But Obama, for me. I actually think we’d be better of with a Repig winning: So long as Obama is in power, the Democratic Party is paralyzed, and we are stuck with another 4 years of corporatist drift. If he loses, though, then the Democratic Party’s leadership will be (justifiably) shattered, and there will be an opening for a progressive takeover of the Party (a` la Teabaggers and the Republicans).
I’m giving my donations this year to Bernie Sanders, Alan Grayson and Occupy Together. The Democrats in general, and Obama in particular, are irrelevant–and will be until the corporatist DINOs, Obama primary amongst them, are run out of the Party once and all.
I’m from the “if it’s too good to be true, it is” school, and am pretty good at sniffing out frauds, cheats, and phonies. However, the bunko artist currently residing at the White House took me in with his “hope” and “change” schtick. The only thing I can say in my defense is that in the primaries, he was only the alternative to a card-carrying, open and notorious DLC Third Way triangulator by the name of Hillary Clinton.
I will no longer donate money to either a party or a candidate because it gets spent on pollsters and consultants who are a major reason why the Democratic Party has become a worthless shell.
There are a couple of candidates running for local office that I might support, but with my time and donations of food and bottled water for campaign workers. That way my time and effort stay in the community.
I too was duped by this fraudster…but for gawd sakes! lets hope all of those who were duped have learned their lessons & not repeat the same mistake again.
I know I certainly won’t.
What even more telling is how can someone who supposedly went to Chicago to work for the poor & needy so quickly dismiss the situation of the poor & needy once elected President….This guy was always a fraud & used poor people to get to the WH.This is how craven this guy is folks.
I have a friend *Pete* who shot and killed a man during an altercation in a night club when he was 19. He served 18 years and was released for good behavior. He is a mellow old man now and I can have lunch with him any time I choose. So I don’t need to pay $75 to have dinner with a murderer.
I got a call from OFA at the end of September. I stopped communicating with Obama’s network in May of 2008 when it became crystal clear to me that this guy was headed down a bad path cleared for him in many dimensions by the Bush Administration. Health Care opened many eyes and his subsequent dissing of Civil Liberties, financial reform and environmental protection have kind of sealed him away from the small contributor. Anyway, the guy from OFA asked me if I knew about Obama’s job’s bill. I said why yes I had and he said well, do I need to explain it any further or can I just cut the chase. I just had to say “cut baby cut!” So next he says, ok, could you give a gift of 500 dollars to help “America Back to Work!” I just had to laugh sardonically and then began to outline exactly how enraged I was with Obama and the rest of the Democratic Party until he finally came around to excusing himself with the smug dismissal that I’ll probably vote for Obama anyway. Well, no I won’t, not unless he cleans out his cabinet, replaces them with respectable progressives and somehow can get me to believe he’s serious about progressive change between now and the election. That won’t happen, but at least I felt vindicated that someone from the Obama organization finally got to hear it from me. It was worth sending money to #Occupy Wall Street, which I did the next day. I’m afraid all the environment gets in its Halloween bag from Obama will be the BP oil spill cover up, more fracking and a pipeline to get tar sands onto refineries and boats to ship to locations in the world that still have an employed work force.
That’s EXACTLY where I was: I was leery of Obama (I called him “Corpobama” on DKos in 2007–before I got kicked off the site for being too cheeky about 9/11) but simply could not stomach Hilpig.
So I worked for, donated to, and served as county delegate for Obama. Who promptly put in the same Clintonist swine that I hated so much during Bill’s administration–including the Sow herself.
No more. No money for Democrats this year. I’m back to voting Green–and sending what little money I have left (after Obama’s deliberate fumbling of the economy in service to the banksters) to Occupy Together.
And…. special bargain…..your friend isn’t continuing to murder people.
Thank you for saying what I would have. I don’t allow them to call or email me anymore. I worked to get him elected last time around, in the primary and in the general. Not this time.
Best thing I’ve read yet on O’s pathetic e-mail hustle. I’ve got them myself and, of course, never sent dough (though I had done so in ’08.) The e-mail about the dinner was especially memorable. It said O’s campaign had never taken money from lobbyists or large corporations and never would. He wanted, I think, 25 bucks.
Then I read about a fund-raising dinner he had in NYC. I remember somemthing about Chef Daniel Boloud and lobster-and-beet salad. For just $38,000 per head. Joint was crawling with spawn of the Vampire Squid, and the like.
Gotta say this. Guy’s got chutzpah. Which I am informed translates best as ‘unmitigated gall.’
Not electing BO(DINO) again in 2012 is good politics and best way ahead to badly needed change and hope.
BO has had a chance in the WH — BO blew it badly.
What OWS is about is not what BO is about. BO’s deception in 2008 was bad enough. Do not let BO do it again in 2012.
Bill McKibben gets it — thanks BM.
Thanks to TE/TomDispatch too.
BO not in WH in 2013-2016 would be a good change.
This is not about DEMs and it is not about GOP — we need genuine change and hope. What BO has not been about. Is not about.
Not what BO was about in 2008. BO’s Bait and Switch in 2008 was deception being done by BO. BO is still doing deception in 2011.
BO has not done what he suggested he was about in 2008.
Deceptional BO(DINO) should not be elected to WH again in 2012.
what a surprise it will be when all the progressives DON’T march down the path to Obamaland again – one good suggestion? vote for at least one Dem each election, so the DINO Party knows they COULD have had lots more votes.
To quote Muddy Waters, “You cain’t lose what you never had.”
Great article. In 2008 I told myself I wasn’t going to get hopeful and I ended up hopeful anyway. Then when O. won I allowed myself to continue to be hopeful. The hope began to end when he started naming his administration, but I held on for years, still, thinking….
It was Brad Manning that put me over the edge with Obama. I wrote and told him so…but never heard back.
Would you vote for Obama again if he stopped the pipeline to Texas?
What about the wars and all the other issues?
It seems to me we all need to stick together and refuse to support Obama.
You know, the pipeline to Texas isn’t the only pipeline out of the tar sands of Alberta… there is the pipeline to Wisconsin, too, that they ran across an environmentally sensitive area much of which is the Leech Lake Indian Reservation here in Minnesota.
There are a heck of a lot of other issues besides this pipeline upon which Obama has earned the right to be defeated.
This is my belief as well. I’m having a hard time “converting” all those folks [friends] I called & e-mailed back in 2008 to encourage them to support Obama, but perhaps by 2012, that process will be complete.
Bill, Tom, this is a WONDERFUL diary!! Thank you so much.
I too was an “early & often” Obama supporter in 2008. Now my reaction to him is much like it was to Bush: I can’t stand to see or hear him, and turn the channel whenever he appears. [I even get mad at FDL when they have an Obama photo accompanying a diary.]
I hope his unmitigated gall & narcissism will prove his undoing, and that his “well, where else are they going to go” will come back to bite him in the ass. I hope large numbers of votes show up in the Green, Socialist, Working Families or Peace & Freedom columns, so Obama and the Democrats see that we DID have somewhere else to go. He could have had our votes if he’d earned them.
PS – I actually get a charge out of responded to their plaintive pleas for cash. I know that some poor underling is having to read them, but hopefully there will be some tally. In any case, no money.
I almost wish I still received the snail mail so I could respond, but no one reads that stuff once they determine that no $$$ will be forthcoming.
No money or volunteer time from me this time around, and ablsolutely.no.vote.