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Today's
Stories
November 7,
2005
Jeff Halper
Israel
as an Extension of American Empire
November 5
/ 6, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
Storm
Over Brockes' Fakery: Guardian Fabricates Chomsky Quotes
Lawrence R.
Velvel
Lying,
Law Schools and Executive Power: What Senators Should Ask Alito
Diana Johnstone
Srebrenica: a Response to Certain Criticisms of My Essay
Roosa / Nevins
The
Mass Killlings in Indonesia, 40 Years Later
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Missing
the Bus: When Conscience Bows to Calculation
John Ross
The Zapatistas' Otra Campaign for Mexico's Presidential Elections
Mike Whitney
Globalizing Sadism: the United States of Torture
Mark Engler
Will Big Business Turn On Bush?: the Economic Nightmare Unfolds
Juliano Mer-Khamis
They Shoot at Children, Too
Ron Jacobs
When Gen. Westmoreland Visited
Jill S. Farrell
Bird Flu and the Posse Comitatus Act
Missy Comley
Beattie
Trent Lott's Untroubled Sleep
Mitchel Cohen
People of the Dome, Revisited
Evelyn J. Pringle
Bush-Cheney and Big Oil's Big Summer
Reza Fiyouzat
Signs of Life or Last Gasp? Structural Problems in the Democratic
Party
Charles Sullivan
When Courage Fails: a White Southerner on Rosa Parks
Zachary Richard
Return to Louisiana
Ben Tripp
Beginning of the End? Don't Start Cheering Just Yet
St. Clair / Vest
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week
November 4,
2005
Jeffrey St.
Clair
Blood
on the Tundra, Betrayal in the Rotunda: Losing ANWR
Dave Lindorff
A Majority Now Favors Impeachment: If He Lied, He Must Be Tried
Phillip Cryan
Crackdown
in Colombia
Christopher Brauchli
Katrina and Tax Breaks for the Very Rich
William S.
Lind
Exit Strategy: You Can't Stay the Course in a Lost War
Daryl G. Kimball
Of Madmen and Nukes
George Beres
Laurels for Negroponte?
Peter Montague
Why We Can't Prevent Cancer
November 3,
2005
James Petras
The
Libby Affair and the Internal War
Saul Landau
Torn
Families and Shot Down Planes: a Cuba Story
Rep. Cynthia McKinney
An Occurrence at Gretna Bridge
Michael Dickinson
Bang! Bang! You're Deaf! Sonic Weapons Over Palestine
Joshua Frank
Sham Behind Closed Doors
Remi Kanazi
Dancing with Perseverance
Reza Fiyouzat
Taxation or Racketeering?
Website of the Day
CIA Leak Investigation: Bigger Fish, Deeper Water?
November 2,
2005
Cockburn /
St. Clair
Holy
Alito!: Not as Crazy as Scalia, But Just as Bad
Robert Oscar Lopez
Saving Rosa Parks from American Hypocrisy
John Walsh
The Philosophy of Mendacity: From Leo Strauss to Scooter Libby
Brian J. Foley
Why Most Americans Don't Care About Gitmo (and Why They Should)
Ramzy Baroud
Rolling Back Syria
M. Junaid Alam
What Moral Values?
Todd Chretien
Judgment Day for the Governator
Bruce K. Gagnon
The Democrats' Slap Happy Day
Website of the Day
Hands Off Dave!
November 1,
2005
Ron Jacobs
An
Interview with Kent State's Dave Airhart
Gary Leupp
The Plame Affair Leads to Rome
John Ross
Days
of the Dead on the Border
Bill Quigley
Why
Are They Making New Orleans a Ghost Town?
Joseph Nevins
From a Boundary of Death to One of Life
Dave Lindorff
Thinking About Impeachment
Linda S. Heard
Bashing Syria: Another Trojan Horse from the UN?
Heather Gray
Thank You, Mrs. Parks
Michael Dickinson
To Di For: Charlie and Camilla Cross the Pond
Jeffrey St. Clair
Kent State: Wise Up and Back Off
October 31,
2005
Elaine Cassel
Libby's
Lies
Mark Weisbrot
Pop Goes the Bubble: Bernancke and the Fed
Mike Whitney
Carry On, Patrick Fitzgerald
Norman Solomon
After the Libby Indictment, the Press Acquits Itself
Farooq Sulehria
Trading Weapons While Kashmir Burns
Nicole Colson
Scapegoating Immigrants
Madis Senner
Dhafir Sentenced to 22 Years: Another Erosion of Civil Rights
Paul Craig
Roberts
Scooter
and the Neocons
October 29 / 30, 2005
Cockburn /
St. Clair
The
Libby Indictment: Gotterdammerung for the Bushies?
Peter Linebaugh
The
Wedges of Hephaestus
Tim Wise
Framing the Poor: Katrina, Conservative Myth-Making and the Media
John Chuckman
Bushspeak: Dark and Garbled Words
Steven Higgs
Green Hoosiers: Forging a New Democracy in the Heartland
Brian Cloughley
The Fifth Afghan War
M. Shahid Alam
Israel and the Consequences of Uniqueness
Nikki Robinson
Crack Down at Kent State
Ralph Nader
Let the PIRGs Begin!: Student Activism Thrives
Joe DeRaymond
Requiem for Bethlehem Steel?
Joshua Frank
Karl's Great Escape: Did Rove Rat on Scooter?
Laura Santina
Tongue-Tied on Iraq: Why Aren't the Dems Screaming Bloody Murder?
Fred Gardner
Death of an Organizer
Michael Dickinson
Insult Your Country
Ron Jacobs
Autumn in America
Dr. Susan Block
Fear and Sex: a Halloween Greeting
Vanessa S. Jones
Self-Portrait, 1994. Bronte Beach
Jeffrey St.
Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week
Poets' Basement
Marbet, Gardner, Ford, Albert, Engel, Krieger & St. Clair
Website of
the Weekend
Red State Update
October 28,
2005
Jared Bernstein
Inflation
Up; Wages Down: Fastest Decline in Wages on Record
Virginia Tilley
Embracing
the Anti-Aparthied Movement in Israel/Palestine
Phil Gasper
The
Race to Execute Tookie Williams
Jennifer Matsui
It's Mardi Graft Time!
Manual Garcia,
Jr.
Is the US Really Against Torture?
Monica Benderman
In the Name of Justice
Jason Leopold
Fitzgerald
Focuses on the Forgeries
Dave Lindorff
Suddenly, Bush Endorses Right of Fair Trials
Otober 27, 2005
Saul Landau
The
Scandal Isn't the Leak, But the Illegal War
Stuart Hodkinson
Bono
and Geldoff: "We Saved Africa" Oh No, They Didn't!
Ingmar Lee
Stop
the Troops!: No Glory or Honor in Iraq
Lila Rajiva
License
to Bill: Gates Does India
Ilan Pappe
The
Last Moment of Hope
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Waiting for Fitzgerald
Michael Donnelly
Look Who's Talking Now: the GOP on Perjury
Ron Jacobs
Escape the Weight of Your Corporate Logo
Cockburn / St. Clair
White House in Meltdown
October 26,
2005
Kathy Kelly
For
Whom They Toll
Gary Leupp
Dialectics
of the Plame Affair
Mike Marqusee
Empire of Denial
Eric Ruder
War Crimes in Afghanistan
Patrick Cockburn
Iraq: a Constitutionally Divided Nation
Joshua Frank
Fitzgerald v. the Bushies: Hold Your Elation in Check
J.L. Chestnut, Jr.
The Legacy of Rosa Parks
Website of
the Day
Decent Work in America: the 2005 Work Environment Index
October 25,
2005
Paul Craig
Roberts
Condi
and Syrian Regime Change: Could Somebody Recommend a President?
Ken Sengupta / Patrick Cockburn
Attack on the Palestine Hotel
Conn Hallinan
Sleight of Hand: Iran, India and the US
Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed
Pulling the Court Strings
Jackie Corr
Barbara Bush: Poster Gorgon of the Houston Astros
Robert Day
Talk to Strangers
John Sugg
Judith
Miller and Me
October 24,
2005
Dave Lindorff
Revoke
Judy Miller's Pulitzer
Michael Donnelly
Shades of Iran/contra
Patrick Cockburn
A Nation Stands on Trial
Mike Whitney
Apres Rove
Norman Solomon
Iraq is Not Vietnam, But...
Bill and Kathleen
Christison
US
Foreign Policy and Palestine
October 22
/ 23, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
When
Divas Collide: Maureen Dowd v. Judy Miller
Billy Sothern
Letter
from the Circle Bar, New Orleans
Saul Landau
Bush, an Assessment
Ralph Nader
An
Open Letter to Bush on Harriet Miers
Behrooz Ghamari
Whose Justice Does Saddam's Trial Serve?
Brian Cloughley
Bush the Strategist: Pyrrhus Without a Victory?
Diana Barahona
Venezuela's National Workers' Union
Fred Gardner
Dershowitzed!
Lee Sustar
What the War on Terror is Really About
Patrick Cockburn
Murder of Saddam Trial Defense Lawyer
Laura Carlsen
Mexico City Seamstresses Recall 1985 Quake
James Petras
China Bashing and the Loss of US Competitiveness
Joshua Frank
Invading Iran: Who is to Stop Them?
Manuel Garcia,
Jr.
Disasters are Us
Michelle Bollinger
When Abortion Was Illegal
Missy Comley
Beattie
CSI: Iraq
Kona Lowell
Intelligent Design: Making High School Fun
Ben Tripp
Tanks for the Memories
Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening To This Week
Poets' Basement
Albert and Engel
Website of
the Day
Indictment Watch
October 21,
2005
Dave Lindorff
The
Democrats' Abortion Hypocrisy
Winslow T. Wheeler
Paying for Their Mistakes: Incompetence, Deception and the Defense
Budget
Col. Dan Smith
The Destruction of the National Guard
Norman Solomon
Media at Crossroads: 25 Years After Reagan's Triumph
Madis Senner
Abusing Katrina
Michael Donnelly
Richard
Pombo: DeLay in Cowboy Boots
October 20, 2005
Dave Lindorff
Impeachment
Comes to NYC
Ray McGovern
16
Fatal Words: Cheney's Chickens Come Home to Roost
Jeremy Brecher
/
Brendan Smith
Attack Syria? Invade Iran?: By What Constitutional Right?
Patrick Cockburn
Saddam Refuses to Recognize Court
Kevin Zeese
Was the Iraqi Constitution Vote Fixed?
Ross Eisenbrey
Millions Would Lose Pay and Protections Under Enzi Amendment
Randy Shields
James McMurtry Makes It in Dayton
Justine Davidson
Prosecuting Bush in Canada for Torture: a Small Victory
After Lucas
Cranach
Judy and Holofernes
Joe Allen
The
Scandalous History of the Red Cross
October 19,
2005
Christopher Reed
Koizumi and the Rape of Nanking
Stephen Soldz
Bush
and Avian Flu: the Excuses Begin to Fly
Chet Richards
War
and Intelligence
Patrick Cockburn
Saddam on Trial
Scott Richard
Lyons
Multicultural
Columbus?
Ralph Nader
An Interview with Rev. William Sloane Coffin
Website of
the Day
Shocking Video: Why Birds May Be Taking Viral Vengeance on Humans
October 18,
2005
Chet Flippo
Merle
Haggard: "Let's Get Out of Iraq"
Ron Jacobs
Dual Devotions: the Catholic Church and the US Flag
Keeanga-Yamahtta
Taylor
A Tale of Two Cities: From DC to Toledo
Dave Lindorff
Judy Miller: Little Miss Run Amok
Virginia Rodino
A Winter Patriot: Reflections on the Antiwar Movement
Thomas Healy
The Weather in Goshen: Still Radical After All These Years
Ralph Nader
A New New Orleans
Stephen Lendman
The Sorrows of Haiti
Patrick Cockburn
On the Eve of Saddam's Trial: a Divided Iraq
October 17,
2005
Peter Linebaugh
Spinoza
and the Black Limos
Norman Solomon
Judith Miller, the Fourth Estate and the Warfare State
Cockburn /
Sengupta
"If
the Sunnis Don't Like It, That's Their Problem"
Mike Whitney
Miller's Confession: Last Gasp Before Indictments?
Uri Avnery
Iraq Now: What Awaits Samira?
Harold Pinter
Torture & Misery in the Name of Freedom
Website of
the Day
Al Joudi v. Bush
October 15
/ 16, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
Ayatollahs
of the Apocalypse
Patrick Cockburn
"This Constitution Won't Get Me a Job"
Saul Landau
Two Terrorists and a Lush: Osama, Posada and Bush's Drinking
Neve Gordon
"Beyond Chutzpah": Exposing Grave Moral Distortions
Moshe Adler
Poverty in New York City
Christopher Brauchli
Lynndie England's Burden
Diane Farsetta
The Emperor Doesn't Disclose: the Fight Against Fake News
Sam Husseini
Notes on Current Reporting About Judith Miller
Monica Benderman
From Chaos to Conscience to Peace
Mickey Z.
POW Abuse by US: Nothing New Going On Here
Douglas C.
Smyth
George W. Bush, the Honorius of Our Time
Lee Sustar
Will Delphi Bust the UAW?
Fred Gardner
Cannabinoids Arrive in Realm of Established Fact
Elizabeth Schulte
A Former Panther's Georgia Campaign: an Interview with Elaine
Brown
Joshua Frank
Will the Democrats Save Harriet Miers?
David Vest
Down with Formalism! Up with Values!
Ben Tripp
Epistle II: the Reawakenign
Poets Basement
Engel, Albert, Ford and Louise
Website of
the Weekend
The
Hidden Canyon
October 14,
2005
Farrah Hassen
A
Somber Ramadan in Syria
Ron Jacobs
The
Black Panthers: They Haven't Forgotten; Neither Should We
Sasha Kramer
USAID
and Haiti: the Friendly Face of Imperialism?
Katrina Yeaw
The Student Struggle in Italy
Nicole Colson
Bird Flu: Militarizing Health Care
Raúl Zibechi
Survival and Existence in El Alto
Nikolas Kozloff
Hugo
Chávez and the Politics of Race
Website of the Day
LA Filmmakers Cooperative
October 13, 2005
Jeremy Scahill
Mr.
Bush Goes to Tikrit (Sort Of)
Jeff Birkenstein
A
Thoreau for Our Time: Why Cindy Sheehan Matters
Brendan Smith / Jeremy Brecher
Harriet Miers: Bush or the Constitution?
Stan Cox
Did You Know This About Iraq?
Anis Memon
The Curious Case of Russ Feingold
Gary Leupp
Miller, Libby and the June Notes
Dave Zirin
A Tribute to August Wilson
Matthew Koehler
America's Endangered Forests
Werther
The
Two-Headed Monster
Website of
the Day
Hurricane Song
October 12, 2005
Omar Waraich
Britain
and the Quake: Mean and Stingy
William Cook
Voices
Behind the Entombment Wall
Phil Gasper
Countdown
to a Legal Lynching
Dave Lindorff
Impeachment Now and Then: Clinton, Bush and the Polls
Matt Vidal
Capital, Power and Class
John Gautreaux
New Orleans will Never be the Same
Diana Johnstone
Srebrenica
Revisited: Using War as an Excuse for War
Mark Weisbrot
The IMF Has Lost Its Influence
Brian J. Foley
Gitmo Tribunals Endanger Public Safety
Website of
the Day
Columbus Day Lies
October 11,
2005
Roger Morris
/ Steve Schmidt
Strategic
Demands of the 21st Century
Lila Rajiva
Live from New Orleans: Abu Ghraib
Bill Quigley
New
Orleans: Leaving the Poor Behind Again
Paul Craig Roberts
Natural Born Liars
Dave Lindorff
Recruiters in Schools: No Lie Left Untried
Dr. Teresa Whitehurst
Suspect Thy Neighbor
Mitchel Cohen
Showdown at Chuck E. Cheese
Tariq Ali
Pakistan will Never Forget This Horror
Website of
the Day
L'Heure Americaine
October 10,
2005
Cindy and Craig
Corrie
Rachel's
Words Live
Joshua Frank
Washington's War Dems
Gideon Levy
The Beautiful Life Without Arafat
Alan Wallis
The Fight for Free Speech at Union Square
Mickey Z.
In Defense of Liars
CounterPunch News Service
Vermont Independence Convention
Paul Craig
Roberts
The
Police State is Closer Than You Think
Website of the Day
Dylan's Chronicles
October 8 /
9, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
Rhetoric
and Reality in the Business of Getting Rid of Black People
Ralph Nader
Katrina
and the Growls of Greed
Jennifer Van Bergen
New American Law: Legal Strategies in the Dharfir Case
Saul Landau
An Oily Religious Dream
Jeff Halper
Setting Up Abbas
Lenni Brenner
The Millions More Movement and Zionism
Nikolas Kozloff
Bird Flu and Bush
Brian Cloughley
Training Soldiers in Iraq
Alice Slater
A Nobel Prize for Chernobyl?
John Gautreaux
A View from Cajun Country
Fred Gardner
Does the Controlled Substances Act Mean What It Says?
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Leveethan Approach
M.G. Piety
Rot in the Ivory Tower: Collusion, Cover-Up and Kierkegaard
Tom Gorman
The Hitchens Doctrine
Mike Whitney
Bunker Days with George
Aseem Shrivastava
Beyond the Wasteland: Lessons from Afghanistan
Ben Tripp
Religion, an Epistle
Poets' Basement
Albert, Engel and Ford
October 7,
2005
Larry Johnson
The
Plame Case: the Real Issues
Will Youmans
Why
Do We Hate Our Freedom? Recruiters and Thugs on Campus
Dave Lindorff
Bird Flu: Evolution or Intelligent Design?
Judith Scherr
Haiti's Children's Prison
Russell D. Hoffman
Nukes for Peace, Revisited?: Nobel Prize Debacle
Jared Bernstein
Katrina and Jobs
Jennifer Van
Bergen
New
American Law: the Case of Dr. Dhafir
Website of
the Day
FBI Witchhunt
October 6, 2005
P. Sainath
"Take
That, Tom Friedman": Indian Masses Reject NYT's Neoliberal
Idol Again
Scott Parkin
When Antiwar Activists Get Mugged
Paul Craig
Roberts
Blundering
into Syria
Andréa Schmidt
Haiti's Biometric Elections: a High-Tech Experiment in Exclusion
Dave Lindorff
Easy
Money in the Big Easy
Joshua Frank
In Defense of Lew Rockwell
M. Junaid Alam
Jackboots at George Mason
Matthew Koehler
Cock and Bull on the Bitterroot
Robert Pollin
Is
the Dollar Still Falling?
October 5,
2005
Heather Gray
Militarization is Not an Answer for
Reconstruction: the Case of the Philippines
Robert Jensen
Is
Bush a Racist?
Ramzy Baroud
Bush's Final Choice: America or
the Empire
Col. Dan Smith
Keeping Promises to Iraq: "Everything
is Bad"
Dave Zirin
Barry
Bonds Laughs Last
Paul Craig Roberts
Liberal Guilt? How the Neocons
Took Over
Alan Maass
Doing
the Right Wing's Dirty Work
October 4, 2005
Nikolas Kozloff
Shocking the Two Party System:
a Political Opportunity for Sheehan and the Antiwar Mvt.
Mike Roselle
Houston,
You've Got a Problem
Joshua Frank
The Scoop on Harriet Miers
John Chuckman
War
Porn: What the Gruesome Images Say
Alan Farago
Storm Warning for Jeb: Developers,
Hurricanes and the Keys
Mickey Z.
An
Interview with Thaddeus Rutkowski
Christine & Ethan Rose
Home Depot Exploits Hurricane Victims
Gary Leupp
An
Earlier Empire's War on Iraq: a Lesson from Roman History
Website of the Day
Rodney
Crowell on Bob Dylan
October 3,
2005
Vijay Prashad
Desperation at Holyoke
Paul Craig
Roberts
Condi
Rice: Gunslinger
Joshua Frank
An Interview with Cindy Sheehan
Seth Sandronsky
The
Hiring Crisis for Black Teens
Jeffrey St. Clair
The Great Green Scare

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We interrupt your regular reading
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Onward,
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November 7, 2005
An
Interview with Stan Goff
A Special Forces Officer
Turned Anti-War Socialist
By M. JUNAID ALAM
Stan Goff is a former US Special Forces
Master Sergeant with three decades of military experience, now
heavily involved in anti-war work with Military
Families Speak Out and the Bring
Them Home Now campaign. He is also the author of two
books, Full
Spectrum Disorder, an analysis of the US military action,
and Hideous
Dream, a memoir based on his military experience.
Below, in an extensive interview,
Goff discusses the current configuration of the American political
landscape in light of all the scandals exploding around the administration,
and what the Left can do to take advantage of them. He also talks
about the politics of the anti-war movement, why liberals refuse
to endorse immediate withdrawal, and on a personal note, how
is own son came to sign up for the military. Finally, Goff offers
his thoughts on the Venezuelan revolution, its achievements,
and its implications for neo-leftist ideas that declaimed against
the state as a site for social change after the USSR's demise.
Alam: A political sandstorm
is brewing for the Bush administration on so many fronts: Iraq,
Plamegate, Katrina, gas prices, the Delay indictment and the
judicial debacle. Broadly speaking, do you think the left will
be able to capitalize on Republican weakness, or does the centrism
of the Democrats stand in the way of significant gains?
Goff: The crisis of the Bush
administration has just been further deepened by the mass protests
and political cold shoulder he got when we visited Latin America
to flog the FTAA. Hugo Chavez declared that the agreement would
be buried in Mar de Plata, Argentina. And huge, militant street
actions ripped the costumes off the perception management act.
A Zogby poll now shows that
the majority of military personnel in the US armed forces disapprove
of their commander in chief's performance. The CIA gulag is being
exposed. More Abu Ghraib photos will soon be released, just as
Janis Karpinski's expose is released. While we don't hear about
it here any longer, the incident in Afghanistan where Special
Forces troops burned the bodies of dead Muslims remains a source
of seething fury in the region. A little-reported Shia rebellion
is gaining strength in Basra, while Sistani talks about the new
government demanding American withdrawal. And Karen Hughes, Bush's
PR flak, recently had her head publicly handed to her when she
tried to lecture Indonesians on democracy as she tried the kind
of historical mythologizing that she gets away with in the US.
The crisis here is one of legitimacy.
There is no immediate threat to the general stability of US imperial
power. There is a threat, however, to the Republican Party that
is being borne into the party by a fairly reckless lame-duck
government, and the latent threats to imperial power are growing
everywhere.
If the US left doesn't encumber
itself with unrealistic expectations, there is ample room to
make some headway in the next period. But we have to understand
which points we push on will give way and which won't.
Standing on the sidelines during
the Republican terramoto to show how above bourgeois politics
we are strikes me as pretty foolish and self-indulgent. We definitely
have to unite with this gathering storm surge of resistance to
the seated government, even when it does provide some short-term
opportunities for the Democratic Party.
Internationally, this crisis
of legitimacy is not perceived as a Republican issue, but a US
issue. Most of the rest of the world has some real sense of what
US policy internationally translates into for them, and the distinction
between Republicans and Democrats is fairly meaningless except
to a few pet NGOs. I think these perceptions abroad are more
accurate than our perceptions here.
The left in the US is clearly
out of the left-sectarian sandbox right now with regard to the
war against Iraq. At least the majority in the US now believes
it was a bad idea--for a whole host of reasons--and that it's
time to get out. So mass organizing has created a huge new discursive
space here for the left, and we need to ensure we don't blow
it by using shotgun propaganda--that is, approaching every sector
in the movement and every audience with the same message, couched
in the same terms.
It always amazes me that the
same people who can explain something as nuanced and philosophically
complex as commodity fetishism can fail to appreciate the formidable
epistemological barriers that prevent most other people from
understanding the same things. But if we learn to do public pedagogy
effectively, beginning with the reduction of these barriers through
popular education and the development of different approaches
for different sectors, there is a huge potential to consolidate
the left itself, and to win over key new layers of the mass movement
to at least an anti-imperial consciousness.
This is a crucial step along
the path to refounding a US left that has the power to go beyond
the demonstration dynamic and actually begin to put down local
roots in communities where they can develop some institutional
infrastructure. This seems like an organizational development
imperative.
But the left also has the responsibility
to weaken the obstacles to progress toward refoundation of a
vital left in the US, and my own feeling is that this involves
the eventual euthanasia of the Democratic Party even though I
don't think we should underplay the risks of this for polemical
advantage. It is very risky, and so we need to calculate those
risks, then move forward.
The key is to expose and isolate
the opportunistic leadership of that party without attacking
its rank and file. Calling people stupid for voting Democrat
is a fine cathartic outburst, but it doesn't seem like a very
good strategy for wining over the next layer of people to an
anti-imperialist consciousness.
We are already dong a fairly
good job of exposing the Democratic Party on the war against
Iraq right now, or rather, the Democratic Party is dong a fine
job of exposing itself. But there are two points of vulnerability
that haven't been taken up as aggressively as they should be
and that is making the connections between the social conditions
of oppressed nationalities in the US and the Palestinians.
Many people want to make a
preposterous case that the Republican neocons are in the pay
of Israel and that the US is somehow subordinate to Israel. This
is not only idiotic, it is often anti-Semitic world Jewish conspiracy
stuff. The problem is that people in the US are spectacularly
ignorant about Palestine and the state of Israel. The more dominant
belief is that Israel is an island of white civilization in a
sea of Arab deviance, of course, and an alarming number of Republican
partisans have convinced themselves that the Israeli state is
the fulfillment of biblical prophecy in the end times. The political
reality is that the Republicans have seized on Zionism so aggressively
to undermine the Democratic Party, whose Zionism is almost legendary.
So I guess I believe that we
should be working three fronts hard.
On a practical level, relating
to the Iraq war, we have to up the ante in terms of war resistance
and strengthen our efforts at counter-recruitment. This materially
weakens the war effort, and the US military failure in Iraq is
an advance for the whole world. It also means attacking Republicans,
and uniting with mass disillusion about Republicans.
On an organizational level,
it seems we have to consolidate the left wing of the movement,
isolate the reactionaries who are trapped in this legitimacy
crisis, and work a lot harder and smarter to win over new layers
of the antiwar movement and oppressed nationalities to an anti-imperialist
orientation.
Finally, we need to develop
durable, local social and political infrastructure I'm thinking
here of three groups I know, the People's Organization for Progress
in Newark, and the whole city block in Chicago developed around
the Puerto Rican Cultural Center--where I recently had the honor
to visit. Black Workers for Justice here in North Carolina has
always looked in this direction, too, with a workers center,
clinics, the World Cultural Center, and so forth.
Alam: Turning to the anti-war
movement: Cindy Sheehan has been a remarkable symbol of the anti-war
movement--mother of a soldier lost to the war, active, principled,
and outspoken. However, the anti-war left still seems trapped
in the same kind of circular, sporadic protest-conference dynamic.
What could the hard left do in terms of its own behavior that
could change this circle into an upward spiral of action?
Goff: Just for myself, I don't
see the process as an upward spiral, and I'm not trying to quibble
over metaphors here. I see it as moving into abandoned spaces.
That's why though I believe the demonstrations are important,
the real work to consolidate the advanced activists has to happen
at the local level. I'm thinking here about the ten-point program
of the Black Panther party, and how that was paired with the
development of local social and political infrastructure. Yusuf
Nuruddin recently wrote a good piece on this for Socialism and
Democracy.
Symbolic politics has great
catalytic value, but a limited life expectancy.
Locally-rooted, and culturally
homogenous organizations with an anti-imperial consciousness
are not only more effective at pursuing counter-recruitment work
and pressuring elected officials on the war, they are on the
front lines against the attack against their own living standards.
Katrina is showing us, if we care to look, an accelerated version
of what may be the most important issue facing Black and Brown
communities in the US, and that is gentrification.
Alam: Liberals who express
disillusionment and anger with the war--like Juan Cole - nevertheless
object to immediate US military withdrawal because they argue
it would result in total anarchy and chaos. They also say the
US has certain obligations to Iraqis in light of its policies
the past two years. Are these objections valid, or are they cover
for a more visceral concern about the US losing "credibility"
if it leaves?
Goff: They are an expression
of white supremacy. I don't think there is any way to sugarcoat
this. The racism of reactionaries has been isolated to a large
degree. We can start a fight over the Minutemen or the Daughters
of the Confederacy and pretty much win the public debate. Liberal
racism is a far more destructive force in this society, largely
because it is still unacknowledged. The argument to stay the
course from liberals is based directly and absolutely on a latter-day
version of the "white man's burden to civilize the darker
races."
The political cover is not
to protect US credibility. The leadership of the Democratic Party
wants to stay in Iraq for the same reason the Republicans do.
This is, from the point of view of the US state, an absolutely
necessary re-disposition of the post-Cold War American military.
The argument between D's and R's is about how to accomplish it.
The reason we saw next to zero
official Democratic Party participation in September 24th was
that the Democratic Party leadership disagrees with us. They
want those permanent bases in Iraq every bit as much as Richard
Perle and Paul Wolfowitz do. There is simply no other way to
explain why the most visible leaders of that party continue to
argue for expanding the war with more troops and garnering more
international support for it, when the polls show this to be
an increasingly unpopular position like free trade agreements,
another issue where the public opposes, and both parties agree.
This is a pretty good indicator that transnational capital operating
through the US state regards these positions as non-negotiable.
Alam: Turning personal for
a moment: you've been very active in the anti-war movement as
a member of Military Families Speak Out, you spent about 30 years
in the Special Forces before you became a socialist, and you
have a son who served in the military Iraq. The question sort
of presents itself: how did the son of a Master Sergeant-turned-Marxist
end up joining the military?
Goff: My son grew up on a military
installation. That was a good life, from his standpoint. Military
installations are socialist societies. Everything on them is
held in common, and almost every facility and support activity
is available universally to all members of the armed forces.
Good schools, health care, housing allowance or free housing,
recreation facilities, and for inter-racial kids like my son,
a whole population of kids like him. Inter-racial marriage is
far more common in the Army than in US society generally. He
saw me get a check twice a month, and I never had to worry about
being fired.
His own child had just been
born, and he was working at McDonalds. So he went to what he
knew. Fort Bragg is where my kids have their most enduring sense
of place. And Fort Bragg is a nice place. It is well kept, and
it is not cluttered up with commercial billboards. There are
all sorts of things to do--fishing, swimming, craft shops, gyms,
theaters, libraries, walking trails, and so on.
I won't speak for him on the
question of the war, because I do not have his permission to
do that. But if he never had to go back to Iraq, I doubt he'd
be calling for an appointment with mental health to deal with
his disappointment. He's 22. He likes to fish and dance and play
video games and hang out with his pizos. My kids are aggressively
apolitical it's a separation thing, I suspect.
Alam: One of the often unrecognized
consequences of resistance in Iraq is the US government's inability
to direct its full wrath at an enemy much closer to home: Hugo
Chavez. What are your thoughts about Chavez's progress in cultivating
what he calls 21 century socialism?
Goff: How can I not like Hugo
Chavez? He was a paratrooper like I was, who learned to love
the people and got political. He represents a nation where the
armed forces fused with the masses to disrupt a US-supported
coup d'etat. He is exploiting his assets and minimizing his liabilities
to stick his finger in the eye of the Imperium.
He has accomplished so much,
but there are a couple of things in particular that resonate
with me. He led the process to rewrite a bourgeois constitution
and make it an instrument of popular sovereignty. Women's equality
was written straight into that document, and he destroyed the
most undemocratic political institution in the country, the Senate.
I wish we could do that. But the other thing he did was to organize
a nationwide literacy program around that constitution, making
this document a weapon that was handed to the masses.
Now he is taking on a leadership
role in the whole region, where we are seeing what I call a political
version of continental drift. Latin America is awake again, and
it is trying to gain its feet. That process is strengthened by
US overstretch in Iraq. I don't have a crystal ball to see where
all this will go, but I do know that when I visited the very
independista Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Chicago that I mentioned
earlier, they had sent their youth to Venezuela, and his picture
was everywhere. That all seems very positive.
As to how the Venezuelans feel
their way into the future, I am neither informed enough nor close
enough to Venezuela to make any kind of critique. That the Venezuelan
state is the instrument for returning power to the masses is
enough to make me smile.
Alam: You've been one of
a handful of leftists who has spoken strongly against the romanticization
of Zapatistas and the dismissal of the state as a means of social
change--positions long championed by John Holloway and Michael
Hardt and others post-USSR. Does Venezuela present a definitive
answer to their neo-Marxist/anarchist formulations, or is too
early to tell?
Goff: I don't know if I'd characterize
the Zapatistas themselves as anarchists. I just don't know enough
about their internal processes to make a judgment like that.
They are immensely popular, however, with petit bourgeois radicals
in the US, precisely because of the stalinophobic simplicity
of thinking by semi-leftists who are still trapped in a consumer-capitalist
episteme. They want to divorce themselves from the history of
the left because it doesn't square with the good-guy/bad-guy
thinking of metropolitan progressives. They are interested primarily
in a moral evaluation of the 20th Century instead of a critical
one.
I find this metropolitan hyper-idealization
of the Zapatistas almost orientalist, a kind of fawning over
the charming natives who are seen as modern-day Robin Hoods.
And they hardly ever actually use their guns, which further endears
them to American progressives who vicariously dress up like revolutionaries
in a film script, but who can't seem to handle the moral ambiguities
of any active armed struggle that actually shoots anyone.
The left has to critique 20th
Century state socialism, no doubt. But you can't enter that process
with a moral agenda, or even an ideological one. That isn't just
an issue I have with anarchists, who are stunningly ahistorical
except to pronounce moral judgments on specific events without
the least concern for context. I have the same issue with anyone
who engages in this critique to attempt the apotheosis of his
or her favorite dead communist. Here is a news flash. We are
not living in Russia in either 1917 or 1937. We are not living
in China in 1950 and neither are the Chinese and Russians.
In that process of studying
the 20th Century, not only do we have to ask how the Soviet bloc
was defeated or how capitalism is being restored in China, but
how has Cuba managed to preserve so many of its accomplishments
until now and what about Cuba makes its strategies uniquely Cuban.
The Zapatistas seem to have
adopted a strategy that focuses on civil society as a means of
influencing the state. That might be anarchist, or it might be
Gramscian, or it might be something else. That doesn't seem to
be the issue, at least to me. The issue to me is what works.
Has this project advanced the interests of the indigenous people
involved, or has it been defeated, or where is it along that
continuum?
I won't compare it directly
to Venezuela for a number of reasons anyone could infer with
a moment's thought. But I will say that having state power provides
a lot of advantages in advancing the interests of the masses.
If it didn't, the US wouldn't be so hell-bent on contesting it,
either through interference in the elections of other countries,
or with coups like those in Haiti and Venezuela.
Having clear territorial boundaries,
access to public revenues, control over the legal interpretation
of what property means, the ability to openly and legally maintain
armed forces, international diplomatic recognition, trade agreements
with other nations these are clear. If anyone tells me these
are not useful in the hands of a popular government to protect
the people from imperialism, then I want him or her to share
what they are smoking.
On the other hand, Venezuela
is not just a challenge to anarchist and liberal orthodoxy, it
is a challenge to leftist orthodoxy of the more adventurist kind
that says the only way to state power is through revolutionary
civil war.
I don't think Venezuela is
teaching us anything about "models," except that there
are no models. It's teaching us a lot more about the value of
embeddedness for social movements and the need for tactical agility.
M. Junaid Alam is co-editor of the leftist youth
journal Left Hook, where
this first appeared, and a journalism student at Northeastern
University.
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