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You’re Damn Right I’m Angry. Why
Isn’t Everybody?
By David Michael Green
12/29/07 "ICH
" -- -- I write articles each week with
titles like “Everything
I Need to Know About the Regressive Right I Learned In Junior
High“, or “Conservatism
Is Politics For Kindergartners“, or “Schadenfreude
Is My Middle Name“.
I regret doing so very much.
Believe it or not, I really don’t like spewing venom, sarcasm
and rage all over my computer keyboard.
I particularly don’t like it
because I have friends who are conservative, and it’s not my
nature to trash-talk anybody, let alone friends.
Indeed, none of this is in my
nature. I don’t start fights and I don’t go looking for them.
I’m not an angry, bitter or mean-spirited person. But I can
understand how I might be seen as such in the absence of the
appropriate context, and it truly chagrins me that I might be so
misperceived, and so negatively.
But I don’t intend to change,
and I don’t intend to stop making the arguments contained in my
rants. I’m angry for a very good set of reasons, and I’m angry
because I care about my country just the way conservatives claim
to. I’m angry, in short, because I’m a patriot and defender of
the ideas that America is supposed to stand for. And what I
really want to know is why those on the right aren’t equally
outraged?
I was a teenager when Nixon was
being Nixon, destroying democracy at home, napalming civilians
in Vietnam, conducting secret wars in Laos and Cambodia,
employing racism to win elections. At that age I knew enough to
dislike what I saw (and what I learned of what Nixon and
McCarthy had done to innocent Americans even earlier, before I
was born, in order to serve their political ambitions), but I
didn’t know enough yet to feel genuine rage at what regressives
were doing to my country and to the world.
I began to experience those
feelings in my twenties, first as truly sociopathically insane
gun laws in this country helped to claim the life of John
Lennon, and then as Ronald Reagan began to systematically turn
his back on the poor and the middle-class in order to further
enrich the country’s already wealthy economic elites. I also
felt deep shame and outrage that America - the country that had
supported if not literally created every two-bit dictator in
Latin America, ‘our backyard’, (and well beyond) for a century -
began to murder Nicaraguan peasants in order to halt their
struggle to free themselves from the economic and political
tyranny of one of those Washington-run caudillo clients, the
sickening Somoza regime.
Then I watched in disgust as
Newt Gingrich and his merry band of infantile hypocrites
impeached a president for lying about a consensual sexual
affair, while they were themselves all doing worse, like dumping
a wife while she was lying in her hospital bed recovering from
cancer surgery, or fathering children with a mistress, or
carrying on many years-long affairs.
All of this was truly noxious.
Nothing to that point had prepared me, however, for the
regressive politics of our time. And they have turned me very
angry indeed.
Regressives like to call people
like me Bush-haters, and so it is important to address that
claim before proceeding, because the entire intent of hurling
that label at the president’s critics is to undermine their
credibility. If you simply hate the man, they imply, you’re not
rational, and your critiques can be dismissed. But it isn’t that
simple - not by a long shot. First, it should be noted that the
regressive right is far wider a phenomenon than just one person.
It currently includes an entire executive branch administration,
almost (and, just a year ago, more than) half of Congress, a
majority of the Supreme Court and probably a majority of the
lower federal courts, a biased-to-the-point-of-being-a-joke
mainstream media, and tons of lobbyists, think tanks and
profitable industries.
But as to George W. Bush,
himself, I suspect it’s quite fair to say that most Americans
and even most progressives did not originally despise or loathe
him. I didn’t. I certainly didn’t admire the guy, nor did I
think he was remotely prepared to be president of the United
States. (Nor, by the way, was I particularly impressed with Al
Gore in 2000.) Bush campaigned as a center-right pragmatist (a
“compassionate conservative”, in his words), much as his father
had been, and I expected that’s how he would govern if elected.
You know, more embarrassing most of the time than truly
destructive.
I mention all this because it is
important to note what has - and what has not - been responsible
for my/our anger, and to make clear that attempts to dismiss
that anger as some Bush-hating bias or predisposition are false,
a ploy to destroy the messenger when one doesn’t care for the
message he’s carrying. If Bush had governed like he campaigned
I’m sure I would have disliked him, but neither hated him nor
his policies, nor experienced the rage that I feel about what
he’s done to the country and the world. Frankly, my feelings
toward another center-right Bush presidency would have likely
been largely the same as my feelings toward the center-right
Clinton presidency which preceded it.
But he hasn’t governed anywhere
near to how he campaigned, and he wasn’t even elected properly,
and I do in fact feel huge anger at the damage done. Moreover, I
cannot for the life of me imagine how anyone - even
conservatives - could feel differently. Even the wealthy, to
whose interests this presidency is so wholly devoted, have to
sleep at night. Even they have children who will inherit a
broken country existing in an environmentally and politically
hostile world, though no doubt they figure that big enough
fences, mean enough private armies, and loads of central air
conditioning will insulate them from the damage.
I don’t mind that the Bush
campaign fought hard to win the 2000 election. That was
certainly a legitimate goal for them to pursue. But it nauseates
me beyond belief that their agents in the Florida government
disenfranchised tens of thousands of African Americans in order
to keep them from voting Democratic. And it sickens me that they
gathered up a bunch of congressional staffers pretending to be
an angry local mob and stormed election canvassers, using pure
Gestapo techniques to shut down the most fundamental act of
democracy, counting the votes.
I don’t mind that the Bush
campaign took the election to the Supreme Court, even though
they were simultaneously accusing the Gore folks of being
litigious. What disgusts me beyond words is that a regressive
majority of the Court anointed Bush president in a sheer act of
partisan politics. And that they were so anxious to achieve that
end that they repudiated all their own judicial politics
previously espoused in case after case - from states’ rights, to
equal protection, to judicial restraint. And that they were so
conscious of what they were actually doing that they took the
unprecedented step of stating that no lasting principles were
involved in the matter, that their decision would forever apply
to this case and this case only.
Once in office, there was still
the possibility that the administration would govern as it had
campaigned, as a rather centrist, status quo-style government,
perhaps especially tempered from arrogance and overstretch by
the knowledge that the country was deeply divided and that Bush
had in fact actually lost the popular vote. In fact, though,
they did precisely the opposite.
The first order of business,
certainly the top priority for the administration, and arguably
the only thing they were ever completely seriously about, was
their tax restructuring program. It was grim enough that the tax
cuts, as under Reagan, where dramatically tilted in favor of the
wealthy. But what made them especially disgusting was that -
again, as under Reagan - these wholesale revenue reductions were
not only not accompanied by expenditure cuts, but in fact were
coupled with increased spending. Can you say “voodoo economics”?
Bush’s father once had, before he treasonously changed his tune
to win the vice presidency (leading to the presidency) for
himself. But he was right the first time, before he put personal
ambition and transparent insecurity ahead of the national
interest. And thus we’ve witnessed the only possible result of
the combination of massive revenue cuts and continuing spending
increases: astronomical debt, now well over nine trillion
dollars in total, and rapidly growing. What I want to know is
how can we - especially so-called family-oriented, so-called
fiscal conservatives - not be outraged, not be scandalized, not
be boiling with anger at the debt we have transferred to our own
children, all so that we could avoid paying our own way, like
every generation before us has?
I am outraged as well at how the
administration polarized the country in the wake of one of the
greatest traumas it had ever experienced. Let us leave aside the
ample evidence demonstrating that the Bush team was asleep at
the wheel before 9/11 - or perhaps far, far worse - a set of
facts which is noteworthy in part because progressives did not
use them to attack the president and score cheap but easy
political points. But the administration did precisely that. It
is disgusting - and it fills me with anger - how they used a
national security crisis to win partisan political contests. How
they scheduled a vote on the Iraq war resolution right before
the midterm elections of 2002, thus politicizing the gravest
decision a country can make by forcing Democrats to choose
between voting their conscience and campaign accusations of
being soft on national security.
It boils my blood that these
chickenhawks - almost none of whom showed up for duty in Vietnam
when it was their turn - could dare to accuse Max Cleland of
being weak on national security, a guy who gave three of his
four limbs to that very cause on the battlefields of Southeast
Asia. How could they run ads morphing his face into Saddam’s or
bin Laden’s, when his opponent - of course - took Vietnam
deferments, just like Cheney and Ashcroft and the rest? And how
could they accuse him of being weak on national defense because
he opposed the bureaucratic reshuffling to create the Homeland
Security Department, when Bush himself had also opposed it? That
is, before Rove politicized it by inserting union-busting
language applying to tens of thousands of civil servants covered
by the act.
It nauseates me beyond words
that this president could use the tragedy of 9/11 to justify
invading a country which had nothing to do with that attack
whatsoever. It enrages me that those who had the courage to
oppose this policy so transparently deceitful (and it truly was
- from the proof of the Downing Street Memos, to Colin Powell’s
charade at the UN, to the assurances that the US knew where the
WMD were, to the rejection of the weapons inspectors’ request to
have two more months to finish the job) were labeled as traitors
and worse for telling the truth. And that 4,000 Americans and
over a million Iraqis have died for these lies.
And speaking of treason, what
sort of looking glass have we all fallen through when the
government of the United States exposes its own CIA undercover
agent in order to punish her spouse for revealing administration
lies about the war? When did that cease to be a cause of
outrage, especially among our super-patriotic friends on the
right?
How is it possible not to be
angry looking at the destruction of Hurricane Katrina, and the
bungled response of the government before, during and after that
tragedy? Indeed, even journalists who had spent so many years
licking government boots that their tongues had long ago turned
black were moved to outrage at the magnitude of that failure,
with the president meanwhile on a stage in San Diego pretending
to play guitar at a Republican fundraiser.
I am outraged, as well, by one
of the most insane and avoidable tragedies of all human history,
the slow-motion holocaust of global warming. How can anyone not
be angry at a political movement and a government that puts the
short-term profits of one or two industries ahead of the
viability of the entire planet? How can anyone not be mortified
as we one-twentieth of the world’s population, who generate
one-fourth of the greenhouse gases causing the problem, not only
do nothing about the problem, but actively block the rest of the
world from saving all of us from this folly?
I’m furious because the Bush
administration and its ideological allies have shredded the
Constitution at every turn, destroying the institutional gift of
those they pretend to revere (but only when it’s convenient to
upholding their own depredations). This president, who has
gotten virtually everything he has ever wanted throughout his
life and his presidency, once privately exclaimed in frustration
at not getting something he wanted when he wanted it, “It’s just
a goddam piece of paper!”, and that is precisely how he has
treated America’s founding document. His signing statements -
probably over a thousand in count now - completely obliterate
the checks and balances principle of the Constitution, its most
central idea. His admitted spying on Americans without warrant
smashes the Fourth Amendment. His fiasco in Guantánamo and
beyond mocks due process and habeas corpus guarantees. His
invasion of Iraq against the international law codified in the
UN Charter, to which the United States is a signatory, violates
the Constitutional requirement to hold such treaties as the
highest law of the land. Altogether, Americans have never seen a
presidency with such imperial ambitions, and anyone who cares
about the Constitution should be furious. A year from now, it is
quite possible that Hillary Clinton will be president of the
United States (ugh). Would our conservative friends silently
countenance, let alone viciously support, such a monarchy in the
White House if it belonged to Queen Hillary rather than King
George? I think not.
We could go on and on from here.
This administration and the movement it fronts at least gets
high marks for consistency. Everything they touch turns to
stone. There’s Pat Tillman and Terri Schiavo. There’s the
politicization of the US Attorneys and the corruption of DeLay
and Abramoff. There’s North Korea, Pakistan and the Middle East.
There’s the shame of torture and rendition. There’s the wrecking
of the American military and of the country’s reputation abroad.
There’s Afghanistan and the failure to capture bin Laden. And
much, much more. But above all, and driving all, there’s the
kleptocracy - the doing of everything in every way to facilitate
the looting of the national fisc.
What an unbelievable record of
deceit, destruction, hypocrisy, incompetence, treason and greed.
What a tragic tale of debt, lost wars, stolen elections,
environmental crises, Constitution shredding, national shame and
diminished security.
All done by the very most pious
amongst us, of course. Merry Christmas, eh? I guess those are
our presents, all carefully wrapped in spin, contempt, and
preemptive attacks on any of us impertinent enough to say “No
thanks, Santa”.
So, yeah, you’re goddam right
I’m angry about what’s been done to my country, and what’s been
done by my country in my name.
How could anyone who claims to
care about America not be?
David Michael Green is a
professor of political science at Hofstra University in New
York. He is delighted to receive readers’ reactions to his
articles (dmg@regressiveantidote.net),
but regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to
respond. More of his work can be found at his website,
www.regressiveantidote.net
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