Elections,
Capitalism,
And
Democracy
By
Charles
Sullivan
26/06/08 "ICH"
-- - Because
so many of
the people
on the
political
left fear
that John
McCain will
become the
next
president,
they have
allowed
themselves
to see the
very
moderate
democratic
candidate,
Barach Obama,
as a
desirable
alternative
to the
decidedly
ghoulish
McCain,
rather than
supporting a
genuine
progressive
like Dennis
Kucinich,
Cynthia
McKinney, or
Ralph Nader.
They thus
perceive
Obama to be
far more
progressive
than he
really is.
Such
comparisons
lead us down
a
dichotomous
pathway that
assures a
continuous
drift to the
right.
Each
election
cycle the
people on
the left
find
themselves
out-flanked
by those on
the right by
allowing
them to
frame the
debate and
to define
who we are.
So each
election we
end up
supporting a
very
moderate
candidate
rather than
a truly
progressive
one. Because
all of the
mainstream
candidates
are
intensively
influenced
by corporate
lobbyists
and the
electoral
system is
owned by
capital,
democracy
has remained
as elusive
as capturing
the ghost of
a saint with
a piece of
duct tape.
According to
Ambrose I.
Lane Sr.,
host of
Pacifica
radio’s “We
Ourselves,”
John McCain
has the
third most
conservative
voting
record of
anyone in
the senate.
Running an
extremist
from the
opposite end
of the
political
spectrum
forces the
democratic
candidate
further to
the right
than he or
she already
is. So when
progressives
fall into
this trap,
as they so
often do, it
is a win-win
for the
corporate
lobbyists
pulling the
strings
behind the
curtain.
They end up
supporting a
candidate
they think
can compete
against
extremists
rather than
one who
actually
represents
their
values. If
you have to
become like
your
opponent in
order to
defeat them,
what can you
honesty say
has been
won?
Progressives
cannot gain
ground by
ceding their
ideology to
their
conservative
opponents in
order to
gain office.
Without
having a
viable
candidate
coming from
the far left
of the
Democratic
Party,
progressives
cannot
reasonably
expect to
push the
debate back
toward the
political
center, much
less to the
left of
center. You
can make a
good case,
however,
that the
democratic
leadership
under Howard
Dean has no
real desire
to move to
the left or
to represent
traditional
progressive
values. It
likes the
status quo
just fine; a
position
that has
served its
corporate
funders
well.
Because it
has been
co-opted by
corporate
lobbyists—who
always hedge
their
bets—the
Democratic
Party no
longer
houses a
genuine
left-wing
faction that
can
effectively
compete for
votes in a
way that
emulates the
success of
the far
right.
Because
right-wing
extremism
and
corporate
fascism are
portrayed in
the
corporate
media as
reasonable
centrist
positions
beneficial
to the
people—that
is how they
are
perceived by
those who
receive
their
political
education
from those
sources.
Thus
extremism
packaged as
democracy is
widely
considered
to be the
norm when,
in fact, it
is not; it
is
fanaticism
couched as
something
much more
benign or
beneficial,
even if it
is a poison
pill. Yet it
is this
extremism
that
undermines
the
interests of
the nation’s
working
class people
and keeps
them
subservient
to corporate
fascism.
Voting for
meaningful
change is
like running
on a
treadmill
and
expecting to
actually go
somewhere.
The problem
is that
capital,
rather than
informed
citizens
interested
in
democracy,
is in
control of
the
electoral
process.
Capital
furthers the
interest of
capital,
rather than
the interest
of the
people, and
this creates
an
irreconcilable
conflict
with genuine
human
interests.
So we end up
with a
sociopolitical
system that
is not only
fundamentally
unjust; it
is also
predatory
and
cannibalistic.
It consumes
the very
people who
feed it and
give it the
appearance
of
legitimacy:
the great
unwashed
working
class.
Capitalism
flourishes,
for a short
time, at
least, by
socializing
costs and by
privatizing
profits and
this
concentrates
and
centralizes
power into
the hands of
a select
few. Its
real purpose
is not to
serve
people; it
is to
exploit
them.
Capitalism
isn’t even a
natural
system; it
is a purely
human
construct
that has no
basis in
nature. It
is a
synthetic
system and,
as we have
seen through
chemistry,
synthetic
systems tend
to become
mutagens,
and thus
promote
cancer.
Due in part
to their
extreme
political
naiveté and
to
delusional
thinking,
too many
people have
accepted
corporate
fascism as a
centrist or
“normal”
position.
Thus they
have
unwittingly
allowed
predatory
and
cannibalistic
forces—unregulated
markets—to
determine
the fate of
the nation
and its
people.
Neoconservatives
and
neoliberals,
alike, have
defined the
free market
as an
unregulated
market,
which has
become their
concept of
democracy.
The so
called free
market is
not under
the control
of human
beings in
any
meaningful
sense, and
it does not
respond to
human needs.
Like a
creation of
Frankenstein,
it is a
man-made
monster that
has escaped
from the
laboratory
and is
wreaking
havoc across
the
countryside,
menacing
everyone and
everything
in its
gargantuan
steel-booted
path.
By
themselves,
markets are
not
necessarily
a bad thing.
Certainly
people need
commerce and
trade.
However, it
is when
markets are
deregulated—as
required by
the
adherents of
Milton
Friedman and
the Chicago
School of
Economics—that
they turn
upon people
and become
predatory,
undemocratic,
and
cannibalistic.
When markets
are given
more power
and more
rights than
people,
people will
cede not
only their
power to
them, but
also their
humanity.
This is how
markets have
become
all-powerful
entities
that have no
soul or
conscience
and are
answerable
to no one:
monstrosities
in every
sense of the
word.
I would
argue,
however,
that the
object of
commerce and
trade should
be to serve
people and
to benefit
the whole of
society,
rather than
to generate
enormous
profits for
the benefit
of a select
few.
Commerce
without
democracy
cannot help
us toward a
free and
democratic
society; it
can only
undermine
our every
effort at
genuine
democratization.
Either you
work for the
public
interest or
you work for
self-interest.
It is this
assertion
that finally
brings us
back to our
starting
point—the
electoral
process.
Because the
process is
under the
control of
capital
rather than
working
class
people, it
undermines
the
democratic
process and
substitutes
something
else in its
place. That
process has
led us to
where we are
and it can
never take
us back to
where we
started
from. Nor
can it ever
lead us to
genuine
democracy or
to justice.
It can only
bear the
fruit of its
own seeds;
it can only
provide us
with more of
what it has
already
produced.
If we the
people are
serious
about real
democratic
government,
we must work
for it
outside of
the
electoral
process, as
well as from
within. We
must
organize a
revolutionary
force so
powerful
that it
cannot be
ignored or
denied. We
must
institute
effective
and
prolonged
economic
boycotts. We
must
organize
work
slow-downs,
work
stoppages,
and general
strikes in
order to
make corrupt
government
feel our
pain. We
must create
labor unions
that
genuinely
fight for
worker’s
rights while
simultaneously
transitioning
the country
away from an
exploitive
and
self-destructive
capital
economy
toward a
people-oriented
economy
based upon
need, rather
than
privatized
profit
subsidized
by public
funds. These
are the
means to
creating a
democratic
workplace
and bringing
malignant
capitalism
to a
grinding
halt. The
electoral
process does
not provide
the tools
for
revolution;
it subverts
the process
and only
delays the
inevitable.
While Barach
Obama has
run for the
presidency
on the
premise of
change, his
ideology is
fundamentally
the same as
the
presidents
who came
before him:
the economic
theories of
Milton
Friedman and
the belief
in corporate
deregulation;
profits
before
people.
Obama’s
economic
advisers
subscribe to
the same
economic
theorem that
brought us
the trickle
down
economics of
Ronald
Reagan and
his
disastrous
foreign
policy.
Obama’s
foreign
policy
advisers
subscribe to
the same
philosophy
that brought
us the
invasion of
Iraq and the
Israeli
occupation
of
Palestine;
every one of
them a
war-mongering
imperialist
with close
ties to the
military
industrial
complex with
its nexus of
profiteering.
His energy
policy team
has great
faith in
clean coal
and safe
nuclear
energy,
neither of
which
exists.
Because the
Obama team
is anything
but
revolutionary,
it is
unreasonable
to expect
them to
produce
polices
significantly
different
than the
ones that
are already
in play. We
saw this
with Bill
Clinton who
campaigned
on promises
to do one
thing but,
once
elected, did
another.
Clinton won
office by
being more
right-wing
than his
republican
opponent.
That was no
victory for
progressives.
How could it
be?
This is not
to say that
Barach Obama
is a bad
person in
any way.
Certainly,
he is an
intelligent
man of
reasonably
good
character
and a fine
orator, but
that does
not qualify
him as
representative
of the
people or
the
democracy
they so
desperately
need. Is he
a better
choice than
John McCain?
Without
doubt he is.
But then, so
is almost
anyone else.
A toadstool
would be a
better
choice than
McCain. We
must
remember
that Obama
has been
groomed to
become
president
some day and
that
grooming was
provided by
special
interests
whose
unstated
purpose is
to undermine
genuine
democracy by
substituting
an imposter
in its
place. They
are
convinced
that the
American
people won’t
know the
difference.
So don’t
expect any
significant
changes
under Obama,
despite all
of the
campaign
rhetoric to
the
contrary.
The presence
of McCain
makes the
very
moderate
Obama an
appealing
alternative
and that
assures
victory for
the status
quo. It
frightens
progressive
voters away
from
supporting
real
progressives
like Dennis
Kucinich or
Cynthia
McKinney.
Barach Obama
was the real
choice of
the
established
orthodoxy
all along.
The
marketing
strategists
have used
John McCain
to funnel
the votes
toward Obama
and away
from genuine
progressives.
That is
where the
real fight
was. You can
call it
voting in
the absence
of real
choice
because that
is precisely
what it is.
The same
policies
that have
been in play
for decades
will
continue on
and we will
keep getting
a similar
result.
Obama’s
recent
endorsement
of
warrantless
wire-tapping
is not only
evidence of
his
belonging to
the
established
orthodoxy;
it directly
connects him
to the
draconian
policies of
the Bush
regime and
to those of
Senator
McCain. No
true
progressive
would want
to be
associated
with the
unlawful and
unjustified
surveillance
of
law-abiding
citizens.
This is a
red flag
that must
not be
ignored.
This is why
the country
continues to
quietly
drift
further to
the right:
there is no
real choice
in elections
and we
continue to
behave as if
there are.
It is the
capitalist
system that
is at fault,
not the
candidates
themselves
who play the
game
according to
the dictum
of its
inventors.
They, too,
as
despicable
as some of
them are,
are its
unwitting
victims.
What hope is
there for
genuine
progressives
in a game
that is
rigged? If
we are ever
to become
responsible
citizens, we
must learn
how to
separate the
contents of
the box from
the fancy
packaging.
The same old
ideology,
regardless
of who
espouses it,
will not
lead to
meaningful
change; nor
will pursing
the same old
methods. If
we are going
to be
satisfied
with that,
then we can
continue to
be pawns in
a rich man’s
game and
accept the
results of
the game
without
complaint.
If we expect
better, then
we must
begin by
demanding
better of
ourselves by
recognizing
what is
being done
in our name
and doing
something
about it.
But first we
must awaken
from our
stupor and
come to the
realization
that
democracy
means direct
citizen
action.
Charles
Sullivan
welcomes
your
comments at
csullivan@copper.net
