Monday, February 8, 2016

My heart says Sanders. But so does my head.

We are being told that even though our hearts are attracted to Bernie Sanders’ message, we should vote with our head, and support Clinton.  Herewith is my head’s response for why thoughtful people should support Sanders.

It all comes down to what you think is necessary to address the public policy problems we face:

•    a policy debate that has shifted dramatically towards the right
•    a dysfunctional Congress dominated by right-wing rhetoric and moneyed interests not acting in the face of climate change, economic inequality, institutionalized racism, the need for real healthcare reform
•    campaign financing rules that give the rich way too much access to policy debates
•    an economic system that purports to build from the top down but merely lifts yachts
•    the making of district boundaries that assure conservative control over the House for the foreseeable future
•    a mindless national  press corps that parrots the talking points of the oligarchs
•    a Supreme Court dominated by manipulative ideologues
•    political discourse that presents no room for a positive role for government

My heart tells me that Sanders could lead us in addressing these problems. 

Will Clinton solve these problems?

So, my head wants to know — What do you think Hillary Clinton will do to solve these problems?  In spite of her protests to the contrary, she is, of course, utterly a creature of the establishment.  Made rich by courting the rich.  Playing the games of Washington.  Carefully triangulating every position.  Yes, she is the first woman to come this close, but she is not someone who will change the substance or the ground of political debate.  More of the same, but in a pants suit.

Hillary proposes to right the country’s wrongs by doing pretty much the same thing as has President Obama, only better.  We have no evidence that she will do things better than he, but more importantly, neither he nor she seems to understand that playing the game inside of Washington, only more exquisitely, is not the solution to any of the above problems.  These are battles that can only be won out among the public, building a social movement that will trump the establishment and its rich, conservative benefactors.  Obama never understood that; Clinton doesn’t either.

Maybe she will do less well

And I think there is evidence that Clinton would do less well than Obama.  It has to do with how good you are at chess.

Me, I am not a good chess player.  I have difficulty thinking that far ahead.  Move, counter-move, counter to that, and so on, ten or twenty moves down the road. 

Yet that is exactly the strategic capacity we need in a president.  To understand the nature of the real domestic political fight ahead of us.  And to represent America in foreign policy by thinking deep into the moves and counter-moves of international strategy.

So, there is Clinton, serving as Secretary of State, knowing full well that she is going to be running for President in a couple of years, and she decides to handle her email on her own personal account.  She must know that this is going to be just the sort of thing that will plague her during her coming campaign, yet she does it anyway.  Or worse, she hasn’t thought it through far enough ahead of time.  How could she do that?  I don’t think she needs to apologize for using her personal email.  The apology she owes us is for not thinking more strategically about the implications of doing so.

And there is Clinton, having left the Administration, now actively planning her race for president, but also ready to work with her husband in his successful efforts to cash in on their cache.  She takes $225,000 from Goldman Sachs for each of three talks.  And she doesn’t realize that this will be a problem when she is running?  She hasn’t thought that far ahead?  Or maybe she is so deeply acculturated to the corruption of Washington that she doesn’t even see the problem?  “Well,” she offers, “that is what they offered me.”

And she gets taken by surprise when a reporter asks to see the transcripts of these talks.  Come on now – didn’t she see that coming?  I mean, I didn’t see that coming, but I am not running for president, either.  We need better.

I want a president who is a whole lot better than I am at thinking through the deeper moves in strategic analyses.  I don’t think Clinton is that person.

But that is not the point

But actually, this is a digression.  Because the real reason she isn’t the right person is because we don’t need more of Obama.  We need to do what he wasn’t willing to do, which is create a movement that goes “over the head” of the corruption in Washington, that empowers politicians to reconstruct our institutions and actually address our problems.  Barack Obama made the mistake of not seeing this necessity.  Nor does Hillary Clinton.

What is wrong with America is not a new thing.  It has been forming for more than 50 years.  The conservative movement has been strategizing, planning, building for decades.  The fact that the center of gravity of our political discourse has moved so far to the right didn’t just happen.  It has been a concerted effort, executed over many years by thoughtful people on a mission.  A mission to delegitimize government, to play off of the anger of people frustrated by a changing economy, a changing culture, and a changing world.  And to exploit racism as a political tool, as Southern politicians became the leaders of the new Republican Party after Nixon’s successful “Southern strategy.”

Not sure that is what really happened?  Yet, this is the story told by Jane Mayer in A Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right and E. J. Dionne in Why the Right Went Wrong: Conservatism from Goldwater to the Tea Party and Beyond. 

And Hillary Clinton is part of the problem, not the solution.  She was an integral part of this history.  By working with her husband to pull the Democratic Party to the right in the 90's, allowing the rightward current to carry them along, rather than acting as a counter-balance to that trend.  And as a favorite dart board target for conservatives, distracting us and the public from facing our real problems, a dynamic which won’t stop if she is elected President.

A counter-revolution

Bernie Sanders is almost right when he asks us if we are ready for a political revolution.  But what he really is proposing to lead is a counter-revolution, an attempt to bring things back to an equilibrium where government is seen as a positive force in the lives of Americans, not by excluding the market, but by accompanying it.  Yes, some things are best left to the market to allocate, like hats and bicycles. But other things should not be  “marketed,” like healthcare and
protection of our common resources.

A respect for government.  That alone would be enough.  After all, some of our problems are problems that exist only at the level of “community,” like justice, racism and environmental decay.  These aren’t problems of the individual.  These are problems that will only be solved by the community acting upon them.  And the legitimate agent of the community is the government.

Yes, the Declaration of Independence emphasizes the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  But the next phrase is too often ignored: “That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among [people], deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” 

What is needed is a social movement that moves us toward more justice, less prejudice, a respect for “waging peace.”  A respect for the legitimacy of collective action, made possible through government.

This counter-revolution is what will be necessary to go “over the heads” of Congress and the Washington press, to confront directly the oligarchs.  To succeed, this social movement needs leadership and intensity.  Leadership must be based on authenticity and intensity will come from rousing people’s frustrations with the corruption of the present and their spirited belief in a better future.

What Sanders is saying

And Sanders has been saying exactly what that would entail:

    Returning to a progressive income tax
   
    Recognizing the right to healthcare
   
    Reforming our campaign finance system
   
    Redistricting that is non-partisan
   
    Restructuring our energy production system

    Building prosperity by supporting the broad middle of the economy, not rewarding the rich and hoping it will “trickle down”
   
    Preparing to keep us safe in a violent world, but also becoming a voice of peace and justice in that world

    Electing progressive Senators, Congresspeople, Governors and State Representatives around the country

My heart and my head

My heart is lifted by this call.  But, in addition, my head is clear that Hillary Clinton will never achieve any of these things, not because she is a bad person, but because she is utterly a creature of the problematic present, not someone who can lead us into that future.  She has neither the authenticity nor the vision to rouse our spirits. 

Let me be clear about something.  If Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee, I will work for and pray for her success.  It would be far worse to have any of the current Republicans as president.  And I am not oblivious to the danger of supporting Sanders.

But my head tells me that Hillary is no more likely to win than Bernie.  Democrats have a substantial Electoral College advantage.  And Sanders has shown himself to be a powerful political force.  Will he be attacked as a Jewish, non-religious, socialist?  Of course.  But won’t Hillary suffer from the brutalizing that has marked her continuous battles with the right-wing?

If neither Sanders nor Clinton win, woe to us.  But if Clinton wins, we will not heal the gaping wounds of our body politic.  There are not enough bandaids to apply.

So, there it is.  My heart tells me that Sanders is speaking truths of great consequence.  And my head says that following those truths is the only way to promote justice and fight corruption, to reverse the rightward movement of our policy discourse, to relegitimize a balance between government and the market, to allow me to be proud again of our policy making. 

Bernie Sanders for President.  Sounds right.   

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