February 1, is the
first voting contest in the presidential nominating in the US state of Iowa. Iowans
vote in caucuses, which are small political meetings held throughout 1,681
locations scattered around the state. They are similar to primaries in that
residents cast ballots for their preferred party candidate, and whoever garners
the most votes wins. The number of people in the room are counted, and any
candidate who does not get a certain percentage (a threshold set at the
beginning of the night) in the first round, is eliminated. Those who voted for
losing candidates are then coaxed by the others to join their side and to vote
for their candidate of choice. At the end, the results are collated across the
state in all precincts. But people do not just show up and vote - the process
is essentially a meeting of friends and neighbours in high school gyms and
church basements, where discussions about candidates are held. Representatives
for the candidates are present and, at one point, attempt to persuade undecided
voters. This is what makes caucuses different from primaries.
No matter who wins the American presidential election come
November, it’s a sure bet that the losers will be the American people. Go ahead
and support Hillary Clinton. Just admit that you will be voting for someone to
be president who has not only been profoundly wrong on the two most pressing
issues of our time—economic injustice and the ravages of unbridled
militarism—but, what is more significant, seems incapable of learning from her mistakes.
What one finds is a defense of bombing nations into freedom, leaving them
fatally torn—Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria. On foreign policy issues, Clinton
is a first-class hawk.
Should a politician
be held to their record? Does what they have voted for in the past has any
bearing on what they will vote for in the future? Does a former member of the
board of Walmart become a champion of the working class because...she says she
is? Or because she can show where she has been such a champion in the past?
Does that count or doesn't it? Voted for Bush's war? Obama’s air war upon Libya
and Syria. Does that matter? Politicians say what they need to say and people
should not let them slide on their record. The trade deals she supported? By
what else do we have to go on with Hillary? Where are her positive talking
points in her record? The trade deals she didn't support? Where is Hillary's
record of progressive things that she has represented with more than just talk.
Where are Hillary's facts on the ground so to speak? She may cast herself as a
progressive liberal, but her prior history and propensity to flip-flop on
policies says otherwise.
In an article headlined “My Plan to Prevent the Next Crash,”
Hillary began by blaming it all on nefarious Republicans led by President
George W. Bush. Of course, the Republicans have been terrible in their zeal to
unleash Wall Street greed ever since the moderate Republicanism of Dwight
Eisenhower came to be replaced by its opposite, the Reagan Revolution.But the
reality is that Ronald Reagan presided over the savings-and-loan scandal and as
a result was compelled to tighten banking regulations rather than obliterate
them. It remained for President Clinton to enact into federal law pro-Wall
Street finance regulation, by signing the so-called Financial Services
Modernization Act of 1999, reversing the Glass-Steagall Act. Hillary Clinton,
in a statement this week, made clear will not revive those restrictions if she
is elected. Contary to the advice of Brooksley Born, a head of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, Clinton in his second term, signed legislation that
explicitly banned any regulation of those suspect mortgage derivatives,
involving many trillions of dollars.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established by
international treaty in 2002 in The Hague, Netherlands, as a means of
prosecuting individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, and other
international war crimes. In reality, the ICC only has jurisdiction in cases
where national courts are unable or unwilling to prosecute soldiers or others
for such crimes. Despite some notable lapses in prosecuting some offenses, the
Uniform Code of Military Justice provides a sufficient domestic mechanism for
trying any members of the U.S. armed forces suspected of alleged war crimes to
avoid having any American soldier tried under ICC jurisdiction. Furthermore,
virtually every person put on trial before the ICC since its founding has been
a high-level military or political figure, not individual soldiers. Despite
this, Clinton voted in favor of that Republican-sponsored amendment, dubbed the
"Hague Invasion Act," which authorizes the president of the United
States "to use all means necessary and appropriate to free members of
United States military and certain other allied persons if they are detained or
imprisoned by an international criminal court," an action which would
presumably involve armed confrontation with Dutch soldiers and police guarding
the court complex. In addition to violating the UN Charter, such an attack
would run counter to the NATO Treaty, to which both the United States and the
Netherlands are also party. Apparently, however, Clinton who has championed
U.S. military intervention in over a dozen countries as a senator and Secretary
of State has no problem with that.
Clinton leaves a lot to be desired. She does favor a woman's
right to choose and has recently come out in support of marriage equality.
Clinton supports comprehensive immigration reform but also backs stepped-up
border enforcement. A former member of the board of Walmart, she is cozy with
Wall Street and voted for the Patriot Act. Clinton has been called a
"focus group Democrat," often accused of believing what polls and
focus groups tell her she should believe.
Mrs. Clinton helped lead the development of the neoliberal
“New Democrat” movement, which pushed the Democratic Party to abandon its last
lingering commitments to labor unions, racial and social justice, and
environmental protection. She voted (as a US Senator) for legislation advanced
by Wall Street to make it more difficult for poor families to use bankruptcy
laws to get out from under crushing debt. She called, when Secretary of State, the
corporatist, anti-worker, secretive, authoritarian Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP) “the gold standard’ in agreements for “open free, transparent, fair
trade, the kind of environment that has the rule of law and a level playing
field.” She “operates,” in the words of New York Times reporter Carolyn Ryan,
in “a world awash in money and connections and a very privileged place” – this
while deceptively posing as a “populist” who is “in touch” with the concerns of
everyday working Americans. She gives speeches to leading Wall Street firms
(and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange) for more than $200,000 each – more than
four times U.S. median household income – as part of her effort to build a
preemptive “money machine” to block
rivals from making serious primary and caucus challenges.
And Hillary Clinton said the following – in her role as the
head of the Clinton administration’s failed corporatist health reform
initiative – to a leading national physician and health care activist when he
told her in 1993 that “Canadian-style” single-payer health insurance was supported
by more than two-thirds of the U.S. populace and was certified by the
Congressional Budget Office as the most cost-effective plan on offer: “tell me
something interesting.” (Along with the big insurance companies that they
deceptively railed against, the “co-presidents” Bill and Hillary Clinton
decided from the start to exclude the popular health care alternative – single
payer – from the national health care “discussion.” Obama would do the same
exact same thing in 2009).
What is so special about Hillary other than she is a woman?
Margaret Thatcher was a woman too. Golda Meir. Indira Gandhi. Benazir Bhutto.
Angela Merkel. Julia Gillard. All saints and angels, weren’t they?
Voters believe in the fairytale that politicians are
saviors, capable of fixing what’s wrong with our communities and our lives,
when in fact, most politicians lead such sheltered lives that they have not a
clue about what their constituents must do to make ends meet. They support
endless war, ignore the citizenry’s basic rights, are bought and paid for by Big
Business and only care most about their own power. When faced with the prospect
of voting for the lesser of two evils, too many compromise their principles and
overlook the fact that the lesser of two evils is still very much an evil.
Stop playing their game. Stop supporting their system. Stop
defending their insanity. Stop giving them your vote. Stop believing that
there’s a difference between the Republicans and Democrats, when in fact, the
two parties are exactly the same. Stop buying into the lie that there is no
alternative. It’s easy to become discouraged and turn into cynics and hard to
believe that change is possible since in the end we get the government we
deserve. Democracy needs people to be informed and educated about the issues
and willing to make the sacrifices necessary to stay involved, whether that
means forgoing Monday night football in order to attend a town-hall political
meeting. People need to be willing to do
more our job as citizens begins and ends on Election Day. They want us to
believe that than whine and complain. We must act—and act responsibly—keeping
in mind that politics extend beyond the act of voting. The powers-that-be want
us to believe that we have no right to protest unless we cast our vote one way
or the other. They don’t want us talking about is the fact that the politicians
don’t represent us, and like Hillary Clinton, most of the candidates are
frauds.
We, the people, have a decision to make, and a choice.
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