The lesser evil
defeats the more lesser evil in Super Tuesday...or should that be the less evil beats the lesser less evil?
Bernie Sanders talks of “political revolution” as part of
his election campaign slogans. But a political revolution is a process of
radical change and is born of a mass movement. A political revolution will
succeed or fail dependent on the persistence and tenacity of a grassroots
struggle which must remain active and grow in intensity beyond the formal
process of voting. The scale of change needed requires long term vision and
commitment to continuous fighting on a day to day basis regardless of the
outcome of the election. The political revolution requires to cultivate the momentum
to completely overturn a fraudulent and undemocratic system. Such a
transformation is not a return to FDR New Deal style politics. It requires a
thorough re-thinking of the meaning of democracy, entire transformation of ‘business
as usual’. Will the revolution be delivered by Bernie Sanders? For him ‘political
revolution’ is merely a sexy slogan with no meaning or commitment to truly
smash the oligarchy and take back democracy. What will Sanders supporters do if
he doesn’t win the nomination. The obvious answer is: join forces with the
Greens. They offer everything Bernie does plus more. The problem is that the
Greens are not now, and never have been, an attraction for American voters who
are not interested in “third party” politics. Running as a Democrat, Sanders
avoided that fate. Had he not run as a Democrat, he would never have gotten
anywhere near to where he now is. Once he is out of the way, his supporters it will
fall into line and follow the Hillary camp for lesser evil reasons.
Running
against Trump or any of the other Republican hopefuls, Hillary Clinton would
actually be the lesser evil. They have all expressed racism and nativism and views
which put them all beyond the pale – whether or not they really believe what they
say. But it should also be noted that on many issues – among others, coddling
banksters and corporate profiteers, trade policy, overseas interventions, job
creation through public works, health care, the provision of social services,
and even U.S. policy towards Israel and Palestine – Trump’s views, compared to
Hillary’s, are not all bad. This does provide yet another reason why even the
most fretful lesser evilists should realize that Trump would not be quite as
awful as they think. With Hillary Clinton was at his side, as a de facto
minister-without-portfolio, Bill Clinton said “the era of big government is
over,” and promised to “end welfare as we know it.” And he did, by signing the Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act. The law bore severely on low income families,
disproportionately communities of color.
Clinton took pride also in the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement
Act, which led eventually to an explosion of incarceration, and spawned an
industry of private, for-profit prisons.
Once again the law impacted most heavily the black and Latino communities.
Hillary Clinton’s corporate America grew in strength and political power as
Clinton continues to pander to the wishes of Wall Street.
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